Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1918, T——— —+ [ LIST OF NEW BOOKS AT TAE NEW BRITATN INSTITUTE [r2z2vts woces e e | QITY.STX NAMES The Herald has been request- ters of the continent, though thou- ed to scttle a discussion as to 5 sands have gone across the Atlantic fthat Empey lost his | | the date of the assassination of || Anne Pedersdotter, by Hans Wiers- | Ten Months in a German Raider, ince the war began, from Canadian on by bitterly as- | | President McKinley. | Jenssen Prisoner of War Aboard the|and from United States ports. The = An intense, tragic drama in four Wolf, by J. Cameron. watchfulness of the disposition of its Lin the course of a It was during the Pan-Ameri- acts translated from the Danish by 2 SoIpponeny cratighas thiuagh enfestals Ington theater. He can Ixposition in Buffalo that John Masefield. The scene is laid in | Traveller in War y Winston | lished. The same watchfuln e tained that draft- President McKinley was shot, on sixteenth century Bergen, the plot i AP » y s Churchill effective disposition will keep down . . . because they only September 6, 1901 He died [ based on the belief in witchcraft i * the activity of the ly'vlrlmw which cross COHUH%GH[ Wl” LE&VC [01 Gflfl]fl 4 September 14, 1901, at the home which prevailed at that time.’—A. L. | Two Towns—One City: Paris—Lon- | the Atlantic whether they try to op- mpelled | . ! ! e 2 3 joo to do so. of John G. Milburn, of Buffalo A. Booklist don, by J. F. Macdonald erate in Canadian or United States wa- G l i G on Au 26 .8reat number of The assassin. was Louis Czolgosz, “Divided into three The ‘en- | ters Feefl e&, &., g fhe latest develop- ’ . | parts: imce and in the who was electrocuted at Auburn Cheer-up Letters, by T. Ford tente’ before the war—London in tate Prison, New York, October ‘War letters written home by son | War time—Paris of today. A series Fish That Stay Fresh 28, 1901.—{The KEditor.] f Sewel F . ereat £ T hy f which interpret th tw (Westerly Sun.) ; = ¢ 2 = o8 cities making men and things vivid s nounged itodayichessel SoLONE Ol £ when Empes 3 Belipse of Russia J. Dillon, and alive, and sctting various events Practicing economy in food buying | to compose the contingent from ks And and conditions v before the | t0 those who have the desire, is large- | district to go to Camp Green ¥ Sar G - y End of the Wai Walter E. Weyl. | mind A. L. A. Rooklist Iv a question of keeping eir eves | August 26. The list contains 66 nam {Commission was 2 w5 e b ter E. We . c sio WHEN A MAN'S THIRTY. 5 i v v open to changes in supply and new | six of them beir rnates e % e h 4 Finland and Finns, by Arthur} Verses in Peace and War, by Shane | methods of keeping and cooking Both boards are making prepara- hentic, Empey | (By “"R'Y""“Y;'““,Dglf" Intelligence Read Leslie. There is an unwarranted prejudice | tlons for the registration to fValuable lesson. ranch, U. 8. A.) ‘Timely, authoritative book.”— | ‘“This extremely slim volume bears | against frozen fish, but according to & | place on August 24, of those young ashington will ! fisaia o nave " > The fArst draft listrict President Wil- | TEdoeanitizeemtio el e Dial quite substantial witness to his un- Prnminelnl dealer, ‘wvho h-’ts. rtmde a men who have nuqhvcfi their 2 : Jountenance dis- TEeeeEaeaN rope s S RO | B e common poetic gift, and to the high- | study of kitchen r \”}10](7#3.\ as “'M,‘ birtt ,»x‘y\ since June 5 Those ‘ery\.,‘ 2 : % E | General Foch, by R. M. Johnston. Jy mystical and impassioned quality | as of the fish business, this old idea | within the registration requiremer tome Bgainst drafted " Eun . P of his imagination."——Catholic World, | that freezing spoils the meat, gives| will register in their respective dis- there is only TGTi l\vfflt:;‘c:‘w blessings «!'PHT.K"V 3 | Georgian Poetry, 1916-1917 | - ow o way before actual demonstration. He | trict ho gd offices The First, Third - Hleiind mKM;m with the year twenty- RS (O i T S Fiction gave a fish dinner to several hundred | and Fifih ward men will register at {zationgfs the | snd yet they ave far put henind us, | Of SiEhteen poets, nine not previous- bara Picks a Husband, a comedy | Women in a Massachusetts town, us- ‘lhc First q..