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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD., THURSDAY, AUGIIST 2 1018 Y ately reveno irl. Her only comtort | captain, “He wanted to 20 to France, |ble for T e HUME SERV]BE WHRKl s to be amc the things she and | and he meant simply to be emphatic formation i i al} had bo ht for their home, the ibout it.”" Accidents have nceurre { kKitchen range, the cabinet, the fine Another mountain boy, when he camps where the Americans . i ite of zolden oak first ed while apparently in very trained and a few n h But as she sat among these vivid | good frim was unable to finish even | killled but the record T g L, JL | remine »f her brief happiness she [ the shortest practice marches. Re- | percentage is far e e came more and more unhappy. She | cently ne in under a seventy-five in the United State i care what happened she | pound pack from a forced p tice ing here are incline would not even take care of herself | march of twenty-seven miles head up, 'difference more fo n ta an and began to n her appearance { smiling, the freshest man in the com- |things else 3lthou 1so v ind her health. Throngh an Italian | pany pointed out the prabat vk - grocer her trouble was brought to| The change had been achieved, it |average airplane used in F i 0 workers. The other Italians in the | cured him of the hook worm, re. lage that has bheen used in t} e _ town were mobilized hy the home | moved his tonsils and adenoids, and |States i How tie American Red Cross | Service section to help her. First, they | made other slight aiterations The hombing devices being attached | through its Home service 5 [ 2ot her interested in the family of a The boy had been resentful over ta virtually every plane i t the con- | * helping in the at task of binding | neighbor woman and took her mind | being forced into the army and littla trivance that was the earlier | off her own loneliness by allowing her | promise of ever hecoming a fit sol- days of the war That nsed then wa are of a sick child. Then | dier. Today he is ahout the ‘‘smart- |little more than a mecha rica into a | to ta the different races of one uniffed nation is described in m that re statement issued by the home service | they ask if would not like | ' man in the company, his captain |1eased the projectile owing it to | GRation ot ihetidual et avior. 67 th) to! lenrn Sho Swrite BB A Gl rat tatie ks Vs, After several months of serv. |fall at a point approximately near the ! Red Cross based upon reports re. [NOt interested but an Ttalian friend | ice he was given a furlough home, on {AT8et. The device now being nsed is celved from all over the United | susgested that she learn to write in | returning he frankly told his com- |©N® With which the operator 1 with Staites { Ttalian so that she could send a mes- | pany commander that while he had |MUch practice be me almost as pro The Mexicans that constitute a |Sagc to Tony been mighty zlad to see the home :"""” in mark ip an artil v iy She asked t e taugl how & s e ST he leryman with h Almost eve 3 P's problem for the home service be asked to 1 aught how to folks, he was glad to get back to th e n'j‘ ”W E workers in the southwest, the Indians | Write just three words. They were | army He expressed the wish that EAL D B ill ca nbs of at least of several western divisions,” the | 1 love you. | the folks were living as well as he |25 POunds and from the Avier | When she learned that I she | wag |there will be hurled the the foreign popula- antic seaboard citi began 3 she Another boy who had heen offered aud even | had become a truly American mem- | an agricultural furlough to help his a | ber of the town because she began | father on the farm refused because statement read tiens of the A tie negroes of the Soutk in one remote part of Minr ers of high explosive n !different from those ns new and happier life an mans in some of the more raid ota, gréup of Icelandic people—they are } to make friends and take an interest | he was afraid the division might be | sll coming under the sttentionm of | In .affairs about her ordered to France without him. | TR (Borhe service because they are send- | Work Among the Negroes. e — | Nature intends every woman to ha| i ng sons and fathers away to war. cheerful, light-hearted and happy, but “In the South the home service | Any family that has a soldier or Lo gt o 2 ot 3 i & sailor at tho fromt or in training | WOTKers are in many cases dealing hen dragged down with pain and | % with negroes who have more money ! §, M| 114 5 L suffering from female ills, will power | h#s a claim vpon the government s { = 3 n o sections of | than they ever had before. Govern- alone cannot overcome a nervous, | £ e Dom e oS ol et s warides) ate Wealth to)ither. |despondent condition. Multitudes of | i |. & right to claim » share in the neigh- | and they are being educated by Red jAmerican = women, however, have kS b sl | Cross home service workers in habits A LI} (found that there is one tried and true | b borliness and sympathy amd kindly | Fross BAmE BeTU T8 0K ers L e remedy to restare health under such | aid which the home service sections | Of thrift ! : circumstanc ) e Snie monse et e lof ting pros oty LR ircumstances, and that Lydia > organized : o S e A e ; § , _ |Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, made [ This remarkabl | practically all typess The Iin¥ans Who Kissed the Flag. ,, . % . 