Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 26, 1918, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Rooms 35-3. Buletin Job Office 35-2 85 Ma'n Sreet 1901, RVOFHE® ..oovieriiere.. HH12 March 28 1918........ 9719 MEMBER OF THE ASsocmTEn PRESS by enti Press is ex to e i e usé fof ed in thi pl’cr and also the lou\ " 'rhm of - republicatiéri of m:ul despatches herein are also s (levolovm &autions h- of pi THE EMBARGO bN iufiba-rs. What wad_{iféatened Mas takén place in thé placing of an Ghbm—go 6h certain of thé goods imported into country. The finés of goods selected i making @p thig list afe those which| this country eithef get alofl. without or it is to prodiics | . if the proper attenition i8 given to sk == | production. But whilé the stimulation of our own 1§ a matfer which calls £6r increasea atfention, the need of utilizing our trafsportatién fatilities in the best msiue mannés is of the utmost importande. It is the . shipping problém Whieh has brought about the imports embat- £0 and by it it i§ fikufed that it will be possiblé fo divert ships With a toni- nage of a third of a million from thé tmporting tfadé fo ovérseas setviee and that at this time 1s certaidly a matter of deépest concérn. There are goods which are of course fiot affected by the ordef and where shipping space is avaifable it is to be realized it is_advisable to bring return loads provided thefe is fiot an unwarranied deldy oceasion- € by the loading of such, Al this is taken care of in the embargo. W4 conditiéfis will of cétirse reduee Such re{u.rn 16ads to the minimum as miight pected but such as can be moved 3& be transported instead of nend- in# ships in bailast, It 18 quite &vident, however, that | all sides ot the question were looked “Right is More Precious than Peace” e MR SHOULD SPUR UP CONGHESS. There are certain idasures before congress which have been held up through failure of those in Washing- | ton to push them forward. Theéy areé being held in committée 6f tied up . in one way or another by what séetiis to be a disposition to obstfiet and not | permit them to come up for aetfon one ! way or the other rogardiess of the importance which they afe to thie na- tion at this particulaf time. ‘This is | particularly true of imatters which den] with the war where new work is necessitaied in providing the @ piies In the various liffes for the sel- diers abroad, Time and again have appeals come to the effect that every energy sEould be bent to meet the sitiatioh. peatedly has it been shown that the pregrammes mapped ottt afe hot belig maintained, thisman: labor troubles afid Gnferesesi | having been experienced and ail of at before th eg was décidéd dpon and such bem e fact g60d resuits, although some inconvenience, can be anficipated with the foFmieF overbal- aficing the latter. Pt S TOO MUCH DELAY. Almost froth the beginning of the war fof variots reasons amohe which the lack of organization and prepara- tion stand out prominently there has been a failure on the part 6f the en- tente natiofis to take advantage of the|p v oppértunities which havé beén open to them. This has resiited in grvins the enemy the chanece to get the drop upon the allled fofues asd, to fortify {hem@elves against plans which have|i iater materialized. zdefl, has been - | shiown in regard 6 the Baliéans and likewise in m 16 the Dardanelles. I‘:!g:h the same “;:f of a gituation een developing for some time in Russii and Siberia. Thére Germany Has managed fi6t oaly to sét control Bf & large slice of , rich grain gections and a foute to the east buf in spite of the peace Which has been signed it 1§ sHNl pushing forwara and menacing other tervitory as is shown oo i ATEE “‘W& &in try keepiu[ s\!d dangerous pets,” sug!uud his friend mg‘n%‘ = rnmt!t fleblrfll out the ‘Woodlawn. to_purshase %flumu is the word agreed the i@ thi a_full & man go afound -nmvfi';.a being gm to death to an answer. Do you one . |mifiute I like to say ‘Tweet’? I am mgt? my 1ips one naturally ing momentous fo nfixg something the populace coul of hang -on, you know! So you s youp mugsested ke st absently, . you wring iis fefk and have The Hyde Park fian gave a nme i ik #ée; . vasa: waid: w h tistm, i1dn’ spell of rheus , ypu ‘wouldn’ ng e 1 W tawn “why !OM dly When it had a sl meé to “of e&fifi:fiwflén T sai How féolish | was Hhogéae Décorning over ifie canary 1 remofistrated with h 1 ut tHat