New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 10, 1918, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1018, R our yvoung reader's | Empress Il — Headline. There 1s' About Knitting, her 100,000 volunteers back of the fto assure him and ail | more bad news coriug which we are Ihere is no doubt whatever but | used, and only the word “overscas’ Is would welcome any [afraid will make botl ind Karl (hat - those engaged in promoting [ fising lines in rance, e ——— — it ————————————— T L — | 1 hand-kuitting are “tuated the India, Egypt and Arabia, the West best of motive If, however, the T 10 PUBLISH COST MOBILIZE INDUSTRY informed pe ing their part of the hurden of sup- Iy abandon this Lne of work, for v enns a serious waste of the ac called Yanks"”, or Sammie: or try orks and other | Americans, nnd Tet it Ko at that? jurces should he used with highest| halfomiliion for active servieo — ST e i tion Tor Retailer and Consumer tiout Must Hasten Work \the half holiday “A man learning to drive a motor- | itself against the assault of the RSsEcnoroRthesoine will b B8 have voted to |truck in Ncwark killed a pedestrian, | 1055 Military autocra b the drug stores, [wrec we and was arvested.’” The reasons why ever B has been adopt- [ New VYork World. Somoe motorists | articles | Be N whether our hoys in Irance should he s from Delhi the government India, which has already supplied ent stores and e used, and only tre wor overseas' is | = ir destination. | L : The plan of the food ndminisira A t a meeting Hartford, S - i < tion to have published in the local the Connecticut State Coun< of all kinds is a s - aper okl « i-weekl pte to mobilize the girls o arrested wag | many are involved in (he L € b papers. weckly o1 RSy . groNuronizaill Sl { hours, but it | will clai at getting Bd until the con- | the oniy he committed conditions of wool-t =k i kS [ vailing prices of €oods, was outlined the self-developmer 1 fsts, now absent S iltho there is no recason wh ) 2 eral Administrator Robert 7 M o intelligent gent obtained. In ¥ Indy-in-waiting 1 the D fl like to say that | Rus ourt says the {ebacle in | follows 3 A, a the rooms of the Chamber of Com T f Woma SIS G0 Seoville of Hartford. last evening in General-Ne-reta 8 for closing. the [that land s due to the fact that | 1. Woo attal | the t irst) s i nierce, Lefore a good representation ers on Recreation ke the public |the “czur was doped. He must have | [0 Succes milieg r s asiand fexpeditions were sent into, o¢ Jocal grocers and retailers. The " jifteen years Miss Hamilton hag : ifles, artill T A T o e : wlTnals : been organi vage earning wome At least one [ben smoking some of those awful |} 1 munlsion ROtEIa N2 wknd meeting was oalled by local Food Ad- ! >°°P Orsanizing wage earning womed £ g | ing estimutcd that seventy pounds of | send anothe ) fon—anoth = into evening recreational clubs on self« the city should be | Russian ciga. | scoured wool per year will be re- | half-milon fram thaf immense In ministrator William J rlsy, M whollid s Sr ines o e e e ic at all hours - — | auired for each man in active service, | which th rman N felt that local householders ought to | sectarian lines. Such clubs, employers 2 FACTS AND F. | or 850,000,000 pounds for an army of | into i 1,000,000 men ) ANCIES, a ] e 1B pt posted from week to week | are beginning to realize, serve ta S 2 Wwhat prices they are ex- | Stabilize workers by making theit In most Euro- R oihe Noticing a sign “Go slowly”, many 2. The Ur ¢ s produces an- 3 offout, motorisisfonanfun) thels Sthrot il : Flection of Judzes | Mobilized Tndustry Needed #and are com- |tles confident that the coast will be oured out one G = Other representatives of the stato food | [ T e Ry it wool requircd for | N (From the Fall River Herald.) Miss Hamilton said in part In gnate one of e 000,000 men which le . The constitutional convention has : keep open shop Neor men beli vill be needed leisure hours more attractive el pected to pay for food products | dustriai mobilization ha en falked 3 or Alfred B. Hall of Hartford. who Mol i 5 s who has over led a drunik 2 - . met up with the proposition te elect | will as Mr. Scovill in the work: W e nfixht. : The v7|‘.l»‘ -" l»;'r;v home \\\;! \mr;'\m( \\(’i the k ‘h”” M‘"y ““" A