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. Jorwich Bulletin and Coufied 121 YEARS OLD Subscription price iZec a week) 50¢ a month: $5.00 n year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as second-class matter. lephone Call! Bullg:n Businass Office 4S0. Billetin Baitortal Rooms 83«8, Bulletin Job Ofice 35-2. Office. 67 Church St 2. réviation of any paper in Eastern § nnecticut and from thres to four that of any fn red fo over ouses n Nor- nety-three per in Windbham over 900 Aouses. ielson to over and in all of places it$ nsidered the 1 dally. ; H [<].3 es 1 o ‘of the 4.053 read b the peop Da o Eastern Connscticut bas forty- ne towns, crne humdred and sixty- Sve postofiice districts. and sixty tural free dellvery routes. The E s eold In town and ou all of foutes in Eastern Counecticut CIRCULATION average. 1901, 905, average. TIPS —— » letin leaving trips can have us keep esstul ms for ex- as shown ft- and worthy of Sluntary months, something =fors equalled in this country. ciaiming exemp- livcoddles. The dcor by escape 1ty at home consideration. supporting exemptea Behs ats were there fs no such claime would If what they number done well! going to pro- WHSRE GREAT THINGS ARE EX- PECTED. expected that the play a Getermining r s is Amerfeans ie in the in Europe agalnst . first speech showed his skift®as a | racy and keep the doctors busy. | | Germany does not ask favors of | weak nations. She simply demande | them amazea by e as been de-| The new shipping board gives evi sleasure its | dence that some boards work better g as it now re of President e a law The reason war fs not ecasily for-| v assailed | 2otten is becalise it takes so long to but he has|Pay the f the people tv to honestle amq| The Crown Prince at Verdun sends in his best men where he would not 1086 who destroy|Send 1 his best hounds. , advance prices : ==l upply, as |, The evidences of the war show that e o e DI, 2% | Berlin’s Ananias club is one of the Ses, 1ithy h i @~ | most flourishing on earth. ri 1 to a fine o Sosis s A New York e ‘"JEZ.';' kills more folks than rum.” It doesn’t lezally | pauperize quit y n of distilled : fi ik and no illed| The 50,000 German agents In Rus- sia_have made a mighty show, but full power tofther haven't won the game. prosecut- = e 1y be guilty of| Tt is easy to claim exemption, but ¥ way. the physically fit are likely to dis- serfect there 1s|COVEr that it is not easy to win. since it 1s a = e national se-| The church militant doesn't seem ! { camp. a starving. of America. omption board.| The fund the London Times has s e _,:”_;“,“"" raised for beneficent war purposes militany servies | €Xceeds 35" millon dollars. That's man policy. vices on Sunday. as well as tobacco. NO SCARCITY OF GLASS JARS. ‘Theré is no reason why the price of glass jars for preserving should be advanced, as some of the profiteers are venturing to do in some localitie: Representatives of the glass Jjar manufacturers stated, in a conference held at the Agricultural Department, Washoington, on July 17, that there is no shortage in glass jars. One manufacturer declared: “We have not received enough orders to take care of our dally capacity, and have even offeréd to sell jobbers jars on consignment, to be pald for as sold. ‘We have sold to the jobhers their usual supply, what they usually pur- chase in a vear. They have sold to the merchants the usual supply and they are not ordering any more until they begin to sell and reduce the stock on hand. By the middle of Au- gust we should begin to ship very freely for the fail trade. This s good authority, backed by the government, and there 1§ no rea- son why advarices should be toler- ated. Glass jars may be bought right of honest dealers. A KEEN PHRASE MAKER. The new German chancellor in his gay deceiver, for in speaking peace he braced up the war party Lioyd Georse in analyzing the psace speech selected for critlcism its ma: terly war phrase, and this is what he said of it: In this speech “there are phrases for those who earnestly dasire peace, many of them, but there are phrases which the military powers In Ger- many will understand, phrases about making the frontiers of Germany se- cure. That is the phrase that annex- ed Alsace-Lorraine, that is the phrase that has drenched Europe in blood since 1914; that is the phrase which, if they dare, will annex Belgium and Courland; that is the phrase whic will once more precipitate Furope in- to a weiter of blood within a genera- tion unless that phrase ls wiped out on_the battiefields of