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fl - ROTHFEDER’S 378 MAIN STREET “Special Value” - Offer DRESSES Of Serge in a large assortment of the latest models $19.95 Their real value is from $25 to $30. Shop now to avail yourself of this money saving opportunity -- WAISTS - - 10 Dozen Waists of assorted styles, all sizes, large variet ““Special Value’” Offer 78¢ Filled to Uverilnwmg With the Joy of Living The simplest remedies are nearly al- ays the be That's why thousands f bright-cyed. clear-skinned men and omen lkeep themselves fit and fine by aving an abiding faith in elery King shioned, that " vour sed to mu'\\u. It purifies the blood, reguiaies the 3 lowels, keeps the stoinach clean and will be in charge of the musi wveet and is the tonic laxative program. The affair will be in charge u can take of the social committec of the corps. The kiddies like it, too. for it is Dancing will be enjoyed from 8 entle and mild. Give it to them g'clock to midnight. No tes, TicKew the ight are selling promises to be ion dance tomorrow rapidly The a delightful event. The executive morning. committee met this DRUM CORPS OP NS DA ERI TONIGHT. The Y. M. T. A. and B. socicty drum corps will open a series of dances, stmilar to the series conducted during the wwinter months last vear, in the socie v hall tonight. Lynch’s orches tra TABS' inexpensive grandmothe best ‘Goldine at Hospital Read oldine no poof-of the remar iven by H. M. Ny ““That the how a lot about roubte, catarrh, this man ordi v medicine. what ys and you will realize that There is not a better \ble power of Goldine than the one of the New Haven Hospital. He said: Lest medicine 1 hav r used most all of them, for I had stomach and rheumatism for 20 years. 1 pred” nearly all time for one thing or another, oré hislp._from Goldine than from all the othe i sed to haye such a sour stomach after eating ould fill wp with gas. My bowels bad and T fn. felt dizzy. I-got so 1 couldn’t get'to sleep any ight before midnight, but now'I go to sleep the te I strike the bed and I have no more sour stomach v gas after eating. That is not all. My « Th was s0 d it was makin: me deaf. It seemed as though my re_stopped u) with something and there vays @ roise in my head, but that is all an hear as wel as ever, and ry catarrh is ¢ in cvery way. [ had rheumatism in left knee mtil 1 became £ 1 could hardly walk, but tpday hat Atitiess 15 alll one wnall Wonid not have Known. 1 wwer had rheumat 1. 1 had bheen under tlte hest of medical treatment but Goldine did more for me than wmything clse, I am ¢lerk of, supplies at the. hospital o when I sy Golline is a good medicine [ should Low. and 1 doc- but go* 2dvymg S4ng o My Photo and Signature min- 8 4 % Originator of Goldin: was al- now gene and a lot het- “H. ML medicine. Tt Everyone Don't now at NYI needs knows delay and Crowell's Goldine is not a patent »oof to the people of your alue amd where to get it. your suftering. G et it 254 Main street. Ask about the free bottle the druggist has for you. no its prolong Drug Store, affair | LABOR QUESTION I3 SERIOUS ONE S0 Declares Ole Hanson, Tercor of Reds on Pacmc Nov. st terror, 0.-—Ole Hanson, who spot of Commerce that the h paramount issuc The industrial New Haven, the Pacific o tore the Stite Chamber Jast evening, declared cost of living is the in America todax. problem is the greatest question of tha . he asserted, declaring: find that is not the paramount, s-at-hand, #rass-root problem people of the United States toduy. The people want {o know when high prices are coming down. They want to know why this hatred and un- rest that has become so prevalent throughout our country. Why do people applaud cvery destructive sen- timent, every lawl word and excuse, in @ measure, every lawless act? They ask: Is this the end? Are we ta go back to Have the trin of tic anarchy taken lasting root in our people? Greatest Danger. “I Dbelieve the greatest country is facing today is our indu; trial condition and that the time has :» when our officials in Washington 1 devote the to solving the great problems before the American people today. Our govern- ment must function, or why the gov- ernment® Traitors must remain in prison, or eve n cell in th should be emptied. The anarch this country who ar