Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 14, 1917, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, and Goudies 121 YEARS OLD . Subscription price 1Zc m week: 50¢ & month: $6.00 a vear. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., &s second-class matter. Telephome Calls: Dalle i Businass Office 480. Billatin Editortal Rooms 35-3. Bulletin Job Ofice 33-2. Office, 67 Church St WiLmantle §The Circulation of iThe Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest§ cireu'ation of any paper in Eastern § Connecticut and from threy to four § fimes Jarger than that of any in Normich. It ls delivered to over 3 : H 2,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- wich and read by ninety-thres per cent. of the people. in Windham it is delivered tu_over 900 houses. in Putpam and Danielson to over 1,300, and in all of these places it is considered tbe local dally. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns. one hutdred and sixty- Sve postoftice districts, and sixty iural free delivery routes. The BEwmllctin is sold in every§ town end on all of ke R. F. D.j routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION average........ T — 1901, 1905, average.. August 11, 1917... s of The Bulletin leaving for vacation trips can have it fol m daily and thus-keep in touch Order through T ness office Builetin busi- he serd nort ern camps did a =zood sections of the coun- an open question whether a4 have extended welcome are extending to the nities wot > north At Spartansburz on Sunday, Aus. 5th, the people invited a whole com- pany ner in thelr homes; and s was done ake of extending to dinner n for oing climate to the Carolinas ry camps are y to health A SCHEME BEING CONSIDERED. 5 of land lying of producing if 2,000 Amer- to France to work A the boat by zrowing sustenance for France upon - 1 seems feasible New England is more than n“farm laborers, and s country could give 100,000 more men: but sround is not popular—it t00 long hours and too short 2,000 men short ad of taking 2,000 farmers from America we need 100,000 added to the, working land forces of the matfon. 1 not the forelgn production of wheat, corn, beans, potatoes, carrots end other staples could be produced for the immediate consumption of our army at the front with comparatively small cost in France be produced so much cheaper at home that nothing would really be gained by the ven- ture? The frelght and the peril might be avolded and the soldiers given more green stuff; but is this scheme really worth while? SPARROW PUDDINGS. There is a plague of sparrows in England, and they are taking tall of the wheat, oat and corn crops which is_very nettling to the agriculturists. ‘What has been done to reduce their numbers has not resuited satisfactor- | tions, persistence. n ‘Wwe suffer in the ‘would be speedily abated. It seems a small matter that those who are so particularly interested in the success of agricuiture should do what Here is a hint for Americans who are fond of bird-soups or ples. There 18 no doubt thousands of them are eaten for reed birds every September in this country, just ds robins are served as quail on toast. This sparrow pudding s what we call bird pie, probably, and if it is “the last word in delicacles” there is no reason why Americans should not enjoy it. SOMETHING YELLOW. Gov. Holcomb has been taken to task for saying there is something vel- low in this state. There is something as yellow or vellower in every state, for there are ten times as many copperheads in the states as there were during the Civil war. 3 There is also a fine display of gol- den patriotism in this state, as there doubtless is in all the other states. The real American spirit never dies out. Tn every town in Connecticut and in every part of the Union, young men between 16 and 20 have refused to be refected because of their lack of weight and other fechnical objec- and have butted in by sheer Several youth of Norwich have done this, and doutbless vouth in all our 163 towns have done the same thing. One Norwich boy whose foot was slightly deformed ordered a toe am- putated that he might get by The spirit of young America is all right! 2 We are calling men cowards who are not cowards and women slackers who are not slackers. Why not aban- don this habit of calling names? HOW GERMAN HATE WAVERS. The world looked up in wond: when Germany put her hate for Eng- land into song and taught even her school children to cultivate this dia- bolical habit of hating. When Tommy Atkins, taken by the music of the eong began to sing It to other words, Germany noticed that the coffect of it on her enemies was not just what she expected it to be: and although the Kaiser honored the au thor of the song, the people deeming it unworthy of a cultured people made an enad of it. They have hated and abused the Jews who belong to the Algimex, a trade organization which recelves and distributes Imports in Germany, be- cause