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& = - —— o ~a-ao- - AYT0 ! y—— T —— — = — — = S — = = of ' | NICE TO GET UP BUT 0 Q ? 5 : | j J l 1 4 BETTER LYING ABED | > : : = ] ) | J 9 | Y N 'R HMAI VREONT OR ) : Licut. Cornwell Telis About Rest Re- | v sort for Amecrican Soldiers at ! e w’ s o [ &l i | . fan Heads Meri- s Lo B FRUIT-A-TIVES” Brought Quick Berlin Vorwaerts Says War Has British Shop Fills Order in Time | (it | lopping \ . Mrs. Jane I Cornwell, cashier at | and Permanent Relief - : : Y, Loun ,On S BLi & KOIDET | v Westom Union elegmapn omes | Not Improved Public Morals | for Immediate Use /' Summer’s — el and whose home is at 314 Arch street | HC e | - D = Griddle | - is in receipt of a letter from her son, e T I | Winter has beem | QLY M. Loe of oot 7icut, Clark Cornwell, an electri- | New York, Aug. 10—War has cau (Correspondence of the Asso Press.) cutting into Summer ppointed super- T e R s e ! an increase of crime ar depravity Manchester, England. July 30.— i/l like. a phonograph ;‘t‘:i‘:‘:” \\‘Y‘\" Lieutenant Cornwell has m.‘\‘x ,,;: [ German people, according | TWO days after the British began their and a pianola play- § es on Monday France several months and has earned | to an analysis published by the Berlin | bi& drive on the Somme a rush order i s r-lr‘)‘m:» |(-n(\“uf:‘ « g Bhie office at 89 a seven days' furlough and in a re-| Vorwaerts. 1e paper recalls that at | for 5,000 shells was given one of the 17,“'0; ol il G lette daled Juiic vl inter- | { the beginning of the war, prophets | Projectile factories in this district. So " Hot-Weather Suits | f an office o o |estingly. ife writes e A 3 p B ; o T a g pent service in| ““You will be surprised to learn that | spoke of a “steel bath™ in the waters | Promptly was the order executed that | in Flannels, Tweeds, | n _____!I am writing this from one af the | ! of which the morals of the German | the shells reached the British gunners | § Fomespuns and Tro- | | most wonderful resources in the south- people would recuperate {in time to be used for smashing the ¥ "':;““fl,", ,‘:(:;‘ | rn part of France, Aix Les Bains. 1| “Since August 4, 191 cays the | enemy’s first counter-attack { ;:'M: hifrien b i ; arrived here last unight snjoy A ) ; S - ] B SRR e ! Vorwaerts, “we have allowed the| This shows how closely the mu- ones >w Tt sranted to me. | blessings of this bath to act on us | nition plants are related to the front | ' The “Maybe you have read about this ith toadily et | and gives an idea of the remarkable 12 e e 2 ith steadily increasing vigor and the | 2 L | 1 place I the papers at home. 1t has | MR. P. H. MCHUGH result is a moral condition of health | 4¢ETee of co-operation that exists be- | Elb el | soldiers shall spend thelr Teave, unless | 103 Church Street, Montreal, of the German people of which the | tWVeen the shell-maker at home and [ Co., |given special permission to go else- December 10th. 1017, | compilations of criminal statistics give | he soldier in the field | { 93 ASYLUM sT, | where. According to present orders ; Sosmber 10th, 1917 | ohvincine reooris. Thise el us ol The story of this distrlet’s schisve- i LA ,“lll: 1: .l ! (.:‘,Lnt, 1Y over h\,.,. are en- | ‘Iwasabrca sufferer from Riewunz- the steadily increasing number of | Ments i the manufacture of muni- il (h. ‘“.\,\.‘A ‘y: vM\Hs leave (~\u1“\ l‘fum'\ atism for over 16 years, 1 consulted et Ry et iunm illustrated by the actual opera ynths, providing it doesn't interfere e o B crimes of brutality, and serious crimes g Sid 3 SOtUE g | specialists, ke ~dicine: sel g with thely Work. This {s the first one L| -rociiists, fools medicines, wsed || fol 0t ol any | tions, was unfolded recently to a party Hevaib o it s o e BB Itionsi Mbut nothing didim e good N s [Liaye Deshable o/ avallimiysinion ibut Sl RS e paper confrm it in- | Of Allied newspaper men, including a | 3 | .’u’“f to |||],«.u up f ‘vhu by having L B SO i e b Der 6f Gl b erice Ana bt (mepresentativesiionil mhe M Aoclated || | ach a good time on this ono. nd in 15 days, the pa { glaries in the cities and as well as in | Eress, which inspected the factories i [ opThey put the bovs in the best ho- | easior ‘and the Rhewm: rural districts, Svetematioally organ. | Under the guidance of officials of the "w;’\\n“.vm luvy t o Y e h(’;( 2 M?