New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 9, 1918, Page 6

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~ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, MAY:9, 1018 B’ritain Herald. ered Bernstorff their father. That's | FACTS AND FANCIES. ence to winter wheat, “the striking | move to avert tho impending catastro- ap-parent. | s improvement in the condition of the | phe by diplomacy and compromise. ERALD PUBLISHING COMPANT. But clever as they were, the Ger- ncif)c:-: ?\\:‘u 1: \: ;:?t\:lirmiai‘;yfififi growing Crop Is general, save the|One revelation after another has . g iy mans found our officlals even mors | beso 0 J 0 CUL PUL vour stiaw hat |usual exceptions here and there which | shattered -the Prusslan structure of . to | ) geport - jfortunately fail to affect the general | falsehood - 4 dafly (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m, | clever. Cipher messages were ap- | —— total. it since he Sl o LB mnt u t He © t | e > : rald Building, 67 Church § prehended and decoded and the alert- The way to get your carpets beat- j The prospect in Michigan does | war conference at Potsdam in July. d at the Post Office at New Britaln | ness of our scerct service enabled our | & free will be to put a poster of the ) not compare well with that of her | Austria tually admitted the truth s fecond Class Mail Matter. kaiser on them and hang them out | neighboring states pecause of an un- | of it. Then came the official declara- — Government to reveal to the world |; e v —Passaic New: v BRI b5 carvier to any Dait of the oity in the front yard.—Passaic News. favorable start in the Fall, followed | tion of the Burgomaster of Nurem- or 15 cents a wenk. 65 cents a month j the extent and ruthlessness of Teu- e , | by winter killing and dry weather well | berg that no French airman had vis- bription for yaper fo be sent by mall. | tonlc' treachery. ~Ven!, VI, vicl’, was Cuesar's|into the spring. Rocent rains, how- | it that or Wiy nelkhboring city pros BUY THRIFT STAMP ;l;tr‘;hlnn )iz.rnd\'an(:c. @0 cents a month. 3 dord tersa report of his great hnl_\o. ever, have greatly helped matters. | to the German invasion of Belgium. . A BT o e “Bend 1t to Georgius Creelius to be | Ohio and Indiana had somewhat the | The myth of a Russian invasion of Buy 16 Thrift Stamps at 25c each, add 16c, (during the month onlv profitable advertising medium in | claborated,” the order was given— |samne experience; and in consequence | Iast Prussia was also exploded. The of May) and exchange for a $5.00 U. S. War Saving certificate. ho city Circulation books and oress: Secretary i s us that at | bu sec Lhey clded ey av % s N Bt (o 36 savercisers. v Baker informs us t t on second thought they decided |they have some plowed-up fields. | most staggering blow at the Kaiser's ipen 8¢ { the present time there are more than | to let it stand.—Boston Transcript. Both of these states have come back | hypocritical moral offensive, how- N \ Horeld wiil ha found on sale at Hota- | 544 00 N 3 e strong because of recent bundant | ever, J e 3 v e il X oait w00, American troops in Francee. recent abundant | ever, have come, vemarkably enough, B R R N e hepdocq s That new hired man seems (0 |rains. The middle states are ih much | from leading German statesmen. 5 # - RS, ! ' E 5 ©|know a lot about agriculture” Te- iihe same condition as last year. Bethann-Hollweg, the Imperial R the exact number of men over there, marked Ars. Corntossel. “ “The south will raise more winter | Chancellor at the outbreak of the AND o o;:{:m‘p‘urmz CALLS but even if only a half a million had | Yes”, replied _hx:r husband. He (wheat than ever before. It will raise | war, has had to acknowledge the au- ~ prial Rooms 7 already b sent, that would be = :;'““ 50, ONEN-’\I""H lfl‘hml} it. T"“ at least 25 per cent. of all the winter | thenticity of a secret dispatch which s een - frst | K04 o scared for fear he's more of | wheat grown in this country. Texas | he sent to the German ambassador in Aflnmlrar of[lha A‘snurhlcd Pres iaa most credftable showing for our firs a lecturer than he is a farmer.”"