Europe.” Michaelis was sclected as a ste- cessor to Flerr von Bethmann because of h ty to piay a dou- bla role-—to give assurance to autoc- and democracy at the same time. He knows how to say things he doesn't mean, as well as the Kaiser can: a can play a stronger part for in could his predecessor because he ana s pretends to be of the people, for the people. The joy riders fili up the hospitais Doctors of Jedicine disacree often as the Doctors of Divinity. disloya]l congressman is an ex- hibit that should be hid in a corner. as If Germany had a gocd cause she would not have so many fierce ene- mies. With aliens exempt our soldier boys get it in the neck and the aliens get the pie. to have any fighting blood like that shown in its theological disputes. When Wilson zets congress off his hands he wili feel about as pleaved as If our troops had won a victory. There is no doubt Germany Is hon- est in her desire for peace: but for the entente to yield would be sur- render. Do not be surprised if some of our American boys capture a few French and Belgium hearts while they are awdy Charlotte, North Carolina, is likely to be a larger and more familiar spot on the map because of its soldiers’ Half a miilion a month will be re- uired to keep the Americans from Great things are expected going some! The old German premier had a face that @id look better than the Ger- This cannot be said of his successor. Connecticut caters to the needs of 1e people as well as to their smail You can buy beans The brazen speculators who twere { world added together; man. aininz mach standard type, and 100 are now in use at the and not n a fatal ace alves service fo Americans themseives d carrving ve and the Germans. an order of to @o good work In the a! America’s big fleet awaken German; American eagle prey. 15 a now covering up the truth. coolness Zovernment has contracted for es of the “model of them represents & government one has ever high ndividualism and depend- and has the judgment and valor of airships wiil to the fact that the fierce bird of German Kuiture is very busy just|would be glad if they counld in peace take a Christmas dinner in Podunk!|Hindenburg as a military dictator. t5 push eggs to a dollar a dozen tais year have failed. The store houses are full and the demand slow. The recruiting plan of Maryland is designed to make those who are fit fight, and those who are lazy join the ranks of toll. If the Red Cross of America Is to be organized on a military basis it should be made a part of the army and be supported by the government. The professors of Bonn University are warranted In asking the Kaiser to make no more peace offers. They are no sicker of them than the world at large. Those bumptious royaitles who were going to take their Christmas dinners in Berlin, Paris and London, ‘SHARING Author - committee NATIONAL BREAD ECONOMY and fectuzer on home economics, formerly chattman home economic’s fational Federation Women's Clubs. GRAIN WITH CATTLE By Helen Louise Johnson. has been much talk about War Bread and the complete extrac- tion of the grain, or the using of entire wheat flour for all bread mak- ing. In this connection 1 want to make these points quite clear to you. First, that flour, made from the entire grain, has not been proved to be a more nutritious food than white flour, for this reason: Our bodies are nourished by what we absorb, not by sgluten, and slightly so of what we swallow. There is a larger proportion of mineral salts in whole wheat as compared with white flour, but this is balanced by the greater waste of the former. We digest white bread more complete- 1y, therefore it yields as much to the body as the whole wheat bread, which is useful .where bulk o: waste product is desired. The second point is that the experts sent to Fu rope to watch and study food conditions there now entire grain as food for men. y that Germany made a great mistake in using the As now used in this country, the extraction of the grain for white flour is cltt}e. not” complete, and the residue is sold as food fo. It should be plain to every one that food for e, espedially to keep dairy herds intdct and givinz full quota of milk, is a prime necessity. Milk is the catt] a food of babies and children, and it is one of the cheay and good sources of different greatly needed foo W e must not deplete or lower the quantity or qualit the milk supply. in bu might give opportunity foi In this connection let whether it is cheaper and it depends. kind you can make. In this particular crisis it make rather than