she was ignoring 2 | the %fle (af was faiely crying out|ine Atfention ana petting, nothing 6f 4 Socks needing daFning afid thost 6f its necktics desirifig ioR- retérted dréamily by saying rédlly sheuld have Séon |an how cute Dickey was that afternoon, fighting himself fi fhé mirrors. She said R&' got perféctly furious and geoldéd lke anythings ‘““fhis; in the face of heér remarks, & few days previeus,*that I had a mthmg temper, was too much. How, I argued, Was it logical to com- ménd one l!ve thing for - its vicieus dispositioi and lam anotheér creature for the same attribute? I it was owiining for a bunch of yellow feathers to shriek and jump, it lkewise was 4unning when I did the same, and T'd thank hef to remember the point in our fattire conversations. As to his remarkable habit of walking around i came home with a new caga = I bird d‘maoeeua.nt. That msn.ns heve Mioré than six at the table the larger company tloth I mx & blong m:ofimdny t|centric person with am aversion o fl!k’!utM"’l 282 My t | “Itogene everl and callin: t6 oh==100] High—Héten! Ic beyond ine mflvuynflng Wwomén ; - comx-em just then the camary, Which was sweopiig ardund the roomi; dashed down and settled on the mguuekdmem‘mm lies ffomi fiy edr. astingly and twittering l,t'fll':t bird v ‘I tufned my head to glare at him because he had made such a breeze, @ by Geerge! Théré he sat with his md on ohe side, studying #fie in the most iatelligent way. ‘Tweet!’ he m‘z‘ the b'}fl&tam He found he had at- itracted my attention. “Well, I ask you, What was there for he?. ‘Howdedo?” 6F It's a hicé day’ would obviously béén ihadequste. Thére wasn't & single thing he'd un- derstand except ‘Tweeét,’ 6. just to be polite ¥ tweeted, ‘Cheep!’ he came back confidently and trustingly, and sa I ¢heeépéd. He knew exactly what he was saying, and dgreed uttérly with my remarks. Beforé we got through that bird was gitting on my sheulder reading the same paper I was—and Imogene said it wds perfectly _re- the floor a: thm!gh he were a puppy mnfl:i’ X bird, warblina as he walked, she had but to consider the case;, and shée would find that I was addicted to the same practice. I had walked around the floor and sung for markable fixy powér over bifds. Why, “Aw,” said the Weodlawn man, *“I know what your family heeds! Fm going to end you a cat, next Christ- mas{"= Cfiicaga Véws LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Undesirable Dogs. Mr. Editor: 1 would like to say in nswer to “R. A: G.'s” letter in The ulletin today, that if these dirty dogs that are running the streets, Kinig at nearly every person they 866 and are an objection in more ways than one should kill every sheep and lamb it would make no difference to the owners. They would feel insulted should go to a dog owner with & éomplaint, in fact they would tell onie that it could not have been his dog. Oh, no, for his dog was of such fine breed and would not hesitate to tel} him that it was net true, only a stfonger word would likely be wused to bring more force. If a dog usually & hound, whines and howls, beginning \;etore the dawn of day, and the sui- |4 should appeal to the owner in a ianlike spirit, he would be given ety cool reception and, in faet, he would be told to get out, that he would do as he pleased, that he pdid a leefise horiséfi on the HioFfow of the affair.’ The primary -object of the raid, in of the auxiliéwy forces on outpost duty ifi the Channel. At least -tenr of Gerfiany’s lafgest and fastest @ stfoyers partieipatéd in this “vietory.” hat they returned to their base with- aiit being ihtercépted is attributed t6 “acéurate, forekfiowledss of the @is- sition of thé British patrels™— owlédge obtainéd By aerial fecon- naissanee. It was a chosefi night—inky dark- ness upen afi area of & thbusand square miles of surface. The Ger- indns appear to have epérated in pairs, the leader of each two being eatiipped with. a_blinding_searchlizht Which it turned upon each victim Whiley Geérman consoris cafried out their wofk of destruiction. From the folit quarters they destended simi taneously upon the fishing fleet, pour- ing twa salves of high explosive fella jfinte each iglishi Vessel @s ey passed By at a distance of fifty yards range. urvivors of this fleet spin yarns of heraism. Deckhand Plane, of the Cloverbank, which had been tirned There were few misses at this these thifngs make it apparent that while this is & big country with great | an | résolivess we are not Keeping up with € t it other things have not brought congress to the realizatiofi of speeding up its work and getting the proper machinery Ifito operation, it eertalnly ought to bé brought about by the ¢on- ditions which are prevailing in Bu- rope at the présent time. They are only what have beem pointéd out likelf to take place but the p&!