— |and Oklahoma alone will fall some- | Paris on July 31, 1914, and in which ssociated Press is exclusively entitle il e S| et % ; a vill fall sor y 31, 1914, anc 7 o tho use for republication of all mews | Y€ of participation in the war. | Washington Sun. what behind last year’s production, | he demanded that France surrender In a S ec]al Sale at 4 98 h reditec to it or not otherwise credited { Moreover, it is a fulfillment of Mr. s ; because of prolonged drought and |the fortresses of Verdun and Toul as o4 eac By c'uh_ning’medcapu;n:nof‘-01:‘0‘00 cold high winds, which blew the soil | a pledge of sincerity in the event of prisoners in a five-days battle in Fin- faway from the plants and left the |the French Government's o = ) promising } Senate last January, that carly in the land Berlin incidentally admits that | oots exposed to the long and bitter | to maintain an attitude of neutrality. I present year 500,000 men would be | the “reds” are not merely brigands. |cnld of last winter. These same | The significance of this demand can- | despaiched to France. | ——Springfleld Iepublican. Wwinds did some damage in Colorado | not be obscured by sophistry. Ger- The German press has repeatedly | - oSaE o or|mme braska, and much in the | many did not intend to permit France i A [ivery member of the senate of |ngrthern part of Kansas. to stay out of the war. Peril d | informed the publie that if any Amer- | 2 S 3 2 5 SUONIROf S AL Eor ous A | the United States can look on that Among the southern states, | intolerably humiliating conditiony 5 Yooph: & 4 res ro ca 1 11 | ican trooops at all were sent to the | spring drive on the western front, | Arkansas in particular, has learned 1o | were demanded of that great nation Y, | Western frout, no appreciable number | and exclaim: *“Well, it wouldn't have | yaise wheat and likes it, as this|in order to force it to enter the con- Oney a Jlng ppOf Unl leS could be fifted out there before 1919 | otten near so far if it hadn't been |year's vield will demonstrate. Tili- | flict. at the very earliest. After the engage. | 07 Me! ——Baltimore Sun. nois, Missouri, Towa, Kansas and | Finally. the remarkable memoran- s — Nebraska, will have bountiful crops. | dum of Prince Lichnowsky, German a iS re ments along the Toul sector, and the | Germany 1z melting "down more | Kansas should double, and Nebraska | Ambassador in London in 1914 which glorious achievements of our men at | statues. It Is perhaps, an unique case | grinle last year's production, if the | is veheme ..iy demounced by the junk. Seicheprey, the German commanders | ©f &pplied frightfulness, wherein the |eather goes well and predatory in- | ors as the decument of a renegade or :‘T'm‘\d "3]?‘[,\' ““""]-:‘0"-\ K"';‘ FH""[“- sects be absent. madman, has revealed the designs B e Jing. The resultant metal will do TR Seleniinel] - v e w : 3 e libexty or give me death! Cradueily thoylara awalering {0 tile| 1ttt hacm fanchanynow tha statvesipun e o ois (e anen ganainorcayestll 00 the loarmany Misperariand fhis ad: . ) B Gen’ around the world. - it k DowthE st o the Pacific the general story is of | visers in and before that fateful year. t FILLIAM JENNINGS BRyaN, | fact that this country is in the fght | will be eliminateat=Newt ¥érkEmvent [l 6 e T o e L ol save D] hik e am y ew ecKwear to a finish and that not only Ameri- ning Sun. erally high condition. The percent- | moir—which was not intended for 4 - - e = a = o e can dollars, but American men as e age of abandoned acreage is very | general circulation—that his mission COLLARS, VESTEES, COLLAR AND COUFF SETS— White and ) = Tt may be, as the Berliner Lokalan- | gy " i ; are < = Vi T 5 colors in all the new styles. White and coloved fancy Vests to 0 sl Wik o A . nan- lsmall, especially as compared with a | to London was “wrecked not by the Sbeode L v . e g factors zelger says, that von ' Hindenbur® | oaragzo. There is some in Michigan, | tricks of the British, but by the trick- be worn with suits. Several hundred pieces specially priced for the world conflict. hollly the key to Paris, but, the @00- | 105ians, Olle, mpre 1n Ollahiote | insas oF ous dwn Bolley. 