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Jlorwich Bulletin and Toufied 121 YEARS OLD Sutscription price 13¢ & weel; Soc a th: $85.00 a year. ered at the Postoffice at Norwich, . a5 second-class matter. ™ = Bulll _n Businass Ofiice 450. Balletin Egitorfal Rooms 35-3. Bulletin Job Ofics 35-2. Office. 67 Chureh St Rt 1917. Norwich, Thursday, July 26, iThe Circulation of {The Bulletin The Bulletin has the m-:e-ti circulation of any paper In Eastern Connecticut and from thres to four sesaesessaseses! times larger thad that of any in Nofwich. It 15 delivered o over 2,000 of the 4,053 nouses ‘m Nor- wich and read by ninety-three per cent. of the people. Im Windham it is delivered o over 900 houses, § tn Putnam ‘and Danfelson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is considered tbe local daily. Fastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns. one hutdred and eixty- fve postofiice districts, iural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold In every wen and b sl of b B ¥ D routes in Eastern Comnecticut. i CIRCULATION -vlr-ge 4112; .,.5,szo§ July 21, 1917, .....ouen 9,3862 1901, average..... mm—mmmm._m TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Readers of the cit it follow in tor Order th ness office The Bulletin leaving for vacation trips can have them d aud thus keep WAR COSTS MONEY. According to Washington reports members of congress were taken off their feet ering amounts ch it v be re- quired no for this eountry to carry on its in the ons are mow being talked s of ¢ s with as great not greater frequency and freedom ions were referred to, in the der normal conditions. We are although the atiof N g bt ,mi_""’;':_:;el"';; Pnt|ary constaeration, wut the position of this conntey ol reqmire fvs” mont| the raflroads is such that. owing to o ake care ot the Csemors| their earning capacity, the denial of o e e oo | rates to meet ihe requirements, tne Dillions will B ceamired i | INADIlILY to get the needed equipment e needs of e eilies |in rolling stock as early as desired forth will re- $14.000,000,000 e war. This penditures of first of next t huge sum, re than haif of what »s. spent, or has been to spernd, durinz the three e conflic be realized t war w at we can- spending o deed fortunate that this country the means or the facilities for obtaininz the money to cn such a great undertaking. it we are going into the war to ah a cto: ns ending, and 3 rse is the only kind that be aimed at or anticipated, we t settle the bills. The money that will be required will he the least of | to show when it is declared that dur- our troubles. It is of course impor-|:ng April 15 per cent. more freight tant that such expenditures should be | Service was rendered than during the supervised, and there are easons to believe that this point will| Wiil be considerably over a million be carefullv guarded, for waste cannot | tons of coal which will be made tolerated in thi direction any lable by this change for meeting han it can in any other, but|/much more necessafy service. Neces- -ements may cause many |Sity is what has-brought about the e not as vet realized that this is actually in conflict with a foreign nation to come to a better un- Ty derstanding of the si‘uation and ap te what has got to be done to yme the laxity in our prepared- ness during the past. BOWS TO THE DEMANDS. he time when the British| week. decided that there would —_— attempt tpon the part of that| The Bear That Walks Like a Man! answer Germany air raids|is now displaving some of the traits! over Engzland, waere the lives of non-|of the barking dog that has lost its} combatant mene women and children | teeth. have been taken without military R T benofit, in the same sort of a brutal The man on the corner says: Man nd savaze manner, erstood that it was fully un- mor for just such action. It was|covered. believed that by such a method it ks would be possible to make the people| These are busy days for the mem- oF dhat o amicy tamd how the|Dbers of the National Guard but they er was treating bjects of | 2Fe other nations and imfiletion | WIRch I IBOUIRE. of similar losses 1 the German R T ! ace would be the quickest meth-| There is no question but what Nor- 0d of putting an end to such unjus- tifia operations. ® Good judzment, it is believed, was| They are to leave within a short time rcised by those in authority in|and it Is important that all should land when it was decided that]Dbe ready. nd could not stoop to the base actices of the ememy without bring- pon itself the same gulity ac- cusations which were being made concerning the Germans. It was felt]that he let a great big opportunity that England could not descend to|So by before his resignation was the Jevels reflected by such warfare | called for. and justify its uction, however much it was urged to