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NORWICH BULLETIN, Glorwich Bulletin and Goufier 121 YEARS OLD ption pr wweelis 50 a Subscription price Zmonth: $6.60 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Corn., as second-class matte Telephone Calls: n Businass Office 450. ©illetin Editorial Roorus $3-3. Bulletin Job Offics 35-2. Office. 67 Churca St mantie one 210-2. Norwich, Wednesday, June 13, 1917, nesesescorasssnseessesessanassaciy H 3 H i i Bulletin has the Jargest$ circulation of any paper in Eastern§ Connecticut and from thres to four$ s larger than that of any in$g Sorwich. It is delivered %0 over 00 of the 4,063 houses ‘m Nor ich and read by ninety-three pe of the people. In Windham § is delivcred to over 900 houses, $ Putnam and Danielson to over $ 00 and in all of these plages 1§/ considered tbe local daily. ; Eastern Connecticut has forty- towns, one hundred and sixty- @$ five postoflice districts, and sixty$ 22 ;ural free delivery routes. i 22 The Bullictin is sold In every 3 wn apd ou all of he R. F. D.E - outes in Eastern Connecticut. ; CIRCUL. H ATION 478400 19C1. average..... .. 1905, average. =% June 9, 1917.......... 9,341: on for the ght ought as to just ¥ the mo: each an! i upon i to the e of its nd it will to be placed of n have an purpose ended much the order to out its of the Oth- fon and n the hts Dby ing but nish- subscribe ccess- to hand cured by -the ame as feeling adaitional now to make all our re- It would shameful e. flower of youth to f we do not give them e financial support that is required to play. There each and ever:. e buyving of the and in order to s, in order to the country is government and is deter- its money as well as its fight, there should be a tion of the bonds. sure. THE WAR BUDGET. In spite of all the delay. that is be- the wrangling: that is| in congress and the legislation in of the ailing today progress moving along pace that assumes when e country has a major eneral and his staff rope to prepare a base for the A can army in France, when it ting ready to assemble its mobi s and is prer to draft for a iarger army evervthing is prac- ically at a standstil] in resard to_the budget which is necessary order to meet the expense of all s woric. There is a dispute as to how much s should amount to, but the dis- cement is only over an item of mall importance’ in comparison with total figure. Both houses of con- are satisfied that over a three <nd a quarter billions are necded and they dre ready to approve the appro- priation, but the measure has been blocked by the matter of purchasing al back- | tance. | town project because it is claimed that the amount is too great, that ad- vantage is being takes of the govern- ment because of the existing situa- tion. If that is the case, and it cught not to take .a long time to prove or disprove such a claim, the whole mat- tér ought to beé eliminated from the budget, in order that the other mat- ters can go along as they should and let that be taken up separately. No schemes to do the government out of money ought to be tolerated. If the grounds are needed a fair price can be fixed in one way or another, but this war measure should not be block- ed and it must not be if we are going to have efficient service. BAD PLACE FOR SAILING CRAFT. The fact that the American five master Magnus Manson has been Sor- pedoed off the French coast by a Ger- man submarine, while on a voyage h lumber from Pensacola to Genoa, ects increased attention to the dan- zer which is involved in the invasion Iof the barred zone by the sailing ves- sels. It is not to be supposed that ships of this character do not have the same rights as other vessels on the high seas, or that they should be lim- ited in their operations when accord- ing to international law they are priv- leged to g0 and come as they please, but with the determination of Ger- ’man_\‘ to show no respect to shipping, { whether it belongs to belligerent or . neutral nations there appears to be {zood reason for striving to preserve iall ships possible which are not able to offer any protection for themselves by keeping them away from the dan- ger zone and utilizing them in trade on routes which are not infested with e underwater boats. ecause they do not possess the speed which would permit them to get away from a submersible and be- cause satisfactory results cannot be obtained by mounting guns on the decks of sailing craft, such vesscls furnish an excellent target for the U- beats, and the Magnus Manson was by no means the only one of that character which had beem taking chances in trying to pass throuzh the forbidden waters, but it was facing dangers which it was thoroughly un- derstood could nct be eluded if it was discovered. Sailing craft have by no means out- lived their usefulness. They are an important part of a nation’s shipping oth for coasting and, transoceanhic ice, hut where the submarines are known to be it is safer that the