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

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flcMillan Store,inc. 1f A ' Memorab'e “ALWAYS RELIABLE” \side All Your aleof Women’s Coats FINE COATING FABRICS WILL SOON BE A THING OF THE PAST ! MILLS ARE NOW STRICTLY LIMITED to only the PLAINEST MATERIALS ALL THOSE WHO CLEARLY FORESEE THE FUTURE KNOW THAT 3 c NOW, NOT “SOME TIME THIS FALL”, IS THE TIME TQO BUY. sehold Duties psday Morning || P WOMEN’S COATS Ag(l))RwF&l’rléR 4 seGs In This Sale NEVER HAVE WE OPENED THE SEASON WITH SUCH A WONDER- . $3.98 FUL DISPLAY OF COATS } Silk Dresses, Silkk Poplin Dresses and beautiful B o e oioti e ; } Il At Values That Caunot Possibly Be Long Held Down—Many in Materials ! Fible That Are Now Beyond Any Duplication.—Wise, Smith & Co., Hartford. 3 | EUY NOW IF YOU WAIT ] dred POUfldS Of SCOtCh ‘ " and you are assured of buying all-wool materials, materials vou are likely to have the unpleasant surprise of not being = that in many cases cannot be bought later at any price. able to secure at any price a coat of the material you've in mind pisted Knitting Yarns W * and navy shades of olive drab aud khaki. BUY NO lF YOU WAIT 'Y MORNING 1 19 and reap the henefit of economies springing from the fakt you must not lose &ight of the fact that garments that we R e skein . that we contracted for these garments when fabric prices and are able to replace cost us from five to twenty dollars more than : 8 costs were fa s 3 cial offering for WEDNESDAY MORNING ONLY. labor costs were far more normal the original orders. BUY NOW IF YOU WAIT three Hundred Pair Men’s Heavy § e LA i T I ALt (g styles, in shades many of which will soon disappear but you have late because lacking all-wool material and limited to a few stand- h wool Army SOX i the benefit of most careful making in every particular. ard shades. IR, oy 1 o oo o e e MAGNIFICENT FUR-TRIMMED COATS with Shawl Collars or the New Military Fur Collars Gould conceive | B WEDNESDAY MORNING 89¢ STUNNING COAT MODELS WITHOUT FUR That May Be Worn o Knit Sleeping Garments With Your Own Fur Pieces g i that the Allies, singly and For Children YUKON SEAL COATS coltectively, have pledged themselves to a restoration of that unfortunate - They're kiit with the feet in them to keep the children warm, should they Kic off the bed clothes. On Sale JULILIARD JERSEY COATS SEALETTE VELOUR COATS WEDNESDAY MORNING CRYSTATL, CORD COATS KFHAKI ARMY COATS the suggestion of the f Sizes 0, 1, 2, o from this district and declar WEDNESDAY MORNING 980 RAYONNER COATS i BUFFIN SEAL COATS NORMANDIE MIXTURE COATS POM POM CLOTH COATS PONY PLUSH COATS Women’s Coats at $22.50 Women’s Coats at $55.00 Regular $1.25 values. Only 12 dozen to be sold at these prices. We cannot speak too highly of the beautiful Velour Coats at Wool Velour and Silvertone Coats show collars of seal or skunk, 0 $1 89 this price. One model has a large square aviation’collar and is opens or Big Collaxe | (helh mve nat fiur HiGavand - Coilare inimth SopuCob ooy TR & trimmed with fancy buttons with a novel belt for good. meas- with nutria are very striking. The backs are extra full, some of yed in our south window until time of sale NG. country; and, finally, in the face of the magnificent efforts of Polish sol- diers in France, it ought not to take very long for this country to adopt . FROST GLOW CLOTH COATS 89(: & DUV-DE-LAINE COATS WOOI, VELOUR COATS BOLIVIA CLOTH COAT FVORA CLOTH COATS SUEDE VELOUR CLOTHS SYLVERTONE COATS regarded as a free country. The very reasons put forward for the recognition of the Czecho-Slovaks obtain in even greater measure for the recognition of the Poles, and the data compiled by Ignace Paderewski, Ready to Hang Curtains Of fine quality. Marquisette trimmed with lace edgings all complete with valance in white and cream, they're good values at the Polish leader in this country, out- $2.50. WEDN. lining the aims, aspirations and achievements of his countrymen will no doubt carry great weight in the official deliberations on the question. Those of Polish blood in this city, as well as in other communities throughout the country look forward to an affirmative decision in the premises in the very near future. And Tapestry and » elvet Rugs T ’ t