gainst ( od and all government, must shall be deported. Must Be Americans Pirst. “There never has been a time in the nation i when we faced such grave dang from within are presented to us today. This i time for partisanship. It makes no dlfference what political faith we have, we must all of us be Americans first, v to you that a man who will not leave his party for the good of his should be forced to leave the country for the =ood of all parties, 2,000 Strikes. January of this year we had going on in the countr; By July this number had increased to 264, or twice as great as in July, 1918 Offi of the American Tederation of T.abor estimate that there are now 2,000 strike situations, meaning strikes going on or immi- nent. Think of it, 2,000 strikes in a country where labor is at a premium, where no one longer seeks the job, but where the job seeks the man! ‘The people of the country are simply fed up on strikes and realized that if they submitted to the burglar ous demands of the coal miners it simply meant bringing them one step nearer to the goal of the ‘Red’ mis leaders of .labor to turn our country into a Sowviet rule for the benefit of a particular class of the people. The time has come when we must make our stand; when we must not allow any minority to control the destinies of our peopl This is a governmernt of, by and for all the people, and no minor: whether a labor union or a group of bankers, must ever be al- lowed to control its affairs. The time has come for a showdown in this country and the quicker it comes the better Continued flirting with, an- archy is but to put off the day when it must be met and defeated. Immense Resources. “We have nearly 2,000,000,000 acres of land, of which only one acre in seven is under cultivation and of which there are still 000,000 acres in the hands of the government. We have a larger proportion of fertile land in the United States than any other count on the face of the earth has. We have 265,000 miles of rail- roads—?3,000 miles more of railroads than we have of hard-surfaced or graveled roads—in the United States. In other words, private capital for profit has built roadbeds and put ox cars and laid steel rails in this United States a distance sufficient to zo around the world 10 times and then le our entire border. We have 4,231 billion tons of un- mined coal in the United States and Alaska—sgreater hy 579 billion tons than that of all the remaining nations of the world.” The speaker discussed further the great resourcos of the United States ,and then continued, in part, follows: We need we need fear In the next only hold trade, the really danger the and “In 105 stri as fear no foreign foe and no foreign competition. five years we will not and develop our internal sreatest in the world, but we will, if we co-operate and use our brains, capture the foreign trade of the world. Only Oue Liabilit, “We have but one possible liability confronting us, and that is industrial and civil strife. Bnt now, everywhere, in this country, thousands refuse o "bide by orderly and legal procedure, ‘ime honored and century tried, and advocate a reign of lawlessness and | overthrow of that government which to this date has functioned more suc- cessfully for all the people than any other yet devised: or tried. We all vealize that thousands are against the government, but few of us have stopped to analyze ihe reasons why. Phe Immigration Question. “The doors of the country stand too ajar for the successful assimila- and digestion of the incoming To close the country’s portals would create a situation equally dif- ficult. Contrary to the times after the Civil war, the immigrant of today | does not go out on the land, he does | not establish a home, but he herds in congested, foreign colonies in our great citics and does not become | Americanized as readily or Iy tion alien. Sclection by Fxamination Urged. “In my judgment we should select our future citizens. ILet the intending immigrant go to our agents in Eu- rope and make application for en- be- | doce- ! as rapid- For Itching Eczema, ' Qid Sores and Piles “I guarantee my Peterson of Buffalo, “to cure eczema; to stop the itching at once and an reliable druggi: will cheerfully r fund your mone if PETIERSON'S OINTMENT doesn’t everything } say it will do.” William A. Carley of i | ointment,” say: do inklin, N. writecs: is surely o wise man <1 used MENT on PETERSON L Jitidle boy suffering eczema. It did the wor with | Then there is Alex. Louttel, fireman of Bu '.