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- delight Sunded, ‘for Brit- f@lready gone on record} BROUEh the speech of Balfour, as voring the establishment in T of a national homeland for Jews Migrate Back to Palest The story of the return to Px of the Jews during the last 40 years’is as amazing as that of Pilgrim fathers and in many ways a remar able parallel to it. This migration, too born of per he fir great series of m cres of J Russia began in 1882, Scores of thou- ®dnds of them fled to America A turned toward Palestine Every great movement jsh tribes has had its . Jeade The Moses of modarn Zionist imovement was Theodor Herzl. Ferzl med of a national home- Jand his race. His pamphl 3 Judenstaat” (“A Jewish State™) call to the Jewish people to ganize themselves on a nation il by @nd create for themselves home state. Herzl spake of that hone state vaguely as “Over There 1 Tittle the history of his he knew nothing of what piring in Palestine. Still 1ble was the effect of his that inside of a vear the first congress was held in Basel, land The oJshua of the Jews today is Chaim Weizman, president of the miniztrative commission He is hemist. He was born in Rus [ ter me a British subject the cause of the Zionist nevertheless has a that in a lestine our cut fow of the Jew- prophet drez was or- wsis n of remark- pamphlet Zionist witzer- so Dr. d ut A move- he us in i S practical British Britair of chemic Weizman strong to the he 1s war conmh appe: the certain for maki in hi the combination tion and ma 3alfour was one the Jewish realm Great an 1s ked out sired a reput al friends. T Thus impioned jons moved into the olitics nd Miraculously Developed. pio in Palestine in 1 aspira m of practi- eers ST alwan goes with health,and health making is the big reason for A delicicus food, rich in the vital phosphates. No Waste.You eat and enjoy it to the last atom. fealth making, nourishing. economical. b Try it. = There's a Reason. and | psed it. fentific and Bt in German. ensued over thi one of the fir Great was d surrounded NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1918, arid, barren, by first immigrants i §jcn. Milture; nd fo evements They vet they their of Pal r in soil knew race. the r productiveness. In, prosperity. {banks of | | Jaffe, in 1878, or aula:‘ed%.’]{ed Cross Workel‘rs Also Show | | than At st of the colo- the imerable dif- ple land was gs in 1890. § pounds. 904 and rade land of 1 at 60,000 of 000 €0-0pera- n thation andful were . de- in to op- h o d school jedts Hebrew iIndergarten guage are, nanites ese struggl- they fthe Orient. piz their ute to- ftute/of Technol- e Siv ey mon ing board. Pruction in t émbers sudd Th War, he enly - he jews won their victory. the plan the resignec Jerusaleni and wepe he depanding protes passed he shudedts o but thei them. Nathan teachers th W were ich hus tI estine 1 feated Gerpans in their doggzed friends 1 m = T ov) and hool. with the result tat si Hebrew 1c 1ad | ! opened attempt t T Heb pushed the a hody at of Haifa a re the sch ruled then Wl students went over The t the alone to Pr been by already arouwzh ussian rew At mel were | and Dr. became' mem- When a resolution the sole lan- chool, the rose They demanded that technical subjec controve language ques- t battles fought up be When their fasion, language Jaffa, at » meetings of 1 and resolutions were onsideration ool i, o a ht W us protested, pro-German director ignored e teachers protested. Thereupon, resigned new continued, new institutions Zionists at Dr. to- He- all of taught. morally before the war broke out Zionist Troops in the War anize Pal- de- But the language war was merely a clash of cultures fought e then, alestine trfare Intente w mocracy organiz part Gallipoli as the One played fated known ine man su of war volu that paign ey 1 to 1 rition Pa nota ists how in le the ve resolute | tells of Ro. gotten teers ¢ not to to jumy rifles fou rell’ Out grown in Ame from el the ht their already America front t organ on s of course 1 2 For the accommce the New will commencc ositors mber res tu a a re e are were the tt have at they sinice finish with taken . hey are bops for the valiantly as tion of J in cam; Zion from among compelled t the outbrea refused to Untrain rto do the t of for any prepared t st the brill sung devoted hign. ut art in any ewish those flee of k Mule Corps, a battle of principles bloodshed. Zionists of actual now fighting among cause of soldier soldiers the glorious but This de- ill- force, the was Jews from war hecome Otto- ed militar: o carry