}:ww office, Room 408, Sonaln e e A s impressive than the earlier vol- P be frozen to be marketed successfully & OF ourth and Sixtl rds us umes, but it is really worth while."— | Dawson Rlack ail Merchant, by | Most of the women who attended said | 'égister in the second district office d Ne will re- | . A. L. A. Booklist, Harold 1 it was hard for them to believe that|in the hearing room of City hall That here we have reached.twenty- arold tehead. nall. d policy to speak nine. Hed trent ST frozen fish could be so delicious, Now Eleven men left today for Newton, jat army. i High Adventure, by James Norman | Green and Gayv, by Lee Holt. they are regular buyers of this class Mass, for special training in me- . i ve a g sl “'A pleasant story of a convent hos- | of fish-—in fact the consumption of | Chanical lines. They entrained = Our teens have a charm that's en- he G . 3 e B Hor e !, ~hanting | tuthor of Kitchener's Mob | pital which is being directed hy a | this one variety doubled 1in New 24 on the Boston bound exp The late czar's s o gives in this book the They were a jubilant crowd E. A glory unknown till it's o'e et Dy e i For Youth, e'en with raving and rant- | publisher's Note. C aviator e e cd poilus, and among them one in a | in good food and an opportunity fc first personal | charming French woman and her | England as a result of telling the daught Into it come the wound- | housewife what she had heen missing | MeN. eagerly anticipaf tunity ahead for valuable me training. A number of frien German uniform who loses his mem- | saving. . | present at the station to see them o th of Thrift Stamps « smooth as the silvery shore. N T b ~ By . ¢ e reful a 1 1d1 pj‘ pyarfare, v _G. Blanchon or and power of speech ¥ In- It is estimated that Cape Cod pro IR colnt:y. Did | Existence is peaceful and idle, I A book by a French naval expert | teresting ho a story and as a |duces annually about 15,000,000 i The course is as ~H'¢1\(‘Z'|" ;w a line, | which surveys comprehensively the | war And no one affixes the bridle present war, its methods, instruments | ;i Until we approach twenty-nine. Enal ol Those composing the party are picture."—A. L A. Booklist pounds of this variety—the whiting ateletet S e e ne 1 Al the flesh of which is so tender that it | ju bert Sesds \’{‘al'y'}‘w' P o 8 . re and gives a vision | Long Ever Ago, by Rupert Hughes e £ Fis . Ado lson : community “sing? of the more exquisite refinement of imenlanor 25 Subent - Usheslimbet frozen in ordertol stand jup i i Nifchell. | Piftainger Alas, then they come with the trap- 5 ) n short, interesting stories, all | in shipment and on the market. M professes absolute ig- | Alas, b B G the horrors of war which future in-|about Trish living in New York city. | sachusetts has been usingz only about | c*Pt&in F A pings vention will bring about. Not techni- | The same characte z e o - = L Second District: Leo A. Kraus, g roint. And saddle us over with weight, cal, but Diedentionian spot ks s st reRin B e v (1T - — The while are administered rapRIngs | reager.” A fsliing industry now’ o ate that | G ton, Julius B, Peterson, John pass Around Dead Man's | That warn of the hour growing late. I, - ] i 1o sales this coming year will reach selie it : g Minniglen, by Agnes & Egerton | 500,000 pounds. The consumer has dline. The deceased evi- | And 50 we are caught in tho Bustle | oy the Fringe of the Great Fight, by Castle o TR R fcons ey 8 not a prohibitionist Tih:"‘ pushes ‘(“" “‘““‘(" the inc ‘:“:- George G. Nasmith, L Many ‘Westerly | mn i : 'r' Vh“ ‘”‘1' - And thero on the crest comes the | work of seldiersciontists b - 4 g ) any Westerly people go to the beach R i8ce 0 Tt cientists back of | Rough Road, by W. JI. Locke Tlthe Iatebmil e it i o rater: s soon as we leave twenty-nine. hemmed fish from the shore 5 [HoEton ate watermelon and Afiscaniasiueilen bl The Sub, by Taffrail, Beinz the Auto- and 26 of the 1918 class, six of the There are excellent reasons why herel ore excellentin s hy | 1918 class being named as alternates. 