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14 ; NEW BRITAIN Dnn\ D} FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918, T ———————— - = e pr—— » = - e — — - i "Tho Has Just Lost an er Front Tooth - - - - rig sz : g IRROR AT BY 1S PERSONAL 4 AGAIN HaPivg SHOCKED A | g G 1 Noted in R sVL’P:E;E (NS L e Sy Tie SIGHT - A military model, ve aréal Increase Noted In ke-expor- oot & cAme , ) | TR e smart style, many othe tation of Foreign Goods ouT good ones here. New York, Nov. S.—Whether the : ; fi & United States is to become after the A A NN A 5 B 5 e var a sreat clearing house for inter- T4 : / v ; T N national. trade cannot yet be deter- s ! 3 ; /e e% y ined with accuracy, but certain it that the foreign merchandise re- rted from the United States has H 3 s b 5 3 \ wn tremendous gains during the > - 2 s i N 4 : | % i s 5 period, and in the r which | o | R : \\ . ds with next month will be about i Y A y 5 W SRR N § three times as much as in the year preceding thg war and four times as much as a decade ago. g 5 ; . : § The total value of foreign merchan- Y " I i arx dise re-exported in the calendar year B ] g 1918, according to a compilation by | B i The National City Bank of New York, | LAUGHS oPEmLY EXPERIENCES i 3 l\?';',o’i»’l’}:}?fiif'fl? ti9‘117?0'§7r?£}§)§;17.'nwloi“:; g‘é Ngi:ECUH;\‘:Js :Gufie'go:z;mi‘szy J')f CiDES To : e e o The VACUUM WoRDS = BE‘;‘(TE o:“fi_ : e fi Make which means long slgrpinm S e Gt wieh s AND TRIES T : { service, $25.00 to $75.00. o e | oven U , T = A great showing of Boys 000,000 fn 1879, $13,000,000 in 1889, P : ., Mackinaws $6 to $12. $22,000,000 in 1899, $27,000,000 in : V45 % j [ i § . Some time you will need| Gloves, large assortment proximate and perhaps cross the §100- 000,000 line, The total for the nine | R / /1 AN Y ] ; ; B 50c to $5.00 pair. months ending with September, 1918 | P 3 R B 3 is $71,694,496 against $43,405,445 in | |’ Wl ; 3 R I / AN : e This store is the home of the same months of 1917. Should this | great show of Increase continue during R i SRR { ) A | & o o HART, SCHAFFNER & the entire year the total for 1918 would exceed $100,000,000 against ! : B % : & > K ’ MARX Clothes. 1909 and $386,000,000 in 1913. Then | it began a rapid advance as above in- | | dicated and in 1918 the total will ap- $64,000,000 in the former high record | year of re-exportation of foreign | merchandise. ! and manufacturing | 3 ? ; = e = the chief article in | o { 'F d struction, will, at the invitation of the ] This conference, according te which this increase in re-exportation | L4 Y field division, Council of National De- | nouncements, will be of great imp of foreign merchandise occurs. Rice, 2 fense, attend on November 11 and 12 | ance, It will discuss and arrange corn, wheat, tobacco, fruits, fish, COPYRIGHT 1918, NEW YORK TRIBUNE INC a conference with the Federal War | policy for the handling of nations fresh beef, tea, beans and peas show Industries Board. Invitations were | problems, more particularly tH a large increase in re-exportation. So | - | issued, pursuant to the wishes of D.| covering non-war construction. liave also certain manufacturing f .| R. McLennan, chief of the non-war | preparation for this meeting, Ber: materials especially sisal, leaf tobacco, | from the Latin American countries ¢ articles showing increases but in a | value, the stated value of raw silk ex- | quantity of foreisn coffee exported in | construction section of the War Indus- | M. Baruch, chairman of the Wars raw s and pig iron. Of rice chiefly | shows a tremendous increase in 1 ver; large proportion of cases the | ported in the seven months of 1918 | the ven month of 1918 having been from Japan the guantity re-exported | exportation, the figures for the sevi g portation in 1918 is materially | being 37,000 against $ ,000 in ,653,000 pounds against 5,133,000 | the °'n months of 1918 was| months of 1918 being . s than that of 1914, this being due | the