0 05 5 ome service work- DfiSfl flfld Da[lflg I'II U S FI]SI’S"”'"‘ herbs and roots. This old-fach-| at the moment of firing shows the re- | are tested before 4 “Home service workers,” the state- | ors a spirit of brotherhood and a | mnot:v medicine is now considered the | coil of a French i35mm gun. It is at ‘ bovs “Over There.! went continues, “have found that| yessage of common humanity is car- W A : t S ard American remedy for such | the Aberdeen proving grounds that ment of the i meet of hese various racesare whoie { yjeqd by home service workers. Little YInS Admiration condition | Teartedly in the war for thie Allied | joolated communities all over the —_— e 3 $12,000,000° | i hotograph taken i causs, not because they are ITOM | aountry are being made to feel that esuntries fighting Germany on the | thev are a part of the zreat United continental battlefields but beecause ' giates, a part of the national pro they believe it is America’'s war and | gram, not only because they have .that they are Americans. Some Of | een sziven the privilege of contri- |pla them begin to fight almoest as s00n | puting fighters to thesNational Army 4s they are entitled to citizenship, 0 because the families of those They feel it keenly if they are not | fohting men are a national responsi- |of the corps will be increased if a | accepted as real American soldiers. | pijlity which is being discharged |bombing device is added to every “In the assembly hall of one of our! through the home service work of plane sent out, even though it be mgobilization camps, according to a| the American Red Cro the type once intended only for recog- story told by one home service work- |nizance work, and Americans n er two hundred Italians were taking training in England are being as car ithe final cath that made them mem- | HOW ARMY WORKS | fully drilled in bombing as in handling Pers of the commonwealth. They | a machine gun. With the American Army in En land, July (Correspondence of the | Associated Press).—Almost every ai e used by the allies soon will carry bombs. Experts in aerial warfare are | convinced that the general efficiency | #poke Fng with difficulty they CHANGES IN MEN Lessons learned during the resist- | had been in this country only a short ance offered in the recent offensive time but they were already in Kkhaki S have served to increase the already 4nd they were going almost directly high regard of both British and Amer- vice for the | | | i | [n-.,izhm Into Fighting Material the There was no doubt in their mmd:‘ low-flying, bomb-carrying craf | | from that room overseas to fight ican officers in the air se . and, that they wereé Americans through Huns Will Have to Buck over the camps and countryside where | snd through. On the other side of ; |aviators are being trained, planes are | the roam stéod a group of native born Against. {in evidence almost every hour. dipping soldiers who looked with rather Loulsville, Ky.. Aug. 8—Some of |G0Wn from high in the air and skim- | A indifference at these new |y, en to come to the National [ming the nearby country, barely m meh Army cantonmentg at Camp Zachary Taylar in the first quata of selecteq |NEWer lessons they are learning, and |observers back from the front where {the allied planes did such remarkable work not only in scouting and dis- | tracting the enemy but actually in | |hreaking up formations and at points |checking the onward movement Yi'\zw s | of “An Américan flag hung over the by he alians. On " desk before the Italian ne of | Lecruits came reluctantly. These same them stood staring at the flag with | i | men as members of the S4th division, ck eves. When the | \a¢ional . Army, recently transterred to Camp Sherman, Chillicothe, Ohio, wouldn’t quit the army if they could Ilustrating this change in feeling, | .. e o company commanders tell many s ll‘f:f" Conicentation onsthatsror :“”’ PEY IO profanely objected to |.,; aviatian camps have been Itberal is father's efforts to get him out of Iy i " hiaico of the new fliers