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S NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 24, 1918 ~ Britain Herald. D -'PUR', SHING COMPANY. Proprietors. track attendants, bucket-shop tendants, fortune-tellers, frequenters, and idle of | Nor classification difference at- pool room all make classes, does any in the status of anyvone in- cluded in the foregoing category, The fact that a rloyed that s 4 Iy (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. my ferald Building, 67 Church 8t i The McMillan Store, | NEW SUMMER DRESSES { INVOILES AND GINGHARNS | SHOWING THE “PEGGY PAIGE” ~ and “VERGINIA DARE” DRESSES For which we have the exclusive agency New:’ Britain. You will find several extremely smart dresses Priced $5.98, $7.98, $10.00 and $12.50 at the Post Ofce at New Britam | jRecond man Class Mail Matter. ! is not usefully em- | Watch the Red Cross Figures Go Higher and Higher The huge tabulated sign that extends from 2nd floor to the roof of our building gives th daily totals. WE ALL WANT THE RED CROSS NURSE TO GO “OVER TH TOP” Before Saturday night. So, Give, Give, Give. — will outwe the { by carrler ta any part of the city | 5 cents a week, 65 cents a month | ption for paper to be sent by mail, | her in o in advance, 60 cents a month, 0 & year. condition | ne has drawn late order num- | the draft or that he has been | granted deferved classification Paragraph O is of cspecial interest shall non-useful oc- lv_profitable advertising medium in eity Circulation books and vress always open io advertisers. It be re prescribes ths hose also arded s having rald will be found on sale at Hot s, News _Stand, 42nd St. and Broa New York City; Board Walk., At He City, and Hartford Depot. cupations who are ecmpdoyed in cou nections with games, sports, and amusements, except actual perform- EXTREMELY IMPORTANT CLEARANCE TAILORED SUITS Here are two hundred and twenty-five man-tailored suits, which have received quick marching orders. Not one in the lot has been here more than forty-five days, and in TELBPHONE CALLS In legitimate theatrical geem to ers concerts, operas or perforers, indicate that muet find other erter military Department has This would | baseball play- | r of the Associated Press. oclated Press s oxclusively entitled CeReGER G use for republication of all news ted to it or not otherwiss credited the War his paper and also the local mews ot ishea nerein. { hs | ruling will be given in regard to those | engaged in the national pastime until July 1 or thereafter, when a specific 1§ case ers ervice, . but an sunced no for may come up for decision. The entirc regulation is most com- that those who which to in our showing. each. mendable for it means have not occupations are es- | sential wiil increase the size of our fighting forces and it will “‘couple the other grounds be used the face of the constantly advancing prices of wool NEW WASH SKIRTS Of Pique, Gaberdine, Poplin and Washable Satins. Priced $1.98, $2.49, $2.98 to $5.98 each. SILK SUITS AND COATS That are Cool and Dressy for warm weather wear, they’re made of good wearng, all silk taffetas, in Navy, Black and Copen. Specially priced at $25.00. GEORGETTE { BLACK SATIN AND CREPE BLOUSES l GEORGETTE CREPE ‘i \ | industrial basis with cloths of all kinds and scarcity” and advance in cost of tailor labor makes this a most attractive important offering. .\ GREAT VARIETY OF THE SEASON’S MOST ATTRACTIVE STYLES; COLORS INCLUDE CLAY, SAND, TAN, PEKIN BLUE AND GRAY AS WELL = AS SHEPHERD CHECKS. Sizes 16 to 44. for cxeption and will require that emption shall ing effectively to the fare of the nation.” any man pleading e ‘unfon of freemen of freedom. FFALO PLATFORM OF '48 for = the on any ground whatsoever also show that he is contribut- industrial wel- VIVA, ITALTA! live Italy! From every heart this wish is expressed e brave Allles who are today he the GIVE, THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE. WHY NOT The Red merrily on, The thermometer which up until yesterday registered the con- tributions, was found to quate when the total shot $150,000 third anniversary of ountry’s entrance the war. In city, in every in the entire nation, Amer- e gathering today to give vent feelings of sympathy we the land of Garibaldi. realize better 0,00 Seventy UITS $25 Sixty Sixty SUITS Thirty-five SUITS || SUITS $27.50 AND $29.00 had been willing only ! into Cross campaign goes every be inade- up to over the “high- was only $100,- 000, New Britain's quota. Today the total more than $183,- 000 the committec charge justly confident that when the final result is announced Monday we will be well” over $200,000. Why not strive to make it a quarter of a mil- lon dollars? | all