iant in the arts heir bit, they unmartial tas cani- water 1d the mules carrying ammu- T line trenches. They command Trishman their fame in the hook entitled ““With the Zion- the th val into at Gallipoli' of s W fairc 10t fr ta the their < of out Iniskilling ht p windoned their fle ) into the from as valiantly a won ri zonc v and e the t idence Jowish in to place o rench dead sol tl day Mu Legi and the Zion Jewish Eng (except phy Fifteen to Pa regime; ved its bap north of Jaffa au ¢ preparing 1 still other, the now that ut their hi and v, they ese PO f safet , and diers’ 1 le on, and sical) And t remarkable moment when | regiment are ble to the draft in the country of he shell, T tz ¥ ladies f Corps organi Canada among Jews who for one reason another hundred lestine nt tism tells in went he had nule- inted tasks, but aking 1ands om has od in- have from they have joined at the which London and wich has al- of fire Other rzon- to go from from ICanada. Pale fizhting ahead of men are '\goiniz prepa supreme in most sacrifice doing thi to speed s vhen the blue and white flag vith the six cornered star of n the centre will float proudly the flags of the free nations. CITY $19.75, Bargains in $23,7 —Advt dies’ Auxiliary 1 meet tonight at 7 1 Electric 28, ings from purpose of hall. A whi meeting. Britai to keep open on ITEMS Men’ of the 20 towill of n aturd Suits, at Besse-Le- A [} o’clock 1 = & ollow their de- | rust on Saturd com- Sep- eve- 7:30 to 9 o'clock, for the receiving posits only -—1 re- U.S. TROOPS HELP DURING AIR RAID Worth Under Aerial Attack W, on Cross hington, ept a German air raid the American Red gives a thrilling acount of how Amer- | ican troops and Red Cross workers gives aid to the city in such desperate moments. He describes an air raid | in this fashion: “Nowhere is there any sound but the echoes of footsteps. Not a street | light is to be seen, not a single ray of light—nothing but the inkiest and most impenetrable darkness. Then all of the noise of the world seems to break loose. Clang—clang—clang hooms the tocsin—like a gigantic pneumatic riveter wor on a col- 1 losal bell. Whooo-o shrieks the siren running up and down the scale in an awful wail “The streets —Writing of Paris, one of inspectors come to life. Doors | {open and slam shut. The sidewalks | j are full of ghostly figures hurrying ! | towards the caves, where the inhab- | | fitted up cots and bunks. | up now to make a sitting | place for the new comer: The | place fills up. Everyone looks apa- thetic, sleepy and bored. The chil- dren go to sleep with their heads on their mothers’ shoulders and a girl in the uniform of a street car con- ductor swaps war yarns with a poilu in dingy blue. In the 1 aid, the front trucks of her car were thrown from the rails by the displacement air, caused by an exploding torpeo. The car and its inmates were un- hurt. The poilu looks mite in- credulous and murmurs, ‘T can well believe you, Mademoiselle.’ “Outside the noise continues about three or four minutes and subsides as a new noise starts Archies, or anti-aircraft guns commence to bark furiously from half dozen different points. Searchlights rake the sky. The Arch- ies continue their clamor, but they are not firing at anything, merely ! keeping up a barrage fire to prevent the Boche from flying over the city. “Suddenly there is an earthrocking WHOOM. No more doubt as to where the Boches are. WHOOM, WHOOM, WHOOM! One involuntarily ducks and tries turtlewise to cover his head with his shoulders. A hideous noise resounds up and down the deserted street—falling walls, and the tinkling and crash of showers of broken and roofing tiles. “Through the gl and litter of the street an American Red Cross camoinette come ploughing its was One of the city firemen stands on the running hoard. They stop and the fireman flashes an electric lamp into the ruins, makes a hasty inspection, and then runs up the strect and dives into the redlight ‘cave’. “‘Anybody here from numbers 49 to 512 he calls. A half dozen voices yell out that there is. “‘Is everybody here from numbe Was there anyone either of those buildings?’ “There is an anxious calling back and forth and a rapid counting of noses. ‘All here’ is the answer! “Good! Not much left of those two buildings. Don’t enter the ruins until they have heen inspected by the engineering department. Go to the Sisters of the Poor if you want food or a place to sleep.” “A wail and several curses pete, but the fireman is gone “The Archies have stopped {here are no more whooms, but ple stay in their cella Tt is only nine o'clock. and experience has shown that the industrious and meth- odeal Boches will keep coming back again and again until after midnight. “A half a mile away a bright red glow gets larger and lavger and lights the sky. A fire has broken out in the railroad yards and is making great headway. Several cars of oil are burning fiercely and spreading to | cars of merchandise. Half a dozen | American soldie re working fever- | ishly trying to get the untouched car way from the fire. “Two of ‘them have got hold of a switch engine and are shunting out whole strings of cars. “‘Do you know anything about these I'rench engines, Sir?’ asks the impromptu engineer, ‘I can’t find the damn brake’ “The fire is eating its way towards a pier on which stands a line of drums of gasoline. Py “‘Come on, boys! roll them Kegs o gas outa here’, yells the corporal the line of drums starts trundling down the pier. It is infernally hot, and the average man does not know just how hot gasoline can get he- fore it begins to misbehave; but the line never wavers. ‘‘Roll 'em along going. Everybody itants have | They get c which glass a those left in com- and peo- hoy has Keep em got to die sometime.’ “Little quieter, Archies working bors in ir become down. The | there a its la- miss- out of sounds stately, Al little fires stop. Herc party still the ruins. Someone and they want to get him cellar. Now the tocsin again, this time with slow, measured beats. This the thir die and continues by The is is Il serivicrisin | the dreaded | ocean of wheat, clear’ signal. No more enemy planes are flying between here and the fight- ing lin People come out of their cellars and go A few cautions souls are busily putting sheets of per and pieces of beddi acro, their broken windows to keep out ‘courant d'air’. Now and then there is a small group in a doo -, recounting experiences he Boche has dropped more one hundred bombs ton many of them of the 60 pound s The net damage is not great. A few houses destroved, windows broken, a few victims—very few but all too many: a holes blown in the streets, some trees uprooted in the parks and some pansy erated. I imagine the Bocl home wa very man a few that back in his quar- escadrille kommand- atur, after sadly cataloguing his own wounds, is writing up account. of his glorious night's work for the edi- tion of the reader of the ‘Kol- nischezeitung'. His ductile pen is reeling off: ‘The earth reeled and rocked and while rows of went down like card houses; light of the flam showed panic- stricken crowds su z through the streets toward the open country: the railroad depots were levelled to the ground and many munition dumps were blown up. and several fires we seen to break out in the bar- racks and military warehouses'. “The adrille kommandatur would be eved beyond could he but walk through the streets tonight and inventory the net results and see thc effect produced on population. He who now less shrugs his shoulders and ‘C’est le Guerre', and once more peaceful stars shine down ly on the silent streets.” 20,000 ACRES ARE an is says the RECLAIMED BY U. S. | Ficlds Now : ters of Sacremento Once Surged Flood. Grain in Sacramento, Cal., Sept. T.—A wheat replacing a sea of wate thous d acres in one tract bringing forth the cereal of which Uncle Sam and his allies in the world war are in such great need is a transformation accomplished on what was overflowed land, near Sac- ramento. The huge tract with the flood waters mento and the American in a fertile basin of some odd thousand acres, most of which has been reclaimed and turned to agri- culture through the efforts of the federal and state government, cost of millions of dolla The reclamation of this permanent fashion was made ble by the progress of the mento River Flood Control of twenty formerly covered of the Sacra- rivers lies land possi- lifornia legislature, is be- ing steadily pushed to completion by the Federal authorities, the Califor- nia Debris Commission, the state authorities, the tion Board, on the othe ject eventually will cost about $42, 000,000 and is designed to take car of the floods of the Sacremento river; these amount to five times as much as the river channel can carry. The interests of navigation, reclamation and flood control are so intermingled that it is necessary to adopt a plan which will provide for all three. The partial completion of the propect, with its accompanving and the Reclama- The pro- big put- ting to use of the reclaimed land, in- | sasure what the final This one great tract solid dicates in a m results will be. of twenty-thousand acres, a if not the greatest American fields grown to this grain SEES ISOLATION OF GERMANY AFTER WAR and Admiral Von Koester Says Hun Will Have Role of Cinderella. Sept. 27.