they do business together and help their friends to nice little careers for which. purpose they are exempted from military service. But just now Americans come in for most abuse in Germany, and for be- ing hated stand at the top. “The German explanation to her people of the intervention of America is generaily this—America was afraid that England would not win and was then alarmed about .her ammunition orders. That why she came in but also because she wanted to s at the green table when the peace negotiations came on. | | ‘NATIONAL BREAD ECONOMY BREAD HAS NO SUBSTITUTE By Loulse Caldwell. Institute lecturer in home economics, Kansas State Agricultural Ccllege at Manhattan, TTH flour around $12 to $13 a barrel, bread at tén cents and fifteen cents W 2t e nouewtte i staggered by ber monthly bread bills. Can she find a substitute for bread, a universal food, the largest single item in the diet of the vast majority of people? She can not. ‘We may suggest meat substitutes, butter substitutes and.substitttes for potatoes that play their roles reasonably well, but a bread substitut would be nothing short of an apology. The cereal breakfast foods furnish the same food principles, but, substituted for bread, would grow extremely monotonous, if not positively distasteful. Potatoes as & substitute are no economy at pres. ent prices. Shall we then cut down the allowance and g0 hungry? Experience teaches us that we can not afford to eliminate bread from our diet so long as it is obtainable. Mr. Hoover's advice in regard to the staple foods 1s to eat plenty, wisely and well, and without waste The last suggestion is the one that wiil help us in the solution of our bread problem. Cut down the waste Too much bread is Aigding its way to the pig pen from injudicious buying, slicing, poor storing and ous antip. athy for stale bread. - We read that seventy thousand loaves of breac are returned weekly to Kansas City bakeries and so largely for stock feed at a loss of $2,800 to thoe baker simply because we scorn day-old bread. Stale bresc s is good food and more wholesome than that freshiy > baked. There are a few who buy it through prefer ence and some for economy’s sake, but as yet the stale bread purchasers are comparatively rare. Shall the housewife bake her own bread? This s out of the question for the business woman who is away from home all day. She might be able to accomplish the feat and often does, but at a great sacrifice of energy and too often losgeof sleep, which, if long continued, must be paid for in the end at & high pri ™ foals and flours raads from various ottier cereals have bhen recommended as substitutes for wheat flour in bread making, but no other flour has been found that has the same desirable qualities as the flour made from wheat. The most important thing for the housewife to learn just now is to pre vent one single crumb of bread from finding its way to waste. Bread should be stored in such a way as to insure its keeping. Do no: remove the wrapper from baker’s bread before putting it into the bread box. which should be perfectly sweet and clean. A tin bread box with proper ven tilation is most satisfactory. It should be washed, scalded and sunned at least once a week, if not oftener. Do not allow bread to mold in the bdx. Musts or moldy bread very soon spoils fresh bread placed in the same container. Siice only enough bread tc serve the family for one meal. Better slice a second time thgn have pieces left over. Cut slices in half so individuals wi not take more than they can comsume. Make it bad form fo leave even a square inch of bread on the plate or crumbs on the tablecloth. If slices should be left on the bread plate. pack together closely and return to bread box. Teach youngsters to eat bread crusts—not because they will make thelr hair curly, for they will not, and it is poor policy to deceive a child even iy s0 small a matter as this—but because the crust is the mos: wholesome par: of the loaf. The starch is more thoroughly baked in the crust than in. the crumb and consequently more readily digestible. Besides this children meeq hard crusty foods to develop their teeth and teach them to masticate properly But no matter how careful the person in charge of ‘he food supply in the ‘home may be there is very likely to be more or less stale bread. Her problem is to convert this unpalatable food into an edible and tempting product, whien may be accomplished in a variety of ways. Partially stale bread may be freshened by moistening slightly and warm. {ng in a covered pan in a moderate oven. Bread too stale to freshen in this way lends itself v?ell to toast making and may be served dry. buttered, or moistened- with milk or cream; as a garnish for meats, vegetables and eggs: or as croutons, sippets and toast sticks with soups. Coarse bread crumbs ean be used economically in making puddings and scalloped dishes, while fine crumbs made from thoroughly dry bread ground and