fast and. armed steamers should be sent nd that the stickers should be used on this side of the water or in trads with countries which are not invoived in the way. Such would meéan the de- nial of what must be looked upon zs ertain victims for tk PASS THE F second food control tha Now that the ! has been ccmmittee on agr should be made to pu house effort t forward to which faces v solution first bill it is to be remembered not as yet received fi That is for the purpose g the production of food, v m: that ne=ds. and with that still pending the sec- end, which is f 1e purpose of con- ion and price, is on. By this bill upon committee has reached an it is proposed to guarantec minimum price to the producer of non-perishable agricultural produects, the rezulations of which are to b prescribed by the president. Evervbody who has anything to do with the purchase of foodstuffs, and that applies to about evervone in one way or another, fully understands what the conditions are today, and that there is need not only of regulation but of bringing it about without de- lay. The consumers have felt the ef- cts of those who have taken ad- antage of existing conditions to put screws on. They have been aged right and left and without any more reason for it than that those in touch with the situation have seen the opportunity to get rich quick and eeded to do so without regard for | what the effect might be or who were de to suffer. It is time, however, to straighten aut this deplorable situation. There are today no agencies vested with the »ower to carry out such reforms as re needed but it is high time that h were provided and they will be under the provisions of the bills which are awaiting action. It is highly im- portant therefore that they should be | passed. at the earliest possible mo- ment that will be compatible with se- curing a sound administration there- of. EDITORIAL NOTES. The only question in connection with the Liberty loan purchase is as to how large the amount shall be. The motto of every one who is not able to take part on the firlng line should be “If I can’t fight, my money ecan.” It is a toss up now whether the chap in charge of the weather lever is playing into the hands of the coal men or the ice men. |, SWhen Berlin declares that the Amer~ ican entrance into the war is disap- |"pointing, someone must be whistling to keep up his couraze. The man on the corner says: When most people kick abeut the weather they are inv bly thinking more of themselves than they are of their home garden plot. With Rumania having reorganized its army and declared its readiness to fight it is to be hoped that it will not be disappointed a second time by the Russian army assistance. the government’s an- nouncement the Jupiter has arrived in a French pert. Nevertheless Jupi- ter Pluvius is working overtime on this side of the great pond . According to Word comes from Maryland that the berry crop has been withered by the heavy storm there, but thus far there has been no claim that the rhu- barb crop is not up to reghirements. When the responsibility has been fixed there should be prompt justice administered in the case of those Mis- rouri kidnappers who also took the the site of the Jamestown exposition at Hampton Roads, together with some additional = territory adjoining, for which three million dollars are ask- ed, and while there is baggling over this amount contracts for equipment, ordnance and supplies are waiting to be_signed. There. is opposition to.this James- life of their victim. Jail is too good a place for them. While the salaries of the city offi- cials are being raised, the council has given proper consideration to the worth of the present street commis- sioner. Hé has been well tried and he has made good. _| pattle between the “Don't mention anything of the sort to me,” s Mrs. Pond when the chairman the committée suggested that she might contribute some time and jellies for the occasion they were laboring to make a success. “I have not forgotten that experience even yet. ‘Explain the mystery,” commanded the chairman. Very well,” said Mrs. Pond. “It goes back to one Saturday last fall. “Ripley,’ I said to my husband as he rose from his luncheon, “I wish you would put up some extra shelves in the pantry so that we can have a place for our jame and jeilies.” “Ripley is generally nice about such things. ‘I had no idea we should have to build addition in order to store your pret es’ he said. ‘They are all right where they are, in the cellar at Idlehaven.” We can run out now and then and bring in a few jars at a tim *“‘Oh, Ripley, that wouldn’t be right’ 1 told him. ~‘All during this awfully hot summer, when I felt almost ex- hausted, hovering over the preserving kett'e, 1 knew just how rich I'd feel in the winter to see our shelves load- ed with the fruits 6f my labors. “‘Well, 1 feel prétty poor when I think_of what it cost for the sugar” Ripley. ‘But we had to have the sugar to save the fruit!' I protested. “‘And now we have to have _the shelves to preserve the preserves. Well he surrendered, “if you will take the measures T'll order the lumber on the way to the golf club.’ “Ope morning a few days later Rip- ley Said at breakfast: ‘This is a cork- ing fine day and there won't be many like it this season. Let's motor out to Idehaven and cook a picnic dinner ther “‘We really ought to go out once more to see that everything is in order for your Aunt Berinthia when she comes back from the mountains,’ I agreed. “'Oh, the place is all right' said Ripley. ‘I engaged Jake to attend to everything, and 1 figured on getting your canned goods ready to ship to- day.” ‘That will be a good job to have done, T assented. “‘So we motored out to Idlehaven and as we turned into the drive my exclamation of horrified surprise €o startled my husband that he almost “Ripley laughed. It's so annoying when your husband laughs easily. “Would that be a terrible calamity?’ he said. ‘Jake just hasn't got arourd to it. He'll attend to it in time. You know very well, Ripley ,that it would be a very poor return for your aunt’s kindness in lending us her place it we allowed her costly bulbs to be destroyed.’ “‘Oh, well, if you are so serious about it I'll dig buibs while you broil the steak.’ ‘So I broiled the stéak and half an hour later called him in to carve it. His hands were muddy. ‘How are you getting along, dear?” J asked. ot getting along at all. These must be the rabbits of the bulb fam- ily, the way they muitiply. Maybe with your heip we can finish digging them before we have to start back.' “It was dusk when the last basket of bulbs had been carried to the celar and both of us laborers cast regretful glances at the undisturbed ranks (23 Jars and tumblers in theé stdreroom. ‘We can come out again next week, can’t we, Ripley? I asked. “To be sure we can,’ said he. “Those sweetmeats ook pretty good to me and I'd like to have them for realy reference.’ “The following Saturday Ripley rose early and brought the car to the door just as the postman rang the bell. I came down to the car with a handfal of mail, and my husband spoke up: “You can read the letters to me as we go along. We have a fuli day's work ahead of us.’ “ “Why, here is one to me from your Aunt Berinthia,” I told him presently. “My dear niece,” it says. “it was a very pleasant home coming when I found how much vou and Riplev had done for me. I must confess that I was very anxious about my bulbs and hastened back to be sure that they were all right, and _so _they were, thanks to your care! But I never even imagined how good you were to me till 1 caught sight of the rows gnd rows of delicious jams and jellies on the storeroom shelves. I hope you didn’t leave me more than my share, for it certainly is a very generoue one, Thank you many, many times, Come out soon to a meal” “‘Oh, Riplev!' I gasped. can explain, never!® “‘We might as well ‘We never drive on and ran into the steps. take lunehean with her,’ Ripley an- “‘What on earth is the matter with | swered. ‘She’ll have to give us a you. Ada? he asked. taste. T'll sat a whole tumberful of “‘Oh, that good for nothing Jake |something! And anyhow, I shan't hasn't taken up a single bulb. Suppose | have to give up those shelves!”” we hadn’t come out to-day and all of | “I see” gaid the chairman of the your Aunt Berinthia's gladioli had |committee. “And I can't blame you frozen! for vour aversion."—Exchange. HOME GARDENS Sprayers. The most economical way of using insect sprays is in some sort of a spray pump savs today's bulletin from the National Emergency Food Garden Commission cooperating with this newspaper to help those planting gar- dens this year for the first time. Everv good gardener is prepared to use sprays in his gZarden to combat the insects which may otherwise make his crop his failure. The garden nmy escape, but should the insect horders come. the gardener should be prepared. A spraver for scattering insecitides, as the sprays and mixtures are called, is not an absolute necessity, but it is highly desirable for the gardener to have one. The prices range all the way from fifty cents to seven or eight dollars. Where they are many small gardens in the same locality. several gacdeners may continue to purchase a g00d spray pump, as one pump is sufficient for several gardens. However, if the gardener feels that he cannot afford to buy a pump, he can apply the sprays in various other | ways. «he sprinkling pot is véry wasteful, but its use is better than not touse spravs at all. Before spray pumps were invented wisk brooms were used to sprinkle on spray mixture. This method can still be followed, The cheapest spravers are the small atomizers. These cost from fifty cents to two dollars, and are entirely satis- factory for small zardens. Other good garden sprays are the bucket pumnp. Which sells for $4.50 and the small, compressed air spray an implement which costs from $5.00 to $8.50. These spravs are supplied by seedsmen or hardware dealers. Where poisons are used dry they should te applied in some sort of a sifter. A cheap_flour sifter \loes very well for this. You can also make a sifter at home bv punching holes in &ie bottom of a tin can. In usivg powdered arsenate of lead or any other drvy poison, it should be mixed with road dust or sifted ashes. Earlvy morning is the best time for powdering plants since the dust ma- terial sticks better when the leaves are wet with dew. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Society. Broadstairs—“Bombed by airplanes and Zeppelins and she'led by destroy- ers, the English seaside resort of Broadstairs must feel that it is losing the distinction which it has always claimed for quietude and reserve; and that it is experiencing a sort of geo- graphic or historical ataviem —for as early as 833 there took place a bloody Danes and the Saxons in which the invaders were successful. This repetition of hietory, however, does not extend to the re- cent bombardment of the place by the German forces, which was barren of military results,” begins a bulletin just issued. by the Nationai Geographic Society. It goes on to describe this pleasure resort as follows: “Situated on the southeast coast of England, along the chalk cliffs of the Channel and about eighty miles from bo%flon, Broadstairs has long been e fatorite watéring place in both sum- mer and winter. Its name is sup- posedly drawn from the manner in which its roadways to the sea have been constructed they being a series of ramps cut into the precipit@us cliffs while the town itself crowns the head- lands and sweeps in a semi-circle of vikas along the edge of the bluff. “Broadstairs was a favorite spot with Dickens, who spent nearly every summer there from 1837 to 1851—and the houses in which Dickens lived are ointed out and marked as numerous- ly as those throughout this country in which Washington had slept or as those in Gemoa which are claimed as the birthplace of Christopher Colum- bus. Here Dickens wrote the last of the Pickwick papers and portions of Nicholas Nickleby, the Old Curiosity Shop, Martin Chuzzlewit and Dombey and Son. Some of the details of Bleak House were based upon one of the houses in which Dickens dwelt at Broadstairs, and this structéire, now bow-windowed, castellated and mod- ernized is known by that name. “Betsy Trotwood, one of the char- acters in David Copperfieid, is claimed | praise when, 1 by Broadstairs as one of its own peo- ! ple: and the green upon which she would not permit her donkeys to set hoof is now shown on the Fort. “George Eliot also frequented Broadstairs: but she developed no #uch affection for the place as Dickens did and her name is given scant re- gard: for Broadstairs continu e to feel that Dickens sounded the acme of its writing from Albaro, he said: T have never vet seen it so clear, for any long time of the day together, as on a bright. lark-singing, coast-of- France discerning day at Broadstairs: nor have T ever seen so fine a sunset throughout as is very common there.’ “Lord Holland sought to commem- orate the ancient battle of Broadstairs by suitable Gothic structures, the chief of which now remaining is Kingsgate Castle, on the edge of the cliff: but none of them carry the verisimi'itude of antiquity, and they emphasize the criticism of Walpoe, in one of his in- terminably gossiping letters. when he says they are in no style of architec- ture that ever appeared before or has since, and in no connection with or to any_other.' Ttaly “Near the harbor are the remains of ! the old flint gateway, called York Gate, which was part of the defences of the ancient town, and where the portoullis grooves are plainiy to be seen. Nearby. but much altered by Puilding stands the mediaeval chapel of St. Mary, which was so much ven- erated in connection with its image of Our Lady of Bradstow that passing sailors lowered their sails by way of sa’utation. “To the north, between Broadstairs and Margate stands the Northland Lighthouse, whose structure’ dates from 1683, when the light was no more than a fire burning upon the roof. It was off this spot that Prince Rupert fought de Ruyter, in 1666, when the British fleet was compelled to - seek refuge in the Thames and when the Dutch complained that the English could be killed but not beaten. The first regular lighthouse here was erected in 1635 by Sir John Meldrum, who was empowered to levy a penny a ton on all British and twe-pence on all foreign shipping that passed. In return he paid £20 a year to the Crown. How numerous the shipping may be judged from the fact that when the” light fina’ly passed to the Elder ethen of Trinity House—as the British lighthouse service is so quaintly named—they gave to the Greenwich Hospital, which then re- ceived the fees from North Foreiand Light. the most inconsiderable sum of £8,000 in amortization of the right. ‘Seven miles at sea