|1n who s write as follow on my leg for doctors led. MENT entirely healed the sore quick- I8 And from over in Canada con w letter from A. Blockeby, : | “The best thing T ever hit for itchin piles is PETERSON'S OINTMIND A big box for 35 cent e———————————————— man PE trance; let him till out a naire and be physicall examined. Upon ¢ question- mination and sent to a board of immigration in Washington, whose duty it would be to select only those immigran are fit to partake of our privileges { and fit and willing to perform the | duties of citizeuship. Th -mvl\u-\‘ should also be asked to nify his desire in relation to his destination or future home. Our board in Wash- ington would then select only those who were needed in this country for some useful occupation. Under this plan, the farmer would not be al- lowed to stop in New York, where perhaps, at the time of bis landing, there was a great supply of labor, but would on the other hand, be sent to the point in this country, where farm labor was needed. On the other | hand, the mechanic would not drift to the farms, nor would the alien be permitted to colonize in the great cities where his unassimilated breth- ren live. It seems to me that the greatest problems of our country is to get the people on the land to stop, in a measure, the overgrowth of our cities. It is not lack of land that stops our agricultural production; it is lack of sufficient and efficient man power, Two Menaces. “The irreconcilable alien, agitating Bolshevik or anarchist, should not be allowed to remain one hour longer than is necessary to go through the proper legul forms to send him back ind mentally ! investigation, his application should he ! s who . to the land from which he came. ‘While the alien has given us a | great deal of trouble, he is not the only trouble maker in our country. The American born who does not understand the principles of our gov- ernment has, ofttimes, joined the alien agitator in trying to destroy our nation, and in my best judgment, a good deal of this unrest has been our | own fault. We have, in the main, neglected the Americanization of Am- | ericans. I contend that no unbiased, unprejudiced person can sincerely ad- vocate the overthrow of this govern- ment if he understands just what kind of government it is. “Red” Employers “One of the fruitful causes of hatred and discontent are the “Red” employers of labor. They are as dan- | gerous to the employers as they are to the rest of the national fabric. They ; stant menace, and upon deeds and their words many an agitator has hung a convincing ser- mon. W, should be very thankful that every day they become less and soon will be an inconsequential minor- ity in the land. Progressive, decent employers of labor condemn their ac- tion as vigorously as do the workers themselves. The factories, univer- sally, must be places where men and women can do their work without loss of health and vigor. The work- er’'s capital is his health, his eyesight, his physical and mental fitness. For Colds or Influenza as a Preventive, take LAXA- TIVE BROMO QUINT Tablet: Look for E. W. GROVE'S signature on the box. 30c. For Colds LINONINE TAKES THAT AWEFUL KICK OU OF A HARD COLD AND RENDERS IT HARMLESS. M IS THE GRE. FAMILY REMEDY TOR ALL FORMS OF COLDS AND A REMARKABLE PREVENTIVE OR HE MORKE DANGEROU THROAT AND LUNG COMPLAINTS OFF ADULTS AND CHILDREN. Have a bottle of Linonine handy at all times—there’s no telling what instant it will be needed, espeeially | so for coughs that threatén bronchi- tis. Nothing quite, cquals Linonine for bronchitis, and | | WISE WOMEN Beauty enemy. yield to hut e o ones pey know that KALPHO 1 its forms and & ty and they al- acts on the s aneCyess Ll Youth averwol and vefuse to surrender blood cellsi rebuilds wornout tissues and, by virtue of its prevents the decay of ntly tends to repel dise KALPHO regulates the gra in the brain and is the sable to all mental wos no At drugglsts, Insl the observe its magical cffect. e e ——— ¢ matter : indispen- Contains ng drugs. substitutes. LPHO harmful