same months of last year. Y\’l; ame months of 1914, and of 60,000,000 pounds, valued at $3,984,- | against $20,000 in the corresponding |of course to the very large demands | India rubber, there i marked in- | cocoa 7.188,000 pounds against 2,100,- 000 against 14,272,000 pounds, valued | months of 1914. of our own manufacturers for manu- | crease, the total re-exported in the | 000 in the same months of 1914. at $308,000 in the coresponding period Cocoanut meat or copra brought | facturing materials. Of wool the re- | seven months of 1918 being 5,579,000 of 1914 all of which preceded the war. | chiefly from the Philippines and other | exportation in the seven months of | pounds against 95,000 pounds in This great wheat gv‘:\\'(n;: country al- | Pacific Islands ,qmwola‘ a total of [1918 is but 477,000 pounds against |[the same months of 1914, while of WAR BOARD MEWTING. s0 re-exported no less than 1,164,000 | 282,000 pounds in the seven months | 2,499,000 in the same months of 1913, | hides the total quantity re-exported s bushels which had beéen brought in|of 1918 against only 190 pounds in | while of tin the quantity re-exported | in the seven months of 1918 was| Bisscll and Fersuson Will Attend from abroad chiefly Canada against | the corresponding mgnths of 1914. |in the seven months of 1918 is but | 4,422,000 pounds against 3,001,000 712,000 bushels in 1914, the value in | Fish re-evportation in the seven | 515,000 pounds against 1,019,000 | pounds in the corresponding months onths of 1918 being $2,- | months of 1918 aggregated $1,170,000 | pounds in the same months of 1914. | of 1914 Hartford, Nov. 8.—Richard M. Bis- $685,000 in the same | in value against $168,000 in the cor- | Raw silk chiefly from Japan, shows a | Coffee and cocoa chiefly from Latin | sell, chairman of the Connecticut State of 19 responding months of 1914, material increase in 1918 when com- | America show marked increase in | Council of Defense, and Samuel Fer- Tapioca which we bring largely In manufacturing material there are | pared with 1914 both in quantity and | the quantity re-exported the total | guson, state director of non-war con- tries Board, fo representatives of | dustries Board, has made publig every State Council of Defense in the | list of projects which should be, country. These representatives will in | ferred until final peace las been many instances include governors of { clared. The list embraces park states. | provements, sidewalks, moving piet| e | Tt is known that those .attending|houses, theaters and other am { will include H. B. Endicott of Massa- | ment places, public buildings, garag chusetts, Governor W. K. Harding of | gasoline stations, bank buildings, n Towa, General Francis Walters of | war factories, mills, apartment by Maryvland, Governor Albert E. Sleeper | ings churches, schools, sewage ¥ hington Meeting. of Michigan, William A. Orr ¢f New | tems, grain elevators, gas and elec| York, Fred G. Croxton of Ohio, Gov- | light plants and waterwork imprd ernor Peter Norbeck of South Dakota, | ments. Governor John T. Cornwell of West Construction restrictions gradu Virginia, Samuel Insull and Roger G.| will be modified as soon as war ce ulivan of Chicago. | tions permit. D WAR WORK CAMPAIGN NOVEMBER 11TH. TO 18TH. OUR QUOTA %200,000 When You Think of What the Boys “Over There” Are Doing to Help the Great Cause of Freedom, Wouldnt You Just Gnve Anything to be There and Help Them" Wouldn't You Fairly Jump at the Chance to do Anything in the World to fiack up the Boys That Are Fighting? The Organizations for Which the VICTORY BOYS Are Working Provide the Soldier with His Movie Theater, His Church, His Club, His Store Where He Buys the Little Everyday Things He Needs. When He is Hungry They Feed Him, When He is Tired They Comfort Him. GIVE GIVE GIVE GIVE Until it Hurts, the Boys Will All Know When They Come Home Just How Much You Thought of Them. Now is the Time to Give the Comforts