t 43 00 with their rows and rows of buttons and their little tucks. Peau de omens Loats a s Sysme linings are plain or figured, making the Inside as beautiful These rugs are remarkable values at this special sale price peau de cygne lining, a feature worth ‘while noting. There are when our Government does issue a o that look for all the world lik~ a soldier’s cartridge belt in the back, This collection includes model Coats in Bolivia, Silvertone, gested, Congressman Lonergan will | s e s e s S AT e Y SIS T taupe, brown, navy, wisteria, its own, each an aristocrat among high-grade coats. ure. Sizes from 16 to 44 and comes in navy, brown, seal, green, T e A T A, 2ty e e T s . as the outside. Slze 27x54 Duv-de-laine is a new fabric that makes these Coats wonder- ek have fur collars; others have self collared WEDNESDAY decorative buttons and fancy envelope pockets. The backs . are Come for them carly as we will sell only one bale at this price. have won the lasting esteem and 9 *9 S MORNING e b double when they reach the front. Pockets are very important, fully effectiv some Women’s Coats at $60 to $150 MORNING ... ok $1,69 full plaited. Some of the belts have little huttoned-over flaps formal decree along the lines sug- though the front isn’t a .bit militar The shades include beaver, sta] Cloth and Duv-de-laine. Each has an individual beauty gratitude of every Pole in the United Herald will be glad to co-operate | recognize the Kaiser when our lads fully with patriotic citizens who may | volunteer for the arrangement of ai B B States and other lands. O T S T PERSHING DAY. patriotio program for next Friday. Who will help? The three Scandinavian kings will Once more we remind our readers : meet again soon. If a couple of hat next Friday, September the 13th, queens attend the meeting that is the 58th anniversary of the birth | yndian summer is here. | would make a full house. of General John J. Pershing, com- i | model villages for the benfit of ship- them. In Nebraska, en hundred | ganda among their people is unfor- _ imng workers. and eighty-five men in one county | tunately well proved. No other cpun- e latest story from the trenches | Now comes the Commonwealth of claimed oxemption from the draft|try is confronted by such a problem | Massachusetts and in the person of , upon the ground that they were “ene- | Here among us are hundreds of thous acting Governor Coolidge, under the my aliens,” but upon being questioned | ands of men too alien in sympathy sent a cloud of gas into the German authority of the State Defence act, ! they admitted they had been voting | to fight for this country and too-un- trenches and then sang out to the confers upon Henry D. Endicott, man- ; for years! | American to be trusted with respon- B — weeping Fiins|that old refraln: “Im . 8ger of the public safety commiftec,| An enormous number of slackers | sible war work, yet they are permit- By iroratannonr e : power to seize property for which an {in war, but actors in voting have |fed to help Federal representatives sorry I made you cry unreasonable rent is charged work- been revealed in the German counties | and senators, governors and legisla - men and the families of workmen in South Dakota—the counties which | tors who may obstruct needed war FACTS AND FANCIES. employed in the production of muni- defeatéd woman's suffrage on refer- | legislation, and ,if the war lasts so gard this as a crushing blow for their — = | tions, ships and other articles for war cndum in 1916 \ long, may help elect a president business. Korniloff is alive again Positively ' yses. And we do not doubt that he Great Britain and Canada in order | UPon whose attitude and character - - < S his last appearance?—New London i) use it if the profiteers do not|to make certain of loyalty at the! the fate of our country will depend n the least from the honor due to “Allies Bite Huns' Flank”.—Head- SHITvErAlwo e e Day. reform. elections, have disfranchised for the On the other hand, hundreds of these sons of France, and with no 3 — It will become painfully evident to:l.period of the war all objectors and | thousands of women, American by The more general the observance the rent sharks, if occasion arises, | 5l structionist Mo Great Britain | birth and education, who are backing = —_ might be well to advise them also of | of the motorless Sundays the fewer that the law of 1917 conferring ex- ! has held no general election since she | the war by work and sacrifice never Chicago ball players will NOT the danger of wrist watches, powder | there will be of them.