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weel) 50e a . i%e Telophone Calls: Office will be held today. diers are in trainis fiving i For the .i'fllllllntlc e. 625 Mala Street "._fl’..‘;“_g;_z._,eg' legis! Norwish, Tussday, March 18, 1918, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Iy entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news despaiches credit- ed to it or not otherwise credit- ed In this paper and also the local news published herein. All ts of republication of special reserved. \ ¥ “Right is More Precious than Peace” . _ _____ _ __ _ _ _________ ] THE HIGHWAY TO THE SUBMA. RINE BASE. ‘When it comes to standing loyally by the government and giving it the as- sistance which it needs and which it calls for, Connecticut has never been delinquent. It has far exceeded its quota of enlisted men, it has met all the requirements of the draft law and it has more than done its part flnan- clally whenever appeal has been made, For some time past the government has been developing its submarine base on the Thames. There is a large body of men stationed at that point and a small army of workmen are em- ployed there developing the hase for the accommodation of far greater numbers. This means that every pos- sible facility for getting to that point should be provided. Last year in response to the govern- ment’s appeal a modern highway svas built to the base from Groton. It was a long needed improvement and of great help to the motor truck service which is neeessary in order to get supplies to the base, Lut in the utili- zation thereof it is to be remembered that the inconvenmiences of ferry ser- vice have to be encountered.” Under the existing conditions when the ferry is more likely not to run than it is to run a great amount of traffic along the shore line highway in both iirec- tions, as well as that to the base, is forced to come to this city in order to get over the Thames. The one great objection to this is the wretched highway between Norwich wnd the submarine base, That road is and has for a long time been in deplor- tble condition. The need of a new high- way there is apparent for normal travel as one trip over it will disclose, but with the inereased travel caused by the develepment of the base it is as important that this stretch of the road sheuld he modernized as it was that the section from the base to Gro- ton shouid be rebuilt. When that job was done it was evident, and it is more so now, that the requirements were only partiaily met. This is a much used highway, but it would get greater use if the stretch between the base and this city was put into shape. This improvement which is now asked is seriously nceded by Uncle Sam as well as southeast. ® Connecticut and having re- sponded to such requirethents In the past It is vital that Connecticut through its Thighway . department should overcome this handicap. The quicker it can be done the greater will be the assistance to the govern- ment In its development at the naval station. To permit such an important thoroughfare to remain in its present conditien is a disgrace not only to this section but to the entire state. YOUNG MEN FOR FARMING When President Wilson appeals to all boys in the country over the age of 16 who are not permanently empl ed to enroll in the United Boys' Work. ing Reserve there can be no question but what he is aiming at bringing to the government's ald at this time a large army of young men in the vigor of youth who can be of inestimable value in overcoming the farm labor chortage. ‘This week has been set aside for the enfoliment of such a force, by the de- partment of labor, and in his letter en- dorsing the plan President Wilson sayn: “T sincerely hope that the young men of the country of 16 years of age and over not permanently employed, and espectally the boys in our high schools, will enter heartily into this werk 3nd join the Boys' Working Re- serve in erder that they may have the privilege, for such I believe it to be, of apending their spare time in a productive enterprise which will cer- tainly aid4 the nation to win the war by’ increasing the means of providing for the forces at the front and for the maintenance of those whose services are so much needed at home.” While it must be realized that there is less probability this year of young men of such ages going through the summer without getting employment of some kind or other than there might be under normal conditions, there are unquestionably hundreds of thousands who would prefer the healthful out- door work on the farm to that of the and it should be remembered. help in the PR TN o day to do what is that matter there onght to difference -!uom thoroughly understood, so that it be- comes necessary to provide against loss of their vote because they are en- gaged in national service. To deprive them of the right of suffraze would |3ITay of be an unwarranted hardship and Con- necticut cannot tolerate such an in- justice. It is therefore of the greatest importanee that the state should ar- inasmueh as the