U "“"‘ . indzes by popular vote. Tt was inevit- | A. Shechan of Hartford, director of rally taken care o est heroism in President Wilson sian autocracy ¢ R R e B Rl il claration that he intends to stand 5, that of riov for The | #ble that soon or late it would have s we will direct our enecrgies toward ¥ wool to supply this deficien i 0 tackle this propostion, bhecausa I common place activities of the indus- | Hotoniol Mo i o ille spoke of the mauner in | Bl on the list keeps g e Alistralia, Ne | there have u frequent demands trial situation with that snpreme ef- Soutl 3 Sl eor e i e ot tromitITEe et which lists of this nature are being | i B ona week, and i ih i wnd Argenting N rom life tenura hy ap-| WIS UStE 0f nalire ave el % < facls m lain that the <t pointments by the governor, which de- | RL2isiec Sl 0 CTSCLIES HT S srate a druggists ave able Tha kaiser—Hand xossitnelisen | L 82 RiAucE e o L S e R il M. | The movement e didn’t scare me. but CGott in Himmel! ot NoL /alliy : ‘ RS 3 3 they have their feet here! w Yorl sudden and serious ill- | ([ more important, the impairment of these is sfaction af the in ahout a lof. When we ly see that it is as necessary to (h vinning of this war as is military mobilization r a whole weel, fort they now demand. Axnd we must horry. Connectitut e cen . . ters of war industr v hurr Biands of those who are Allablelima terial bull what is ave v of m 1o most slgnificant | ford about menthe seo ADGNE Ewo i SSEACT ERSET A Rl o8 fEuiat KT months ago the New Faven papers| onc W . ! 1str < ! 8 el Aleah R o cel that the citizens of the state ar our ability to fransport men munitions | ferpretation 79 it 600 f 0 G nmenced the publication of the list mily to have a prescrip- ack of them, as they are back of the soldiers, in Khaki: that just requirements of the industrial soldic 3 = % i . and war-supplic ance to aid | This means that the persons who thus [ A1 Women all over' the city have ac jefore morning. Of course Even in war times there are those | our hardprest Allios feel themselves aggrioved hope to thinking it a patriotic duty 1o run for public oflice.—Middletown Evening Press. customed themselves to it so much that when they make their food pur chases they know just what are the | @S to quarters, conditions of work, prevailing prices, and whether or not | conditions of play, are being as fairly they are being fmposgd upon My, | met as the requirements of fighting Scoville suggested thaf in preparing | Soldiers. Then, and only the will ifor druggists abroad to ex- There is na more wasteful use {2ain an advantage by upsetting the of wool (han that involved in hand-|bench and putting upon it men of knitting. First, heause the hand- | their own choosing who will interprot P! . knitter uses worsted yarn made of | the laws more to their liking. Th rtment. above the shop. He “On, how I Jove this world that is | 4q b 7 Iving so quiclly v re. Un- a plan because the apothe- his assistant generally lives in new wool, special and expensive | does not mean absolute justice, such 0 | these lists for New Britain, the com- | We ®et the same unwavering secrvica Mot remain in his place of bus- : ; { mittec in charge spread the prices to | from the indus Wool. spun hy an expensive process, | as the courts of all states should guar- fortunately, the ser has laid him- | i, % i : 4 im- | instead of lower-prived mixtures of fantee. It means the infiuencin of the : reed : e gty ""-““';”"" ! R selfiopsn o fithe Ssuspicionfoflloving | laheanert waol | Sottor e al ahoday]| courtslia ta = cover those quoted by the lower pricec England found that she could no 5 onls b 1ok cheu vaol, cott s courts to shape their judgments to : : : omer has only to push a button |t5o well that part of the world that | spun by a cheaper process; secondly, | popular favor. That is mot swhag |Stores as well as those of the higher | stabilize her expanded industries unti placed near the main entrance of the | has not been Iving so quietly, but | hecause the garments can not be | Massachusetts should have. priced places, for example: Butter, [ the housing problem was handled shop, which rings a night beil and no- | especially brazenly and blatantly, | made uniform in size or weight by One of the delegates, in debating | 