sifted are good for crumb, ing croguettes, cutlets, fish and vegetables to be fried; as a substitute for part of the flour in griddle cakes and gems: or for thickening soups. Copyright 1917 by T. T. Frankenberg. Loulse Caldwell. HOME-READING COURSE FOR CITIZEN SCLDIERS (Issued by the War Department and all rights to reprint reserved) EDITORIAL NOTES. Evervbody who weeps today is not stricken with crief. Some of them have the hay fever. The American who is always ar- guing about constitutional rights is usually a dodger not a doer. The prices of cotton and tobacco confirms the belief of the southern that there 1s a God in Israel! The man or woman who gets two weeks' vacation this vear beats the President of the United States Washington is such a “wet” place that Old Virgintx finds it difficult to carry out her “dry” programm Thousands of cooks, bakers and | butchers are needed for the army, but | what country has g0od ones to spare? Col Bryan has made such a suc- cess cf keeping still that country- men surely hope that he will keep at It may be dirty politics to knock free trade in war time, but it is an enemy that deserves to be knocked | out. he world would be glad to sece peace declared before Christmas, but not such a peace as Germany would tate. The Honolulu Star-Bulletin says: Woodrow Wilson may be slow in| reaching a deelsion, but when he turns a corner—Ilook out! Fighting the Huns in Belzium keeps them from doing to portions of Amer- ica what they have done to Belgium, Serbia and Rumania. * There are 100,000 campfire girls in the country and they have won nearly a million of honors in a vear. Honors are not easy with them, either. Honolulu sent out two million letter: 2 month last year. The natlves have not only been pietized and civilized, but they must be running tvpewrit- ers. ?erman pledge of immunity to hospital ships would be less open to suspicion if Germany did not have such a free and easy way of violating pledges. The The high cost of living is a thing that can be investigated oftener with- out any visible result except deplet- ing the treasury, than anvthing else on earth. We are so limited in our powers that those who ride cannot under- stand those who walk, and vice versa. But each class appreciate their su- perior advamtages. I# a protective tariff is not estab- lished before the war ends, the American workers will be erying for free soup as the people of Serbia and Armenia are today! The opponents of the ~government are bold and saucy: but when the military hand of Uncle Sam takes them by the schruff of the neck it will be too late to kick. ily there any more than in America. An Pnelish farmer writes the Lon- don Times: “T am convinced that the only remedy is to make these birds a valuable marketable commodity. If smart soclety and fashionable restau- rants would only make sparrow pud- o B S U Spa The Chicago boys have made an end | abutes of the stories of the Kaiser in the school text books—they have torn cut the objectionable pages. They are a law unto themselves. Young Ameri- ca can’t o beaten! LESSON No. 2 Going a step farther, loyalty gov- Making Good as a Soldier s tave pe s felnge, Bnd (Proceding Lesson: 1. Thor Boet obl| oo i S T s ; : RS e o et e s Hatiohal Kecnr R R e ol e are to take y cé. trul; Jiioleng et e el rac Sl ot mein N men of ail degrees of wealth | army life 9 education, chosen through fair Obedienca. | and open selection by lot All arg The second of the i brought er on terms of equal- | quaiities is o | ity. here has been and there will | cipl Withot H e 1 Sreat Natibnea: Asiny | ST e ooe Ben oo hok v o e ch learn from the other. place cach man makes for himsel be determir is own work Developing Soldierly Qualities. in the army of resenting the question as to whether immediate 1 unquestic obedi- - to the colors now or w ence is required of him. Je cuicki contingent is not worth ar-|learns, however, that obedience en- | decision has been | foreed througholit the army is in all man by lot. An am- | situations the chief safeguard e | however will be glad to afort and the safety of | It zives him a better m the raw recruft to| for promotion. The commis- .{ sioned offic: the first contingent | are picked men who bave volunt inruly or ! gone through the hardest kin n every gr | training. The of later ana forced to | gents will be argely from the | for the benefi Bien anliatea contingents. | Military aiscipline There is plenty of opportunity sonal. Obe for every man to use his brains ¢ merel his enerzy and to earn promotion a: re cordins orth. This does not with fully as muct mean ea ick advancement. It Feduired of vou 7t | means you will have your ur duty, whenever you fair char wou would ask for tthority over other man, | nothing more-—to develop vourselfand [ to demand from thom the same ful to_cl upward step by step. measure of obedience that others will In order to make good in the na- | require of you, tional army you must, first of