men are so widely scattered tinte is going to be required for preparation to meet the situation, That the members of the general as- sembly will recognize their duty dnd tion of their constituents. THE BENEFIT FROM RUSSIA. There appears to be some question as to how great will be the immediate resuits which Germany will get from the grabbing of Russian territory. It will be able of course to benefit from the railroad equipment which has been seized and from other supplies which can be used in the conduct of the war, but the great need of the central pow- (ers at the present time is food and much had been expected from the win- ning over of the Ukraine to a separate peace. That being one of the most | fertile sections of Russia it was an- ticipated that it would provide just what was wanted, that large supplies of grain would be forthcoming at once and that Germany and Austro-Hun- gary would get the relief which they have been secking for so long. ‘When, however, the press of Ger- many tells the people not to expect too muych right away from the Ukraine and that much political unrest pre- vailg there still, it would appear to in- dicate that disappointment ls being felt over the immediate benefits which are going to be obtained. The Ukrainians are apparently looking out- for themselves first and are not giving up their food just for the sake of being good fellows, and such may be ‘taken as one explanation for the pushing on to Odessa and Ni- kolayev, the big navy yard of the Black sea, which will open up the way to new wheat fields and rich farm iands from which large supplies ought to be obtained within a short time if none is found there in stora, It is evident therefore that plans are being laid for the future as well as the pres- ent. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the cormer says: Keep the war garden in mind and be ready o dig, The first baseball scores make it evi- dent that spring has positively taken the place of winter. Now that they are launching con- crete ships, someone may yet try to set the Yale bowl afloat. Now that Petrograd has been evacu- ated by the bolsheviki it is. probable that it is getting ready to change its name back to St. Petersburg. It isn't necessary to have mueh warm weather in order to turn the housewife's thought to getting the|Were constant scares of submarines,|her. refrigerator ready for the 1918 stryg- [2Rd we knew that if a submarine got|soon as thing gle. Germany is simply putting its ae- tions into words when it declazes its determination to include neutral as well as belligerent ships under submarine wartare. kept & whole stirred up for two while the affair was going d the season duning which people gradually forgot about it. “Mrs, Bingle was an elderly pe left alone in the world with a life insurance and the huge rambling acres on the Jake, which in days of prosperity her hushapd had bought with the idea of a manor and peacocks on the lawn, but he never achieved more than a weirdly uncom- fortable small cottage and a 10-cent Press is exclusive- } range for the taking of this vote and |patch of etables. “I jmagine that the Bingles got just as much pleasure out of their plans for futyre grandeur as though they really materalized. Bingle Bai place o made your mouth water, but the old lespatches herein are also §| accomplish it speedilw is the expecta- Iman died without improving it ex- cept on paper. Mrs. Bingle couldn't afford to run even the modest cottage, 8o she rented it and boarded summers at the small hotel. “When the Panfeits up and bought Bingle Banks the colony thought they were lunatics, pure and simple. The grass had not been cut for years, all the trees needed pruning, fences were down and altogether it was a sad spot. People said Mrs. Bingle certainly was lucky—and then began to bestow at- tention on the Panfeits. “Those people were a caution. To them money was merely an implement with which to get what they wanted and they made thngs fly. They hired men and they got out and worked themselves and before people knew what had happened the old, Bingle place was a freshly painted, built-over, smart young estate, with cipped lawns graceful trees. hedges, flower borders and Italian gardens, vegetable plots, chicken yards and such. “Mrs. Bingle grew more and mors interested as the improvements went on and spent a great.deal of time watching them. Mrs. Panfeit was . STORIES OF THE WAR Where the Submarines Lost a Chance. (Correspondence of the Associated ): ‘How, serfously the Cerman sub- marine have crippled British Nayy in the early days of the war, when there was not a single British naval harbor protected from submarine attack, was told last week by Lord Jellicoe, formerly TFirst Sea Lord of the Admiralty, in a, speech at the annual meeting of the Hull Sai- lars’ Orphange, Hull, England, “The work of the fleet was a good deal more arduous in the early days of the war than it has been since,” sald Lord Jellicoe, “In those days there were no bases protected from submarine attack .and the fleet was hunted from