‘twhl:g this country has got to play is given new emphasis. The call te speed up ! was mever more urgent and consress #hould take the lead in responding to it. Buch it 1s believed would have the : best possible effect upon the entire country. X . GERMANY'S BIG GUN. As difficult as it was to believe that it was pessible to produce a gun that would shoot 76 miles, the admission that Paris is being bombarded by &uch a weapon and at stich a distanee estab: lishes the faet. One of the strongest Bits of évidence that such a gun had beent pfodiiced was the fact that the reports afnouficing its accomptish- ments eame from Paris where the ef- fects of it were being felt: That was one of the things which discountsa the disbelief, Bt fiow that it has beén shown that such a gun is not imposaible it is be- ing founq out that it has been known all the time and by the entente na- tions that it was possible té bring out such a mechanical marvel, and even though the French claim to have known It it s impossible to take away from Gemnl!y the credit which it is efititlea to for dotially producing it and putting it into tse. That stich a gun tirowing projec- tiles into Paris at intervals of 16 to 20 minutes at a cost of $4,000 or more for eath shot has caused about ag mueh attention as has the Cedtran of- fensive itself is by no means Sur- prisihg, but the manner ' in which such an attack is be- ing réceived in Parid makes it evident that it ean be of little or no military afitvantage. It is in keeping with the air ralds which have béen persistentl; made upon London without gaining any advantage. Germany is from nll indications endeavoring to terrorize the French capital but such is far from being a fact and it Js quite évident that the big and thysterions tun will not win the war or contribute any material aseistance fn the present drive. It makes it evident, however, that the day of the impossible is far. ther oft than generaily believed. CANNOT OVERLOOK CARE. Bver since fl:u reat war in Bu- rope opened 1 ‘usaes ‘which have occirred in lhi.g country through ex- plosions and fires have been immedi- ately attributed to the asents of Ger- mafy. This inclindtion has increased sinée this country was forced to des clare itself at war but if the Na- tionsl Boara of Fire Underwriters n‘: e ¥ hy the expected edptiife of Petrogtad ga presencé of three armies be- 68cow, 15 say nothing of the or- muuan of the Gérmian prisoners in Bibefia for the pufpése of reaching into the east through that routs, All this has been anticipated. It was apparent ffom the chaotie ebndi- tions which accompanied the rule of the bolshéviki that it was batind to take place and yet no serious move has been made to offset it. Ths oppofhinity hich is presefited to Japah t8 eome to the id of RisSia and to resist the menace to the peace in the east has not been seized and yet while that country’s help is being talked absut Geérmany s pushing ahead and getting into @ better position every day to meet it Whefiever it is bfought into adtion, Japai's strength should have been shown thefé long ago. EDITORIAL NOTES. Holland appears to Be most un- fortunnte in the selection of ‘ene o its neighbors. When the kaiser declafes that tHefe can B8 no 86ft peace he Fully Fealizes what he is Facitig. e ey o X Uader the dasiizht saving plan some beople afé golng to have greater trou- blé than ever te wake up with a smile. i sy Thete ie gtill & gréot chatice for the edvocates of reformed speiling to get blisy in eastern and southéastetn Eu: rope. The man of the torner says: There are those of éourse who claim that the alartn elocKs are gréat daylight kavers, Al doubts about spring arriving have now beéfi pushed to ofie side by the fact that the circus season has opened. [P NE SN, It looks as if Germany was -des termined to get in its blow Dbefsre Japan oteps inte the ficy and re- quires increased attemtion. previtis When Germany calls eut its bays of 16, as reports from that country inai- cate, it 