buy it. cither way as yet. ing water, 3% teaspoonful stirring with a wire whisk water, let stand till firm, cold, foamy fruit sauce, or when it Is taken from the ugar or corn syrup, orange. order given and bake in a Serve with cream or mil 2 cupfuls broken bits dried white, swect, or white a miixed, % teaspoonful nutmeg juice and grated rind 34 lemon, 21 cupfuls boi. and nutmeg and when tepid the lemons. uits, raisias, dates, ete., 13 teaspoonful sait , or with an orange s Copyrizht 1917 by T. T. Fra Let us learn to use cornmeal, rye and other flout: many=different ways in our own kitchens. This is a necessity that the demand on flour shall be lessere:l or permit legislation whick Particu t do not let us ury r a positive depletion of nutritive quality. larly let us know what we are about, and talk as well as use intelligently. me further say that I believe it is vet unproved better for all families to make instead of buy bread It depends both upon the kind of bread you can buy, and th. It depends upon the number in your family, and the kin of flour you use and its cost. It depends upon Lhow you use and waste bread would seém a very proper study for the Home Ecc nomics Departments of the colleges to carry on a survey and determine unde what circumstances it was better and cheaper to buy than to make bread, ¢ I do not believe either the Department of Agricu ture or any other Department has sufficient established data to make a cia: Bread Jelly. whole wheat bre salt, 34 cupful sugar. Simmer together the bread, water and salt until it is thoroughly blende ; it will take about 20 minutés. Then add the suga Tarn into moulds rinsed with cole and serve with cream or miix and sagar, with ar with stewed fruit. If desired quert raisius, bits of figs, or some chopped nut meats may be added to the mixture neat. Eggless Bread Pudding. 3 cupfuls milk, % cupfu e or the grated rind of 3 . 1 teaspoonful mixed < Pour the boiling water over the crumbs, add the other ingradients in the en till irm and brown, about an hour. o = Mrs. Allen’s Cook Book. cenbers. moderate o —Recipes memory of the man sight, a sound, or a smell the smell “the awful, worse than anything I hav fore, of those cellars at A timeés when sith sweet perfume of the window—oh, the eems t00 zood to be the horror of that awful s ras!” une; Windsor, the new Royal not new to our peerage. It the title or part of the ti | Stanwell, created by Henry VIIL, who figured on the “Field of Gold,” and Viscount Winds castle, an Irish peer, who which dates from 1796. sor, A war, compared with conceived; public a debt larger ti debts that ever ext the people studiously rendered unless the stvle and prose tray the writer, will surely an accurate description of things today. But it is Macaulay’s description of tion of things during the ended with Waterloo. an officer dining in public vate. It was late. The present writer long ago a private in unifo have grown bang out of rig, 80 I've horrowed a sul guvnor, haven't I dad?” have, and it's my best, More annexations! This German victim is Joan of the Germans are actuall; patron saint of France countrywoman. large quantity of statuettes of the Maid in the French they still occupy. duplicates of has casts. was man. mies; Red tape had no more re| emy than Sir Eric a civilian, then become a Gq the Admiralty. He had m goods manager he issued some sound advice, and to not ‘use the N. E. R. if he sibly get his goods carried means. It was useless, and our canvassers gave young man found however, ening himself. two met and talk horticultu; got the traffic and that got promotion. further. GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES What is likely to be the most abiding | Bismarck wished to be a sort of di at the lad, home in hospital, writes chiefly 1 wake in a lovely smelling sheets and fields wafted into the differsnce of true, peers in the past. There was William de Wyndsore, who was made a baron by Richard iL: Lord Wndsor de SRR other wars sink into significance: tax- ation such as the most heavily taxed people of former times could not’ have It has come at last—the offence of bound to com ¥ | answered the second civilian. clatming the as a fellow- They have acquired a In one case, at least | they ordered a manufacturer to The Frenchman was astonished. and asked the reason of this devotion as the reply from a Bavarian officer, oan of Arc is not French, since she .a Lorainer, and Lorraine is Ger- Certainly she prayed to heaven for the success of our arms for they are directed against her