give like for like and bring the enemy to its senses through large and liberai doses of the medi- cine prescribed for others. There has, however, been such a rénewal of the demand for reprisals that the government has found “it [} there was a widespread the people and annéuncement to that effect has gone forth. This has been provoked by the frequent visits of the German airplanes, but it cannot help being feit that much greater and more satisfactory results can be attained by confining their operations to the air raids upon the army and naval bases of the enemy, that he may be crippled at the points where he is strongest, and by such efforts driven to points where the air attacks cannot be made with such ease and frequency. The rescrt to reprisals simply means playing into Germany's hand for that will give them the ex- cuse for utilising sueh methods which seem to please if, to & greater extent than ever. SAVE GASOLENE; GET A SUBSTI- TUTE. The question of the gasolene sup- ply is one which has received atten- tion from one end of the country to another at different periods in the last few vears. This has come chief- Iy from"® the increase in the eost of the commodity, the excuse for which has at different times been attributed to the great demand and fo the ex- pense of making it. The production of this fuel for internal combustion engines has not increased in keeping with the demand and if the claims of the producers are to be accepted it is not likely to. Just now attention is being direct- ed to the government's feed for gas- olene to operate its submarines, au- tes of all kinds, armored cdrs, air- planes and dirigible balloons, and to the demands which are being ‘made upon this country by the allies for supplies of the fuel for the same pur- poses, and the suggestion has been made that those who operate auto- mobiles for pleasure should do their utmost to reduce the comsumption by doing less riding. This effort is not made primarily to reduce the price of gasolene but for the purposeé of insuring an ade- quate supply for all the needs which the government may have and with the idea of permitting the allies to set all they require in their opera- tions. We are gradually eating into i the country's surpius of crude oil { withcut having any definite knowl- edge as to our resources in that di- rection. With somewhere in the neighborhood of four million motor cars in use in this country those which use gasolene are consuming about 40 million barrels yearly, or ten per cent. of the crude oil that is be- | ing obtained. This it must 'be realized furnishes an admirable opportunity for curtail- ing all unnecessarvy use of the fuel. There is a4 part which can be plaved by each and every auto owner, the| fellow with a motorcycle or the one h a seven passenger touring car. who is burning up this valuable ar- ticle for pleasure when there is so grave concern relative to the supply holding out. But at the same time sho reaseqthe activity which being manifested in securing a sub- . That has never beem needed more than it is today. ascessary fo submit te :he velse ot “Nix on the rabbit stew. girile,” said Miss Halloran, the manicuris “I've had rabbit stew so much I can jump fourteen feet without tryin'. My innards are clamorin’ for a steak and you'll understand when 1 tell you the deal I been through.” Miss Trimmers, manicurist, had loaded two of the cafeteria trays with foods and now made the change requested, and then encouraged her friend to proceed. . “You remember Madge I was tellin’ you about,” the masgpose we got :n our beauty parlor: oM Miss Hallor ran. “Well, she comes down to the pariors this past week lookin' she'd et somethin' she didn’t like. “I like the kid, for she's clever as well as nice. So, I edge up to her at noon and ask her what’s the trouble. “I mighta kRswn. A man! “Seems like her own father was dead and her mether gets skittish and marries again. This time she’s got a mean little shrimp, so her money, which she let him handle, lasted quick. Instead of bein' in clover, the kid had to rustle a job. I also gather that she’s to get some more money when she's of age; her own father, kindo' havin’ had a line on what the old lady-might do after his departure, had tied it up. “Now, the kid had fell in love with a bank clerk, which made trouble be- cause her stepfather had a son like like Pimself, and wanted her to marry the son. days. That's what's worryin' her these “Bein’ 30, as I am, permanent. T've reached the age of indiscretions, so I rush in where fools fear to tread. ‘Are. you willin’ to leave yourself in the hands of Mayme, the child wonder? I ask her. She says she is. So I tell her to bring down the bank clerk, so I could give him the once cver. Which she does one evenin'. He was a bis, red-headed, open-fased chap that had a_smile that started under one ear and reached to Satur- day night. I liked him. Him and me talked. He kindo’ let me suspect, by tellin® jt every other breafh, that he wanted to marry Madge immediate. All right,” T sa “You be at my touse tomorrow evenin’ at 6 o'clock. I give him the address. 