'This sin- this sale Ar B G 49¢ to $1.98 cach ning May 20 ax “Red | Crities’of the War Department, | Ple is tho Hartford Courant obino | particularly in the southwestern and | cere Ambassador worked successtully i g i od | Who have beceuwsc aimost hysterical ]‘.'{)‘ ':“'"‘ 280 13»1 P\, i;‘i P northwestern portions, a good deal in | for an understanding with Britain but fs Week”, ydurin ATHICH L PEri0) A e keyhole.—Greenwich News. Texas, and an unpleasantly large | the authorities in Berlin wanted war, | T American people will “be called # B8 SaoRoal & J = y quantity in Kansas, although what is | not a peaceful settlement that would B8 contribute $100,000,000 to the | Chine suns, are effectively silenced by The latest bit of humor from Ber- | . in {he latter state is nearly double | give Germany “a place in the sun”. LIST N . { an ‘additional statcment by Mr. Baker, | lin in the editorial remark: ~\“‘*’:Ld' that harvested last season. There aro | They were insatiable. They were bent S o who declares that “There is no pres- | Degins to see that E]l‘e' zmd b;fai:h no records anywhere of insect dam- | on the subjugation of Europe, if not B olon thsiretident ) o i e EAS NrtousSLorES Lo Re u T age.” of the world. They expected a speedy | Collected Poems of James Eiroy [ pealing for a book fund and in to the | ©nt shortage of light or heavy types | Dealer. Conditions in Canada are reported | victory over isolated France and Ger- Flecker. copeal shows the feelings of the s of these weapons, either in France or e . |as excellent. TFavorable weather and | manized Itussia. Sisie diers in the ficld. Furloughs are be- Amcrica, and no shortage is in pros- This is the day of new economies |eap)y seeding conditions there fore- Brutal junkerism stands unmasked. | Donald Thompson in Russia, by D. | coming more and more rare, relatives Peet. This whl he gratifying Hiews to | O00 e ubllization of waste Pros |east an unprecedented acreage of | The verdict of history upon its erimes Thompson | are not allowed to send delicacies to th " try’ at 1 o but ially gt G D "”".‘ed gpo l‘f’ spring wheat. In short, we shall | cannotbe doubted. “A ‘movie man’s’ description of{ the front, German forces are holding e country at large, but especially | microbe. Soon there will be no toW- | g6y ptless have wheat. The real job the Revolution.” part of the line in Macedonia and to the members .of familles which | el-linen, cotton or paper. Al we | (i o0 per it to Iurope. The rift § e find conditions. 8o tiying: there- dhat shall have to do will be to turn a f; = e " 0 BOC 5 L0 (New York Sun) Face to Face With Kaiserism, by J..| “Uleir very voices seem to have k g Bt T ohtos: : ute is ships. ( ace to T aiseris ¥, 3 ieir very voices seem to have be- I Sation of effort 2 kit Socigand stand In thel ot Ran 4y | The Committee on Statistios and| Prince Lichnowsky's revelations add W. Gerard. come extinet.” whioy| Bervice SN up.—Philadelphia Record. Standards is composed of as follows: | damning specifications to the Ind et D The Zeitung s collecting both There s no doubt that the Ameri- 7 b A. W. Douglas, chairman, St. Louis; | ment on which that unspeakable | Historic Ghosts and Ghost Hunters | books and money, the Allies also arek Sieidann Jeliicos and ”‘"r-mscg‘xu A. Ross Hill, Columbia, Mo.; 1. N.|murderbund of Potsdam at no dis- by H. A. Bruce. Coing their best to supply Fritz with needed no introductions, : st New York Ci : tant day, measured by standards of | “Mr. Bruce, who is a well known ! icading matter by sending over revo- 4 S e only a small part of the total st 5 5 i _ | Stone, New York City; Spurgeon Bell, | ta Y, L L v : y fition with our warrio e o trength | jellicoe was only a captain the dis- | i " ¢ Rorty, New York City: | national longevity, will he arralgned stigator, has carefully studied all | lutionary pamphlets tied: to little bal is is the second call made by the | that will be available for employment | cerning eyes of the steel mnsfer BadilieS D Weld, Chicago; M. S. Wild- | for judgment before the stern tribun- | the recordel facts bearing upon each | loons. ‘ Oross for such an amount. The | by General Foch