pillar to post to find se- SUEEy’ S0 Searty. St | thou epeTY operations of coaling. Some of the coaling operations were performed under very exciting conditions, the base being open to any submarine that cared to come in. “If the Germans knew it, they never had the pluck to try it. If they had done so, they might have reaped a rich harvest. But we always had to be thinking of the possibility of such attack, and whenever I was inside a base 1 spent many anxious moments and some very amusing moments— amusing to look back upon, I mean, but not amusing at the time. There inside the harbor it might sink a bat- tleship with each of the ten or twelve torpedoes it earried. Put yourself in such a pesition and you may be able to appreciate little the anxiet: was felt whenever a signal was given its|{that a submarine had been sighted|fn that partieu! nearby. “As usual in times of anxiety, we be Mrs. through the haouse, ingly how Mn Bin had gi that table on ther twenty-! pot in since she left. - “‘How Mr. Bingle had loved this 'place!’ his relict would sniffe, gazing about the cretonned and cheerful new bedrooms. ‘To” think I had to give up And look at that chiffonier! I never woull have known it, never!’ rs. Bingle would sob. The piece of ture in question had been ready for the junk man when the Panfeits got it, but Mrs. Panfeit was ingenious w;& the brush and had made it quite pe 2 ‘“When Mrs. Bingle took to epenng closets and bureau drawers Mrs. Pan- feit was aware that the last straw wan not far away. Mrs, Bingle even ap- peared, a figure of black gloom, at the big lawn party and wept all over the front porch about cruel strangers en- tertaining in the old family mansion, uvntil some very select visitors in- ferred that the Panfeits had foreclosed the mortgage and dragged her out by hair of the head. Then Panfeit him- self led her aside and told her pointed- ly that he had paid her good solid money for the place and. strange to i&y. it was his and his wife's and not ers. 3 “She took the hint then, but ehe has never forgiven them. Living nicely 'on the interest of the price she got, she still enjoys herself very much in the light of a cheated, wretchedly used woman and, as for the Panfeits, they are upstarts, blackmailers, despoilers, and the Lord will pumish them some day. So—" “My goodness!” gaspel| the little ‘woman. “I shall run a mile the next time I see Mrs. Lamphead coming."— Chicago News. of Admiralty after I had joined it as Second Sea Lord, and there was no- body in a responsible position who agreed that the German Navy would really do such a thing as Lord Fisher predicted. 5 “Well, Lord Fisher was right, as in many cases, and the Navy was unpre- pared to deal with the submarine in that particular direction. But even if the words of Lord Fisher had been believed there was no time to intro- duce measures/ which would have effectually stopped the submarine from getting out, anq that is the only way to deal with them. There is no royal road to the saving of your mer- chant ships from the submarine once the latter has got out of its harbor. The only royal road is to block him in, and that is an impossible operation. ° “But the British Navy was faced with its task, and it did its best It is a superhuman task, because the submarine is a craft which can go under water for 24 hours and lie ynder water for 48 hours, and you don’t know where she is. “People have asked me recently why our losses in the Irish Sea are so heavy. The reason is this: There is much shoal water in the Irish Sea, so that the submarine can find plenty of places where they can can drop right to the bottom and sit there without a sound. In deep water they can't do that, because a submarine can't safely go deeper than 150 or 300 feet, and can’t lie still unless she goes to the bottom. To keep submerged in desp water, she must keep her engines going. “Well, in the Irish Sea a submarine sinks a ship and gets a craft after Our ship hunts her out, but as get too hat for the U-Boat, she dives and sits quletly at the bottom until her troubles are over. Our ship must after a time go back to pert to fuel. Then up comes the farious career. Than is the difficulty lar loecality. She ecan sit en the hottem for 43 hours if she likes, and then come up in some other The worry of the catMemen that|called upon the merchant marine, and |part of the sea. there may be a slump in prices if meatless days continue is something which doesn't win much sympathy among the consumers. —p—t—————— When a father and two sons enlist in the army to get revenge for being torpedoed twice, it shows what effect German methods are having fipon the lovers of right and freedom. If Trotzky considers that the help of Japan is unnecessary, he has chance to enlighten .a whele lot of people on how Russia cun otherwise handle the German menace. an arrangement was made that if a submarine got inside a base, merchant ships should place themselves aleng- side until the warships could get under way. Then if the torpedoes were fired the merchant ships would receive