nor £1.00. Refu: genuine K. on and Widths AAto EE Widths AAto EE Tomorrow and Saturday The last two days of our Bargain Week—You surely cannot afford to lose two and three dollars saving on every pair of Shoes you buy here for the next two days. For tomorrow only we have cix specials—YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS ’Em— —————————————————————————————————————— . No. 2 Ny Men’s Army Shoes of La-dles_ Russsia Calf 9 Elk leathers with heavy and 10 in. Bosts—a stun- oak leather soles, sizes ner—in 4 shades of brown with the high | © to 12. Strong, dry, comfortable, military heels. FRIDAY ONLY $7.85 | $4.85 No. 5 Women’s Cushion Children’s school shoes in black and brown— Comfort Shoes with sizes 8!, to 11—button llzledllum broad toes, low ith and without B ane QWL AcU or lace—odd lots to close. FRIDAY ONLY FRIDAY ONLY " FRIDAY ONLY LORRAINE SHOE. CO. 236 MAIN STREET NO. 1 Boys’ Army Shoes of Elk leathers with solid oak leather soles—just the Shoe for this time of the year. FRIDAY ONLY $3.25 No. 4 Ladies’ Felt House Slippers in grey, red, blue, wine and pink. Fur trimmed with rosette to match. OUR TREAT! COL. JNO. VAN SCHAICK, JR. " “HE'S MAGNETIC—HE KNOWS” “OBSERVATIONS AND FORE A RED UROSS COMMISSIONER IN ITALY, FRANCE, BELGIUM” 'Y. W. C. A. Gymnasium 4 P. M. Sunday PECIAL MUSIC by Courtesy of the Meriden Community Course | Col. Van Schaick and the Y. W. A. The New Britain Red Cross Presents One of Its Chiet In:crnational Workers Worth a Dollar—But Free Jno. Van Schaick, because of his proven learning, powers of ob- charm a speaker and unusual executive ability, held high place in war work almost from the first. In January, 1915, he was the representative for Holland on the Rockefeller Foundation War Relief Commission, serving over six months in this capacity. While abroad with the American Red Cross Commission as an assistant to Horace Bicknell, of the American Red Cross Comm ion, he saw rvice in France and Italy, 5 sl finally taking rank as Commissioner for Belglum—that is to say, as the di- thet's'al shere b So it rector of all the Red Cross relief for Belgium. At La Panne he was the near-neighbor and intimate friend or the Belgian King for nearly two years. King Albert said: ‘“We appreciate your sending Col. Van Schaick to us. He C DE lives here and shares our dangers anfl hardships. We count him a true STUDIO fr van Schaick was repeatedly under fire. He endeared him- s of the Belgian population. His services were recognized by making him an officer of the Order of Leopold with military decora- tion. The Universities of Brussels and Liege bestowed medals and degrees. The foregoing is indicating the unusual opportunities that came to Col., Van Schaick to know the men of KEurope who have been making history for the last five vears or longer and to observe conditions both during the war and for a considerable part of the period of recon- struction so far, for he did not return to America until the early part of Col. Van Schaick is a graduate of Union in the class ‘94 and has recently received a doctorate from that college to add to a rather imposing string of degrees. For more than a dozen years he was the pastor of the Church of Our Father in Washington, and for a considerabla part of that time president of the Board of Education for the District of Columbia. He received other appoin‘tments from three Presidents of the United Stat Magnificent Rather a strong term with which to describe our line of Christmas Photographs {'...c. But hothing more mild will do them justice. We produce the goods and The Photographer in Your Town Eyeglass Comfort eycglasses LAZARUS CO. 164 Main Street Satisfactory will giv more comfort and pleasure in proportion to their than can buy. Whether have you anything clse yon cost to us to the Oculist ov you come If it’s Ladies” Wearing Apparel of exclusive- glasses made upon prescription of to have your eyes cxamined by (Registered Optometrists), you the best the your ness and fashion you want, just call on Lazarus. we sure in very possible eyeglasses at lowest cost consistent with a We carry a full line of Waists, Dresses, curacy and dependability. Davis& Goodwin OPTOMETRISTS OPTICIANS MAIN ST. PHON Coats, Skirts, Corsets, Underwear, at popu- lar prices. £ 1905 39 327