before the summer | SPotted him e & x."omln;‘; n\txt:w I:(M an, Stanford University, Cal. al of impartial history. of the celebrated ghost stories he re- ! In an appeal for more books one Bna of 1917 has been practically | ighting ends. That the men will lack | P24 Become very friendly wi s But the Lichnowsky exposure, val- | lates, and follows each with a carc- | officer wrote: { B i ) —B. €. Worbes, 18 Forbes' Magazine = TN uable as it is for the final record, considered modern cxpiani- In these three and a half years of husted by appropriations for the hothlt:"ix 2 the way of equipment iy ——— ( . More Frightiulness. brings no woight o our arms in the | tion."-—Publisher's Note ! ctupidity, during a life lived in reals Are of the men in our military | Vouched for by the strict adherence | The pacifists are perfectly right in | (New York Journal of Commerce) | deadly life and death struggle now in A {lek ‘Ehat aie. SEASR Tand EHEHEIEEE naval forces, as well as for those | O the part of the War Department to | claiming that it is possible to get When that costly loug-range gun | progress. It is not how the beast got | Trish Memories, by A. @S Somerville =ave learned to value a good boolaf peace without fighting for it, as You | was devised for reacning Daris With | Joose that concerns us. It is on how and Martin Ross. nd it has happened to many to b can always remove some country Uke | explosive shells, comments of Ger- | to kill him before he kills us that all | “This book is a record of friend- | come attaghqd to books and to be- | Rotonsiiradon Gre;enmrfd or Fmazomn” th he | man newspapers show that the pur. | our energies are now concentrated. s_!:ow. It is a memorial of two who i come weaned away from a life-lons 8 % Germans don’t want.—New Haven | yose and expectation to demoral- | There is, indeed, as scant patience in | found their work and their play | devotion to skat. I believe that more & Regarding heavy guns, Mr. Baker | Union. ize the spivit of the Krench capital | listening even to Prince Lichnowsky's | alike, in Art and in Sport, and tried | th this has been ed It has @8 added: S and thereby weaken the support of { revelations at the present as there | fo sharc their enjoyment with others. | heen our endeavor to bring = within & SAMFERICA.” the allied armies. It was certain [ would be in listening to reminiscent | It is the fulfilment of a promise to | reach of the army only the really ; —o— cnough that it could hive no great [ maddening uproar of a tornado. vecord some aspects, humorous and | gocd books. ;‘;r::i production of the heavy type (As the Kaiser would have It sung.) | ¢ffect in the direct destruction of life n\udcnlnuguv?oar of a tornado. otherwise, of phases of Irish life that ———— — g - 'S were more optimistic than My country vou would be and property, alarming though it What are these revelations at best | cre fast disappearing, and it is also - B v cn v il emcsed Bhe | L i inen. The ostimats of trg| And Al yonr iiherty might be on account of fatal results | save added details to the already{en attempt to preserve for her Brabilettmng Bt assigned us. For a city which 2 T'd erush with might in spots What it was expected to | overwhelming sum. total of what wo | friends the memory of the rare and £ @ $3,000,000, twico. the amount |y oy e ot It I could have my way; produce was terror and weakening of | knew months and yvears ago? ~We |delightful personality of “Martin | The burning alive of seven prisonsraifl hested from it, in the Third Liber-| ., ey : g met. Some of 1'd take your land today spirit. Some of _the Guq\mn news- | knew then and we know now that [ Tloss A]’ublvsh(;rf imp_ ‘T-f. warceang lish sailo ona Jaizn, there shoild be no VY guns have been produced | And then would make yvou pay papers, like the Cologna Gazettz and | Germany long and coldly planned to French soldic five Russians—in. gan campaign e and there is every indication of forth- What I think’s right! the Berlin Tageblatt, have declared | et loose this terrible deluge of hor- [ Japan and Its Art, by M. B. Huish, | the German n camp Branden-,. B o ot ome- | o e mereats : that such was