100,000 pou s a yea bu e interesting to the general | eral of them.” pounds a year, hut men ih the | ., yenin George Unterspan, William Rogers First District List. The First district list of those bing to Camp Greenleaf on Augusf includes 40 men of the 1917 class pn& deaf. evidentl rgot to Real Colonel 3 5 biography of David N s . G Elesjevidentlysforac Too quickly the time comes for part- Shih [””»’ gl ”'R‘ "“1”' Tunro, Sub- | traen fish should be generally used i e e B e ve and aleesalalippedlint A Aeutenant, Royal Navy wherevyer they can be Kept frozen un-| ;o e e in0 Arch street. a membes — - Our twenties must go with the tens; til used TIn the process of preserva- | or the Farrel Clothing Co. Howard sterday’s s ced in | While stopping with one we are| . S N i i tion the fish, fresh from the sea, i3| k. voig A v e atre et esterday’s storm proved again onoy the borders of the United States a as summer) and our board of public| frozen and then dipped Into clean wa- | nypeciony of 87 Hawkins street and To look through a new hit of lens 15"“” crop of over 000,000,000 hush- works should not be criticized because obert 1 U‘Juml\ ;»x) 15 Griswold, o W v ; o0 L L Sl ey s is ¢ 2 sl n e il i street are other well known men in, have when enough poweris pro- | oot 005 T (i dow and sorrew, p“TorthL ls admirable’ co-operatioh. | if we had an all-time chairman like | of fco from head to tall. Tn this | s st - A o et oty a01s" nto Globe. | ouE Bomid of pEmosenrs Wo HMIEEC Le | wsniteay cnyelope fhe fish 15 uf Bl ol lled wr Tevieres Y. Crenin 5 &in to build new streets In the manths : cold storage. In cold wes 5 R The Germans have had some very ©of May, June and July—not start in | o0 SOrage. - tn \_f’“h ;_:""h"::; w“‘; ‘,’,r 41 Bassett street, son of the late . i ke : able generals but what they need AUgUSt to make sewerage and water most is = pinchihitter like Fooh. | connections then' begin to lay the R 1 Springfield Republican foundation when “Jack Krost” makes | '0Nths if the temperature is below | a substitute and William D. Roche of his appearance. You could go down | {Te€ZIn® 24 Crown street, called as a substis Varieties that are usually frozen | tute. Roche is a substitute letter car- are plentiful and can be sold for a rier a splendid lghti st ce | S L alaa e ter, which forms an alr-tight coating Stalks in with a dread we opine s To tell us that on the Tomorrow Employes at a rubber plant in Bris- We'll never more see twenty-nine. Lawrence M. Cremin; Leo AL struck for higher wages and their o a supply on hand for weeks or| Forsythe of 17 Crown street, who i§ eu to the scenes of our childhood, const ands w granted. regular | Adieu R gands vere To the boys and the girls once we crisls. The p knew Qnatoith o e *!through the line, but “what's the ous. If the o - To the pathwayvs that lead to the : greatest hardships con- | throu 3 s hands of the ene Phe Bolsheviki have learned that wildwood, ;:m‘r::: "’“' !““m"! Eenlwly s B L . S vae b s prolonged preliminary suspense 0 er, when one has read to here 1 0 ~ to decipher all co: e American Consul in Moscow is a To the skies that were ever so ‘:”’l» e \(“” Y penl one probably kecps saying: “What is | should increase his vocabulary of William J. Kelley, 170 Arch to our diplomatic and oole that they cannot stir up with | To the dells and the valleys of S ity this fellow Kicking about?"—if o | MMES 1o include more than the half- | Charles W. Gelring, 24 Commons 3 ness, e Herolis tho or-ve. ozen varieties that he now knows | wealth avenue which might’ come u unity o nd | After a girl is 17 her time is about 2 i : 5 e i To t::\v;“:ffl on the hill, vours ai equally Aisided between tistting ont| I want to ask the mavor when this| He Will then earn a high price per| Charles Olson, 48 Main street tion ; ; = anine o e iy . next council meeting is held and the | Word and get acquainted with some Howard R. Voight, 37 Hawking hianis: Oshkosh wants to he- _ 3 e 141 . tertaining company and writing to her NeXt counci A pianist in Oshk These are treasures relinquished with | (SEERNE company and w wood question is taken up. to go pre- | of the most delicious food that comes | street i pared-—have sonme sort of an idea what | from the sea Harry Wilchenik, 284 North street 4 e part with the year twen- ; zoing ‘ost a co y . chewsky, 993 North Ma When we part In the midsummer a 32 to 45 year ' the Wood is going to cost a cord de- i Felix Wichewsk) 3 North Main ty-nine. : street, Waterbury fish scales. . old man's fancy lightly turns to livered to the consumer. il f s Ty Then drinic to the dead and the dying, | thoughts of love and marrlage Don’t let us have the potato gossip ortionate Rents. John Panos, 12 High street, Brooksy, en c > dead a ying, S § R : (Washington Star.) Hie M : sl There's a reason—New York World. All over again. The mayor spent $20,- negMazs ceupylng forces hastened to he cons|||| - Meln street #movictiadvertises || o ldaysiand the " dreamines Sof br . 