New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1918, ew Britain HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Al bacl : 5 the nar g ran drive in Champagne is approach- H ld- sarily be lost it John King, leader of ! Brobmn, the famous abolitionist, is The Next Blow. era Fairfiel were dropped, but | said to have been born. And while (From the New York Tribune.) in ashes, Tie multiplying signs that the Ger- evi nents presented by | his home hes a-moulderin fod aatiy (sunday excoptedy at 4:18 . m- | € S ST PRl 1g 1ts term must be accepted with at Herald Buflding. 67 Church St the a chy e ¢ demonstrations of the us t understanding that a new ered at the. Post OfMce at New Britain | con and K be eliminat o i be put. conducted un- | German blow is imminent. The at- @ Mail Matter. ! I as tecond Class Mal all consideration this yea: e au e il oottt taik of ATaech o b leriy ooie o @ bv earrier to any part of the city Na it o i AT A = a4 Aldat S : . sl i s R T R S s BShG § wallow this bitter velati most mothers. Milk is | Tt was not until nine days later that payuble in advance, 60 ceats a month, $7.00 a year. dose without T ‘ And it ood food means the Germans opened their second suc- onlv profitable advertising medlum in | Logapstils ¢ prote g lies, sood 1 DRlghts fcasshilldrive——that ! Blander g the ofts Cirewlation hooks and Dress (are not hecded, there will soon be & 3 5 v between April 1 and April 9 they made ¥oum always open to advertiser TG S e e a desperate atiac on Arras which s e fiy;:n‘r’iou:l?n;ns:.Tn:lfifl\'bo;;: overshadow all eise on the political | Folish troops, under the Folish fla A0 NouEAmn dicatio nige SgRle N el s SRR ISR e S e e s the onutraged feclings | are now on the firing line opposite | cesstul operation sonth of Ypres, We b O Har Depot. N 5 e e 2 lantie City. and tord Dep! of the lieutcnant-governor and. his Germans. Many of them eseaped erlceiaohn lonk for an im- erionsly intended as the latep sue-7 TELEPHONE CALLS ht-hand n are soolhed, Wilson's | from Germany while others have rel- | mediate attack by the Germans else- ness Office ....... . 5 orial Rooms . stronghold, Bridgeport, is lis és who are suffering under the "1V _ second measure of the prob- Member of the Associated Prees. of their attack is found in the itied : . Associated Press Is exclusively ent Kinobc s o b ot - onl Mhel Boles ravi e : apabonlns to the uee for republication of all newa | = i ) : visions used ereditec to~ it or not otherwise credited | National Commiites nd it hardly ) he Jun a warm 3 ent drive On March 21 the Ger- v han tac 3 with it R papor sud dleo the lossl to Le imasgined that he wiil ont- : ans attacked with fort o bublished her & y 4l whith was steadily increased to yight, but, at any rate. all eves will he U s ety twa the end of the operas focused on him and \Wilson from MOTHER OF MERCY. (idme Goimorm ens it oo turn a somersault this year 1 occupation of the now on. 5 G 2 used before. Arras and about forty 1 hy the Red Cross i divisions were employed in the Flan- | The Universal Mother ders operation. The striking power of the first German offensive between the Oise and the Yser was therefore one hundred a forty divislons. So far the Germans have not used ahove fittr divisions in Champagne. and at T Thetigh gone are ail the old familiar THE DRAFT AGE. SHnEh) % The smiles he loved, the hands he Congress s dering a proposal ‘earned to touch, to extend the draft age to provide | 0 peace had taken attered wines, pe zone himp off upon crutch. I earnestly appeal to every in size may be carried out at once hough fled are all the joys he ever lan, woman and child to pledze Herctofore, Secretary Baker ha Krew 5 s Saey 3 . 1, mother, cne i i the previous aitack along the Lys emselves, on or before the |opposed the iden, his contention being | He finds them, meiher. once again in In o sense, all speculat as & h of June, to save constantly that sufficient men for present needs where this new blow is to fall is idle. hd buy regularly Government can be raised under the existing reg- | For vou have all a loved one’s magie QCCUpying the inside of a semi-circle, T3 e all g pourities. The person who buys ulations. The reason for Mr. Baker’s power the Germans may strke at will anv- ar Savings Stamps transfers objection to a change in the draft To soothe his troubled: breast, --to :;::,e:.sr;;r”:t”n Vmfl": j”d L]”P‘ wm; g 7 banish sighs, al effectiveness. and they are bound pn.rclmsdnT power of his age was his fear that to extend the | 40 \ou¢ the ills that haunt his dark- i to choose the goint which offers the oney to the United States Gov- age might prove injurious to vital in- ened hour, promise of the least resistance, either ment until after the war. dustries. It is just as necessary, he | To conjure zunshine out of clouded | bY reason of inherent weakness or May there be none unenlisted declares, to keep such industries as | sKies. 