To- than ever how the consequences might have d not Italy joined the Allies fight against autoeracy. Hun- | thousands of Austrian troops ave been thrown against the and French forces and the would have been even more than it was. prd Robert well said, § come through the trials of h clearer unity, yesterday mark as Embroidered Silk and Bead desgns, made with BLOUSES roll or sailor collars, in Priced $3.25, and $4.98 each, white and flesh. . Spec- ially priced at $4.98 each. VOILE BLOUSES in ever so many dainty styles to chose from, they launder nicely; they're inexpen- sive. at popular - price they're the most desirable Blouse this season. VOILE BLOUSES, plain strpes, priced 98¢ and $1.25 each. Others with large collars and roll collars. $1.49 and $1.98 each. . Hand Embroidered Voile Blouses at $2.98 each. VOILE BLOUSES in extra sizes of a very fine quality white Voile at $2.25each. BUY GLOVES AND NECKWEAR To wear Sunday and Memorial Day. SILK GLOVES in white, black and VALUES $37.50 AND $45.00 vater” on it is something and in is That would be two and cne-half times as much as we were asked to contribute, but what of that? The boys in France do not ask of their leaders, “What of Cecil self-confi- if possible, with greater than she had before. Italy Wn herself ready to extend to ressed Poles, Czecho-Btovaks, lians, and ugo-Slavs, the prin- | which her own unifica- and on which she will go forward to a greater | What is true of the United nd France, and Great Brit- | rue the longer continues, the more powerful the 3 white and colored d, is the mini- mum you requ until it aladly, 0, and us? give their called They give lives, upon to do also give until it Britain’s hurt too. and 0 i Priced can ik 2 across the se: we not bon hurts? New martyrs ceeaaean s“ founded to give just what was asked of them, they would not have won fame. New not ¢00. immortal of Ttaly, and Britain has shown that it is $100,- | satisfied with Will the twice giving only bow be ple and spirit must And the pagifists were silent for awhile, ting about for a new way of sowing division among the peop opposed to Germany. Now the Eng lish ones have found it, and pre- umably there will soon be an echo ¢ it over here. Their new way is to in FACTS AND FANCIES. integral force Thy resu press e it & 1o rescue ion among the Allies into a unit, and each an ally to r. a and Italy city satisfied with amount when $50 The trouble with a Lot of Folks is that they Send their Prayer in One Direction while they're Packing Up to Travel In Anothe Binghamton Fress. giving that 000 more can be not? All together raised as easily as | Out of thy very sto marble, and mortar, Spell of oid ! | | | are bound to- now,tor the | passions and yearnings the new ore closely than e. The Italian armies are the with us v goal, like ours, is the solid ient of the rights of people lons to determine their own now ever common enemy bt living as well as their own | re happy message to Italy today could be than that of Wilson which is being read | lished broadrast in that coun- In the ‘concluding para- all concur most heartily. Tt ows: ever-increasing resolution kb we shall continue to stand in the sacred common cause, salutes the gallant King- taly and bids her godspeed:” Viva Italia! [HAT OTHERS MAY LIVE. | { o} W DRAFT LAW. 1d be borne in mind that the lations issued Provost General Crowder, which have ed the “work-or-fight la y to citizens of militar om 21 Mon and boys over under military age the present, at least, ngage in “non-cssential’ oc- by to 31. or con- Those who of not in- the new regulation at all le lerstood th draft so-called t find July 1 nationat are not ardless age, are is very clear and It prescribes that age who non-useful some essential are posi- occu- service. The The war has ad- as rea- is also clear. sorganized the lof industrial it the enormous to men normal man power industrial cessary suceess in not be given serv effectively the prs and shall choice nilitary and useful B to which occupations are e new regulations are very Those who_hold non-essen- ons, according to the word- latest edict, are clerks in piters bartenders, club , hotel workers, apartment and Pkers, elevator pployes, operators, gamblers, race- was evidently | communication, ! good faith name citt- | not to | en- | or else be inducted | the | ta woman! $250,- 00¢ mark! GIVE, THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE. ANONYMOU! We receipt of a letter to- day about the Red Cross parade Sat- are in urday which is highly interesting and which contains statements that are bound cause a sensation if cculd only published. But a fectly good story is spoiled the writer of the letter to withold her name. to they per- because