47 cents to 52 cents per pound. This| Then she found it was cually vital since we entered the war—Columbia, | hand-knitters idea is not only heneficial to the con- | to make adequate provisiofi for leisure nooRvic thirdly because the [ the proposed change, observed that = s. C, State. yarn used by hand-knitters is soft, | Massachusetts stood too muech on pre- | SUmer but to the retaller as well. It [ time opportunities, if she was to sus A T 5 flutfy, and lacking in durability, be- |cedent. Massachusetts courts have w | Prevents profiteering, especially when [ tain the moral tone necessary for augurate some such plan here, if pos- ONLY A VOLUNTEER. ing suited for the cradle and wot the | reputation for souniness of judsment | there are so many demands made up- | steady work. Workers uprooted from ible. It does not seem quite fair to ) 0= trenches; fourthly, because of tho|and fairness to litigants second to | M money during this war homes, lonely and bored in towns of 3 (‘l‘m‘\(v(tr;d’ —;1 |.v.‘m;::m».v ”\’er‘san immeasurably grenter cconomy offnone in the United States. Much of Not to Fix Prices. ew decent amusements, proved to b eprinted by Reqiest from “The Em- | labor yower-knitting i factory | this re : eet dno : - . hoor workers no matter wh ¢ til 8 o'clock in the morning to have a | pioras ‘ Lhon & Bmo laborl InUpawer-knitting: inia ftactoryil this reputation ihasibeen (dus ito ithe The idea as outlined by Mr.|'BOOr Workers no matter what they blem'”.) as compared with hand-knitting. | kind of men appointed to the court |« e e o were paid, sometimes poorer the more prescription fllled. Such delays can Compared on the basis of _stitches|henches. It is superlor to that of | o ilo 18 mot to fix prices, but o | tney were patd prove fatal to a sick person. Why didn't T wait to be drafted alone, without regard to the im-|many other states in which judges are | #110W a fair profit and not an ex- i*Tiesel are Connectiont's| mroblems | N And led to the train by a bhand, measurably uperfor quality and | elected. and the precedent is worth | orbitant profit as some dealers have | today. The committee on health and NEW PEACE PROPOSALS Or put in a claim for exemption condition of the machine-made pro-|gtanding on No convincing argu- | heretofore been making In some | recreatlon of the Council of Defense is 7 o . Oh why did T hold up my hand? duet, one knitter in the mill daes in [ ,iant for a s yet been ad- | cases wheve the administration has [ equally interested in them hoth. Even orge Bernhard. editor of the | Why didn't U wail for the banquets, | a minute the work of 7,500 hand-)oniieq’ 1y s convineing to say |attempted to fix prices, the movement | when workers have decent beds in Vossischo Zeitung, a Berlin newspa- | Wiy gt Tma e b olisnrnds knitters, and furthermove docs What | tpat iy 42 other states the judses are | broved a failure. Mr. Scoville, how- | decent rooms, they are not necessarily Voee0 nitni \bmarine | Per Which at one time was considered | TOf_the crafted ot tho « Sk :"”‘ Rancehnltesssanino iR iRResn [T ib i nobi itk pteunle .an | ever, cited the following: “While the | going to live decent lves Gnless they opposec uthless submarine | Vhile T only velunfecrec up for ten hours a day. libelad 1t S wice of wheat had been advanced by ! have decent outlet 2 e s power in Germany, has published S St aas Doy ave | Pe added that the judicial sy price of wheat had been advanced by § have decent outlets for their energle: S Glslen Labas & O limproved thereby the administration. the price of flour | after work hours. Such outlets have | the following conditions for peace Nohodv gave me a houquet enough to show the folly of hand had been cut down from $(8 to $12 | heen found imperative for the ..en France and Italy to discuss No tricnds said just one kind word | knitting, but there is still another | er barrell.” This showed that the|in the camps and the men at th with Germany and Austria their A puff of the engine, a grind of the | count in the Indictment Accordins { Another Star for Sims. idministration w willing that the ) front. They are just as imperative future frontiers without the in _ wheels to ”;v\': stimony of Maj \|”: lm‘?hm’ (St R hE ko) farmer receive a reasonable price for | for the men and the girls behind tha jom, alrcady smarting under tervention of third parties Was all the good-bye T heard offiEe s CanadlanEa U R el R Al ROT | F e ot m= to be under the | Nis Wheat and vet provide a fair profit | machines. And the towns which have the All the German colonies to be Then off to the camp 1 was hustled, | the 1""'\‘!