0y hgcausg of the dispatch of reerves to e e Rl e S * The solden quest of life hegins anew. the threatened front before Paris 0 2 Ay the railroads and the steel industry at | A,,q hope comes dancing back be- | Thus we may asume that if the Al- oduction and savings. their highest, cfficiency as it is to mo- cause of yo. lies have weakened their forces before | WOODROW WILSON. bilize an adequate army. Secretary Amiens or bhetween Tille and Arras What matters if in unfamiliar keys | the Germans will follow up their 2 5 He hears the drone and hum of ' earlier successes on one of ei [E WAR SAVINGS CAMPAIGN. |should be nimeteen years. The maxi Rl ey ol ° fhess mum may be placed as high as 45 What matters the houlevards he | If the first purpose of the Germans If the proposal meets with favor in sees , be to produce a dislocation of the resel s aAds a e s Evoke no memories, are leagues | entire Allied line betwe, Me Savings campaign, which begins | COnBress, and is made a law it will | e SR £ e the Meuse Sieh ih ihe ol o away 3 and the sea, preliminary to the de- Jaudlsh ns wIUS ehe uniisiied ARty peo a1l Bt voull ) end onllohead ! ieier oF 4 wiiicns b thing i g . Mlson i s . S et ¥ supr blow, nothing is Bw Britain. This campaign does | Which President Wilson favored. The | ' gouslifiohylong ; more likely than that thev will now inaugurate anything new. It |fact that men who have opposed any j The n::;,r(m;;; fgf‘ls him back to life aifack somewhers betweon Rhelms and L rather to give impetus to the | Proposal to extend the draft age are ! ‘ml 'i\mfn :hy express 'purrm olr dis- _ iR S now advocating such a move, is proof i . other moulsll cpemniznegEIsRveryiistron s Sandiims i jhase of \‘\u‘.. faxmgs Stamps. It Bt g e i e The Jr(?].e\h ) all the mother souls | ,o,taut cection of the Allied defence. | helps to alleviate the present situa- LIST OF b n IN IT real “‘drive’”, in that its purpose ' st g 7 1‘_‘ 9 3"' ko <o dwells | Mloreover, since the situation be- ) tion and goes to insure our final suc- | NEW BOOKS AT THE NDW BRITA[ Il the nation are rapidly awakening to eir sons to fight our cause d S e e o i || et millionfold o . A - ront is critical. it is more likelv that ey = Foch has drawn reserves from the Germany and Russia. Confessions of the Czarina, by Count who wishes to prepare for war ex- east than from the west and that he i Vassill (pseud. of Countess Rad- | perience The author is a war (From the New York -Times) ziwell) { nurse in France.”"—A. L. A. Booklist. 2 moderate estimate the strikinz for-e oft to them would be another fiftv divisions. Thev have then the pawer to deliver anather blow as heavy 2mple man power so that the Presi- {dent’s program of an army unlimited as the vecent thrust at the Aisne and —_ Baker thinks the minimum judge from the enthusiasm dis- d at the rally last evening, the by, will be pushed with great vigor i ———— e gather in an army of new sav- neds of the hour. is a) air- For now, more than ever be- |the neds of the hour. Tt is also fair In you. ‘Through vou Democracy ly good evidence that they intend to T el 1ive! ’ do as President Wilson “suggests.’ Through yon the harassed ranks of | If. as Provost Marshal General Freedom hold! Mother of mercy, naught that we can Crowder has indicate s not the | ° : country during the current year | Crowder has indicated, it is not the do idea of army officials to call on men | con aver pay our debt of love to you in cla other than one this year. ELIAS LIERERMAN unless it appears that they have been in New York Times it is necessary to save and to ice thrift. It has been stated on has exposed. an important but less vital region to attack, rather than We know: something of the invineci- “Although there are many details | invite a new assault on a nt dan- |Ple superiority of integrated or self- ' which diverge (rom the real facts, | Why God Loves the Irish. by H. J. zeronsly weakened in the March and | contained and self-sufficient industries the author is astonishingly well in- Desmond it v over athers which are dependent upon ‘ormed in the main fhings."'