from Broad- stairs lie the Goodwin Sasds, of sinis. ter record in maritime annals, and by tradition supposed once to have been an island, Lomea, in the estate of Earl Goodwin, and to have been destroyed by the. sea in the Eleventh Century. Lambarde, a skeptical English chron- icler. however, disputes this legend, as he does aiso another which tels of the Earl's choking himself with a morsel of bread because he had. said, May this bread choke me if I caused my brother’s death,’ when, in point of fact, he had procured it. A lightship has been maintained on Goodwin Sands since 1793, but mar- ine disasters still occur there, and sometimes even in. clear weather.” Views of the Vigilantes THE SLACKER BENEATH CONTEMPT By Thorton W. Burg of The Vigi- lantes. The man constitutionally a physical coward, unable to bring himself to the supreme sacrifice in a cause which a; vet he has been unable to sense as per. sonal, may be forgiven. He is even to be regarded with charitsble pity. The man who conscientiously feels that at present his first duty is to those dependent upon him for daily bread, but whose heart is in the struggle for freadom and democracy, and who wil answer tie call to the colors when it becomes apparert that the need of him is greater thers than at home, is beyond criticism. The man who. by reason of age or physical unfitneéss ¢r his greater value to the natjon and humanity in indus- trial service than in the trenches, re- mains at home is above censure. . But what of the man who refuses or neglects to do his bit toward fur- nishing the money without which all DAY, JUNE 13, 1917 ‘Raising ‘flags is all right—but raie- ing _money LIBERTY D at THE THAMES NATIONAL BANK —_— the sacrigce of blood and lifs Already made and all that will be ma=, all thé suffering beyond imagination whieh has been, is being, and is to be en- dureq wiil be in vain? Te is a slacker beside whom the in- vader of the conscription law appears almost decent. He is a slacker beneath contempt. Have you bought or arranged t6 Buy a Liberty bond? I put it to you as a personal matter. Don't be a slacker, temptible of all slackers. Get that bond today. LETTERS TO THE EDHOR Armenians Still Need Help. Mr. Editor:—Will you permit me once more to call attention to the condition of starving Armenian wo men ahd children. ‘The time to help them is now. You have helped to keep alive thousands thus far; will you still help in the good work? Put yourselves in their place. Can you do it? “As ve would that men s| you even so do ye to them. Contributions may be sent to Col. Charles W. Gale, Thames National Bank, or to the subscriber. JOHN OTIS BARROW! Norwich Town, Conn, June 11, "17. uld do to The Liberty LLoan. Mr. Editor:—The mechanic or cierk who subscribes for the $50.00 bonds of the U. S. Government is doing fully as much proportionatelv as John D. Rockefeller who has subscribed for $25.000.000.00 of the Liberty bonds. Had it not been for Belgium, France, England, Italy and Russia, Germany before this would have levied upon New York city and New England un- doubtedly more than five billion dol- lars for her war needs. An over subscription to the Liberty bonds means that we are not dead nér afraid of Germany and_ her allies. Wake up, America! Wake up. Man- hatton! Wake up, New England! Wake up, vou two score states and eight of fate! WILLIAM KMIBERLY PALMER. Norwich, June 12, 917. LENDING TO LIBERTY. By Albert Bushnell Hart, and Essayist. Historian Tend to Liberty. Why not give to Liberty? Giving there will be a plent; taxes, time, energy, gray mattep, pa: sionate anxiety, services of your sons, wounds, disease, death. Liberty re auires no niggardly service. Tn ad- dition, in order to make our military preparation real liberty just now asks for money that will be repaid. The Liberty loan, being tax free, would be taken in great quantities by those seeking something absolutely safe with a fail retur What js wanted, however, just now is not only subsecriptions, but the god- speed of the nation. ‘The men who buvs a single $30 bond thereby gives his approval to the tremendous efforts which the government is making to transform the will, the power and the wealth of the country into a fighting machine that can protect our shores and join us wiih our allies over seas in resisting the greatest danger that has come to mankind in a thousand vears. A hundred millions now spent in provisioning and supplying _the French and Pritish armies is worth a thousand millions two years hence: it may make the thousand millions un- necessa The work must be done. The foun- Aation for that work must be laid. The Liberty loan must be subscribed. You must ‘Do Your Bit.” _ OTHER VIEW POINTS A Brockton man has just paid $33,- 800 for a five-months-oid calf, and as the animal's birtn certificate bears the rame of “King Ormsby Jane Ray Ap- ple,” perhaps it is worth it. But we shudder to think of the cost of veal steak of this origin, or of a pair of shoes from the same.