‘“ “‘”“‘ by hand are not et L & e “m both the wholesaler and retailer. | doubled their industrial needed by soldiers in active servic mpressio at legislation is requirec l Ho told us he had never scon a | in order to give to Vice Admiral Sims Commlittee s Named. i towns where industries are heing soldier in active service wearing the promotion to the grade of admiral Mr. Sheehan outlined to a commit- | EStablished for the flrst time. do not sweater and had not heen able to| which he so well deserves, and which provide such wholesome recreational BSs ail the time, but the late cus- "Junk- | © 8t his ut- | tifies the apothecary that he is want- B¥¥ party of the | ed. It would seem advisable to in- fted that he resign #h, von Kuehlmann at- Make it clear that he had | | | | the public o be compelled to wait un- inderstood, but he only add- e flames of opposition by ab- Great Britain from blame for & the war, and charging Russia yull responsibili His oppon- leclared th [)\n—l‘]nl—: nd they never forgave him for | gnation of von Kuehlmann | of more than passing note. | ! Bavarian, and the subjects™of treatment at the hands of population £ eturned: To he trained for the next hal ans, >m they depise heart- L ppas, g waon L Belgium to be restored com- vear bill not fecl muor kindly di pletely as an independent state; And in the shuffla [ was forgotten toward their northern neigh- All merchants of the Central I was only a volunteer. bt seeing their countryman com- Powers who have heen deprived of their property overseas to be I builded the others their barrack restored to their former rights While roasting alive in a tent: A reparing the list of prices. The | sc = Tox 4 2 Det vonl Kuehimann | was sl B I cleaned off a dozen parade grounds |a Knit abdeminal band, which would | of the navy is permited to designate )’:n:.l.nlu G n‘ :v ’~I T‘ :mm”,. ‘1)\‘ nding comfort kits to solders of possessio b Zed T & e : <1 « erm 1 he only . 1 - Kol 11 ¢ | €O ce selectec ast eve, B 1S as hed to the German embassy Great Britain to evacuate un- For the fellows that were only sent. | D¢ @ fogsvermin: Mhatithe Joniylithree fofoers loflold! the & arade ofilien e e S it e T Bissg ey 3 % onally 7 barts of the |Then along came the National Army, : “allaha Fillia . 4 ashington, and later served as gonditionally all parts ) . Henl 2 S e s e e e nAorE L thisE oF THE Afignte and| = Callahan, Willam Cowlishaw, Jo pationiol : Turkish Jmpire and Persia And then it was made very clear p i B " | manders-in-chi f tht antic and | Z L Rt L aws, Mr. Miller of Mil. | #1Y adequate scale, put into effeet The situation before the war to | That the zlory zocs to the drafted | OVO" @ M Vl;‘l.\yulv‘hu‘\ Jirt out of| pacific flects and the chief of the | i Olson, Mr. Bovee of Miner, | Without extravagance, means trained eat Britnin. He held that post et e man [ihe WWORRINEHDELTS i G *| burean of operations are the three | 1y ok £ E il e azach Al oy canzatio ot ¢ LR ) i AT s work tohtheoiunts | would serve the purpose much bet SR S i be | Read & Tullock; Mr. Hyde of the Mo leader i in organization: And this war broke out. After his re- The Dardanelles, on the basis ork to the volunteer et ot i el i [lomeers tesignat y hfican company, Morris Cohn, Ired | 1S What {he state should offer to the was appointed Min- of a treaty applying to the states imple enough for the de ment to | Majetta, Walenty Leck, V. Katz and | community Often » locality that : bordering the Black Sea, to he I have waded the mud in Texas; free for tle passage of Russan T have frozen in Canada’s cold nople. Tt was while in the lat- B rTne T've walked my post in the moon- tee selceted from which to pick a sub- [ outiets unless they take thought and committec to announce just what are | make sacrifices to do so, This Is war fair prices, the manner of procedure | work that needs suppor{ as much as find a soldier who had ever seen the responsibilities he now