— bd . . The thing that is of ntmost im- |Mmarkets for their supplies, and must Times Fiction. portance to remember now is that the | 9€duct several profits paid to others 7o Day and Night Stories, by Blagk~ before they can calculate upon any, Dere Aable, Love Letters. of a wood authority that the war expenses average about $400.000,000 per as against one-third of that nt for 1917. Accordingly, the of this country must see to it the Government is not forced to il more than it receives. And this " affords the people an admir- opportunity to help flnance the While everybody may not be granted deferred classification erron- PAGTS AND BANCIES. i Beemen hiis nol el ) o ; eously, then it will be necessary to cision by any one of the thrusts that | PTOfits for themselves. An industry Rookie, by E. Streeter, which produces complete manufac- S | Drifting (with Browne), by Byers tures from the ore cumulates profits Doctor’s Diary in Damaraland. by N “leteher. at each stage of manufacture. An- F. B. Walker. Whimsical reminiscences of a other industry which buys its mater- Al voung Iinglishman who is conva. ials loses these profits, and may even Germany As It Is Today, by Gyril | lescing in a British hospital ) he unable to secure materials at times Browne There is no plot, but much qujet of greatest need. A Russo-German Ll | English humor, and good characters economic combination would integrate . Keeing Our Fighters Fit-—For War ization.’ A. L. A. Booklist the two nations' resources in a man- and After, With a Special Stafe- ‘ T ner impossible to overcome. Germany ment Written for the Book by Enchanted Barn, by Grace H. is incomparable in organization and President Wllson, by E. F. Allen Lutz. rivals all in the application of science and R. B. Fosdick ! Cloan, sentimental. uplifting and. extend the draft age very soom. At But we do wish the English would ' Ne has undertaken. althoush his first the rate we are now sending troops to | keep their darned sparrows out of our , drive toward Amiens had a weight war garden.— Bridgeport Telegram which suggested that it was intended to achieve a “knock-out” if possible. SR S0 GO Gy o0 Gaih About the only thing vou can buy ' His strategy has seemed. and seem o purchase Liberty Bonds, there | |ON8eT: even though a quarter of a | for a pickel nowadays is & three-cent ' rather first by a series of blows de- Bl & motsan wholicannot buy million will be added to its number | stamp.—Kansas Industrialist. :;s;red’frnmdvh;\ interior position to 5 i 2 ifio e T slocate and disorganiz o r more War Savings Stamps sev- | hroush | reclassification and thel . Ly goon packers of Chicago | svstem of allisd r]a!fr'n:“:i‘ af!:‘do n:::.lf,' imes during the year. Wages | “Ork or fight” order. don’t care who makes the laws. If ' and only then—to risk all In a final igher now than at any time in There is no reason why the age |you will only let them make the meat | thrust. So far he has contented him- bty oz el country:flreas, | ShoRid ot BSIRRAaL e e sons Rl s m R ena e e y\l;'h, hr'.": offorts only after ey, jnqustry. . Germany s so weak'| o ow { full of good ideas. it will please ng people have the increased |2Pout as judiciously as was the case Prussian diplomacy proceeds on | apric I‘nf"‘::“fi to be checked by the | ,erjculturally that her customs policy | Latest Light on Abraham Lincoln and | readers who like of living to mest but still | Vith the original registration. There 2 S i esernyes; has been agrarian protectionism In! War-Time Memories, by Ervin | huppy ending.’—Publishei’s Note Russia -Germany would find food for | Chapman. 5 her population and materials for Ger- | man factories in inexhaustible supply, | tropiedl produ alone excepted. | Otherwise, a Russo-German combina- tion would be self-contained and self- | France Class 1 will not be able to ove story with a the theory that a new victim is born ! pna qan - H i e danger for the German in g are any number of men over the pres- | cvery minute.—Washington Star. R et G e Enlightenment of Paulina, by FEllen and Lefters of Christopher | Tompkins. Pearse Cranch. by L. C. Scott. | Yia PR Graftons, by Archibald Marshall Rea! Front, by A. H. Chule ! Lt “It is a book fuli of the chaos of , Howard Chase. Red Hill, Kansas, by war, its fragedy and pain, its gay M. Sheldon : is obvious, He is stead- ent draft age in this country today = iy consuming a limited reserve 1t Burglars now beset Germany.