1 kmew I could get Madze to go with me eas Then I called up a reverend, who ha 2ll my marryin' business on #ccount of me knowin' him when 1 lived in the country, and got him to say he'd be on the scen So, last evenin''T took Madge home with me to my room and kitchenetta, where I sometimes frv my steakettes. Mrs. Devlin is the lady I st from and who has the rest of the flat. One thing about a person named Devlin, vou can depend on them to under- stand, and to stick to you, if they like you, whether they understand or not I put Mrs. Devlin wise and asked her and her husband to stand as witness- es. ‘We'll outwit the ould devil’ she said, and she washed her hands and viped them on her apron. dze was a lovely blushin' bride prospectus when Jimmy rung the be folded Madge and Jimmy against her ample besom. Again the bell rung and this time Mrs. Devlin answered and let in him she called @ominie. “Him and@ me shook hands ahd he cleared his throat and opened his b but before he could prenounce the fatal worda, there was 2 sound of Furryin' feet and a highcracked voice, and then somebody come in at the door that Mrs, Deviin had left unfas- tened. My stepfather!’ Madge whispered to Mrs. Devlin and me. “'She's here, squeaked the voice clong the hall. ‘And I'm na get ner.’” 1 mmd,boc--ne ‘wasn't of age and he could take her away. Mrs. Devlin thought quick “va your brother ssain’ she said. &ivin' me a push. d pac- ify him in the ot.her roan ‘hen she looked at the domimie and explained. ‘He's a bit woree dor the drink. Poor girl! He'ds a cruel torment to her. She heaved a sigh of sympathy, eased me out the door and I heard her slip the bolt. 1 came face to face with “Froft- Madge's ragin' relative. “‘How, do you do? I grins. ‘Was vou lookin' foer some one?” 1 edged Aim toward the kitchen as I epoke. ““1 want my daughter, he tried to shout it, but bein’ a five footer, he merely whistled liké a peanut roaster. 1 feared the dominié would hear. We Zot to the kitchen and I aeliberately pushed him in. He'd found out at the beauty parlors where Madge and me was. “‘There’'s some one in that next " he sigses. ‘Sure. but they're friends of mine.' ‘and if you keep quiet they'll iet you stay in here’ I was talkin' to iill time till thev’d get through in the other rfoom. The litte man was shoutin’. - “The @oor opened a crack and Mrs. Devlin’s head came through. ‘Whisht!” she said. “My prisoner made a rush for the door. Quick &s a wink, Mrs. Devlin ¢ame thréugh and shut it, and befors vou could say scat she had him by ite back of the meck and with about as much effort as you'd use to twist 1 doughnut from flour ehe had him scross her knee, her foot restin’ oh a chair. ‘She took off her slpper and used it where it did some good, then he slapped him on a chair aad de- parted. “The little feller was spunky, TI'll ay that, and he made a lunge for r departin’ back, makin' a racket ike a wild hyener. I had to grab him and sit on him and wren he com- menced ho! I put both arms| arotind his neck and kinds' choked off | his win d when that didn't him. 1 cd enced sinzin' fo thé top of my voice. Every time he let looss a howl, T eung louder. her what was the trouble. and she fold him every time mv brother went on a bit of a tear T had to sing to nim. He asked if I always sung, and e said 1 did. ‘Teii her to stop> he Vs, Her brother is incurable or 'd takeén the pledge for life. long azo.’ “Well. they were made Mrs. Devlin told the lit defisd him. He left gritt “When T told Mrs. Devlin one, and e man a-~d his teeth. that tha s, and knew ‘That's all long as it Adminie knew me for ve: T bad n) bréther she s as BETTER FREIGHT SERVIGE. It was not so long ago that such a thing as giving the freight trains the right of way over the passenszer ser- ice on the raflroads would have been iooked upon as poor management and a decided disregard for the conven- ience of the traveling public, but in view of the demands upon transpor- tation facilities today anvthing ap- proaching such a situatfon causes lit- tle or no surprise. There are de- mands which have got to be met and it is necessary to adopt the most feasible methods in meeting them. The time has not arrived when the passenger trains are given second- and the lack of sufficient facilities at the present time, it has been neces- sary to curtall the passenger service in favor of the freight by eliminating many of the non profitable trains and by utilizing the motive power for the hauling of the quantities of freight of all kinds which are await- ing_transportation. This s a