“‘ better. Gradually, ‘7z ized and methodically operated bands | Ministry of Munitions LEAS”RE A”TUS 1 1eadquarters here where they v 4 1 . e s 5 J 2 % . s | provide everything for the fellows' | overcame my Rheumatism; and now, | ©f rebhers menace continually life and The party saw a great industrial Zomfort and amusement for five years, I have had no return | PYORST!Y of ‘esnectable’ citiz 4 fchhcomonanetho woounties ol o ot i e \lso honesty of the 1 has | Westmoreland umberland, Lanca- E {ERen 2ng koo dand cveniibingiatin Ec:c_ma_and Constipation, and | here the influence of the steel bath the Isle of Man, which had been con- | . R o TS T feei (m (1| “TFruit-a-tives” relieved me of these | directly proved. We do not fear that | verted into a vast co-ordinated plant | £ different mountains and lakes around | complaints ; and gave me a good |[%e are disclosing any state-endan- | for the turning out of war material Y . LEE. S R e R to health”. P. H. ?ICI‘.ILUII. | few German subjects who have not in | peacetime work, had cleared deck for | anuiacturers Uraere m eVON I B who came over with us who are also | 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size25¢, | Some more or less serious manner | Wartime action. | violated the existing government | gt then minister of mu- 8 i T here on their leave. Mr. Kelly was | At all dealers or sent on receipt of | i P thie ecottion ol fo e of them. He is tt ho Bea- i FRU. TIVES Limi | decrees and in of such offices being estab- | 2 Is the one who Bea- | price, by FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, | e tr Herrick knows and comes from | oehENeBUR V.Y liable to punishment.” nitions, visited Manchester and told : lnef;l)né\ier?cxg:. ;:‘ IQ::»I‘;\M;‘\:‘:{ Hacitor) | NSBURG, N.Y. . I”w; \4\;‘»\\;1\:”»(\~‘I).»n1 m?g aro_ st | e e I e e \ > 2 ¢ | “I understand this was a very popu- | stances of the citizezn, who on Sun-| that the country needed a huge supply | Washington, Aug. 10.— oNces are official agencies Of |}o, piace with American tourists be days goes to the country to buy food . Y é TR e B e of munitions and needed them at once. > i Sty turers of passenger - ¥ ! fes eoverniment Tox 0. forel thie Mwar imrey lavel o atreet for hoarding purposes. of the proud f At this moment the great demand |, : g & obiles el ’ gruiting and transferring of labor In};;meq after J. Pierpont Morgan wife of the owner of a large estate. | was for shells. They must be haq, | 2¥ised by the War Industries Board IS ehoe |War plants. At the present time they | ".y"cooq fine to lay in bed this whose chickens *lay" ezgs only for a vesterday ; not six months hence but im- to convert their plants street to |are in complete charge of the recruit- LU P to . morning as long as I felt like it and mark apiece, of the wife of the first| mediately 100 per cent. war wo y |ing and transferring of wunskilled la- | "oM 28 9% S008 B8 (A Tt ready, lieutenant who sells the food article i T os oy o . | bor in war plants employing more |07 BEVE to £0t up SAUL T S0t veads, roceived from her husband at. the| The Manchester District Engineer- | possible and to place them on that s = ANGES, (than 100 hands. The private recruit- | {uthe ha ha - CONVEYANCES. |}, "¢ cuch labor is prohibited by the ing Trades Employers’ Association | basis not later than Jan. 1, 1910 : called a meeting at once, at which % - v documents were filed for igovernment. Later the program is to n the town clerk’s office dur- pe extended to include the recruiting ) non-federated firms also were repre- sented. The chief question considered | !omobile Chamber of Commerce Ing the week and there were also SiX and placing of skilled labor in “war TOOT' TOOT! BABY SPEGIAL : : ) oo icenses ana 15 deathe. |piants e | Famous in History From Farly front at fancy prices and the army of usurers, secret traders and forgers. The Vorwaerts then dwells on the effects of the steel bath on the grow- ing generation and cites complaints by the clerzy and teachers to show that in a letter addressed to the National Au- as