them instead of the battleships. “That was the arrangement. The merchant marine as usual, did exactly what they were asked. Scores of ut the harbor at full speed to keeff the submarine under water and if they saw it to endeavor to ram it. It was extraor- dinary, having regard to the con- ditions of sea and weather, that many colkistons @ not occur. The ekin with which the whole prosram was “Similarly. the diffieulty of keeping tlsem to their own ports is accenuat- ed. by the fact that the around the Hellogoland Bight for a radius of 150 miles is of a depth in which the submarine can sit at the bottom. Assuming that we had a sufficient number of eraft thoreughly to patrol that arvea, which stretehes something Kke 200 miles from De: mark to the Dutch Islands, we should still have to meet this difficulty. = “Immediately you tackle a subm rine ,he dives to the bottem and waits until night, when he can come up and eontinue his course without being seen. At night, even on the suiface, a submarine can only be sgen for a water in -and Just what the pressure is that Ger-|carried out, time after time, Was 2a|distance of about 200 yards. many is going to bring to bear upen the Dutch will be disclosed in time, but it cannot be very bad or Germany, of course, would not employ it. The aviators are doubtless interested in the support given their extra pay, but they are more aunxious just now ta see that it fsn't the ememy which hands out what is coming to them. The fellow who has the plle of ashes in the backyard to move ha one bit of consolation in the fact that it is not as large as it would have been had there been no fuel shortage. The congress of soviets in Russia have ratified the treaty with Germany but even as they do so there is the mental reservation that it will simply be used as a period of preparation to retrieve recent Josses. New London is getting some pretty poor advertising over the inauspicious start which it is making with its mu- nicipal ferry. It may, however, be sim- ply one of those instances of a bad beginning with a glorious future, Germany couldn’t make any bigger mistake than to suppose that the al- lied nations would be willing to make reace now on German terms because of the situation which prevails in Russia. That is one of the very things that would prevent it. The real unfortunate thing for that 19 year old girl who was held by the Middletown for the death of an aged resident who was struck by her car ig that she didn't have her case heard by a jury before the coro- great testimony to the seamanship of these in charge of the trawlers and bigger ships. “The British Grand Fleet could not exist without trawlers. One of the omissions in our pre-war naval prep- arations was that we left the navy absolutely unprovided with vessels of the trawler type. 'When war came, the Admiralty had te depend upon the generogity of the trawler owners to keep the fleets protected. So it is not too much to say that we owe the trawler owners and men a very large debt. It would be impossible. to re- ward them adequately, because if one attempted to bestow decorations and medals, I don’t suppose any bedy in the trawler service would bo un- decorated. “There have been several outstapdins deeds of gallantry, one or two partic- ularly, which I would like to tell about, but I shall not tell, because they were performed against submarines, and if the particulars reached Germany, the Germans would learn something of our methods. Moreover, if they ever got hold ‘of any man or officer who had achieved some great success againat the submarine, they would not treat him any too well.” In an address at the Hull Exchange, Lord Jellicoe said in part: “You who belong to a community comnected by sea, know better than those who live further inland the difficulties with which the navy has had to deal during the war. Those difficulties are due sim; and solely to one source, and that the submarine. “The submarine was sprung upon the British navy, at any rate the new methods and morals as a euprise. I remember that Lord i ‘u.mxsmmmmn‘ How Each Gan Help. Mr. Editor: War has been dcclared, The call to arms is being angwered by the- youth of the country. Conservation is the livest word of our language at this time of the na- tion’s crisis. There is a great work for us who are left.behind to do. The Question is, Are wo doing our bit" Nearly a hundred of our boys have gone from the town of Griswold al- ready, and no one knows how many more are to follow. We are approach- ing tho time of the year that recalls to us how. our Heavenly Father gave His Only Son that we might live Then at this time let us not forget the many mothers who have given their sons that . we might live and have our liberty, free from the mailed fist of the Prussian- monarch. I have asked the question before, are we do- ing our bit? We may have made mis- takes before. But let us stop now, and insist that what we do now will count for something. A few weeks ago the town voted $100 for an honor roil board. Stop and comsider what that will mean. It means just mow about one dollar a man and the more that 80e3 the less the amount will be that you honored each with. Fisher wrote a memorandum in 1911 | orial. e A Great Britain, they would use sub- That memorandum went it shi) to the Board you can do your bit. Write to thip boya in a while. There is nothing Tike a letter from home. Send them 2 mm book as an Easter Days—Com. THURS,, MATINEES DAILY Matinee prices. ...... 