step which has been forced not only on the small systems but upon all the railroads of the coun- and it is accomplishing desired results when it is shown that over sixteen and a quarter million miles of train service a vear have been elimi- nated in the endeavor to make better use of this motive power and at the same time to save man power and fuel. i And the results have already begun same period a year ago while there change and it promises in the long run to result in much more effiiently operated railroad systems throughout the country. EDITORIAL NOTES. The resort managers cannot com- plain that the weather man is not working hand in hand with them this isn't apt to believe that adversity is good for him until after he has re- are only the beginning of many more wich is desirous of paying full honor to its local companies of soldiers. Ex-Chairman Denman says he was anxious to do everything pessible to help the president, but. it appears The elimination of joy and pleas- ure rides in autos is now ddvocated n order to save gasolene, but isn't it about time to get a report from that fellow with the green liquid gas- oleng substitute selling for a cent a gallon? levery Imake them feel at home. giving them Wants Facts for the Government. Mr. Editor: one of the Connecticut correspond of the U. S. weather bureau desl to keep in touch with all kinds of crop raising and conditiol including acre age, I would greatly appreciate any facts of interest from any Bulletin reader. Let me know how those beans, peas. that patch of melons or pota- toes are getting along, perhaps bugs, worms and insects trouble you, let me know and I will see if I can help you. Perhaps 1 can dig up a few cabbage plants or something to fill in a corner of your garden yet unplanted. Let's all be good fellows and help each other. I will do my part. Come across now, don’t knock unless you expect to and want to skin your fist in the knocking. We are now living in times when it requires continual vigilance to keep going and favors are as eas- ily passed out and a good bit more kindly received than malicious digs. By the way the 2,000 cabbage plants I have given away the past four davs were planted “by the moon” but they are not “mooney” by any manner of means. C. B. MONTGOMERY, Cor. of U. S. Weather Bureau. Packer, Conn. Guardsmen Appreciate Interest Taken In Them. Mr. Editor: Fully realizing all that has been done for the officers and members of Companies 1 K. and L, while these orgahizations were on de- tachment duty in various parts of the Bastern section of the state and dur- ing their stay at Camp Dimock in South Coventry, it is with no little degree of pleasure that we avail our- selves of this opportunity to voice our deep appreciation for all that was done and extend to all of the people our sincere thanks. As the people are well aware, soon after President Wilson called out the National Guard various detachments were sent on railroad bridge duty. In every locality the wel- come was extended plainly -indicated that the people took the highcst de- gree of interest in the military organ- ization of their state. One feature in particular was most pleasing and that was the hospitality extended by the people. Guardsmen were invited into homes and everything was done to make their stay in the various com- munities one replete with pleasure and when orders came for the taking away of detachments it was with feelings of regret that the guardsmen left. In the weeks that the guardsmen were out on detachment duty the people made them feel the fact that they understood the | sacredness of their task not matter how humble the same may have been. In a number of localities the guardsmen boarded in private families and in instane nothing was spared to all that the guardsmen had, and often much more, in their own homes, which they left for the service of their coun- try. Then when the time came for leaving these communities the people in touching ways displayed their regret that the guardsmen were leaving them. The evidence of kindness, consideration and courtesy were so numerous that it would be practically impossible to enumerate them. Hoping that all vill understand that everything done for us has been appreciated and as- suring the people that it will never be forgotten and will always be a source of pleasant recollections ' we beg to remain Major George J. Rau and the Offi- cers and men of Companies I, K and L. New Haven. Conn. July 25th. 1917. Headquarters of the Third Battalion, First Regiment, C. N. G. Mgr. Szeptycki, Archbishop of Lem- berg, who was imprisoned after the Russian occupation of Galicia and had peen released by the new Russian Government, will shortly arrive in Rome. . " > Having been appointed | ONLY WHAT YOU GIVE YOU KEEP. | By Edgar s.uua of The Vigilantes. A recent | Cross su