whether it was wiser to establish | I No other way, the letter stated, special national plants for the manu- | ¢0uld they be assured of the continu- Eighteen real estate transfers were Mr. Lee has spent large part of e 6 i o 1T it facture of shells, or to utilize the re- | 21Ce ";Y!!Pir industry or the preser- as follows: Ithe past 15 in the newspaper | maller Communities Wil Be Visited Vo | The paper calls attention to what it | S0Urces for the work available. It [ Vaton of thelr organizations. Stefanijia Zimtruk to Thomas Paty- |business and for six vears was busi- Years 0[ G{mstlam]y [ describes as the “fruits of the best | Was decided to follow the second plan o letter was in response to a rals land on Dudley street; Charles |nes manager of the New Britain Her- by Flying Squadron to Weigh and Y education as shown during the Ra- |2S it assured quicker results. | proposal made yesterday by Hugh 5. Mclntire to Alice M. Mclntire, ald. Previous to that time he was el B : nd and buildings on South Burritt ! with the Mexican Herald in Mexico Measure Children, street: Harry Bronstein to James|City, and was there just previous to Tuosenwics, land and building on |the resignation of Porfirio Diaz and aty Chalmers, on the part of the manu- facturers, voluntarily to curtail the passenger car industry 50 per cert. The War Industries Board declared that the present situation regarding steel and other materials needed for war work gave Ifttle assurance of ma- terial required for the manufacture of passenger automobiles | deck-Bernstorft libel case.” It adds:| Textile manufacture is the principal | “When refined cavalicrs of the most | industry of the Manchester distriet, | Hartford, Aug. 10.—Many towns in Washington, D. C., Aug. 10.—The | prominent society apply the most|and at first it appeared that the ma- |the outbreak of the revolution. this state will be visited between now | National Geographic Society from its | common names to each other and box n'{lymmz\ \.’N‘f‘ 1|‘|‘ the textile factories Harvard street; Leon Leikin to|®h® and the time snow flies by the “Con- | Washington each other’s ears, then no one has the | Was entirely unsuited to munitions Frank Ritoli, land and buildings on . — necticut Baby Speclal” as a part of | rollowins war . right to claim for one certain class, | production. But by perseverance and Pleasant street; Abraham Shuberg VALUE OF GARBAGE. the children’s vear campaign being & war geography bulletin on | gecency and well-bshavior. ingenuity the textile machinists have to Concittona Daroto, Iand and & o conducted by the child welfare depart- | Montdidier, a few miles east of | ‘“The steel hath exerts its effects on | contrived to adapt their machinery so buildings on Acorn street, Adrian | Health Board Officials Put in Very |ment of the Connecticut State Coun-| Amiens shes over the home | well to the work that they are now P i e oo ar Swanson to Carolina Swanson, l:n\(d; . Busy Month. il of Dafl-lnsc- 'rnlm campaign i ‘r the l"‘!)h["llv it as well G the :l'\o"\;;mr.\! shelllproducer= i inWhe (B0 5o RETISCE BERUVEEHE ORI S 08 and buildin on Roberts street; progress all over the country, under playroom in the family of the count,” | region. i 2 ahp and b \‘;Zlil‘\\e“;]‘:l‘h a.r and others to Adolph | The monthly report of the board |the direction of state councils of de- | | concludes the Berlin publication. At the beginning only shells were | ‘\'\’;ndh:e?\i(;fl:p:ldwllc::nzr:? ?"1?“"!‘:] Ietter and wife, land and buildings | 0f health commissioners was issued [fense, with the object af conserving| March and April, and now the Amer- | . turned out, but gradually the field of | : B e ey headquarters issues the cveryone and spl “Montdidier fell into enemy hands during the great German offensive of 5 —~ pE L I = . - —— ufacturers, the letter states. on Ash and Vega streets; Snatwlsia | t0day and it contains the following |child life as a war measure. icans, brigaded with the French, are manufacture was extended until now | ¢ 2 | matter, issued by the United States| T 4 w o o oL . Tt was stated by one member that Bbeiiiick ana ofhcrs folThomas Botye | Iry n is: el 3 ed States The “Connecticut Baby