mortal ene- the French, who delivered her up .and the English who burned he Geddes. énough in a man who a year ago was an Admiral and is now First Lord of with making the North Bastern one of the most up-to-date of railways. story of an obstinate trader who would said the fu- ture First Lord, “to call at his office, fond of gardening, and took up’ gard- For some months these young man ‘We can follow the militarist Germany has cried out for tront—a | tator with the aid of his military con. . |federates. “How keenly.” he savs o A Sussex |yiojike, “he wanted to put in practice of |his military and_strategic. tastes anny | cbserved not on this occasion only..... e smelt be- | His love of combat and delight in bat- rras. Some. |tles were a great support to me. room, | Moltke'’s comment on the war-com the | pelling forgery was “If T may but live |10 leaa our armies. then the devil ma. coma directly afferwards and fetch Today it is the soldiers “could smell, it; it But, oh! mell at Ar- |Crown Prince fetch men out whose f hell.” surname, is has formed tle of many Views of the Vigilantss JANE KEEPS HOUSE IN WAR TIME. e Cloth of or of Black- subsequent- ly, in' 1711, became 'a peer of Great|By Christine Terhune Herrick of the Britain under the titite of Lord | VioHate i Mountjoy of the Isie of Wight. Al ool it these peerages are extinct now, but the = Farl of Zute still retains among his | 1. SGHES , many titles that of the Earl of Wind- | The enthusiastic girl was depicting in_thrilling tones the methods by which ehe planned to increase her ef- ciency. Foncentration is to be fay slogan, she cried. “I shall concemtrate! con- centrate!” Concentrate on what?7" practical friend. “On everything!” eager young thing. That is the way Jane felt when she appreciated the fact that she must reduce her household expenses and at the same time keep up the food stand- rd in her home. She was not willing to leave one department to neglect She would concentrate on everything and she began on soups. The thin consommes and we rthwith banished. They cost too much _and did not flll up euffi- ciently. Their place must be taken by broths, purees, chowders and other ck soups. This change the which all inquired a han all the sted in the food of the dear. That rhythm be. be taken for the state of not. It is the cond war which announced the Dbouillons with a pri- ‘ soon or et not rm and two men in mufti. Of the two. one, Who |easier because Jane's family, like the should have been wearing the uniform | majority of eate Sl o of a second lieutenant ~explained: | soups of this kind and were only sup- Tivate Blank, here, s my uncle. He|ported in their consumption of the is up for a visit, and according to reg- | watery varieties by the knowledge that lations T ought not to be seen about|such were considered more elegant and with him. Since I joined the Army I{ajso that they did not take up so much my civilian it from the “Ye: ou internal room as to leave little for the courses following. she began work Jane had not izuessed how much nutriment was wasted in her kitchen and how many ups ehe could make of left-overs. She sat up nights with the department of agriculture bulletin when it fArst |came and the fruit of her studies be- | zan at once to appear on the table. The family rejoiced in a milk and jcheese soup. made by thickening three | cups of milk, heated in a double boiler, with a heaping tablespoon of flous, adding a cup of grated cheese and salt and paprika to taste. As they con- sumed it they may not have taken sol- id comfort in the thought that they were getting more nutriment than they would have had in a pound of beef, but it did them just as great good as though they had. Almost as well liked was a bread and vegetable soup in which a pint of water wherein celery roots had been boiled (or it might ha from young carrots or turnips or peas or beans or the second water from onions or cabbaze) was mixed with a pint of milk, a cup of the minced vegs etables simmered in this for 15 min- utes, seasoned to taste and poured on lareze slices of bread laid in the soup plates. Sometimes the bread was crumbled_and used to thicken the soup; sometimes it was cut into dice, fried in dripping and put with the soup. The crusts cut from toast wed¥ used in this way. No remainders of vegetables escaped soup pot. The two or three table- spoons left in the dish were no longer scraped out and dumped on the plate of the hungriest of the family with the injunction: “Eat that to save it!” On the contrary, Jane developed an un- canny