— | po coneumes it foo ; Newspaper headline o o We thought the crown prinee’s But we think the draft age should be | zang was in France—New York Sun from 19 to S Lt one ) sufficient bavond any hope of starva- | Don't ne too.hard on Russia. Few & ardi has a very jnteresting ref-|tion by enemy blockade, and would be i ‘ Fs S a constant supply of funds. e men «ho have been hit in the head ©TeNCS f0 Drecisely this same diiculty | a competitor who could mot he con- | lttle lightnesses that offer such odd The experiences of a young Con- U e L g A aat axte ool very mtlifanttimma- || Wions confrorited i Napolcon i nisilnucreal i neace: moments of relief, its loyalties and | gregational clergyman in a small 4 atriotsl s diatelv theveafter—Charleston News Prilliant 1814 campaign. where he D unselfishnesses, its fine spirit. | Kansas town which supports three nation of patriotism and thrift. i A liately a won many local succomses. but found Y. Times. other churches. . . . Meant as a sug- 32 ) PR audiCGeitict, himself without the reserves to en- LIKE COTTAGE CHEESE? | gestion in the problem of church feds we can spare by putting all our : E ST e R “hanies to ioin | fOrca any one of them 5 = Songs of the Stalwart, by Grantland eration.”—A. L. A. Booklist. BB 1ini- it Wer Savings x:l:fp s Russia Yhtise days 1s just one ..\,"f(',‘,fif‘,‘;“fi;‘fl?;ff N‘;W long n| All things considered, the lozical| You Would if You Saw Demonsrators | Rice. e B _ ~ g : D R e co ) O, | O R ERehe Wwoman who can drive her own car | Plice fo look for the hlaw fhat is to Prepare It. o jiyeree ,';f 'hf_*“’"f’“l"“‘?"; A celyidyne. "{“f“f,' He Tales iy A e won't he 1n it. To be the real thing »° °XPe .’l‘rl would be eastward of Aisses Elizabeth Buckley and Helen : :km“fg 1':1;’ 1"{“1\‘":4(1:..'~mlur\7.-1 chekhov e We May Declare War on Tur- | she will have to be able to make her | Rheims, between take citv and Verdun. | ishop of the Connecticut Agricultural | s v‘u.i’w»“-‘v‘wfl"-aj,\ N ‘R‘u‘nl\h: i Old People and the Things Thal 200,000 has been raised. B 2 £ et mie b S Al otiack be z s i ‘—Headline. We generally do OWnN repairs—Pittsburgh Gazette tacls between i Ritel And | college, and Miss Jeannette Metcalf of P 1 by L. M. A. Couperus. now and June I8th we must & . s ; the Argonne in the “Austy” campazne 2 = = s A ks s % = . = ; 3 Vinat e ery Thanksgiving. would immensaly strensti ]“ 'SNe | the Hartford County League and Farm | value of the Classics, Edited by A. F. The third of the series of “Small ase War Savings Stamps to the | ‘ = Soks rengthen the Ger- | pyreau, gave a cottage cheese and West Sonls N SEPR L o rovidence | man position by relicving the thr 5 o 5 g . t of about $1,000.000 T Aehaldskendedgman pin gEroaer SR aTanos L pelieving fhe threat | milk demonstration today at the.store | “Addre given at the conference o x g Remember Lieutenant A man in Boston paid $1,005 for a s hit in Wednesday’s storm on the | to their flank which the high ground | of aj Olson, corner of East and | on ciassical studies held at Princeton, | Sc rs Both. by Gustave Guiches e e s chan hean by a hail stone, the dimen- ' south of Rheims constitutes. This hizh s - Lo 2 b £ S <ians of which monelith were five- ound could not be held were the s from the wages have never so large as right now. If this is turned into War Savings ps it will be the best investment ple to make and at the same rapidly in advance moment when he iz to make his decisive thrust. he wili lack the numbers to enforce his local victory. who are able and willing to fght. They will respond readily if called. it will furnish the Government 's give the Government all the 0. Of that amount. something cow. If prices keep on jumping Diwight streets. together with statements of many | The two soldiers of this unusual ighths of an inch throngh. and a half mans to drive another sal According to the demonstrators | prominent Americans representing | war novel are the man at the front ey g gren 7 = S another salient east | 5.0y people who came into the store | public life, education, business and and the man who, unfitted for milia thing like that amount inch across. But he saved his straw | of it. as thex have now driven cedze i : s S DRSS, S e oAl 2 wedse | scemed very interested in the work. | the varions professions. Includes | {ary service, serves the great cause 1at.