shoulders soldier in active service wearing S0 well warrant do not so under to resign at the behest of the sweater, that ne soldier would wear | stand it. Undor (e law the secretary roper Recreation Necessary. use in trmy he had ever seen & | gdqmiral at sea. At present the com- ‘Recreation of the right kind on elor to the Tmperial ambassador helmets made of cloth are far sup rior to the knit articles. Sto were the only hand-knit goods. designate Vice Admiral Sims an ad- | B, Fichtman, A smaller committee | 1as the greatest need has the least miral in the place of onc of the three [ \iil he chosen from the foregoing | knowledge of how to meet that need 3 liht Boehm said, which were of any Sl minen : Aee Falal o Jeslinlt willEmasta o ty that he was recalled to Ger That is not half had, for a German, TN e , ol alsoTh o N analih et re s ona T \s our Washington correspondent s cxpected that the publishing [ and mubh valuable time. As a war 4. the notoriols| ZIni—t|| oo marinasdl forbats i Tid frst “”111](‘wl.y\”“,w:n‘hw-: ;‘A \'I'v-”_ |n1h~ " ek e in a recent leiter en phasized, Sime is | of list will be started next week. | emergency program, we need some 3 i el ' 0 o Roll « on G e well as to sweaters| today doing the work which for the | Mr. Iarley stated that both local | State-wide recroation organizers, ex 2 e el condition, that any ¢ s _And though seme may she and other articles kit by hand from | Army is performed by two Generals— | papers have agreed to publish the | perienced fo analyze each situation ates of German Intrigue in | ang France may have to do about | By all the rest 'm forsotten wool, not only for the army, but for | Pershing and Bliss. He is not only | list. He feeis that there will be |and suggest the right form of recrea po. He has always been well [ 4yair frontiers, will be donc with thelr For I'm only a volunteer R supreme in command of all our naval [ much less misunderstanding between | tion, for widely varying needs sed toward English-speaking na- | Ayjjos after the rman voice has AT e . o “These statements of the {ruth/| forces in ropean waters, but he | householders and retailers regarding “This conld very prop be done 4 8 Anc dreamed in the far-oft Flan- |, poy e A e ca b onsily | represents us on the Alliec aval | the advance yrices, after people | under the con 1 and has a wholesome respect | j o) cilenced by might of arms. Nar hout. hand-knittir n > '! e i ' n \ Allied Naval j t ] wdvan in pri r peop nd t “ommittee on health and g oy S verified by any one who will devote | Conferen Nothing could be better | hecome accustomed to reading the | recreation of the State Council of De he power of America and Great | Apain in the fourth paragraph, he On the bloody field of Hatc a little time and attention to the|than the way he is performing his [ list in the papers and keeping posted | fense. Such a recreation secretars in neglected, with the usual Teutonic T \'w'"(_\\_m' ('h:' m(‘nn ty a bullet I | ¢5qk The inexorable logic of this| every duty He has proved himself | as to prices. The iocal administra- | (or secretarics) should be an impar- successor to von Kuehlmann, | .0t sightedness, to state whether e ‘;‘l‘ oD T 5 . truth is disclosed by recent events.| not only a great commander but a | tor. Mr. Farley, Is walting for {(he | tial person. rerognizing the value of i L sig SS, en I knocked a e early | mhe government has taken possession A vas e 1 the | printed forms which will he furnished | t1 S 3 iral von Hintze, now minister to . 3 s “ntente 1ate’ most effective co-ordinator, anc e he varfous widely different forms of the property of merchants of ¥ Gatae", of all stocks of wool in the country| ppitish and French share the admira- | by the state food administration. The | recreation a- vble yay ,has been mentione He is | countries, confiscated in Germany, [ And T heard St Peter sayins and is in practical control of all the ! to the Hague and finally to Con- after the disclosure by the o make the ad- S = T s i 1 tion of his abilities which is strong [ meeting last evening was quite | va plans for whichever 1s rdent disciple of von Tirpitz and | oy} pe restored. And finally, he says il o room for your kind here. | woolen and worsted mills. Last we throughout the navy and strongest of | lengthy and although the attendance | quired by We're veserved for the National Arm¥ | at a conference In New York the r Hell was made for the volunteor.” | presontative of the government noti fied the worsted yarn spinners that | o paatictlard oeairt e all among the officers and men of his [ @t the beginning was small, others | one stipulation, in every case e eomiinandl | Gonzress Couldiiwen | kopticoming in 1h»la.