has seen fit We say “her” its contents the letier penned by a lady. It pity that she falled to give her name. It would not have been used, Lad she so requested, but it is a well- Known rule in newspaper offices that anonymous contributions or commun- to the waste basket. Anyone who sends into this office a letter, kind of that how be becouse from is a ications must be consigned or other need not expect be published. no matter its contents may be, un- less the author of it gives evidence of or her tioned this mat- it will important by signing his We have me before and this is the it. ter last refer- ence we shall make to white The 'green, and red! Ninety thous France German na Amevican troops to May. And on likely. early in too, ex- liners, most thrés league star General Crowder tens to strike out every big in the draft age. Red Cross the The Press stops only at Ex- quarter of a New Britain n:illion station. Testifying in a murder trial, a wom- of aving another man’s When her husband kissed him do that hoth I Just like an accused wife said told me 1 he must not and then we od.” Convicts in the death house at Sing Sing began to sing, sing, recently as a fellow prisoner was being marched the 1c chair. What sang was not announced but it might well ha been “Where do we go from here? they GIVE, THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE. is it that a ready to fight for something worth phia Inquirer. Why pacifist i anyth while? always except ~Fhiladel- It is not enough that vour chick- ens go home o roost: kcep home to scatch.—Memphis cial-Appeal. Comumer- When pride turns a man’, is, sure to look the cago News. It there is anybody affe the airplane scandal on eitt who is afraid of the truth as well prepare for trouble 2. Hughes is on his trail World. is Borne them at | From terraced Trieste | Thy New York | We would cheerfully comply with | the rcquests of ‘several politicians to print cerfain things about each other in this column, we are not hankering an ea visit to a penitentiary or a prolonged stay in the cemet Be reasonable, entleme i Daily News. ° S Ttalia Rediviva! Italy, Italy, changeling of Dropped of the gods in the world; Crooned in thy thunder, to its echocs hurled; With breath of thine Alps blow mias- mas asunder for eld wonder, the lap cradle by crag-riven E'er in new conflicts well-known | { Rise, of | | | ling on the Allic And front the new future with ban- | ners unfuried! Cradled and buried hast thou without | number | stated them, Princes and prelates and lords of | cmprise; No more may thy soil foreign despots encumber, Untrammeled thy soul shall mune with the skies Ttaly, out of thy centuries’ slumber, Unified, glortfied, conqueror, com- Frank and from Ostrogoth, Lombard, and Rhaetian, Masterful purpose within thee strains; Genoese, Florentine From Pisan, Venetian Commingle their passion and art in | thy veins; While iron of Roman with fire Grecian Transfusing hardening of the and molding thec, remains, from the North the heavy skies lower, Threatens the Teuton's vain storm- ing and stress of the mountains the powe might of no less; glacier and torrent, from tem- Down where Thine and seas Thy thy secular heroes From { short time, | obviously rise! | restating the | phrase still | l is spun; on thy breezes blue water, Vo of poct and potentate Quenchless they’ll carry, ruin and slaughte warrior sons the Hun! and o'er thy run; through Thy to the of doom to thy tides Tyrrhenean, With triumphs hef rows behin glorious duty pacan That all the free shall bind, into the heights empyrean They lift the new chant of thy pas- sionate mind! ore thee and sor- shall burst in one nations im chorus of thine own Tlaly, Ialy, Dropped of the world; Crooned in thy thunder; the caldron hurled; reborn to sunc Thy challenging more unfurled! changeling the gods of wonder, in the lap of cradle hy crag-riven Into of strife ever Crusader, the last yoke gonfalons once H. M. Donner, in N. Y. Times. ifist Attack. (From the New York Times.) The pacifist of allack changed, All last vear they by wl ma Hrm has h they real- the United war aims.”” The not stncere. The govern- fheir waf alms, and re- again and. again, and time the pacifists would wait a and then, as if whatever had been stated. would the demand, *S your The origin of the demand was German, and back of it was if Mr. Wilson and Mr. could be badgered into war aims often enough Iy meant BEngland States—to “state their demand was ments stated re- new e aims, war the hope that Llovd Geor one of them would in some unguarded ay something which would give offence to the other's country or to France, and thus excite dissension among the Allies. This form of attack had to he abandoned after