i give, it’s gone. | ba, r’ i Red | to you I or interest Economically, that view ma rrect, but an économic view, how- ever sound, is invariably sordid Moreover, from the standpeint of the higher mathematics, the view has the double demerit of being not only sor- *id but false. ou give is gone. one of it returns. AIl you can keép is what have given away. Joaquin Miller said that, or some- thing to the same effect. He. though, was a poet. FEducated people think differently. But then the ignorance of ed people is notable. Educated by reason of their education, occasionally includes mythc o2y, know that happiness is the great- est of all the gifts which the gods can w. Being mortal they try to get being ignorant they fail. rance confounds happiness with Pleasure comes from with- out, happiness from within. People may be very gay and profoundly m the same token they may be really rich yet actually poor. In either case their condition is due ‘to the fact that thq happiness which they sought, thc# sought-for them- selves Therein is %he poignant error of life. People who seek happiness for themselves fail to find it. But they who succeed in securing it for others, discover that on them also it has been bestowed. The greatest happiness is the ces- sation of pain. That pagan aphorism the Red Cross should put on its ban- rers. Spiritually it is defective, but practically it is valid and we have the misfortune of existing not in a spirit- ual world but in one which that fellow the Kaiser. burglar and pestilence combined, has been turning into a morgue. The suffering induced by this apo- j calyptic beast is beyond computation. But relief the Red Cross can measur- ably supply, if, to employ an engaging vulgarism, we all chip in. Chip then! “There are those who ao not like to give,” the Divinity of Iran confided to prophet. The high god added:'‘Satan aw: them.” Few of us believe in Satan any more. That is véry wrons. Satan is merely an old-fashioned name for un- happiness. Chip, therefore. Do misguided statement give does not return to you. It does return, it returns in happiness and ail the happiness that the richest, the poorest, the wisest. the ;stupidest can ever possess, is precisel¥ that happl- ness which they have given away. It is untrue that it not ecredit the THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Society. Idria—"The pridé which the Ttal- ians feel over their recent successfil airplane raid on the Austrian village of ldria is due not to the size of the place, which boasts only about six | thousand souls, but to the fact that here is located one of the world's most famous mines. Until very re- cent times, when rich deposits of mercury-bearing ore were discovered in our own Western States, the mines of Idria and of_the even richer Al- maden Mine of Spain produced prac- tically all the aquicksilvef of com- merce. Even today, or at least up to the time of the outbreak of the world war, Idria produced more than 500 tons of a ilver every year— N\ stop | “Mrs. Devlin savs the dominiée asked | e | It is untrue that what | that what you! As If Walking On Air Oriiuia, Nov. 28th. 1914, @] For over two years, I was troubled with Comstipation, Drowsiness, Lack of and Fleadaches. One day 1saw your sign which read ‘“J'ruit-a- make you feel like walking on air.”* This appesled to me, 80 I decided to try 2 box. In a very short time, I _began to feel better, and now / fec! fine. I1haveagood appetite, relish everything 1 eat, and the Headaches are gone entirely. 1 recommend this pmmnt Pruit medicine to all my friends . MUTT AND JEFF in THE MOVIES ———— i i DAN McLEAN. B0c. & box, 6 for §2.80, trial size, 25e, At all dealers or seat postpaid by Fruite a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, N.¥, ¢ Majestic Roof Garden TODRAY REGINA BADET THE VAMPIRE OF FRANCE in “ATONEMENT’ DANCING 2:3¢ TO 11 ADMISSION The shown every afterncon at 2:30 and above programme will all rainy nights at the AUDITORIUM HE SUFFERED fives” Made Him Foel ives 10c be from one-sixth to on worid's ann used to attract man; 15ts every spection of the Works nec eight-hour diligence from Loits. miles by In péace tim ed on the right bamk output These facts “The quicksilver mines of season, even though ital (round trip) Jj b, a southwest of 1,200 men W of the Rive: rail in the works, bout half a mile f pounds each annval ment gaged in | of the ore, selves to iacemalking ery nearly | ernment { northeast | miles northeast ity and woodmen a few Japs. gested beyond congestion is_extremely costly effective steps which are taken to relieve the situation, by the widening streets, will administration’s could have been taken decades ago, and the opposition then was just what Decades hence the opposition will still be the the while Bridgeport i- growing, growing, growing; and it expression through the tiny down-town channels of trafic any more than 4 baby giant can grow In_a child’s-size suit of ar- mor plate. are certain: must be taken to relieve congestion; that the whole question has beem too long under consideration already. that ought to be reached promptly and put once.