—New Haven traordinary powers on the governor in ! entered the war. Canada has disfran- | before demanded of women, are de O (i TS At (R0 O G2 it bemn rere 8 Register. war time has teeth. It was not for | chised all men naturalized within the | Died the privilege of recording their New Britain ought to realize that if | pyep i - — ] the mere pleasure of phrase-making | last fifteen years for the period of the | Patriotic views at the polls. Our na- TS e CREG (R e (T e And the Bolsheviki are also beat- | that the general court passed that war. Such caution is not easily tak- | tion is engaged in two wars, one with ¥ As Maine goes in September, so the | ing it while the going is good. They jact. Men who defy the underlying en in the United States and is proba- | 20 enemy in Europe and one with an itled to honor and applause when Cheer nup! Some wise one has dis- country goes in November—Political | all have the habit now when the al- principles .will discover this to their | b1y constitutionally impossible. enemy at home. Many an American they are with us, surely our own | covered that “prosit’ is not German proverb, But Maine went dry many | 165 appear in sight.—Bridgeport hearts’ content With the exception of Germany, all | family is left behind without a vorsy greatest soldier, the man who holds | after all but Latin years before Uncle Sam de ‘d o8t S { countries relinquish their claims upon | to represent it. Many a voter will yee , Se de ‘ded to go their citizens when they are natural- | Neéver return and will leave no one be-= We suppose it would be all right to COMMUNICATED. ized In another country and the nat- | hind to protect that which was his spealk of our new conductorettes as uralized citizen is expected to take a | 8t the Polls. America may beat:the onsideration on the occasion of his | others prefer the French pronouncia- members of the fare sex.—Cleveland b solemn and sincere oath that he will | Kaiser in France and be beaten by ! It is all right to talk of near-beer | Plain Dealer. ENEMY ALIENS VOTING. his car home on the Sabbath mander-in-chief of the American Ex- Resistration day Thursday: IoDouaiie L < e T Jeditionary Forces. We ask again e . P B! can almost imagine Ludendorff pun- whether the citizens of New Britain We might refer to it as the Hinde- | ning thusly with the Kaiser: *I don'¢ | 1® 10} about an American soldier who ntend to let this notable date pass | burg lyin’ want to retain that fort, Douai?” without some observance of it. We are glad that those heroes of Verdun | Aqa horrors of war—Nat,Goodwin are coming to this city to give a con- i o6 e ! y g is divorced again. duration of the war no more flivvers We know that the city will wel- 5 wil be produced Junk dealers re- ome them royally, and we trust that La-on, General Pershing, and hear heir reception will be a worthy one. | the Hun squeal “Enough!” However, without intending to detract warned line. Soldiers can eat most anything. not to wear rings while at work. Tt thought of dampening the enthusiasm which we hope will mark their visit here, we believe that the people of he fate of so many of our lads in his D 4 he T on the water wagon hand, is worthy of our attention and Some folks call it St. Quentin, while sirthday. Therefore, it behooves us | tion—thus: St. Quentin :0 act before it is too late, and ar- range some kind of a celebration in \onor of this event. The occasion is ynly three days distant, but we still nave time to formulate plans for the ybservation —of General Pershing's irthday The least that we can do s to hold a mass meeting, secure the services of a band, and have the aud- ence join in singing patriotic songs, ifter which greetings from the city ould be cabled to the General i 4 »ne or two speakers could be obtained ‘or brief addresses ,so much the bet- ter. The plan is simplicity in itself, and we are confident that Pershing Day will not pass unobserved in New pritain. But