knowledge of how much nour- ishment each one actually required and laid emphasis on the lack of patri- ol"m displayed by overeating. Just wait five minutes before you take a second help and you will find you won't want it!” she said. Waiting { time Are. the Yes. and images town which maike Oh,” lentless en- Natural eneral, then uch to do As to the staff 1d_them the E conld pos- by other it up. One that he was re—then we spirit FRIDAY, AUGUST 10, 1917 [then }1ittle thicker. ve been the water | a little while after you have eaten makés you know how full you are! Into the soup pot went all the wa- ter in which vegetables were cooked and all the trimmings that could not be used otherwise were added to, the water and this boiled down. The liquor from rice, macaroni, spaghetti and hominy had " their places in in- creasing the nutritive qualities of the broths. No bit of meat, no scrap of gristle or catrilage w: too small to be added to the stock and cooked un- til all the value of it was extracted. Jane could not bring herself to buy meat especially for soup. That was a thing of the past. But she watched the butcher with an eagle eve when he cut off trimmings and removed bones and carried them home herself sooner than run the risk of losing a fragment of them. If she indulged her household in boiled mutton or beef or in stews, every spare drop of broth wae saved and by the time it had been treated with thidkening and seasoning and bread cubes or .crumbs and de- voured by a hungry circle there was little capacity remaining for the small portion of meat allotted to each one. And yet they were all happy, with the bliss that comes from filled stomachs. CAN, AND CAN NOW. This is the only bag in which real PENNANT whole blanched Salted Pcanuts are ever sold. PENNANT Peanuts are those melt - in - your - mouth, whole salted peanuts-the originals Prepared by our own private process. luscious YUKON A Powerful Drama of the G Mad Days of "8 In the Lawiecs Land of the Arctic, in Seven i, pen: USUAL Can, and can now, eays tcday’s bul: letin from the national emergency food garden commission of Washinston, which is co-operating with this paper in a nation-wide campaign for the conservation of the products of your war gardens. The commission’s cam- paign has been on for a month now and any of these lessons you may have missed will be found in the canning! and drying manuals which the com- misston will send vou frec for a two- cent stamp to pa iesson is on onions an 5 Only well matured onions should be used for drying. Remove the tops. roots and the outside papery covering, | slice in one-eighth inch pieces | and dry as soon as possibie. . Another {to 1s 10 blanch in boiling water for |m. es after slicinz and the in tain layers as above Leeks may be handled in the same way as onions except the sirips are a 3, at 9:15 ships and s: The force Clenaghan it to bits was the on slight inju to_quickly The men vicked up them, but, ar kept reach Ja and iled for a The close shown by {men wer> Dried Potatoes, sweet and Trish: Use | sound, mature ones. Wash and I or steam until neariy done. Prel, run through meat grinder of ricer and spread on travs in thin laver until] slizhtly after drying method had 10 breath | specks™ [ “The the on Te; en Pumpkins and squash and well ripened. wise, peel and remove all oft paris. Cu ¥ slices and dry on E . | 1f desirable the vegeta ba cut | into one-half inch strips. paled and |4 the seads and £0”t paris removed, then | blanched in bofiing water for three nutes. after which ed as above Be sure to condition all u. by pouring from one otber daily store i should be | 2iout Cut cross- [to the seeds and | were gi tative and then 00f containers in § hesoiies R ture of wha ing and thou, no_apology cd June 2 shell-h You Re>ders of THE BULLETIN By sending this ecupon to the National Emergency Food Garden Commission, 210 Maryland Bldg., Washington, D. Cc, with a two cent stamb to pay post- age a_canning and drying manual free of charge. All you have tc do is fill out the spmce and enclose the two cent stampor pestage. These are twelve page manuals, fully il- lustrated and are sent out in zo- operation with this paper as a part of the personal service we at all times aim to give our readers. i In t we. which is fa fon with ga Tomy night. The and sent off poisoning. regiments) b 1 ee mo! i | | i1y fis @ ‘We wait readiness fo; er sit or lie Name Street City gas. would drive is indescrib: State | rignt up to | aays. | being made STORIES OF THE WAR fantry. How the Orleans Was