Special” | aiding the latter in making the city | RED CROSS AGAIN EXPLAINS it covers, besides shells, airplanes, | those who were farsighted enough to | food administration: consists of omob: ck fully enable for s | o Jotor tran 't ve es, guns, tre: i ) e T TG G e Tl el O e e e R SR S B | RULES OF OVERSIIAS PASSPORTS | motor transport vehicles, guns, trench | obtain stocks of steel prior to the r Bbcet: Mary) B! Mcllifo Anna e || o Dzs Housekeepers Donit wos equipped to carry on the weighing and “This little town, whose histor | mortars and projectiles, hand gre- | strictions on delivery in all probabil- Sl el e S | bu‘x/‘n UG e t is valuable. . |measuring features of the child wel-| dates back to the first millenium of | Perhaps mo question been | nades and bombs, mines, submarine | ity will have their supply taken by lin square; ils P. Berhman to 0o ol 8a ins su wre campaign. This work has goms | the Christian era had a population of | icced more froc last | engines, steam engines and turbines, ; : . e { ; the Government, to be turned over t% ess than 5,000 at the beginning of the scientific ins ents gauges, and | war i o (e ssnalos of few months, since the enforcement of D e e nd | war industries short of it. | shell Sufficient “fatty acid” for the 11 take it into ti 11 m T i B a variety of other munitions, ma- Many of the manufacturers who shells. Sufficie; atty acid or the |will take it into the smaller communi- | soci s Qs e s litar >s regarding war servic e - S S 2 o Chapman and others to Mauritz L. <2 ni-| sociations. It is said to have derived | military rule irding war service | chinery and appliances used for war- | have returned sworn inventories, it Kallberg and others, land and build- | :axz;éié\:{es(‘zrclg\( 00‘::}:\;.3(3]{;}: :\x;](m}g{;,X“Frl:nnc:g;xmn‘fk::e :hgnrt:g{: ,Tgs(n?mo from the fact that Didier or | abroad, than that of whether or not | fare. was stated, have on hand sufficient Ings on Carlton street; Henry T.|y.1i0hle in munition making. SR T AT 9 e (e s | e e elatives in the As an example of the concentrated | steel and other material to operate a Bray to Marco Orlandi, land and It used as hog feed it will produce |be in charge of the weighing and ¢ or navy is elizible for overscas | energy now being employed in the | 100 per cent. capacity from four to tiaines Yon WA corn | ntreet; VA drain W08 s 5 seanien st e e cood el | e a T irinEiinl the towns LSl AN | The Manchester district, it is pointed out [ six months. When the inventories street; Bronislaw Levandoski and | firct quality pork. trick will beldriven by Mrs, J. B, Wil- that within a ten-mile radius of the | are in, all manufacturers of passen- others, to Joseph Pacyna and wife, g i Manchester City hall the 2,500,000 | ger cars will be placed on the same Can you afford to destroy these |bur, Jr, of Hartford, a member of i land and buildings on Alden street; | yaluable products when your govern- |[the Connecticut State Motor Corps. population employs 1,000,000 horse- | bases. This basis, it was said, wonld Emilia Kurth to Clement Kalkow- ment needs them to help win the| The ‘“Connecticut Baby Special's” ki, land and buildings on Cleveland | war? s visits to communities of the state will street; Edgar C. Linn to Julla Ras- The United States fod administra- [start an August 21 at East Haddam. kowski, land on Cleveland street; | tion urges every housewife to be |Towns in Middlesex county will be Russwin Land Company to Charles | watchful over what goes into the gar- |the first to be visited, after which the J. Caley, land and buildings on Over- | bage pail; to put less in and take |truck will go into other countles. The cient glycerine for the explosive [forward in the larger towns and citie “harles Larson z thers, land and | 4 L e larg E :h'l;',;: :n\"(‘?m:rnfilnm.:; John . | charge of fourteen 75 millimeter land the “Connecticut Baby Special the last of the Lombard kings, was imprisoned here in 774 by Charlemagne. It will be remembered that Charlemagne, having put aside his first wife, Desiderius’ daughter Recently the rumor ha took up the quarrel of Pope Adrian I with the Lombard monarch, and after marching an army across the