the real effect mercly | rors on the world. We know now and LOLE. I burg. is icially established. Tha feth of that sum for. the Red| .00, SieE My natives over there sticking to the assumidtion that it|we knew long before Prince Lich “This volume gives in as concise | Statements of the Rritish and Germa iy T e e Will thwart you in the air, must be so; but not ouly the Paris | nowsky added his confirmatory testi- |« ferm as possible the information | governments agree or ihe fiet. 1 Someday those who have bcen an- On land and sea; press but all reports irom that quur- | mony to the record that Germany for | 3 Lich anyone secing so many objects | fire was accidental: thar to be exactly the op- | years had her enormous machinery [in his daily life redolent of Japa- :~“}|\m=«!” Eye-witne s e U that . . And working in your mills— posite effect. It strengthened the de- | for' wholesalé slaughter and devasta- | nese influence if not of actual Japa- | When the prison shac s fire t el S Riomitl ey ke i o with raptiire thrilig) termination of the Krench, If that [ tion tuned up 4nd ready to launch on:| nese manufacture, wishes to know | Germans made no attempt to rescue underestimated his abilty. He was For they love me! was possible. It certainly brought to- | its appalling carcer. We knew, too, | concerning their nature, make, and | the seven inmates: that they foreibly placed in the most trying position § gether the political elements to a[as we know now, that all that was |ornamentation.”—Publisher's Note, prevented other prisoners from ‘going ever experienced by any man in his| CKultur” shall fili the air more united support vi the Govern- | wanting was the pretext, and that i “aor Legiingiaciss ‘m\a‘ vv’\l.:vv( whex the en office but he has measured up to th Anoimirden tiosesmiogdaze L i 1t tisjpistextiadinoticoineiiuivonla e i Eeaves ot thanbese, oy A CHBEensonili LR EREIEEEL et e IRl s L e o Oppose it sway _ This miscalculation is in the same | created A gallery of portraits all sketched | (Toush the 3 . o xauieg EENonEly sk atevery turn, and hasmore than| T.ot mortal tongues be still line with that of the harbarous mur- | But irrelevant to present mental | from life. The brief hiographies of ; ¢d them one atter the other and they THE GERMAN CODE. merited the confidence placed in him Before the ‘“‘war lord's” will— der of Edith Cavell, the English | attitudes as is the bulk of these Lich- | distinguished men whom Mr. Benson | 11l back into ihe flames. The first y the President. The great and only “Bill,"” nurse in Igium, and the sinking of | nowsky disclosures, they contain one | has known, and whose influence and | 0 suffer in this way was Tohn Genw- N & somg aniiising thatures That's me, I say! the Lusitania with hundreds of Pas- | prediction which will evoke pravers | ciaracter have left their impress | 0Wer the English = s tas R sengers on hoard, including soveral | for fulfllment from the heart of all { upon him.”— Publisher's Note is (hus described in o memorindun, tsche Bank in carrying out the Who can guess? Our fathers’ God is Mars! Americans. Those things were to ter- | gvilized peoples: P [rlx;:v\\v.v l'”l) .h,\ eight Spanish ors ; The people bear his scars— rorize and weaken tha resistance of | «ne struggle Germany has Dro- | Old Roads Out of Philadelphia, by J, | Who saw it: ptage, propoganda and business = e My sons go free! the enemies of the Teutonic Power. | yoked will end in triumph for her op- T. Faris. “Those instde the dungeans _wera wetions in this country and South | Mac a3 WERS ek ol bl G SRS e e Instead, it increased the number of | ponents and she will stand aone with i ¥ [ heing choked. The Englishman War-shington?" A Tl Coreee) Aal fii enemies, intensified their enmity and | Austria and Hungas Foving Fighting: Adventy O e B by the Attorneyr General of New S - Verily. might is right— :xm.gl:hemul”mo df-le\‘min?n«m] 2 de- | * Such is the punishment GN;@;‘ i der o el hvm ]‘:\\‘h(‘nl‘l‘lr;\'\';‘\r(;-‘ws” fresing. fimsols g i & Tak ! feat the ruthless power at whatever | tormer . r to Great Britain O'Reilly : oniy & k State. Headline—*American troops laugh