—Providence Bul- letin. The autoist who would leave in the road an individual whom his machine had struck, is a species of the genus homo which is not comparable with beasts. He is something worse. He'| is lacking in all the essentials which make a man superior to the brute ere- jation. He is heartless, he is cow- ardly, he is small. The pity of it is that it secms, almost impossible for the law to get its clutches on these specimens of humanity. In nine cases out of ten they escape. Nobody sees their distardly work until it is too late to prosecute a search for them. One feels utterly at loss as to the means which should be employed to get retribution for such dastardly crimes. Too often there are absolute- iy no -tracts of the culprits and all that is left to do is to care for theéir victims.—Meriden Record. STORIES OF THE WAR Between Trawlers and Subs. Stories not hitherto lively encounters between British trawlers and German submarines in the North Sea were told by Robert Lowry and others at the recent meet- ing of the Mission to National Seamen Encounters published of Be Young Darken Your Gray Hair Bring the natural radiant coior e mnwfimfi. easily l‘tm even dark, beautifil shade and keep. gl iife, luitrous, heaithy. soft. wavy and are doing it day tly and Baturally and without ves conspicuous either. You can do it, too, why not try it now and be eon ? ves all trace of . too. Ne dye—harmiess to use. 50c and $1.00 at your druggist’s, who will replace if et isfactory. Always ask for and is better. GET YOUR |} LI The Blood Tingling The D The Race The T T ORIUM Wm. A. Brady Presents the Gigantic Spectacle of the Stage. “The Whip A PRODUCTION THAT AMAZES WITH (TS THRILLS SEE »9 In Nine Wonderful Acts Auto Disaster Fox Hound Scenes itween Auto and Train ible Railroad Wreck nning Races at the Track shin, AND HUNDREDS OF OTHER BIG SURPRISES 3 Shows 2:30, 7 an TODAY AND THURSDAY A Metro Wonder Pla; o y man’s Choi Wi in London. of R a Weo- ight and Vening 7, 8 Ome trawler, Sir_ Robert said, became such a terror to U-boats that four of them lay in eventually destroyed it. wait and On one ocea- eion, this trawler armed with two light guns was attacked by a submarine. One shot went through the deckhouse, another smashed the wheel “but the skipper went on eéteering with broken spokes. the cook’'s galley but the trawl Anether shot carried away er's gunner hit the submarine which then had endugh of it, And went under. Another unarmed submarine on the North Sea and made a_dash for it with the result that the U-boat quickly submerged. said Sir underneath, trawi Robert, ler saw a “It went “he- cause it could not imggine it possible that a trawler would i it were not armed. Bir Robert relatéd how they learned of the sinking of two submarines by the bodies of the crew floating to the surface, although five or six days later a report ave the courage ‘waa circulated from Germany that the boat had returned to port. Admiral 8ir Edmund Fremantle said that much criticism of the navy was Some things had not vet been discovered and one was beside the mark. how "t catch the big sibmarine. But, he said, he did not hear the scientist abused because he had not discovered the secrét of perpétual motion. N He 20c_and 28c 3—BIG KEITH ACTS—3 LAZIER WORTH TRIO Scenic Athletic Noveity “AN EVENING AT THE CLUB" WALTER J. POND The Celebrated Blind Composer FOUR CHEER UPS Novelty Comedy Quartstts TRIANGLE FEATURE BESSIE BARRISCALE i “THE SNARL” Five Part Ince Production HIS CRIMINAL CAREER Comedy Mat. 2:16, 10c_and 15¢ Evening 6:45, 8:45, 10c, 150, 20c, CONCERT {The Academy Orchesira SLATER HALL FRIDAY, JUNE 15th Admission 2S¢ added: “We wili hope that the submarine is in a_different category and that wif the help of our great ally, Ameri we may perhaps discover an appropr ate antidote. We shall succeed if not in finding an antidote, in finding a palliative. Your Last Chance CHOICE OF ANY SUIT or COAT IN STOCK *10.” 43 SUITS VALUES TO $37.50 38 COATS VALUES TO $26.50 SHOWING A Number of Very Pretty Summer Skirts, Dresses Sweaters and Waists At Moderate Prices The 194 Main Street Wauregan Block amplecfitp How You May Subscribe to United States Government “Liberty Loan of 1917” AND PAY ON AN INSTALLMENT PLAN With yeur subsecription you deposit with us and thereafter deposit $2.00 each week for 24 weeks. Interest earned on your deposits. . -$ 250 . 48.00 7 TOTAL paid by you in cash, and interest earned. .........350.57 == When yoeu make your last deposit we will deliver to you a bond for with coupen for six months interest attached.....-.... TOTAL as above L] For subscriptions ldrger than $50.00 multiply the above by 2, 8, 4 or more as the case may be. THE NORWICH SAVINGS SOCIETY NORWICH, CONNECTICUT WHEN YOU W. il ot ol u b Tne ANT t5 put your bus. here is b the ulletin. n ad HEN YOU WANT t> pu: your buse iness berore tn :nu!llc,’lh’ is ne nedium Dbetter h; Tough the ad- ertising coiumns of e nnan