—Bridgeport eity the same. cannot into Standard-American. The purified el or pounds About ontput is converted ng and the women devote “Quicksilver was discover: Tariaz at about the time of the discov- was not until of America but it a century later that th began to work the mi is 30 miles in an ai of Trieste of the Isonz “Tdria of Corizia “In former times the Idrian were supposed dicted to the habit of a Those who think the aphis invaston of the joke about should day and placed in the ranks of the garden aefense league armed with a spraying apparatu: of the sun, of tobacco and soap in their mouths and the odor of the combination per- vading eve: smil rroof. ruisance class as are responsible might have been spared humanity. Bristol Press. potato fields js some be drafred At exay the with the vthing, if the: and joke they would the Kaiser. for struggles In the draft drawings foreign predominate but every man is an American citizen. We find many names which are Italian, Russian, Jewish, Armenian, German, Irish and Most of thoee of foreign names were born in this country but no matter where they were born they are ready States whenever and wherever fight- Jng is necessary. ‘the 'voting to fight for the When we 100l and public the largely in loval of any of Bridgeport is endurance and The center Any extension of stand everlasting credit. Such or opposition is today. But all full reach its In any case, three that some definite the conclusion on the effect at One hundred thousand persons have signed petitions requesting the Aus- tralian Federal kibit treating. Mr. Hughes has prom- ised to consult the Cabinet on the matter. Government to -eighth of set forth in today" war geography bulletin of the 2l Geosraphic Society which adds: merican tour- village Laiba. are em T situated x per cent product iron botties, of the into pig- | and about OTHER VIEW POINTS I site taste could still be bug The aphis belongs in the same school lists, we besin to realize that old New England names are Our_melting pot minority. has been busy and we have the most cosmopolitan popu- lation in the world progressive and found on earth.—New Haven Times- Leader. nd it is the most central the ation- Idria an in ted an | ey by} r Idr is | con- | ed in| & gov- nes. r n $8s wal) | | 7| | miners | to ba | N 7B e sel, Life, Thi ngs of Your [oney. QSITIVELY ONLY ® GNLY A FEW MORE DAYS TO WAIT SIT UP AND TAK? NOTICE! Whatever You Do These War Timss, Don’t Fritter Away Be Wise and Wary. AILROAD 3 RING NEW <HOW TODAY PARAMOUNT and TRIANGLE SUPREME FEATURE JESSE L. LABKY PRESENTS THE MAGNETIC STAR MARIE DORO in OLIVER TWIST An Elaborat: Adaptation of Dickers’ e ALSO THE EVER WELCOME TRIANGLE STAR CHAS. RAY in THE CLODHOPPER A 'Breezy Comedy of Broadway and Bumpkinville in Five Parts. SER 3t Battalion of Billion Dollar Beauticz Do the Ciodhepper Glide, r Irterest Immortal Navel in Six £ to Everyone. THIS YEAR CIRCUS COMIN MAMMCTH INSTITUTION ‘l.F MERIT AND ORIGINALITY - A COMPREHENSIVE ENSEMBLE &V"z ©F THE WORLD'S BE! T PERFORMERS A AND THE FINEST TRAINED ANIMALS - J € MULTITUDE o STRAMGE AND rseniec- | | ng to for setting Both that names United k over to be con- that to the to the steps things steps and matter pro- CURIQUS FEATURES FROM ALL ENDS @ THE EARTH - AN_EXHIBITION THAT & 1S WORTH WHILE ~ B RREN! Adm E H NCT AN EXPERIMENT; ING PRESTIGE, NORWICH CNE DAY ion 5Cc; IN SENSATIONAL MERIT AND QUALITY THE PEER 0‘ ALL TENT- AMUSEMENTS—BAR NONE. EREAFTER A RAPTUROUSLY WELCOMED ANNUAL 27 YEARS OF PHENOMENALLY INCREAS. POPULARITY AND PATRONAGE. iTS OWN SPLENDIDLY EQUIPPED RAILROAD TRAINS. WEDNESDAY, AUG. NS SIREELPARaDE A0 A0 B ZE M.--NO DAILY PERFORMANCES--8 P. M Children 25c ITS FIRST APPEARANCE HERE; VISITOR JRAVELING IN Ladies’ White Shoes lowheels......... Nothing as Cool and Comfortable White Buck and Poplin Boots, White Kid and Caif Boots........... $6.50 to $9.50 White Poplin and Buck Pumps, with or without OIVARS s o iveiisviiaaintansesssss §B00 %0 $5.00 Ladies’ Fancy Pumps, $4.00 value, all sizes, Ladies’” Fancy Pumps, $5.00 value, all sizes, E T R S S R P e T Men’s Regulation Army Shoes, just the thing for real comfort and wear. .. ....... both high and $2.50 to $7.50 $1.98 $2.98 35.50 and $6.50 Cosgrove’s Big Shoe Store 206 MAIN STREET Telephone 544 WHIK YOU WANT to put yoir bus- iness “petore medinm better tnan through the ads vertising columuns o2 the public, there - s no The Bulletin. WHEN YOU WANT t5 pu: your bus- fness berore (ne publis, there t medium wbetter ‘han :_l{mm 5 th ivertising eciumns of he