ERERi flo'{*n B pavCETT, cost. The making of that cosiy e a?::ar?:i:‘r‘ Defeat and dis- Sk [ his leaning out of the window gave hile the Germans probably | 2t German gas.” Naturally, it was in New York Times. long-range cannon and the close ci- | onorable isolation are what it comes | Russia’s Agony, by Robert Wilton, | 15 @ tremendons thrust in the chest. ueht and called President Wilson | 1aughing gas. s R entific calculation which enabled 1t 4, and scant retribution indeed for “A record of the Revolution by the | 'Mn“fi”‘m?:\fl‘x’q‘y‘[\‘:v Q‘-” ‘V‘ll:\\ m(:a“mm y hard names, his code name was e Whent, o hcoyg s siell oyl st e o il ctmeafrosEpatiln e | London Times Petrograd correspond- | e *or i L ll BN pted to plain “Herbert Miller”. The Kai- | Discussing the probable length of 5 5 RO A S e L 0 s CHE met out and the German soldier A possible 650,000,000 bushels, the [the midst of the Freuch capital, w2 e ; is probably beginning to under- | the War is like debating what color | greatest winter wheat crop since the | a marvel of ingenuity. The material Cotton in Liquidation. Shellproof Mack, An American's | Fo0dened his bayonet again nn‘d R Wisiow that this particnlar Milles | the Bouse should be whiteirashed, record breaking yield of 1915, to- [and mental calculations seem almost (From the Wall Street Journal.) Fighting Story, by Arthur Mack, | S0 the 'f.“’h°,‘: e gether with a probable increase of | miraculous, but the moral Ca‘culnt;on A remarkable liquidation in cotton AN ‘:\”1‘7‘0“;:\4::‘;\”{ horror tha il 3 i e Wi . 15 per cent. in the acreage of spring | was an utter failure, and the {hing |js now in progress. Following a bad | Short History of Science, hy W e o German brand of humor is evi- [ -Mutiny in the Austrian fleet is re- |'wheat—that is the forecast e proved not only not worth its | preak on e i o e Sedgwick and H. W. Trier. il e ,.'W[:l\j;, ho. ol \‘l\w“ t in the code word selected for [ POFted. No wonder, with the ship |report on .the condition of winter | cost, but worth more to the enemics of [ an Thursday of around $5 a bale in| “an authoritative study of the an .ml:\‘ prisopen of war iy S lin. The Teuton capital was|CTeWS recruited from 19 different | Wheat issued by the Chamber of Com- | its owner than to the owner itself. It | the future contracts. May cotton [ {iquity and ancestry of man, and of neiine uf Genower va rueh forward wn as “Frenchlike”. The Ger. | Dationalities. merce of the United States through |has helped, like the submarine, to | dropped $7,35 a bale and spots $9.25 | \no development of natural, mathe- | (oo ':m“_' o Briah sl Wade: onal B L i e ey i o its Committee on Statistics and Stand- | convince the world of the utter ruth- [ The total loss in the past two davs is | r.atical and physical sciences from | 0% MAGE 10 Bremt SIe FECE, RRES g est o % ards. lessness of the Teutonic Power and | §15 a hale for May, $10.25 for Octo- | their very beginnings m early civill- | (raean who had arrived on . tha world that Berlin is like France | The Berlin war office reports “local | “The present acreage now standing | the necessity of destroying it for the | ber and $14.25 for spot cotton. zation down to tho present century. ciop o ; s 3 hat it 1s 5o different. Von Papen | ®M8agements”. Perhaps the crown |In winter wheat,” says the report, “is | salvation of the German peopls and [ On April 4, the market reachod its| Based on lectures given to the under- | Apoiher eveowitness sald when ho appropriatcly described in the | Prince has been flirting again with | 20 PeF cent greater than the acreage | the safety of the world. crest at 34.30 cents forf}!ny, .48 for | graduate students at the Massachu- | ang othoer prisoncrs attempted o zo e, his name being Hoggson, al. |the.70-mile gun. |at the same time in 1917. But the R Octaber and 36 cents for spot.. Then | cefts Tnstitute of Technology."