Sunk. seen during D. M. McClenaghan. of Ciaremont, {N. H. one of the survivors of the | American steamer Orleans, which was iorpedoed and sunk by a German s marine July 3 off the coast of France |tells a ‘thrilling story of his expe cncés after the vessel was attacked sorfe 200 miles from Belle Island McClenaghan was one of the metres over |as they catc nal with th half an ho whistling ov Thers is . man lines t lors in the Orleans’s crew of 50 on the Orleans, together with the na gun crew of 12 men. He was report- ed as missing following the sinking of the vessel. He denied emphatically today that he,was missing and said he never feit better in his iife. | The Orleans was the first ship to |make the trip across last April, un- |armed, after the declaration of war | The vessel left Brooklyn on June 19, |en the fatefal vovage, bound for Bor. deaux, France. On the night of July Tn referen tlefield that in the and have b the number tonishing. with eggs Helle lsiana, Mr. Micf then vacht air taken the strips are |Drought them back to N what have no idea what t our ed up by it through we lie prepared for & being continually from the gas. The 23 centimetre We dare not {five and twenty f1 letters as this are written in the Ger- when 200 milés out from e ship was hit amid- ank in about 15 minuter of the explosion, Mr. Mc- said, knocked one of the life boats off the davit and smashsd The captain of the vessel iy one hurt, sustaining a to his foot. - took to the boats and pull- ed on_the oars all night for land. Thay a certain star 1o “lenaghan say: They wer: guid; moving” one day out and they kept on hoping The sun rose at 4 a they hoisted salls and couple of hours. between life and deati the manner in wkich finaiiy picked up. been searching under orders and_tken turn a. m. the captain his men that the: more. In the samr okout reported “two the nd. were the two Orieans were taken on 1 irest, Francs, that ht and taken nch barracks, wiere thes ipper of coffee and th’n T breakrast. A rep- of the American Red Cross for their Ainner that ey remained on the for a week bafore thev on a steamer which w Yo 1ock n a Hellish Fire, letter found upon the e gives such a good pi t the enemy is now endur- he thinks of the war gh it is rather long. I make for reproGucing it. It is 6 a given 15 in hel like— sed in hellish fire day and his marvellousiy beautiful crouch together in_ holes doom. The dead here their artillery alone to ours. The r superior s masks on our faces fires gas shells and three or four hundredweizht of aerial torpedoes all wounded and poisoned are collected in_grouns ; many dead, too, from gas 'p to now our division (only three has lost 2 400 men in beare- nths. The fourth regiment n_ Macedonia. all night In increased r action. We can no long- down. Our heads ache Our cizarettes taste of steel shell a lion mad, and its effect able. Three days more and we shall go o front line again for five e all ook forward with joy to prisoners. | “The English want to shoot us down. | not to make p Their ce. They do not need artillery is enough let a glimpse of us be the day time. ving men are 15 to 30 our position, and as soon h sight of anyone they sig- eir machine guns, and fo: ur the heaviest shells are ver the position. no doubt that many such hese days, but there is ev ery doubt as to whether the censors let any of them pass.—Reuter. Birds on the Battiefield. . ce to a recent paragraph in in this column ajout birds on the bat- “Gunner A. P. ,52294" writes 1t may interest your readers to know “battle area where I am een since November last, of wild birds is quite .as- 1 found a moor hen's nest (three) within the batter Leave New London daily:....... Due New York Pier 70 E. R.32 §t. Due Pier 40 N. R. ft. Houston St. Somfortable Stateroomo—well ventilated—can be = Dining Room service a la ci Fare Norwich to New Y Applications for Staterooms and Tickets o G. W. ADAMS, Ticket Agent N. Y., N. H. & The New England Steamshi New London (Norwich) Line To New York Strs. City of Lowell and Chester W. Chapin 1180 P. M. 7.00 A. M. JI 730 AL M. otcupied at' 7.00 P. arte oric $1.88 hould be made to H. R. R, Norwich p Company ™. aeed have no fears. crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITEH ou ETRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUMINTS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WiTH If these appeal to you, call for examination chargo for consultation. DR.