all, fit| Discipline is not only essential in yourself to carry with credit the si developing the army, but also in de- Dle titie of “American Citizen-Soldier” | veloping vour ow cter as a sol- —one of the proudest titles in the |dier. “The soldicr who is hy nature world. This means that you must|brave, will by discipline become develop in vourself the quaiities of a | braver.” soldier. The more quickly and thor- Physical Fitness. ougthly vou cultivate ~them, the| Tha third basie quality, physical fit- sreater will be vour satisfaction and | ness, is so essentiai that 5 large part success of the time devoted to vour training There is very litle real difference of | will be spent in building it up. Phy. opinion as to soldierly gualities. They | sical fitness includes not onty mmse have been determined by ages of ex- | cular development but good heaith perience. Weapons change, but the and endurance as well. It is a qual- soldiers who handle the weapons re- itv which every man who passes the main much the same. physical examinations can develop in Bisic ities. himself by reasonable care d by ETiEss SHRNIE Al e __ |obedience to instructions. This is a There are three basic qualities. | subject more fully discuszed in a without which no man can be a reai | later lesson. soldier even though he mav tempor- arily wear a uniform. They are: Loyal Obedience, Physical Fitness. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A man without these qualities s in the way and is a source of weakness ” to an army, both In the camp and on Denoceacy. AES Skeu St o the fleld of battle. Mr. Editor: The United States ha The Articles of War of the United | entered into this great war, we are States set forth the military crimes | told, to o the rule and triump! which are punishable by heavy pen- |of democracies, and to preserve the alties Among these crimes are de- [rights of emall nations. . sertion, cowardice, insubordination, | President Wilson has said small na- tionalities should have a_right to de- cide under what form of government they wish to live. and that oppression of ‘small nation ies by largdr and more powerful nations must cease. It is upon this new doctrine of liberty and democracy as announced by the president the people of smaller na- drunkenness while on duty, sleepigs while on. dutv as a sentinel, diselos- ing the watchword, and giving aid or comfort to the enemy. JRun over this list and you will see that every one of these military crimes can result only from ‘he absence of one or more of the three basic qualities of a sol- ater. tionalitles, oppressed by Iarger and Loyalty. more powerful nations, place - their A soldiers loyaity governs, first of | hope. all, his feellngs and actions’ toward | May we speak of Ireland as one of the smaller nations seeking emancipa- tion? Larger in area than Belgium, Greece, Servia. Portugal, Switzerland, Denmark or Holland, and exceeds or approaches any of them in population. When the maiter of freedom and in- dependence of other small nations is considered, will Ireland be forgotten? Ireland is part of no other land, fory God has flung round it His oceans as its boundaries. Dowered with magnifi- cent harbors, eighteen in number, five his country, his government and his flag. There can be no such thing as half-way loyalty. The slightest com- promise opens the door to >reason. But a soldier's loyalty does not stop here. It governs also his ‘feel- ings and actions toward the army and toward all the officers under wnom he serves. It absolutely forbids dis- obedience among both officers and enlisted men, or disrespect toward those in authority. | 2AT f‘; Is RatszMice FOR SALE BY: Preston Bros, Inc, Norwich, Conn. Arthur P. Cote, Baltic, Conn. Clayton H. Rood, Inc., Baitic, Conn. . 0. Co. K Charks Gorriecs; Conr Eagleville, Conn. % J. C. Green, Martin M. Hansen, Mansfield Depot, Conn. Benoit’s Pharmacy, Taftville, Conn. Fred Lavalle, Wauregan, Conn. Sweet Brothers, Lebanon, Conn. israel Botnick, Bozrahville, Conn. H. Fishbone, Fitchville, Conn. Lewis B. Brand, Fitchville, Cosn. People’s Store, Inc., Taftville, Conn. AND ALL GOOD DEALERS are first class. Ireland is In truth the key to tme Atlantic. the Achiiles heel that renders England and the British empire vulnerable to aitack. Perhaps this is one of the reasons Ireland is held down. Of her own free will Ireland has never accepted English rule, and at no time has she sworn to uphold it. Ire- land is no part of the British empire; she is a nation, with national rights of self-government. What allegience Irishmen owe England is as much al- legiance as is compeiled at the sword point. A conquered nation, the com- querors have set up the king and ac- cording to human law. as expounded in these days, the conjuerors’ king is their king. Human law is one thing; Divine law is very often another, and Divine law says compuision perpetuated does mot make right. or that the Jaw of force, even if persisted in