000 for machinery, etc. many patri TsRtheMplan tor the broventine ot BT e n oo 13 O T n pef Stroct S itself as “the coolest theater in the vore. At ofic citizens gave their time free—still | profiteering in room rents Charles Hettinger, 315 State streets 3 it aaterdsTaioralislioasease United States Arin'tl there | any |[TneltearsianditheSheartisches and the money that was taken from the Springfield > : 2 sighiag, 5 ¥ taxpaver to purchase potatoes at $1.35 Charles H Fisher, 139 Church. in Alaska? The Babel that Life holds in store; :f';““;‘”m‘:“f,:: ";;rd:'::;d]'“"i“ RO per bushel was charged back to the | food and fuel from overcharging land- | street, Middletown brim of the beaker, 2 : ke e - e 3 2 2 S T and to make sure that it did not come Pl full fothe brim Rl CWashyerhead70ie= EprinsfleldlDally s Samse| taxnayer fors the isum ot 832 ja | lordecan be putiintolliexscution 1t /{i8 Paul i1 Hierpe, (24 Buell street Mr. McAdoo pleads with Congress The sparkling, the bright, cheery i ¥ bushel Now every person in New |should be helpful in checking the evil Stephen Stahowiak, 246 Broad 07 of {he Germal oMcars) |, ¢ ¢ tox braine” If brains mere | wine,- 3 Britain knows of this “joker of extortion he difficulty as to the | street ggled it out of the office safe, i 4 s A tosst to the folks growing 4 L T : So I suggest that the mavor keep off | fuel, however, is that in most cases Tenn Jenusaitis s 1010 Washington 17 |itaze e Rlnonilo ts ROt people RO The fellows who've past We don't have much time in this 1y "grasc Yir he can't locate a path. |the landlords haye already stored thelr | street TAXPAYER, |ecoal, if they have heen successful inf joseph Gambino, 11 Broad street cou v , anything but ad- could claim exemption fiaa couniry now to do anything F 1: to his private apartment on the same ]llenur‘»fivl\esyln «Tnzm conditions. | poiqing at home, but from Missouri. | the flling of their early orders, glven AR b i il floor, where he burned it in the -Ohio State Journa 7 e et el Old Father Knickerbooker feels | "ACTS AND FANCTFS, e : | LIERSEUE 2NN ol The Legion of Officials. For those who have not filled their |~ maymond L. Knight, 120 Cleveland : i R 0 that he has been annoved long enough o= = Probably Gen. Ludendorff will say E el nen ek S R S 3 deavored to keep the visitors' atten g T e 3ostor erac J S . ) by that U-hoat pest in his front yard The paper supply to Gierman pub- | that the ”“‘7""‘;’“»4 he ) poNuLniee Fho army of the United Stetes has|2lY 10 fhe matter of food supplies David Mooshel, 12 Maple street tion fastened on other matters. The | o = . o L oo ction lice Hansineas) Hesnliout fasatin irefeh ovy s trosedaruebanclone I Ero R ot I 2 he Ubited States Nas | the matter Wil not be so easily ar-| prank Bagrallo, 89 Broad street ruse succeeded, and the Germans e el clistom lof zecord. ||| worth keeping'—New York Sun zrown at a formidable rate during | ilscd There Ix at present no law : 5 . fiaooorg ks the last year. but not much faster e e were much chagrined at not finding } ing only Hun victories, they are mot o ; I g o to deny supplies any indivi Natives of the Rhine provinces are | e o' o b per henceforth, | If German fury is stirred by a | than the biizade of civilian emploves. | foarding can be punished, but ordi- z Al single defeat to a new war on hospi- | The shipping programme, the 1aking | nary buving of food is not subfect to o tal ships, what atrocities will be left of the railroads and wires, and the | prohibition for any cause. The law : The kaiser was all ready to point to | o punish the decisive victories which week-by-week expansion of govern- | would have to be amended to reach HER CHTTERaR0 BB #D Hmisy, the Marne drive and say to Emper- | the allies are still to win>—Spring- | mental functions have combined to |the profiteer in this way. The Phila- { - @00 © THE PRESIDENT STAYS HOME. e or Charles, “There, that's the way you | field Republican make public employes of several hun- | delphia plan is designed to meet an | Voo W Lo p e e 0 SORGROE (@ R | el e G G e e S — dred thousand ~ofers who were for- [evil that cerfainly to some extent pre T e e Rut he conldn’t seem to find the right Many a war garden is wonder ey in privade sorvice vails here, but Philadelphia makes its words, and so there was another | Pot hecause it is so productive, but This is one aspc of the Govern- [ own municipal laws, while Washing- etrategic retreat’—Kansas City Star, [ Decause it is what it is.