“enrl.muo num- | he that bering in the neighborhood of 40 at summer, von Hintze was | o¢ president Wilson, have asserted | And porhaps some day in the future, [ 85 per cont. of their machiners "‘ ‘_"‘ ok ‘I 2 ‘;’ ”; tosthell ti% lote : N i = A de of admiral, but for noote race or 1. but aiming to offe to that country from China, and | 1101 befors peace can be concluded, When my little hay sits on my knee, | would he required for government | © ey ,”‘,1,«‘v e :‘” ‘M" . . o m:fl Oxjvnm b 1t ‘<‘in1 x v id B Y e enahcd LA Cryistiania , i 8 of | And asks what T did In the Great War | work, and that no more varn would [ Tench fhat ! at is required is merican sort of recreat is appointed, the rule of the | po1aind must be guaranteed 1’11 have to look back in those eves “We are faolng standard fabries of { S0 designating him Has Secretary Ui This Is why the National League rists at Berlin will be complete However, we must not expect too That nt me trustinely peer cottan, shoddy, and wool mixtures e of Women Workers which has a L a man like von Hintze a Dhe fac And tell t Tive b othdarted e R oy alrendy Lin |[iESUINE S sUChEanNorden? | number of strong. non-sectarian elube 2 = rationing svstem for clothing the ! Commerce — Shorter Hours and | V1tually intereste situation. Tt e supremely happy, for heis @) ,qp60r agrees that Belgium must be COMMUNICATED prople. The Hme has come when The Avenger 3 would like to do its utmost to aid #fter their own heart compensated fully for the wrongs in- old clothes on the back of a man or (New Yerk Tribune) Uniform Closing Snuggested. an effecive pooling of the recreationa woman are a badge of honor Tha | e e R e resources of the state and the devel Tditor of the Herald riel ~~»ymnm he the first to set GRS mmies” as nicknames About 16 druggists of this city met ff ment of such wholesome. educati 1 ¢ 5 a Of ilensstttorvoL oad- | example el ST s | » rooms of the Chamber of C‘om orm of recreation. as shall make will learn eventually that noth- | poueh thinking men in Germany Tt my\ f r r : el S e L f A ' 1 they can do will ever restore | o o coming to a realization of the | €FS to know that A Quill, | . vor to adopt drastic method widow of Dr. John D. Qu Wal- | saving wool, methods that were en- nker of Junke: Vhen the in- | \oihing about the future of Poland. us bomb plots in Norway were | mpo Allies, following the declaration the recreation provided , widely inclusive, having no bar of Daniels any =ood reason for delay in . 3 this state, Is se e Foreign Office, the Junkers | cgitor of a prominent German news- ( pti whether von Hintze or someone | gicted npon that unfortunate country, L the helm, the Pan-Ger- |is indeed encouraging. It looks as ournal not on'y halks e y ¢ this ferenon at 11 o'clock, to | ™MOT Nigen 1f tin ns of our workers, and prepare them forward tha PUTrPOSes Ssoninvl substina e IREmhe WA e ars il 00 o T p e RS SR nary to the place of respect she | (1,1}, of Bethmann-Hollwes's ato- which it nrzes as s char lingford, who died here Thursday at | forced from the very besinning of | o 11 for closing. Owing to the fact fhat | America is fighting | occupled amongst civilized na- | meng when the latter announced on : Jv the German: mavernment, | Llon ur cause would . the home of her dnughter, Mrs. the hy tv de P AT | o find x more accurate word. It Is | two or three druggists were unable to Aus st 1914, in his first famous . which according to relable report ¢ F. Hale, 100 Hart stree e war spocch, that “Germany did wrong | ¥" iod LOORE{a ntsstveet had Spunie harming out of personall resentment; | was made. However, a schedule of of the first wradu t || stomasesuhen $Hsommitiod kol it exprosses well the spivit of burning | closing honrs, alse hours during Britain State Normal school, and of the ages by starting Ry Aghteousness that sends us forth