—“We we are not to economically.” Grand von Koester, former com- hief of the German fleat, declared in speech to the German Navy League at Dortmund, a Berlin message reports “After the war,” continued the ad- miral, “our ships in large numbers must traverse the ocean and we must have colonies with strong points of support. We want free trade on the seas and we will only get that under the protection of the German fleet.” The speaker eulogized the sword as a means to victory, declaring “As nature needs storms, as God has given beasts teeth and claws, man also needs the sword.” In referring to nations, Admi Germany a Cinderella must. perish Amsterd be victor politically Admiral mander- m, us if aad a the proposed lea al von Ioester would only have in it un de- the of clared role of GET SLOAK'S FOR YOUR PAIN RELIEF You don’t have to rub it in to get quick, comfort- ing relief on that s c pain, r beds oblit- | buildings | the | measure | the | house- | tranquil- | Where Wa- | sea | at the in | Sacra- | project | which, after endorsement by Congress | on one hand, | | the is one of the largest, | | certain Americans who knew the | eign MEN'S STYLES ARE ATTRACTIVE this YEAR - | They are more attractive than they have been for many a year. Most of them have the military lines that make a man walk straighter just be- cause he is wearing them. Every man may not be able to go for a soldier (the country couldn’t get along unless a lot of us stayed at home), but every man can look as if he were fit to be a soldier and able to do his patriotic work at home. SR Are all made with the nice clean cut military lines that add so much to a man’s appearance. The styles have “go” to them this year. They all look as if they were made for able bodied men. Even the styles for older men will make a man look young. Come now and see our attractive lines new Fall clothes and Sincerity models men and young men. $18 to $40 THE ASHLEY BABCOCK CO. of for AMERICANIZATION- BY GRACE ABBOTT! {in Prominent Immigration Student Tells of New Obligations Just before our entrance in the war, there was a tendency on the part of some Americans to challenge the pat- | riotism of all the foreign born among us. These people doubted whether, in the event of war, our foreign born population would be willing to give the full measure of their suppert to the United States rather than to the coun- tries of thelr birth. They were convincéd by the fact that the for- eigners whom they mistrusted had de- liberately chosen the United States a home of their children, and had invested in this country their little capital and their very life itself. This skeptical feeling was entertained hy for born only through their preju- dices; many French and English hon- estly feared it; with many more Ger- mans the wish was father to the same thought Fortunately, after ohe year of war the answer to Germany's expectations and our fears has been given The names of the volunteers, the names on the lengthening casualt lists—Slavic, Greek, Italian, German, Scandinavian, Irish, along with the English are the answer the unde- served charge that the foreign born among unwillir to their share of responsibility national decisions. But as the foreign from the industrial country in camps there has been new past indifference to which come with a tion. The most conspicuor has heen the inability of a able number to =speak Shocked to find that to car the colo not speak our lang cans are ready to dems gressive campaign of tion.” They would like to summarily force all foreign born citizens the English languag: ut 1 that compulsion by Jaw or social pres- sure would fail here just failed in Poland, in Bohem in Lithuania. Americanization n much mare than lea the English lang © pulsory school attendance Jaw the language must moved never e donc and methods. he -En ant lives isol the main But a isolation is own to ns are for our born centers of the- wnd cantonment evidence of our the problems complex popula- of th consider English. who were Ifrance could ome Ameri- nd ‘“‘an Americaniz many to age, to use submit rinyg to under a of can autocratic barrier it successfully coercive sneaking and remote of ant \oran on and in immi- from life his the ide lish no merican in current impor the ig who lives the histor steel worker arment most me River stru of Bethlehem worker in American