—Norwich ' ment ownership problem which has|ten’s laws are written by congress of work for the Doc right in Potsdam i R Bulletin not had from public opinion, the con — ki i T Aver in France they shoot German SRR sideration it deserves. Uncle Sam is Allled countrie propagandists and start treason trials | Autocracy is the polftical skunk. ' prohaply the world's largest employ Thathihe STnenchienunenose i) arenot | Bht in the midst of hombardment | After a while there will be only the {'e; of Tahor ven before the war 8 without authority is apparent trom | 2llowed to give the time of day byl o "o oy Over here it's differ- | laugh.—New London Day the country had frequent occasions to| Jlenine wants the Kaiser to help him velatively low price. The consumer The list follows he writer recalls an incident which o a deep sea diver. Presumably sadness at the time he was Vice | come & deep sea'diver. Presumably adn ends to ru 1p anc own the sul at Warsaw. On the day when | he intends to run up and d g lomatic relations were severed ith Germany, representatives of the charging the victim 40 cents and board | for a haircut and 20 cents for a shave charges by cutting off the supplies of all of functions. The consul's first thought was about the code book | MOVIeS under their very eves, and carried kitchen stove while the writer en Strect George Petrowskl, 54 Lafayette. street, Worcester . Martin Bizis, 191 High street Leo Skritulsky, 191 Washingtom street Paolo Brigante, 11 Union street,¥ the code book amongst the consulate » alarmed alveady over the activity of | anyway.—Fall River EEacte Allied aviators. Next year they will According to an article by a French sent 4 mental expert to administer to e Robert F. O'Leary, 15 Griswold street Gabriel Hoohanesian Arch Help from the Kaiser. ik (Baltimore American.) Joseph O'Kula, 87 Gold street Arthur P. Swanson, Osgood avenue., % v Paolo Aparo, Hotel Washington phone any more. But they might | ot Brockton Times, see how political pressure could be|in Russia, and the ex-king of Greece Rocco Calabrese, 400 South Main write you a letter about it if you — Glessen on the Lahn once —©2S yiought to bear on Congress and on [is beaging him ta aid him to get back | srreet ) ‘ asked politely. It the kaiser has anything at all | famous because Liebig the 'h_"“"‘"; the executive departments by real- | his throne. Then he has Austria-Hun- Luigi Ciliano, 87 Spring street with which to do any reflecting, he | taught at its university. It will be . "cmail groups of workers in the | gary crumbling to pieces on his hands, Toseph Mroz, 69 Orange street - in the years to come Princi- . ,.orpment printing plant, by post- |and the allies driving him back in | Joseph Genovese American Milla, men and by employes in Government | France, with nobody he can eall on to | company, Waterbury arsenals or navy vards. The voting |help him. This war is not turning out| ' iidiner Kapnuk, 15 Silver ! strength of the Federal emploves has | the easy walkover to world domination Angelo Mandalfo, 85 Arch over our real hope-to-dia tornado The American Indian is giving g i 3 = been multiplied ten or twenty fold he thought it would be when he start-| Gjovanni Denigri, 156 Washington main within the confines of this coun- e i excellent account of himself at the < N What will be the outcome when the | ed It Camillo Gagliardi, 107 Arch o O b | S T front. Incidentally it may be men- COMMUNICATED. { war ends Probably the return of —— Willlam H. Jones, 438 d : { tionea that the American Indian had - Heacel willlfindlinis srct eyl ot The office boy today asked us with | no small share in introducing the SFROM MISSOURL™ Rl e e e e a serious face: “How far is New York | corn and tobacco now regarded so 7 o . the Government as their employver. from a certain point?’ By the time | NENly by military authority.—Wash- | Taxpayer Wants to he “Shown” by 4.4 o wonder. They.are getting all mitted, the President could ill afford | . " 0 L 2 ington Star. Mayor on Wood Question e askiiociing he inay ot hieh - ‘;-;x::nhiz.flm‘vmf:w‘dhm the Germans in [ oyenue gra a paperweight he was al- | o e B oiees andliniorsl vl aiseiin o itheinireteatimus (nite as large as | Joseph Somws, 45 i those lost by the British in the retreat In last evenir issue 3¢ stated | They are not likely, therefore, to he B e R : Stanlev that our esteemed mayor has in view | enthusiastic for a return to the old Somne b a e o eR R ER s B Allexander (fiecHan, on 10,000 or 15,000 cards of wood, and | regime. The public is bearing the bur- | 1O _]""_]”'“'rrn ‘Y“"ha’fi’“ SEaaocks) SF Pallfamenta B0 AiVashing that if the council votes its approval | den in higher prices and restricted | « ° °° o pllies cauld Jullan F. Locke, 28 So. High the city can purchase same and save | service, but its sentiment will not e o Cosmo D'Avirro, 28 Booth. received two. Question—FHow many - ool nentake = o iianay E e e s e POSTPONE WAR CHEST. ank Prosperl, 411 Myrtle would he have received had he de- The Brest-Titovsk peace treaty al W. Juengsi, 57 Linwood | ready shows signs of heing bazay Deputy, printed in the Paris Journal, President Wilson is soon to visit the capitals of France and of other other the King of Buigaria. There's plenty b3 Remember. the “*hello” girls are not the surprise manifested by officials in Washington when informed of his statement. It is most improbable New York papers made more of a i that the President will visit any Bu- | must be wondering whatever he let | famous | the Yanks get over there for in the pally because it has had the honor of fuss this morning over the little squall | g, place— Detroit Free Press detaining a number of American sol- diers.—Troy Record ropean country for the time heing. s always be c r the dtihas olway ustom for the | 15n. Riverside drive than we did —_—— President of the Tnited States to re Edward Sczubelik, 30 Bond John V. Carlson, Kensington New Registrants The stores of ammunition and other | prancis Morrissey tration, and it is unlikely that Mr Supplies Captured. Wilson will vioate precedent in this (Toronto Mail and Empire.) Instance. Fven though custom per- o leave h esk in Washington for - ; o : ' 1shington 0¥ | ready out of the room The dandelion’s roar. spoken of in c these columns some months . 4 now silenced in the thunderous whip- Ludendorff dema twenty divi- : e i noed werny i ping of the golden rod.—New London elons of reserves from Austria and | pay. length of time. His duties have tpcreased tremendously since Amerd- a entered the war and the chief exec- of the nation has all he can do of the enormous mass of | i But following up his honer’s several { normal again For good or ill, & are flights sinca he took the reins tunt {ereating a giant political octopus with | N0 Action Until Conclusion of Octoher Levio Bessoni, 118§ T 2lle il Angelo Lentine, 23 fayvetta. Angelo Danofrio, 352 Arch At a meeting of the spacial commit- Gustave Jehning, Locust tee appointed by the Chamber of Rertram Biton. 58 Winthrop Commerce to look into the advisahil- | Lawrence V. Cremin, 41 Bassett. ers which he must examine daily, : papers ; LugL e, dally, | andea only two divisions? e e sriden Record e : 1 : visitors and attend the kn Meriden guide our city sovernment, I recall, | which no public man may now dare Loan Drive. I 25 receiving esid Ing official functions. N a1l A land 1 believe 1 state correctly, that he | to trifie Now is the time to look | E 1 Now that the Germans have heen Twenty scoreless baseball innings ;. " .40 some very bad landings. |these facts in the face and to realize exciting, butif '"”‘; Now, if the mayor is really serious! (heir true significance e expected in Paris this vear. But | __ : g " {100k like mourners passing avound | G- s wood Proposition. let hin is :L-r va, Settne it ot ne willlper theve | o DetlaEhesillTh e o linent Bt o el et ook at i remains oA fne K:J‘l""“("ll“'““m‘ w‘;l"'} e ",‘,,‘,,NH,,; 2 ity of establishing a war chest in New Paul Eolk, 104 Grove. i new monster