to | Which drug stores are suggested to be first Novmal fruin eher to he conq r'\“ ‘4 : i a plain, bloody, horrible war'" that the | closed on Snundays, w mapped ant jeation from a local vouth who ploved 1 T m s 8 ek Dffe el e I may he made safe, [ and altheugh it was unanimously de Those e he triet, at a i this hand-knitting hy frea from fhe wint of revengoe, of | be present, no definite arrangement | $0,000.000 complete uniforms in “CHILDREN'S PAGE”. in violating Belgium's neutrality and S ‘morning we received a com- | that this'wrongimust be righted: es that he would like to have the » ' I hand- ki | ruture’ : e : i n e ‘ S : ¥ AN vt wa copl Avenzensiz Ala it n { prosent. the decision will not be made e ; distincti novz | ook had nlieady e other matte Nicknames a1e a thing | publie nntil the absent druggists hava . He suggests that if such a elty. She was formerly Mary Hart fime when the [Mun otlioe mutter, Nichiiames aio d fhin Yo ed wore a pair of vanilla ige | Southington e e he X Thus writs Mr. Samuel Ve can only the TBroakline - for “Avencer Flim Bapt ald ! ate ) Children zame row afternon been seen and {helr opinion consid- | 'YOn straet well-known Norman Hart, 14 Prosp were adopied, the page conld ote ain storles for the young, notes | cream trousers, but before the con- | famil hat town, which had etz mas reariven hia call to fhe N B it ann like, as well as | test Wwas over they looked more like | MmNy Ao harm nat s Shnt have e , e A e Al sinutifudreiasundac S noiny SUence From Hindenbu ind eleet executive committ De A marriage That the young man will prob- i 5 who 5. Aftc d (From the Concord Monitor.) tails will wranged at a future Fto John Kalko and g npe anno ces a narringe Iy oui e P! o Men. meoeting hotl ¢ N + A Boston paper announ that | marri il The Quest For Mer We haven't heard much from Gon- | mestine. . Mg s munications {rom youthful read- and 1 nd sistor be a successful merchant some - Billy Sunday ix to undergo fin opora- | MOVed ¢ ngford, where (From the fdaho Statesman Jivechavenihed eI The mat | tion. Hope they outiniutuolstensil Y RS LIS SR \Nith the exception of Central that the Kaiser hax “canned” him he- | ERES T2 FE00 0 A0 (S i S « Britain South Ameriea, every section of cause he failed to make good on tha e e Ao hamh “omme Americant ] I e i tion commi vill apnear this ey nt the Germans. I'tom = at the meeting of the commaor is evidence e commercial ght implied in another para- stating that hy doing this the | ousness. Quiill came to this cily and made her - home with her doughter, Mrs. Hale where she assisted her in the conduct of her priva chool fc oung chil ~ N )< the drug stores of the city ar e always glad to reoceive com- | disturbance of our night's rest by the | gren on Hart street. M1 Quill s | “ an continent s giving it ons, | S RS R S GE e th or not the petition for $5.000 ons from our readers, and it | neighbor's cat if they'd only have it | survived by her onlv child. Mrs . i I eab vlaGes dnue lStores areloner hefurtherance of the Americani- and two grandchildre Burial took | Hawaii and the Philippines, New he sizes and types of automobile ; on Gundays and holidays from 8 o, | 7ation porfet in™ this city will be place in the family plot in In Mem »aland, Australla and the islands of | tires are to be reduced B8 | el i e e ire 4 - sranted. The committee will speak “would gain more readers for or”. We wouldn’t object so much to tb | =1ome combed for men April Fool promise? — << having shorter honrs to the Rio Grande the North | nance committee, to find out Hate, | Cuba is helping, and so is Porto Rico Louisville Courier lly pleasing to know that the | tuned up a bit. Our ear is very deli- \zens of New Britain are in- | cate. oriam cemetery, Wallingford, on Sat- > South Seas have r ntativesi| Wil advanse (10 D6es conts everyionce | iSRG < A e e n faver of the movement and urge \ the Herald. While it is urda front. Japan has hev I =0 offen your desier assures you, |jia deeided upon here, the the finance committee to consiler it under present conditions, “Horrible Reports Make Austrian Yours very truly, W. A y in the Mediterranean, China | suggesting that now's the time to buy. fe made public. favorably, e e > -

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