for centuries. can- not become the law of justice. In sub- mission to man's law so far as she must she will acknowledge the king: since Divine law says he is not the king, she bears him no allegiance in her heart Principles are like fixed stars, al- in their unchangeable place: is the chart of the pilot who by their light. He shifts with the wind and the tide. His craft may be driven out of her course by a tem- £ she may lie like a log on the pest: _on waters in a calm: he tacks to the right to avoid breakers on a dangerous coast left to give a wide berth | but all the time he is pressing on with unsleeping watch- fulness to the appointed port. So with the Divine prineiple of free- will, which is more firmiy set than the | sun in the sky, and it will be when the sun has waned and gone out. And it would be laughable If it were not pitiable that a handful of men pa resolutions and. namingz it a law, think | they have outmanouevred Divine law. May their littie narrow visions be widened and may they be enlightencd, too, that vears of wrong never make a right, and that conturies are but the winzheat of a bird in the immensity of and to the to a sunken rock: golden, fumed or weathered oak. ~ Has all the exclusive Victrola features. A most wonder- ful value. your customary contract to that Ne Main St. m Victrola Outfit 6 .5 { il ik 1] You purchase from a Isaways spoken of- several customers instead our treatment must gnd Tiereiee wiere you oy Ference where Victor Records. Victrola - Victrola Outfit 10 80 This outét con- est model Victrola 11 (8100), the most popiiar nstrument the entin try—and your choice of $6 in Vic-. for Recoras To; strument equi ‘with record shelves and all the famous exclusive mechan- ical Victrola feat ures. May be had in mahogany or ail oak finiehes: alvo Spectal finishes. $5 dovn and Victor Records (or your own to same value from the big Victor Catalog): Instrument may be had in mahogany, ish brown, or $5 27 $5 i IMPORTANT NOTICE. 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WARNER in “GOD’S MAN” A Remarkablc Story of New Ye the Fayorite Triangle St WILLIAM DESMOND in ‘Time Locks and Diamonds’ Play. and Daring in Five Parts COMING THURSDAY MAE MURRAY in “THE PLOW GIRL” LOUISE GLAUM e e ‘to-judged by. of one. TODAY AND TON il prove 10, yout {5t Goes make 3 vour Victrola and IN T. W. Robertson’s W. Play Vitagraph Blue Ribb PEARL WH IN THE FIFTH Wy CHAPTER OF Hearst-P COMING WED, YOUR FAVOR “The Haunted ‘send and me at once. ) TODA MURIEL OSTRIC “MORAL C Trus Love Will Tr der the Most Adv es as This Rema Photoplay Demcnstra HUMAN INTER Che: ') and will sign = E. Two Complete Shows EVERY AFTERNOON THE e representat was fiying ev. of the | The eterities, that Immensity which ia | rervaded by’ God's justice.” The ob-|ihat we caught a slimpse of the hoo- |ervwhere. Caterpillars of the brown Breseed ration ls told, while, the *erid | poc. proud of hiz crest and sandy and | ail, locai at home, swarmed on the faoks on, s aproper disposition, | boceieg hron Trom the marshes | bushea@ while thoss of the Ouk F- | Coo =T you may ‘gain by one diplomatic Stroke |hatween the dusies day and night aross | &ar and Cinnamon bar were equaily | Wilton carried as much as you could win by force in|'a chorus of frogs worthy of Aristop- | abundan: on the ground. Of other in- [Country. a century [ hanes himseif. Tt was here that we | sects, perhaps the most natewort Alas! {hey cannot seq tha a nation: | fhuna the bira Jife most fascimatin | Were' two kinds of Horse-ny. tho ona| Aok, aation o live in a lie, debasing | fileon. with black wing tips. species | former thought little of attacking our |5 ) s soul, thag its hody may have some | unknown. was often seen fapping hi | hands and faces with a savage rusn. (b club m e ehaing A pase e le%, Who Kiss | way” solemnly over the marshes, The| biting large pieces of flesh out of them |27e AL oSk, heir chaine and pass on. Under @ new | Sfone chat and whin-chat. (0o, were|and carrying them off to the trees to |chanical ter, contented siaves. They are | scomern ing_from the bush-tops | eat them. ~The green-éyed fellow was|{h% (IR e e citronfident man who Jfeels | our rizhts to-cnter their domains. | more caitious in his methods, waiking | (0% 21\ | Valets ey ik, becance Thar ey | Feed-warblers, "ssdge-warblers, reed | loWiv over our clothes and inserting | {ioie Y valets. They think, because thelr fore- | 7 oo iore, Sedge-warblers, reed | o ehirul proboscis where he coult fathers were bond slaves to 2 master. sy wanteda Tear cwhat Teopoe- | fina a sap.