Alps captured his erstwhile father-in-law's | case of Red Cross nurses, the fuct capital city, Ticinum, and took the | that relatives are in the service would vanquished ruler back to France where he died in captivity. “Montdidier is attractively situated » woman who 1 T duty. s been spread broadeast that the ban was being lifted ani taat, at least in the | Power. Eighty per cent. of this| be the amount of steel the Govern- energy is devoted to the manufacture | ment may be able to supply after war of war munitions. requirements are met. in nowise prevent women froia going | to England and France at the present | hill avenue; Edgar C. Linn to Mar- | more out. But what must go into |“Connecticut ‘Baby Speclal” will re-| - OF 088 8 SIS Y ST AC | time. ! guerite Payanis, land at Overlook; | the pail should be kept separated |main in communities from one to| op ST SHUREHCE OF The BARKS Of The ] An eiement of truth is probabiy re- | IT OVER Usher Krell to Gioacchio Caldrona, | from other household refuse so that |three days and the equipment carried | | ' 5. (oot W5 0 " '{}p y‘ln_"““‘)m A0% | sponsible for the rumor, but is not | land and buildings oz East street. it can be utilized either for making |far measuring children will be set up | (PROSSSERt W0 B8 CORATUNCOTS 00| at an as simple as it sounds. The | k munitions or for hog feed. in schools or halls so that parents may | o1 SO0 and Is 62 miles North Ok | peg Cross is not permitted to securs Do not permit hroken glass, | brine children under six years for the | T2rl5 by rell and 73 miles southoast e e vaoorks forin s Bworenl wh ol Hos AND AC'I" crockery, phonograph needles, or |attention required by the plan of the | of Amiens. Tts chief Industries before | 1o, (ives in the service, whether the ® | the war werc tanneries and the man- other foreign substances to get into vur[nmi;zn\. i : s r it are on duty in this country or across . . B | : n addition to the other material to | Uf2 ; At the Atlantic. The army and navy, on | Fvery article in this issue presents convincing evidence of Semon can’t make all § e sarbase o 1s valuable, |be carried there will be a set of post. | Vhen the tides of war finally re- | & <ot i =00, R DL R B e : % [MEEememberianbzol e S s ®>| cede it is probable that the three ||, ey Auen e ) the patriotic duty and the personal need of efficient training for Keep it clean! ers on child welfare work and a set of | ¢€d ! ¢ ® | those who have relatives in service the Ice Cream, so he The welfare nurses made a total |50 lantern slides, which will be shown | Puildings in which the citizens of} i,.,0q to carry on their duties in the demands of business of 222 examinations for commun- |Where there is proper equipment for | Montdidier ‘took the greatest bride |, pdan gountries— but neither : k the best! S i o = l4e will be crumbling ruir These are | Feiy < = e You must realize the lifetime importance of this training— makes the best. icable diseases and 183 quarantine |it- % o S pietre whith s |Dilitary nor naval seryice of «the visits. Among the cases reported | The dates for the visits of the “Con. | the Church of St. Pierre, whick kind is open to married women appreciate what it will mean to you—what a part it will play in ‘“.‘e, Diphtheria, 17, tuberculosis 11, |necticut Baby Special” to Middlesex | Puilt before Columbus set sail on his iDheldimcnlivlin =ot ins ok complete ) : e L | measles 11, scarlet fever 9. county are as follows: East Haddam, | VOV@ of discovery nv:fl which con- | | g ctanding of the case seems to carving out your future career The tuberculosis nurse reports there | AUgUSt 21, 22, 23; Haddam, August 26, :“"“k "r“””\‘{l.‘, Jv““h““!‘r ';r'h“ ]”,hw_‘("‘"' lie in the fact that the average per- | § Just one thing stands between you and the achievement of i 2 ingwor August 28: Chester, | tury; the Churc f & S Lo 1 ) realize tl he Red re now 210 cases of tuberculosis, a ; Killingworth, August ster, | tu 5 SRR %l son does not realize that the Rec . FRESH | Z«Tn of elght, Tleven new cases were |AUSust 29, 30: Saybrook, September | 15th-17th century edifice, and the Pa- | ¢ o.5'5s an organization distinct from your ambition. Failure to make the start. Don't put it off another | S 7 3 d Saybrook, September ais de Justice, formerly the city cas- | il 5 a PRl A i 3 | reported and there were three deaths [+ 47 Old Saybrook, September 5, e i i b AR BT & the army or navy, and that the rules |l day. Enroll now and be in our Sépt. <classes. Now thre are 38 cases at sanatoria. = that apply to do not necessaril tors before the war were shown six P | The nurses made 401 visits. Five : s fit the other services. 