—A. L. | (o the rescue they placed a cordsn : greatest promise of a high yield of something happened. The market| A Rooklist. X German soldiers at a distance jof ugh it is not clear why the pork — winter wheat is found in the general GRRupal s Cahn ) Mipecs. began a downward siide, which, with iae oF Ry O ity ¥ hily should be brought into ais-| Local camouffage—A bootblack on | high condition of the wheat, a condi- e “ALWAYS LIABLI” n this paper and also the local news published herein. Baker’s prediction, made before the These Blouses are the most unusual values when you consider the price of Silks today, we suggest that every woman should make an effort to see these values which are being offered at this special selling. Buy all you need for present and future. We were most fortunate in securinz such exceptional values and want you should bencfit In the savings. NNUAL LINEN WEEK offers extraordinary savings TOWELS, TOWELI? y LINEN PILLOW The impassioned appeal. “Give | realize how sadly they were mistaken. LRI L resident \Wilson has designated us “to give generously dnuation of the important work distress, restoring the e of war, and assisting in main- ng the morale of our troops and troops and peoples of our Allies have given one or more men to the ifice on the part of those, gh not privileged to bear arms, of ono spirit, purposc and deter- | can force now in France represents the policy of fully equipping every g nt upon them and for the ur- ent v man before he hecgins his journey necessities of our Allies. lew Britain will be asked to con- te $100,000, or a thousandth part he total. There is no question t subscribing the minimum ' in city. The only uncertain feature “Barly manufacturers' estimates as (New York Times.) Ordnance Department in January has s New Britain has never known to fail when called upon 3 v d o ¢ all re tagonistic and unjust tow: As spi they're on your hills ter show that it had war funds, and it will surely not 3 oward Secre- ) such an enviable record the of the 20th. The campaign be one week from next Monday. pare for it 1 ut the German code used by the prica, which has just been deciph- ds slowly but exceedingly fine. (Chicago Dally News) occasional reactions, reached the low Fiction. iBee TR ChE bayonets, so as ce through the relationship. Hugo | Main street near Arch advertises g | 1i0n Which has improved steadily | When in the fateful days of July, [ points of Thurlsd:\y. r{*prose‘nflng a| Blown In By the Draft: Camp Yarns (v could not get near.’ ; 3 s i 4 » ary - cas >russi . $7.30 a bale fn May, $34.50 in ‘tcd At Ohe of the Great s T tor i ; e 1 | since the first of April 1914, the military caste of Prussia |loss of § e Collected At Ohe o he reat Phe German government, while ad- midt, former manager of the |Shine for a nickel, but demands ten “Bstimates of coming vields are |and the German monarch undertook | October and $42.25 for spots, and National Army Cantonments By ' it the death of Genower from pl. who is now in the federal pris- |'Cents for the job. always uncertain because of the pos- |to force a general war in FEurope in | closed at the low prices of the dav. B s ar CorrensbhieHe S e Atlanta, had several code —_———— sible v itudes of weather and |order to realize their insane ambition The se“m‘”flf‘!' insatiate demana for By Frazier Hunt CGierman gavernment’s word on . reds 3 i sl ! 3 3 For g v ite 3 4 rotton for immediate consum .- e ox . o One of“them was ' Sidney | | Roumani depredations of inscct enemies. But |of world hegemony it suited their [ White co! or i ihiEne vorth nothing unless un- i Sieanas 459 ania’ has been added o the | o crop has come through the irying | purpose to pose as lovers of peace | tion was the ‘principal factor in push- | 1y o of the Chapdolaines, by G contradicted. In this case it is eond i . A .‘ er was-Andrew Bro- | list of nations'crushed by the Hun “In | month of March with a higher condi- | who were being forced to undertake a | ing prices to the top.' Mills needed Cahle. tradicted by the testimonv of | Herr Schmidt took so many |the name of peace’. But a day of |tion than it entered it. and with | defensive campaign against envious [ cotton, and holders, knowing their ..o witnesses:; of the eight Spanish.sailons fices that he should have been | reckoning is coming. | moderately favorable weather from |aund jealous Powers determined . to | need, made thelr own. prices. Thel \ o1 Adventures of Henry and Me, {aken from the Gravina, and of two B iiie insiend ot Andy P z now on there is promised a production | isolate and destroy the German Em- {spinner could only plead “my poverty, by W. A. White prisoners of war. Tt will e assur S > instead o ndy. S i {of at least 600,000,000 bushels. 