—London Times. Riig dtapat Do ane has the right to dispute their | p\0r" 1o Gualntest love song of all, — other da Tight to Eive 2way the fealty of their| i1’ of “the grasshopper-warbler | [ unborn children. and to alse sizn them | P01 00 0n™% pEehion with mead | : iy over a Lond siave to tnelr | thrown' paek Gike & patient margiing, || OTHER VIEW POINTS iepal: sucos : | he weould pour out his ratting chir- | o eir own fr2 Fouid pour our D medine ot ; eir honor momeniarily for breath, S | ""The peari-borderad and small pearl b s e, Joe S | bordered fritillaries were seen fiving In| Ex-Chairman Denman now elaims |and species cn_Ame | company with the Burnet Companion. |that the new men on. the . shinping | (he ve opened the Towards evening the pretty Iite sil- |board are following out his idems of a | Booa nder | ver-barrea moth—oniv to he fotind in {is rumored that Mr. Denman is a very | den . VaDcemen. in Eagland and the |insistent person and may be heard of |criminals and are dep collectors of (a great deal. Tt is rumored, tno. that | offens p chief reasons why They pose as vate a job under a corrupt goverfment who give them a fat living. But | no longer feature them on the. | paze: to find news of them. look on | the back corner on ‘the inside pase, | where they are put in competition with | Peruna and Nuxated Tron : J. H. CUMMINGS. Biras and Butterflics, British officers who find themselves now at Le Touquet may have, as the writer and two others had recently, special opportunities of observing the fauna and flora of the neighborhood. The country consists of an extensive area of sandhills running in for at least a mile from the sea, with marshy holiows intervening, and sprinkied with viper's bugloss and other less conspicu- ous blossoms. Adjoining the dunes are the golf links for which Le Tou- Quet is famous, intersected with pine- clad ridges of sand, and merging tow- ards the northeast, in extensive wood- lands which divide Le Touguet from the neighboring seaside resort of Paris Plage. The air was rich with the songs of nightingales and warblers and the soft co0ing of turtledoves. Fritillaries flit- ted everywhere, and at least three species of Skipper butterfly were com- mon. the Dingy, the Grisled, and the bright form of the Large Skipper. At sundown the eye might catch the red form of a fox slinking through the thickets to prey on the fowls of the neighboring farmsteads. From the woodlands the pedestr: 1l emerge upon the links. Here the first sound that will catch his ear is | the sound’ of numberless crickets. On several occasions e stalked these noisy insects to their lair, a small hole scooped out of the sandy turf. If we approached with caution we could ses their black forms dart dcwn thete dugouts, and it was easy with the help n of a pocketknife to induce them to emerge like a “winkled Hun” with his hands up. It was on the links that two of the finest British fritillaries were to be commonly scen. the Heath and the Queen of Spain. The former T have hunted without success in the Centerbury woods, while the latter, with its beautiful’ mother-of-pearl on the underwing, is only a casual visitor to our shores.” Here, also, were noted the migrant brothers, the Clouded and Pale Clouded Yellow, while the gor- geous Cream Spot Tiger Moth and pretty little Tawny Wave, which I have only seen before in Suffolk. were occasionally flushed by our footsteps. Tree pipits were common on the links. soaring up from the pines and volplaning, full of sonz, to the grass; ths Blackcap sang evervwhere, and Crested Larks were common, earrying on a perpetual feud with the Yellow- hammer. It was amongst the pines Y OU sppreciate the Firestone Rim on the road, where the simple, handy construction makes tirc removal quick and convenient. You recop- nize the effectiveness of the accurate aliznment, the continuous support, and the true circle of the Firestone Rim when you find your tires wearing, evenly and longer than you expected. If you have owned cars in the past you probably realize the importance of Firestone Rim equip. ment in safety, convenience and tire savind, Five minates is usually sufficient for removel. There sre no complicated perts, no sticking, no rusti And Firestone Rims aro free from squoaking when the car is in motion. But if you are purchasing your fisst car lot us recommend tha ¢ you insist upon Firestone Rims, BAIRD TIRE & 331 Main St., Norwich, C. When You Change a Tire or Check Mileage You Appreciate Firestone Rims Firestone Tire and Rubber Compa Bear in mind that they are the only rims built a tire menufacturer = That is why ¢! perfectly adapted to meet every tire ne It is true that they cost the mans more. Such a rim as the Firestone sity cost more. Nevertheless you will § the far-siphted car maker does not lot ¢ ¥ question coerce him into Bivind you a rim. If the car you contemplate purchasing d carry Firestone Rims, ask your dealer to make change for you. If he cas have the change made at v Your first tire chanpe will con was money well spent. The ir that you obtzin will add to this coaviction. SUPPLY cO., onn. Distributors for ny, Akren, Ohio. “CAaAS T HAROLD LOCXW in REEND TEEATRE PEGGY HYLAND . and SIR JOHN HART ITE 1 “TLATEST WAR NEWS he W AND T q Prize Dance Wedne AUDITORIU restone Rims ! | i

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