gun if they intend to re- | qear lamented Springfield Daily | §2 V0 in o and carting of wood, men Protection Against U-Boats. Britain, the committee voted to defer John Gladysz, 113 Orange sume bombardment of the French | News. of experience In this particular line, (Montreal Gazette.) the matter until after the next Liber- Sebastian Giliberto, 54 Beaver. o and personally 1 think there is none It is apparent that there ara two | 'Y 10an, in accordance with a recom- Giuseppe Di Pietro 126 High. (N There is no one who excels a col- [y 8 ) Ty manufacturers, who | unwelcome (erman visitors in the | mendation of the State Council of De- Wiadislaw Bislewicz, 106 Rockwely TALKING TOO MUCH. g | ored gentieman in the art of trading |jo0 "3 o this sort of thing hefore | waters of the continent. What i« to | fense. The next Liberty loan drive | avenue eral March has request- will take place in October Robert S. Chalmers, 223 Glen wWilliam D. Roche, 24 Crown Philip David Ross 335 Arch Farsyth, 17 Crown No, President Wilson may hardl = eda el ; Y | pushed back more than fifty miles | may sound very before the Kaiser - » capital conversational salve for slightly worn | 0" 206 became man We have | be remembered in this connection is ed the public to refrain from referr- | woaring apparel.--Capper's Weekly very busy men in this city, both man- | that such incidents were expected and The matter of having a4 war chest ing to Amervican troops as “Sammies.’ - ufacturers and retailers: fhey have | provision has heen made to search for | in this city has not met with a great the publication of his book, Over | mhe best reason for desisting from the Something seems to have knocked | ey come across With their opinion {and destroy the destrovers. Britisn, | deal of enthusiasm by citizens in gen ’"':‘ “R“mv” the Top.” is now receiving a Ereat | uee of this term is beeause the men | e A out of Hungary.—Atlanta Con-|o¢ what our fine up-to-date system | Canadian and United States naval au. | eral. Organizations conducting war R e oM e stitution which has been and is under his hon- | thorities are co-operating, practically { fund campaigns feel that they would to; el B | overseas object strongly to it I o or's rein —but sometimes 1 think it is|under one direction in guarding the [ prefer to conduct their respective nection with his recent nomination — - The crown prince may vet become | shame for them to continue forever | waters of the Narth Atlantic coast. | campaigns separately. However, since Arthur Guy Empey, who received 5 ertising, subsequent to 61 Grove. deal of 1e ible notoriety in con- | = SEVERE STORM for a commission in the United States | The Berlin Deutsche Zeitung an-| g5 impatient as to met into the real | with this same attitude The protective fleet includes all sorts | the State Council of Defense has sug- A severs storm, accompanied by army One T . | nounces gloomily that the present| fighting himself.——Washington Star We don't nced here to quote the|of craft, from large cruisers to swift | gested that all cities and towns in the | high winds swept over the city last i de- E - mistakes of our health board (barn | pursuers, sufficiently armed to meet | state that are considering the matter | night, doing considerable damage t& newspapers | tory to the ef- . S ; 5 Wi & Washington government | building and slaughter house expense) | an derseq hoat and overcome it |at all. defer further action until after ; trees. Branches were hroken off i fect that Empe 1d been mentioned | feat of the war Perhaps in ten | hile the Washington g | building and nse) fan un ? i tr a n Hun setback is “the first serious & is talking of rajsing an army of {ner do we need to auote our park !mhey, with the convoying naval ve the Liberty loan drive, the subject | numergus places. Catch basing over- for a commission and then within a or so the Germans will learn | 5,000,000 men, Nature, according to |hoard (for children born of Rskimg |sels have been so effective in the per- | will be aliowed to rest until after that | flowed and numerous washouts wers very tew days it was announced that | about the first battle on the Marne. the latest estimate, sing within | parents can paddle in Winter as well [ formance of their duty that there ls]t!me- | reported,