1t |pire. France, they said, had invaded | not my will, consents. . . ow by everybody that the eight Spar names seem to have been espe- The Kaiser has wired to Chancel- |may go as high as 650,000,000 | German soil nd had thrown bombs But the great battle raging since| ay.. i, war, by Andreas Latzko. and the two prisaners of war are tel v favored by the Huns. For in- | lor von Hertling: “God will help to | bushels if all goes well”. on Nuremberg. Russia had mobil- | March 21 has changed all this. It ;s . o« ow ing the t¥ulh,' osbecially N thei: e, Ambassador Dumba, who was | Victory over all”. This indicates that | ©On the subject of spring wheat tho | ized and had marched into East Prus- :m“ '"‘:‘“‘:‘3 fi“"';""w““‘] s Pfl_‘“'}w"‘f“"‘f Threshold, by M. B. Cooke stories all agree, and that the Gor- i q ; 't o “There is little to be said | sia even before the Kaiser's ultima- | tions 2R TR ARG YO : e LA man government is telline as muel A the old firm is s s bust caont B IRatc 1« o r months tc d back to Austria by the State e still doing business. of spring wheat, but that little is most { tum expired. These were some of the | Tapidly a qp().‘lfln\ll.‘ rm”“‘:: ys"-”‘"hn ‘k‘) rtment, was called “Lawrence T encouraging. Seeding is nearly com- | lies cireulated by Berlin to confuse [ come. In A CasERCO e ay’, while the notorious Karl| Governor Holcomb declares that | pleted and under most favorable con- | and poison the minds of German So- was designated by the good old | the proposed Willard-Fulton cham.- | ditions. One of the most important of | cial Democrats and foreign neutrals. . ‘hich is the large amount of moisture | Nothing now remains of the fabric of « arney”. jonship boxing match cannot be neq | ¥CH 18 jae 8 g : A = P o e held |y ihe sub-soil. The outlook is for | of falschoods, inventions and shams en diplomatic relations became | in thiy state. The Governor is about | un increased acreage over last year of that constituted the Kaiser's wmoral | g 't situation than ever before. | despatch office at Hoboken the rained between this country | the tenth executive to deny the fight- | about 15 per cent. The increuse is o | offensive. To those who are not wil- ““,1‘1:0““"’"‘m the price fixing question | brarian in charge added to the f (From the Boston Herald.) nany this fact wWas made | €rs permission to stage the bout. If |large in Towa, Wisconsin and Nebras- | fully blind to Prussian perfidy and | Tien Jo0 (58 BEEC YRR SRR ) eceipt: “These are doubly wel- Do you get the full contrast be- o Beriin by a code message | the sovernors of all the states would | K2 tha! "l:h:';“‘::aé‘):‘;e‘“e ol “:"“I“‘““}:,””‘:::Sll’:‘"_'(‘w":i‘:l"‘}"‘:‘S“:I"Vf":“‘ B on e e nfidont that such. a | come for having been prepared for tween (he British bandwork at Zid: K ead-—"Father eails today”.|only make it unanimous the matter | plant is up the condition is excellent”. | 1914, was detormined to force war [FBERS RNl n e question ” d 1's spies evidently comsid- | would be settled positively. The report continues, with refe - padd stubbornly resisted every honest m:m s 3 The . . kY % TR Where the Souls of Men: Are Calling. truth as i tdid when it officially g e by Credo Harris sured the president of the United a non-essential. -~ War is our only arr TRt meadogtr e business, and all available tonnag AN e Seatanitnur iy must be pressed into service. As ships > are built they will be devoted to that In acknowledging four packages - e use. Therefore, there 1s less hope for | hooks sent recently to the A Different Methods of Wi . Bt | ufe. T have mever received a finer brugge and the Hun's lons-ransdiY turbs | 1ot of books for eur purpose.” shelling. of WORSR and LeHIENeE: sl “Frankfurter Zeitung” is ap- Pari measure will never pass congr

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