— T 4 av. 5 i nerefore, hghIY | Many of them asked for recipes to | also a statement of the British and on the land, both meeting equally tha The Hun must go! Patriotic June T probable that the next German thrust make the ario dishes th re 1o h ttitude th statistics gath- call for sacrifice.” rlisher” not Tt is never safe to compliment the may come on the scene of the Freneh < he vavious dishes that were [ French attitude wi ! t or sacrifice Publisher's e, and malke your pledge today : zlass of milk will soon Buy W. §. 8. Today THE G. O. P. ROW, brides re even eliminating ‘‘Lohen o . - b i ered by Dean West. A. L. A, Book- i - brding to a New Haven con- | ' 0 g eather. The Lowell Courier-Citizen | local success in the Battle of fham- r\m"e“ by S e sy e e rin a wedding march. Guil- ' ¢poge Saturday morning for pointing | pagne in 1915, s ¢ T ance, T mant's “Murche Nupifale” makes an contrast hetween June mornings R . . afternoon at 5:30. in the win- | list. i ol Smmgdien GEGGIS o ; relative food value of milk to other * | temporary French Writers, II- ate, w' met in a star cham- - 5= & jFould oods was set ury e P c War Nursing. by Minnie Goodnow lustrati t spirit of the Frenec ate, who e s ith those of January, and before | sreat peril ta the whole Sor foo as set up in the window of r Nursinz 1 ino | TG e G e French ssion at New Haven yesterday, night we learned that on that VrY . tiom. 1t would erente ihe com don: i peop ha Jieutenant-G g A n 101 here had been snow in Penn- SR e e X d that Lieutenant-Governor TR e s Ny x here had been snow nn=yiEss R et e et vivania and frost nearer home.- former Congressman from the it s, Naughton's hakery “An excellent manual for the nurse This afternoon at 3:30, in the win-| — e - — —— dow Porter's fi re store will b . e o ';f.,' Saaenn s S RS WOMAN'S CLUB TO SELL, matter of truancy among the school 2 children. It was the opinion of the ea.hf,,k A This meal will be pre-1yoie Being Taken But Is Eapected | committee that the parents of chile paied yistidenty ol Vocational to Fasor Deai. | dren should take,a more intimate ine igh school and will contain a large terest in their welfare and should percentage of milk co-operate with the school authori« Tomorrow the demonstrators will be in entting down fruancy to a at Cowlishaw's grocery at 439 West imum The committee also dise « Main sty t This is the first time arnaote Period | they have gone into {he western part attend a demonstratic 2 avoldilof theNoity annot be arranged. the White House. When the war is P¢ople should attend a !.nxnv,A'Vfl:!“‘\ any counter offensive of large dimen- |+ ¢ O announce t Of &isonc, s “\:‘"l’“)n-‘;“”'“'V;"Il»rfif,‘“ A~ | sions while the German still possees S ; prigiil s cxpectad Bihat R hiese Ryl i ‘ER SHIPY ARD WORKERS, r column and i well worth | cuch jnatters : n 1” & ‘n prionans |m”h =0 s 6 great striking reserve. He may hope | NMENT SHOP IN USE. little opposition to sclling the proy . |\» e '.\,,\ sh It appears that Messrs SO ve herehy cordially invito them 19 hy cuperior economy to find himselr| The government factory opposite | erty e e L el e ERpes sy Kalser Karl, addressing his troops | oG primol on the Fourth, We | at the close of the campaign with a |the New Britain Machine Co. plant| Originally the club adopted an ex. resentative to hire labor for shipvard o Lioal, wers oblizediio arl, addressing his Ps | will give them a hearty \\Ph‘mn;e ol S e foree, Pt he must | 1S being utilized to its full capacify. | tensive program, whicn called for the Work. met m,,m‘ 5 shipyard volune 8 special trip to New Haven to | Pefore they launched the latest of- . LI D, ok ““ :"T‘f“_" beteve 1 oserve an cquality of reserves | The assembly- of the anti-aircraft | ultimate erection of a Woman’s club feer workers in the city building last . “Ike” Ullman about dropping fensive awainst Italy, said: “Honor, ";\‘”“ “II‘nmm “‘ 'ml“-":’v — guns is done there and the trucks | building on Russell street Subse- | glory and food await you.” And th SIENE are stored in the building. The offi- | Mient events. including the war and clal testing of the guns is at Corn. | its numerous calls, have made it ap- field Point, Saybrook and when sc. | pear necessary to some to curtail all cepted are immediately shipped away. | Uhnecessary expenses at this time and The force of ordnance department sol- | in view of these facts some members diers in the city has been materially | of the cliub think it hest to treat : e = e S Aot St will make o T : W i R IRE ey on