5 e ¢ i 2 FOUR-MINUTE SPEAKERS. unusually handsome Brussels tapes- O s RN 5 Fmeauflle icB cream | clinics were held and 2 2patients were S e s e | o el ng made f examined. nurs h l s to serve in the war zone, and — Tho pininbing fmspector mads 165 | Mobilizing Americe the Red Cross is anxious to have mlt uslness ‘_‘c 00 Man Power” | undoubtedly removed before the Ger- mans entered the city [ inspections. | Subject in Theaters, 2 Lt | nurses enroll; but if married to men | Montdidier's most famous son was e i = = 5 : — | The sanitary inspectors made 381 | e 3 . s scientis o ~nve | In the service, t will not be per- 276 MAIN STREET OVER COMMERCIAL TRUST BANK Today and Tomorrow, || The sanitary inspectors made 381\ Assignment of four-minute speak- | Parmentier, the scientist who gave | I (he Sorviee, TR0 WO, Ro% B8 RIS ers for August 10th and 17th is as | impetus to the culture of the potato of meat. kind in Eu The milk inspector collected 64 | follows samples of milk for analy August 10—Fox | The meat inspectort inspected 95 | {vreum, Rev. W: | | in France. A statue erected here De commemorates his gift to the nation ROy number of yes this little rren F. Cook; Kee- | city was governed by its own lords, P. F. Keeney; cows, 154 calves and two hogs. Three ‘ 3 4 e e el L COTE don = At ney's, F. R. Kilpatric; Scenic, B. W. | then passed under the dominion of | i = | : . & August 17—TFox's, William F. Man- | the 12th century it became a posses- ry Sp o 1S d 1,289 . o c: T r i ‘q?"”a‘f e ‘H“‘":’ pected gan; Lyceum, F. R. Kilpatric; Kee- | sion of the French crown, and re- | R @ras anc cuenes ney's, B. W. Alling; Scenic, Wm. F. | ceived a charter of liberties. In 1636 § — WOMAN VIT Delaney it offered a gallant and successful re- | @ ONE-ARMED WOMAN KNIT The topic is “Mobilizing America’s | sistance to the Spanish invaders A 99 Try It A | Fer heart still in the right place, | xan' power” Dr. Warren F. Cook i i ) ! E [ the fact that she has lost oné arm | .ng R, Kipatric are to speak in = ] ‘hfls not prevented Mrs. A. Flood, a1 pricto] theaters on Friday night, Au- PRICE RAISING DEFERRED. o/ | | | branch, and as a stimulus to others member of the West New York | oo ¢4 sio f opinion among the employers = P ARM H Ac S T e e e o ERROR TN BIRTH RECORD. a“: :”:\m Astpicn s Uy Ve C()rflel' Parl\ afld Stan]ey Streets arters with pride at the headaq 8 L the e o Cook speaking at the Increased prices for barbering win | | branch of the Red Cross, from Knit-| piineees "ang Mr. Kilpatric at the ffective Monday, as EC I i RE A I I Hl‘, (;OSPI ,I, I I‘,N I ting a sweater. It is being exhibited o not become effective Monday, as orig- | |} ) SiNts inally announced. There is a div | men in the service, it will find nNO} yjadislaw Babula of Broad street, Samgserm | rival. The encrgy and perseverance of y unit action ha @ [ this woman have aroused a strons | ‘10 W% locked up for failing to res- | ;,yrneymen barbers have received SUNDI ‘\ i 9 1‘[ GUST 11, 8 P. M- | appeal among many of her two- ister for the draft convinced the po- | their increase of wages and another armed sisters, and in consequence it | lice that he is only 18 years old, de- | concession has been agreed upon and Park, Cor. Bigelow Sts. | . i 5 . . s i probable {hat a greater number of | spte tho fact that the vital statisties | that is that mops vl cose oil dov) - Gpeeig] — [llustrated Scripture Reading All Welcome Phone 1366. B | knitted articles than ever will be | records show that Wiadislaw Babula Christmas. i | made 1n the near future to meet the [ was born in May, 1896. He showed |at 9 o'clock on nights brevious to | ever increasing demand. it was a case of mistaken identity. holidays instead of 10 o’clock.