6 and m . 25¢ ‘and 35¢ ¥ Night prices.. Aiqw.l”‘o g RESERVED SEAT SALE TODAY AT 10 A, M. e | | tain twenty, five cent tickets and are for admission to _the Liberty theatres avhere some fina entertain- ments are given in the various camps both home and abroad. Jewett City, March 17, 1918, MEN WHO CAME BACK Second Battle of Ypres. By Major T. W. Anderson, 3rd- Battali- ion, Toronto Regiment, From five o'clock a furious bom- bardment had been going on—the sec- ond battle of Ypres beginning. We ‘were in our billets awaiting our turn to go into the trenches. We heard the roar of wagons and borses outside and when we looked out it seemed as if the whole world were on the move, all in thé wrong direction. Trans- ports, artillery, limbers, infantry, ref- ugees, all in confusion—but no Brit- ish among them—and the report was being shouted through the streets that the Germans had broken through. Then the order came to “stand to” and” within an hour we were on our way to the trenches. At eleven o'- clotk we were there, in the midst of the most terrible shell fire, that simply beggars description. The battalion lay for a long mfse in the ditch on either side of the road and then half of us were moved over behing some earthworks; the remainder were push- «d fofward. The morning light came, and reinforcements came up, and to see them cross the open was a terri- ble sight. They just dropped in their track like rabbits, and when the bat. talion moved on, the ground was thick with dead and wounded. Some of our boys did good work under fire taking in_wounded. Shortly after this we moved out un- der hea: rifie “ firo to advanced trenches. ring this rush I lost one man from my platoon. We establish- ed ourselves in the trench as best we could and waited, every minute ex- pecting to charge or_reinforce. As it happened, only a portfon of our men | were used for this purpose and few of those came back. The rest of the bat- talion were attacking and counter-at- tacking. In the trench we were continually under the most hellish shell fire, At one time the Germans put ninety-one “Jack Johnsons” in and near our trench in about twenty minutes. They were trylng to ge: us and the barn in our rear where our dressing sta- tion, wounded, staff and ammunition stores were, They finally succeeded. Half a millfon rounds went up in the fire. We were in these trenches four days and four nights. During that time I did not cloge my eyes, ‘While in the trenches we suffered semewhat from the German gasses, but had no casualties. I had my men cover their mouths and noses with wet handkerchiefs for two hours, The ef- fect of the gas on the eyes was bad, causing smarting and tears. If, at that time, we had been required to shoot, we would have been of little or no use. 1 had many narrow escapes, 1 was buried up to my waist in earth after a “Jack Johnson” had burst abeut four feet from me. On another oc- Yy that|U.boat again and continues her ne-|casion I was lying in the bettem af the trench when, for some reason, 1 moved a few feet, and. in the 'exact gpot where I lay a ehunk of shell whizzed in, half the size of one's fist. It would have gone through my stom- ach. On gnother oeccasion I was sitting haek te back with another man and he wag shot through the shoulder not one ingh from me. ‘When we got back from the trenches I had another narrow escape, The Germans began to shell the village, 1 was standing in the door of a house when a “Jack Johnson" fell in the voad in front of me, s0 I went on down the street to pack my things, as t looked like moving day for me. When my man and I were putting my things together in the house where 1 was billeted another sbell hit thd house and hurled a few cobble stones through the window, so we promptly left. I recovered my stuff later. After our division was so cut up and mixed up ihat it was no longer a fighting unit I saw the British charge, {and when they zot near the enemy’s trench the Germans threw down their arms, came out of their trenches, met cur men and surrendered. 