-F. C. JACKSON DENTIST (Successors to the King Dental 203 MAIN ST. A M. to8P. M Lady Asistant Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does.the dread of the dental chair cause you to negiest them? By our method you can have CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS You tebth filled, ur T PAIN. BEST WORK and estimate. Na DR. D. J. COYLE Co NORWICH, CONN. Talephone The four | men lost were drowned when thrown | out of a life boat by dropping one end Fifteen to | . oniy a_ few yards from the guns. ' Finches of ail kinds, mag- ples, blackbirds, thrushee a very good- ly number of cuckoos, and far mare sparrow hawks than ever 1 rememuer | seeing in England over any area of tha | same size. The reason for the latter | is perhaps the enormous number of fleld mice overrunning the uncultivated ficids. A Father’ Misery to bald hedded man usss up more erchicfe this kind of ieather than the feliow with a wealth of i like the Sutherland sisters. He hns | more teritory to cover—Waterbury | Democrat. | May it please the Germans to learn | that the sum of their ejaborate air! ds of London hasn't produced the | ualties which a small but selected | fieet of fool-operated motor cars could | have cauged in that big city in a much | shorter time—Hartford Times i Anl this talk about wiikt is going to| ltake piace after the war can be taken | with a grain of salt. When the world at large setties down. natural eondi- | Itioris will prevail again as they were { hereofore.—Middletown Penny Press. Whether the world ceries is called off o account of the war or not, ths ‘American people are quite likely to too busy reading the war news to nay much attention to it. By world series time tens of thousands of American homes are likely to be directly repre- {sented on the firing lime—Hartford | Pogt. | can Their the Firing Senator Reed, whose attacks on Her- |pert Hoover have been venomous be- | vond the bounds of decency now says he is reliably informed that Mr. Hoover contemplates diverting all grain ship- for a ments away from southern ports to| - Gxchangs New York. Diverting any of the mon- ey producing activities of this war away from Dixie would be a crime calling to high heaven for atonement. —WWaterbury American about the Bx-Chairman Denman now claims that the new men on the shipping board are following out his ideas. It is rumored that Mr. Denman is a very insistent person and may be heard of a great deal. It Is fumored, too that he was one of the chief reasons why | Wilson carried California and so the | country. This may be embarrassing.— | Hartford Courant Why Wait? Once more. congress having found that the country stands with the presi- dent, has vielded to the president. It would seem that an intelligent con- gress would presently learn to do it in the first place.—Buffalo Enquirer. Good Way to Win. The fact that the Texas governor celebrated his indictment on nine grave ¢harges by announcing his candidacy and they TODAY AND SATURDAY THE FEATURE OF THE YEAR DOROTHY “THE FLAME OF THE PAULINE FREDERICK “AUDREY” 8ix Part Paramount Whom His Reeentmont BIFF BANG, Fox Comed In Two Parts Amateur Night Tonight 10c—ADM18810 AUDITORIU REE THEATRE TODAY AND ANTONIO MORENO and BELLE BRUCE “A SON OF THE HILLS From the Novel by Harrist T First Authent Troops Camp Revalution. Sucdeecing the New Democracy. BIG V. COMEDY \other term pects to run on A Colnc The first draft number wa reference to the map mumber of miles to the Rhine—indian Btatements necticut citizens on vital ics have been secured gy mecticut State Council This newspaper rangements by prominent Con of Defense has made ar with the Council of Defense to publish thess interviews will appear Monda Wednesday, day morning i A Victrola on your motor trip Easily stowed away and just as easily brought out to play for you the songs and dances you wish to hear. We have. several pertable Victrola styles, any one of which will make your trip a pleasureable one. ALTON in —IN— Picturs TIME AND PRICES Majestic Roof Garden! TODAY AND SATURDAY R. A. Walsh’s Drama “THE SILENT LIE” Wrath Caused the Daug s Un SATURD —_—N— stock Show Pictures in Franee, and Prepars Line; Also th . First Pictures of E Formation dence. MADE-IN-CONNECTICUT | WAR INTERVIEWS Thursday and Sat ; l Victrola Outfit 6 Victrola Outfit 9 i Vietrola 6...... cevenne $25 Vietrola 9 $50 Records our choice Record. ({Bur choice) to value of ......... to value of....... L] Tohlfi Total $5.00 &5 $3.50 .2, dowm 8800 2.0 $5. Every Victrola and every Victor in stock. Szl ViCT Victor R Df The Store of Main St. _ - VICTOR VICTROLAS AND VICTOR 'RECORDS Norwich, Conn. nd Record always Supreme