Brest-Litovsk, It rested on the holiow that if the Allies would only state their war aims Germany would state hers, and it would be found tpat, after all, the adversavies werc Avm far apart. Prest-Litovsk blew that pretense fo atoms. It became evident that, in the face of an cnemy war were openly the dismemberment military domination Connt: silly enough to give her the chance, it was mere folly to go on asking the western Allies to zive her proof of their own sweel reasonableness, pretense S0 whose of any were cal- | nothing | aims | and | | many i was ] structed | merely | | that { outsidc | is-demanding sinnate that the British government would not listen to any peace terms It Germany proposed them, that Ger- has proposed them or may them, and that if she did Mr. George would hide the fact the unsuspicious Mr, Wilson—it their cue to affect great con- sideration for the president as an honorable but guileless man who is being betraved by the malevolent Premier——and force the British and American soldiers into an unnec war to the death. There is no r pose Lloyd from ! why they should affect so much solici- tude for America, except that they hope to stir up doubt and uncasiness here. So House the question came up of Commons, and Mr. oblized—wearily and disgusted- Iy, no doubt—to settle the ugly and malodorous phantom so carefully con- in the laboratory of the Frankensteins. He did it by reciting the bald truism that Allies are ready, as they always been, to listen to seriou peace pronos: Mr. Asquith express cd great relief and satisfaction at this assurance, Nevertheless, the question will come up again, and yet again, as it Mr. Balfour had never said this, for the pacifist method of attaclk the Champaign, Ill., News.) not wgenerally known to the universities of the States that some of our pro- are infected with pacifist doc- ew know how baleful -is influence upon the thousands of at a period when the nation itself for the gum busincss in the Balfour pacifist the have any (From It is those of United fessor: trines . We must blame our intellectual a measure for their failure to visualize the Prussian aims, They should bave been the first to issue a warning; vet the majority have stood idly by, littie concerned with our unpreparedness It is said that professors of the Ger- man language and literature have ap- reared almost blind to actual condi- tions, or inmclude among their num- hers move pacifists and pro-Germans than tralned students of history and economies. It Is not open to question that the insidious propaganda of the pacifist today is an even greater men- ace than the blarant shoutings of the pan-German. There is no place in the pacifist profe ce to the patriotism and aceristic of Americans, e to succeed in our fight for and rishteousness we must th disloyalists. As the rogr < and our college men calied we have our chance to When falling off in attendance trenchment and a diiction of the fo in Americ rooms for is a me jueals cha I we democr: veed © wa strike. re- teaching our universities, let us cast out the deserving—the pacifist, un shades of grey, pongee and cordovan, plain or fancy embroidered backs. Our kinds give Satisfactory wear. 79¢, 89¢, $1.00 to $1.50 pair. DAINTY NEW NECKWEAR Call and see the ncwest neck fixings that have just arrived. The y're creations in the wanted fabrics ‘ adapted for warm weather wear. Among them are ex- quisite new style collars, collar and cuff sets, vestees, guimpes and wash vests. lars in white and flesh. Endless Satin roll and Gypsy col- variety to choose from. Priced 49¢, 69¢, 98¢ to $1.98 each. SUMMER SLIP-ONS AND SWEATER KNITTED SLIP-ONS in all shades, also two- tone color combinations. Priced $7.25 each, KNITTED WOOL SLIP-ONS in the soft new summer shades, and $4.98 each. ) SLIP-ONS with collars and sleeves. They? wool; shown in the newest shades. sleeveless styles. Priced $2.98, $3:98 all Priced $5.00, $5.50, $6.00 and $7.50 each, Other summer wool Sweaters, coat styles, with belts—sleeves and collar Priced up to $11.50 each. HOSIERY AND UNDERWEAR CHILDREN’S WAIST UNIGN SUITS. ments in 1. Nothing like to see these practical garments. Priced 50¢, 69¢ and 79¢ suit. MEN’S BALBRIGGAN UNDERWEAR. W 2 to 13 years. 3 gar- them for the children. Ask Sizes for children We will put on sale sixty dozen Men's Shirts and Drawers at a special sale price Saturday. Drawers, ankle length, made with double Special Saturday 69¢ pair. UNION SUITS—Vests, Pants and Bodies sleeves. seat, with strap back. women in all styles. Shirts, long or short for MEN’S UNION SUITS 69c¢ to $1.50 Suit. MEN’S BLACK LISLE SOCKS. 25¢ grade. Saturday Special 5 pair for $1.00. WOMEN'S FIBRE SILK HO E. White and colors, 59¢, 79¢ $1.00 pair.