7. The British generals all agree that this secong battle ef Ypres was the worst and mest nerve racking bom- bardment of the war since the battle |- of Mons. They say Neuve Chappeile, the former battle of Ypres, or the battles of the Marne and Aisne were not in it for artillery fire. The trou- ble was we were on an acute salient, battalions alone lost over fighting men, and were left with about ten or ewelve, The other bat some worse. Out of the twelve thou- sand infantry I believe only five thou- sand were left, the remainder either Lilled, wounded or missing, We had remnants of the Prugsian guard up us. X The boys had it in 2 joking way that the slogan of Berlin at that time was “God punish Canada.” Copyrighted by the British-Canadian S Recruiting Mission. Views of the Vigilantes The German Mind. At last the name of Jesus Christ— “the meek and lowly Jesus,” “the Sav- iour,” “the Prince of Peace” of the Christian church—has been invoked by a German in behalf of Geérman's success in the war, Heretofore there has. been a-noticeabls absence of any !ant bearing on the war. jone of the States that realizes this Tuesday—Wednesday 9 SMASHING BIG | FEATURES The Screen Sensation That Proves Good Women Always Prevail n. ALIMONY - THE TIE THAT BURNS The story of an unwanted wife written by an old ) court reporter ALMA RUEBENS in “THE GOWN OF DESTINY” Triangle 5 Part Feature From the Saturday Evening Post Story IN WRONG RIGHT Komedy REE[) THEATRE TR e ST TODAY and TONIGHT AN EXTRAORDINARY DOUBLE ATTRACTION “MOTHER OF MINE” CRANE an ILBUR “THE EYE OF ENVY” e e e HEARST—PATHE WEEKLY " e i e e © “COMING “THURSDAY CONNECTICUT WAR FILMS Auspices of State of Conn. such invocation, the kaiser Hmiting his appeals and congratulations to Goed—presumably the God of War— alone, It has been reserved for a wo- man, none other than Fraulein Elsie von Hindenburg, daughter of Field IManhaj von Hindenberg, to lnk the name and attributes of Jesus Christ with the-German cause. According to the authority of the New Yaork Even- ing Sun, a_member of the society of the “Friends of German Democracy” veceived as a Christmas card from Fraulein von Hindenburg these origi- nal verses: 1 Christ Jesus gave His life for me, From every debt I am now free; He has procured His Fathéf's faver, He has become my gracious Saviour, 7 He to the bayonet thrust gives vigor, The joy to aim, to pull the trigger, My aid s Jesus, that I know— On to the Foe! On to the Foe! If the perverted sentiment expressed in these atrocious lines are to any ex- tent significant of the general feeling of the women of Germany—if the utter unbecomingness of the lines as a Christmas messase, and the execrable taste that could so use them, would be, approved by any number as their author evidently epproves—then, in- deged, has Germany made of hergelf an outcast among the civilized peoples of the world. What bond of sympa- thy, what community of interest can exist hetween those who would sub- scribe to these savage sentiments and theose others who, at least at the Christmas season, attune their hearts to thoughts of Peace on Earth—Good Will to Men! Not even Lissauer's Hymn of Hate lets in upon the soul of Germany so searching a light as da these lines and their employment by a woman who would in Germany pre- sumably be considered an exponept of gentle breeding. OTHER VIEW POINTS It might be as well for the striking shipbuilders to remember that at some time or other they will be laoking for favorable legislation. legislatures and Consresses are elected by all' ti friends.—Meriden Journal, A lot of titled individuals seem to . [hate arrived in this country and their stock in trade is talk. Telling other people what is wanted and how they have suffered. This war though is a case of suffering for and the element going about parading their own. in- dividual ideas is dolng but mighty little good. What is wanteqd now is good hard-headed ideas coupled with work and lots of it. It is clear enough that food produe- tion this year will have a,most import- Michigan is fact and is preparing to meet it . One of the unusua] expedients she haa re- sorted to is the purchase of one thous- The Liguid Wash for Skin Bigease We bave witnessed such remarkable wesuits with this soothing wash of oils - that we offer you a bottle en the guaran- fee that uniess it does the ssme for you, _. ¥ costayon neta ceat. $ic, ®cand §r.o0. NO ADVANCE IN PRICES STOLEN HONOR WITH VIRGINIA PEARSON ‘A Fox Photo Play in 5 Acts THE FIGHTING TRAIL LAST EPISODE TODAY SOCIAL PIRATES A SUNSHINE COMEDY 30 Minutes of Laughter “LIBERTY THEATRES” Have Been Built in All National Guard and National Army Camps in America. “Smileage Books,” issued by Federal tary Entertainment Council, pro- vide free admission to these theatres. Send .one to YOUR soldier or to ANY soldfer. Price $1. For sale at the following places: .The Porteous & Mitchell Co, The Reld & Hughes Co. (Boston Store). o Rathbone's Drug Stor Ricker's Drug Siore. The Lee & Osgood Co. The Wauregan Hotel Office. Mara & Hggleton. George Madden (Cigar Store). Engler's Pharmacy, K. of C. Rooms. Ring & Sisk, Druggists. e Y. . A, Office. The Y. M. G. H. M. Lerou. J. C. Macpherson.® and Ford tractors which she will lease to farmers on certain conditions, One thousand tractors can prepare 3 lot of land for planting.—Bristo]l Press. people, and they remember Uncle Sam's |, (Cat out and mail soupen today) (PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING) 135-143 Main St Norwich, -Conn. WHEN YOU WANT %) put your bus- lness ‘before the public, there is no medium better ‘than threugh the ad- — vertising columns of The Bulletin, e