the part of Col. Uliman Hood ! Administrator rha bl oo fie adygor 1tertainmen t will increased as the production of com- | their original purchase as an invest- ANT BROOK COVERED. g N1t worth while to come here in pref- .te work has ben speeded up. ment and dispose nf the property Alderman A. M. Paonessa has mada e (oo | awarded an honorary degree by Yale | crence to ctavins in Harford Many | MAarne campaign. when the Frenh : : I e e e e e R e request to the city that in next «“ cer received any g | & Sinaa 7 = whe E b ob- c € Petiowst | regely "8 | University. Mr. Scoville deserves the | People are at work on the prelimi- Bad s each ;}h the last line on which tained vear's appropriations a sufficient sum S . Geleb ol v e varied it wag possible to defend Paris Ver. BIN R CLERKS 5 g et E v recosnltontvnicnie iskreceiving s ind ST Slcslshration yllIRbe fvarsTRE R S Hone e Rt snd i ieiver | TOBIN FOR CLERKSHIP e e included “to provide for the cover. &no ‘:7‘1 to suit (‘vf er; bflfl:\'farh‘{ it will ”-": B'"\ L‘-‘le ea ft! ’:'”'1"", Michael T. TC.hH‘ of 443 West Main FIGHT AGAINST TRUANCY. ng of a part of Piper Brook neax be distinctly different from the cus- | K ‘h‘T -‘\‘“vg-\ us bhac r‘;"fln'l» to the | street is a candidate for the appoint- The executive committee of the Stanley street and Hartford avenue, toms of the past. i fm* 'qat this great campaign is going | ment as clerk of the board of fire | United Parents and Teachers asso- This brook runs as an open stream & ? " : Come and spend the Fourth with | to turn on man power and every | commissione ](c“\ a clerk at Rus- | ciation met yesterday fternoon and and is said to be obnoxious to the 4 the battle would not neces- L Torringtop in which John | usl—Biistol Press, man we can get over from America { sell Erwin Mfg. Co. office, among other things considered the residents of that vicinity time of the battle of the Marne, and A : it might comne! the evacuation of | district.’one ol the best known 3 e Verdun and of the Mecus. heights as | in Connecticnt political and legal Well Be far south as the line of the Marne, The Hartford Courant yesterday eastward to Bar-le-Duc. and then of morning under a big display head ad- | the Ornaim. and thence fo the Toul vertised “A Tame Tourth in Bristol” | pocitions now orcupied 7 o The inference was that anvthing short | o 10 pnd which may split the party | dent Wilson are already urging him of a riot is tame in the Hartford point B. Wilzon, of Bridgeport, can hger Lave a place on the state 1f this be true, then a blind an seo the fight to the death | "/ oo~ will be staged in the inner cir- el the Connecticut G. O. P..this | Over-enthusiastic friends of Presi- The Woman's club. throuzh a pos- ta] card vote, iz obtaining the opin- ion of its members on the advisability of selling it} builditig Tot on Russell street, purchased in 1816, A= soon as the retirns are received the club will Work which the association will con< decision of its members, U « American army i Foch's strategy in the same perioc bpen it satisfactory settle- | to he a candi for a third term at | of view. In that case the Capitol City | j¢ anq probably will Denlnd cussed plans for Red Cross relief story of the meeting is told in | won it will be time enoush (o 1gainst the hour when the German QEnins Ehel el WaTe EISeniA nie. stakes all. He must content himself with meeting and parrring each thrust 1t the cost of valuable tervitory nntil her Gierman exhanstion or a situa- tion of too great peril on the allied side compels him fo attack, ae Joffre was finally compelled to attack in 1 o | liminary physical examination their © qualifications were taken and they were advis that many of them will non ceive assignments for active utenant-governor from the tick- preparations ive this city tho ey had to go to see “Ike", be. | S0ldiers answered: Tell with the | jmost unigque, livels 1 riorable R es : ., : glory and honor.” cclebration of th that it ever gke'" wouldo't come o, ses : T nad. The program is not complete work at one of the various shipvards, » reason for this apparent ¢t enough has been do ) assure = The reas or app 2 Congratuls to Robert Scoville, | but enough has heen done to assur — st be expressed in his own e men up state and if they . st efficient official i i nything from me they must | . i d see me.”” It took some 0 doubt, to convinee Col. Ull- 125 destroyed the house in

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