from the army. The boy's father had Writ- | suereon.” thotr only oritlelem. betng ten many letters to the Captain de- |ipat the Americans are “a bit too l"fl\"'"fih'h" ‘“d" Vs “"‘\S'rl"“n ”1“‘1 |keen.”" Their tendency has been to go | might break down completely under | Fis 5 5 o + ¢ ¢ Another worker told a story which | sure of the boy's health the caplain |have admitted 1s a valuable fault, al. | showed how the great war in sepa- | had sent him before the various med- |though not one to be encouraged | rating men from their families has | ical hoards. Their verdicts w that | 1t has been pointed out to the Amer led their families to make /themselv he was in good health. icans that team work as well as indi- more thoroughly a part of the Amer- Finally the youngster came to the |yjqual efficiency is a prime requisite | i had | captain and wanted to know if thess |and the Americans have steadied . 5 B themselves to the routine their train <| ers have found makes for general ad- | Ll . S QI o ican community in which th | s a | frequent orders to appear before med- | i | i | | jing treetops and houses. Tt is the| I tears in his b oath was given he stepped forward quickly, pressed a corner of the flag with a vivid gesture and #aid zomething in Italian, something which ths mative born soldiers could net understand but conveying unmis- takadly his strong emotion The gmused indifferéence of these soldiers vanished Th broke into applause #nd cheers; from then on these Ital- jane were their brother Americans to His 1 Leaders of American for the sh War Suf- ; who e spurred American Jewry to | ed front left, Felix 0 have st 3 4 M. Wa r‘)u point of raising twenty million | Kuhn, Loeb & Co., at frsg‘txri‘l ;‘ | M»L in the last four years for the [ Jacob H. Schiff, two of the Ieader: o 1 | relief of Jews in the war zones. Seat- | Copyright, Underwood & Underwood. in the heart of the New York Distribution Committee of the inancial District. It is these —— been living. Maria C B yaurg Italian woman who had been | ical boards was caused by any dissat- j1igh and she could not read nor write | said. “I ain’t delicate. Look at me. {tions in the United States still is even in her native Ttalian had [ He means well, but you just tell him |taught, but the learning of that form nA Iin in the country and few | to go to blazes. I'm zoing to France.” [of fiving also has come to be regarded | in town For a few weeks nd that boy didn't mean to be |merely as routine and whoily inci- | a miserable lonely. passior- | disrespectful to his dad,” said the ldent to the steady, low fving desira- married only a few months when her | isfaction of the captain with him. {vancement if not for individual ap- | Tony was called to cervice. She lived | Then he was shown his father’s let- | plause Fancy flying, the acrobatic | d In a little mining town ters work that once found favor and drew | ‘ 1 ¢ ST S i : : R “She could talk only a little Bng- | “Huh, Pappy’s crazy, Captain.” he |heavy rate receipts at aerial exhibi- - . ! & b she t RUSSIA, THE HODGE PODGE COUNTRY ALLIED BASES \ [ ¢ | | <) ! | \OLOGDA | 5 D \IATKA ! | | Huge public kitchens, where a e L | Whole meal can be bousht alreads Novoaorcs | -r*"’r cooked, have been installed in Lon- oscow IR A w | don and other large cities, and are 1l )» | { helping to solve the food queetion M’ { " tn England. 7 BOLSHEVIK | [N7e==all] § { In London, the Hammersmith HEADQUARTERS oEN V | baths have been converted into = " “ ‘ i i ‘ | kitchens, equipped with every mod- | o ienc, r cooki 0 KURSX h v‘ ;r:g convenience for cooking cn ety Il e scale. g 11 Purchased in quantity, prepared | without waste, and cooked sctenti- 5 % 3 e , 2% % = cale o/ Miles | fically, these meals can be bought at ;1 f L ¥ T % 1ol 50 100 200 3¢ = & much che: price than could SRGONE 1 : B 1 Kiithen, Dakrops L EHINT — Posstbly be through in- B\ &5 : : e : P “{;\ PaeREl Tickets | dividual purchase and home prepa- 2 rom %1 Cg:;‘zf-e gav;(tbe | : o Ao The military problem the Allles and Archangel have extended their ritory shaded vertically. Germany | "“T’fi‘i poor are not the only ones S = ¢ : 5 K3 . e = face In Russia is illustrated above. ;”fi“‘e“""]"’"fl‘!f“' ’r;f]' 'Y::“l‘ar‘;fldqlhv controls the third shafed area, on the Who take advamiage of the public - 3% 5 e T horizontal shading. he Czecho-Slo- | west. The rest of Russia is mostly kitchens. Ali degrees of social life |counter. Fach customer must {away thé food, and must purchasze Tt 1ot The Allies by landing at Murmansk | vak troops are dominant In the ter- | Bolshevik. &re_ropresented daily &t the food | bring the utensils in which to carry |tickets for the food beforehanc. | .'1‘1;:_{:1;“!O;X:"\rtt;l_r:::)d:&from ofd i 1 i