Drive the or New The of Slavic d the opportunity of the national governmeént and of the local community to the admitted im- migrant were and still are (1) to pro- tect him gainst fraud and exploita- tion, so that such traditions he cherished with regard fo America might not be lost his first contacts with us; (2) him oppor tunity the English language and secure such & working duty in e an not | { | accept | gathered | { troublesome knowledge of our laws and tions as would enable him to join us the work of making the United States a really effective democracy; | (3) to make such adjustments of our political and social machinery the peculiar needs of the various elements our complex population rend necessary or desirable. The nions institu- | humble men ard women who ha themselves suffered from a denial | the freedom which they are askif the world to give to their people here are also “intellectnals” who hay | had their part in leading the o ments. 3 And it is the example of the Unit} States in which the American of maj generations and the Americans ame recently from all the nations Burope are living and working together the problems of our com in as peculiar of our foreign potency of the opi- born citizens at this time should not be overlooked. They have played an important part in the politics of Europe in the past. | l!fe that makes the League of Nt Every movement looking toward more | & Possibilit: And so while recogn| democratic organization in the ‘“old |ing the difficutlies which come wit] country” has counted upon the em complex population we must tecogn grants in the United States for moral | thatit offers us a peculiar opportanil and financial aid and more than one “Americanism” is much moge European government has been con- | matter of the long future that vinced during the past fifty years that | ahead of us than it is of the pa except for American support, the | Unless we shall plan to utllize to demands of the oppress- | fullest extent the contributions wh ed nationalities could have been easily | each of us can make we shall tail silenced. Buf the Americans them. | our obligations to that future. selves know little or nothing about the efforts of the Czech or the Cros tian miner to help liberate the re tives and friends at home. It is not SLATER APPOINTED. Warren S. Slater, physical inst at the Y. M. C. A. and who in charge of the city plaground tivities during the past summer, Y been appointed to the board of pul amusement commissioners to suced Howard L Platt, who has resigned.\ necessary to go to Europe O to acquire a first hand knowledge of the questions that the oppressed of | Europe are asking to have settled rightly now. For here among us, be- cause of that very oppression, are the Don’t Poison Baby. ORTY YEARS AGO almost every mother thought her child muet have PAREGORIC or laudanum to make it sleep. These drugs will produce' sleep, and a FEW _DROPS TOO MANY will produce the SLEEP) FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lau num and morphine, each of which is a narcotic product of opium. Druggists] are prohibited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at all, or! to anybody without labelling them *‘ paison.” The definition of ‘‘ narcotic” is : A medicine which relieves pain and_produces sleep, but which in poison ous doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death.” The taste and smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, and sold under the nam of ““ Drops,” ¢ Cordials,” ““Soothing Syrups,” etc. You should not it anyy medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know! of what it is comé)osed. CASTORIA DOES NOT I CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears the signature M_— of Chas. H. Fletcher. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of Renier Pickhard & Dunn 127 MAIN STRE 1409-2 We are now demonstration of CELLA MUSLIN comprising GOWNS, ERS, ENVELOPE COMBINATIONS. These garments finest materials trimmed. The special advantage of MARCELLA COMBINATION is t while being practically a CLOSH| DRAWER, the wide flare around t bottom, gives it the same advafita, as an OPEN DRAWER. Its special feature is that it is al SHORT SKIRT. It buttons in frex is fitted around the hips and falls fi round the knees like a ripple pet t PRICES LESS THAN PRESENT COST OF MATERIALS. NEW ARRIVALS DAILY IN COA’ DRESSES, SUITS and BLOUSE Now is the time to select your NEW CORSETS. Come in and Be Fitted. Phone having a_ speci] the NEW MAN UNDERWEA CORSET CO CHEMISE ai 5 are and made of t very dainti ty