we would like to see some ACTION! Talking and writing will not accomplish very much. The Speaking of funny names, a crook arrested in New York yesterday called himself Tzzy Strate One government office is said to embrace 77 bureaus. Did you ever try to embrace a bureau? An American soldier writes home that he shot a German in his dugout Bullets are no respecters of anatomy The King of Bulgaria has returned home after a month's visit in Ger- many. Bulgarigh restaurants report a rushing businese. America has recognized the Czecho- Slovaks, but no one will be able to cellor was literally thrown out of of- fice, historians may record that he went Hertling through space. It is all right to talk of near-bear and other substitute beverages but who will find a substitute for the rev- enue derived from taxes on liquors? Tn all the despatches about the tor pedoing of the Mt. Vernon we fail to note a single word as to whether Sen- ator J. Ham Lewis' pink whiskers turned pale in the crisis. The most original excuse we have heard for using an automobile last Sunday was that offered by the farm- | er who said he was motoring into town to find out why he must leave Rent Profiteer: (Boston Post.) There are many kinds of profiteers —a good and great word, men and brethern. invented by a true linguistic genius—brought forth by this war; about the meanest and unworthy of whom are the rent profiteers, the house and tenement owners near gov- ernment works, who, because of the cenormous demand for homes and parts of homes, boost the prices of their hoidings for about all the traffic will bear. The United States government has already dealt vigorously with some instances of this low form of greed, notably down in Bath, Maine, where Uncle Sam seized a couple of tene- ments whose owners had raised the price of four-room apartments from $7 to §80 a month! 1In other places | the Federal authorities have built “Alien enemies,” plotters and other cannot and will not be trusted in munition plants other lines of war wark to which women are being urged, vet they may vote! Americans qualifications These are Arkansas, Nebraska, first papers only North Dakota, South Dakota and Tex- congressman Germans composed a majority his district and that a very large num- admitted that he could not safely of- by voting for woman Other congressmen, of political parties and legislators have these men they repreecai German con- stituencies give up any claims of the land of his | him at the polls at home! The reme- hirth and become a loyal citizen of the land of his adoption. But Germany, in 1913, enacted a law that German citizens should not be considered a | having lost their “German character when naturaliezd elsewhere. Dr. Ne- well Dwight Hillls, in “German Atroc ities,” claims that the vote may be i exercised in Germany under this act, even though men have been made citizens of this country. Thus sup- ported by the Fatherland in the the- ory that a man may be a potential citizens of two nations, the German taking an oath of allegiance to the United States may find excuse to re- serve his real loyalty for the land of his birth That there are many genuine Amer- ican patriots among the Geman pop- ulation of this country is well known That the great majority of Germans are loyal, all Americans hope and most of us believe, but that the ma- jority is engaged in insidious propa- dy and the Jefense is the immediate enfranchisement of women by the shortest possible process The above facts reveal four clearly justified conclusions 1. The possible number of non- citizen votes is sufficiently large to present a real hazard to social pfo- gress even in times of peace. The risk is tremendously aggra- vated by the excitement of war. 3 The condition \is transformed into a genuine peril by the withdraw- al of a large number of loyal voters who in normal times offset the un- American vote. 4. Woman Suffrage would not dou- ble thé danger vote owing to excess of foreign males over females, but it would make good the patriotic ivots and thus go far to readjust condj- tions in the interest of unitedipatri- otism From “The Home Defense.” By CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT,

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