15 piving a fesson to oiher na- tions in the value of greparatien. Poiumiyiioristiui Ay The reasen why that long gistance gunis not praving of greatsr miiitary advantage and causing greater terror is undoubtedly because Gerraany wouldn’t do such a thing. Germuy is said to rmt the atti- tude of Hofland te- the allies, Of course, the government of thai coun: try resents any aattitude which is uot out and out prosGerman. From the way in which some in the Dutek parliament are getting stirred up over the taking of Dutch ships one might get the impression that they preférred to have them 2and their orews destroyed. S ——— s The one strange thing in connec- tion with the fall of a baby from a four story window into a carriage on the sldewalk and esoaping unhurt ig that New York admits that it was his determination to knock ou mmumuwuotm tube service. : to_keép the dog. ow we don’t have te go to the Bi- ble t0 know ~what is right, for our Creatof has given most of us reason- ing power and a conscience and He expects s to use it. The beautiful Golden Rule is another thing for us to g0 by and why can we net practice it? In MoOst cases it is not because of any great degree of affection that the own- ers Rave for their dogs, but it's the old kaiser spirit that they are de- ined te show all through life. What these otvners need is to be sent out to fight for their country. Then pérhaps instéad of idolizing their old, werth 7955 curs they will be ready to treat theit neighbors on their return with more of a civilized &pirit. R. A. G’s letter was true from the beginning to the end. I hope to see ore of the same kind of letters from now on. SOUTHERNER. Norwich, March 22, 1918, The Potato Crop For 1918. Mr. Editor: 1 wish to call attention to one of the products that is grown on the farm—theé potato., Its price has diminished. After having a severe, cold winter, during which there has been much expense to prevent this crop from freezing, we all are aware that potatoes shrink. ‘We also know that the potato is an egsential food article. The farmer well knows the amount of labor it requifes 40 get this crop into money. Some gamble! But it will be a greatéf gamble for 1918 than he ever heatd of. In the first place the farmer’s fertilizer in 1916 at Wholesale price (no potash) cost §32.39 per ton; high grade potatoes sold in 1916 duflng the wintef months at §3.50 per bushel. To buy a fertilizer with one per cent. petash is not worth while, but ia 1916 it cost $51.50 pet ton. The 1816 fertilizer ‘brang 4-10-0, in 1917 cost $33. This same brand 1913 onl] costs $53. The wholesale Frlce of spraying chemicals for spray- ng the potato crop. Arsenates in 100 pound lots last year cost 14 cents per bound. The 1518 price is 19 cents per pound., The price for farm labor, if you can obtain any, will cost not less than 30 cents pat Kour. Potatoes have so1d for $1.56 t6 $2.00 per bushel dur- ing the winter months. If yon cin find o market for pota- toes at this time possibly you can sell for $1.25 to $1.35 per bushel. It Jooks as if the farmer had somsthing . to consider for 1218 to plant potatoes for a paying crop this season. e far- nier womc be better off to locate in gome place besides Connecticut to pro= duce this much needed. food product. J. A ISHAM. Columbia, Conn., March 23, 1918, STORIES OF THE WAR Raiding a Fishing Fleet. (Cotrespondence of The Associated Press:) A German victery by which seven armed English fishing vessels were destroyed & loss of about sixty —thé destroyer raid into the English Channel on the night of February h~ 15—is described in a statement, English Admiralty sources, whsm gives more details regarding the at- tack than were sent to America.by cable at the time of the raid. Come menting on the losses, the statement concludes: “The night's work counted for @& German victory, and had it mot been for the wording of the German official eraft with a gun in never make port ¢« took their into a splintered shambles buried in clp%uds of steam and rocketting , madé his way to the gun; Single-handed, almost stupified by the smoke aad dln, he feturneéd the fire at_close range. Edginemen Hwing -and Noble, latihehing a boat from the blazing Violet May, rescaed some of the wounded who had gone into the sea. They thén returned t8 theif vessel, overcame the flames, plugged the shot holes,. aided their ihjured, coihforted the dying, dragged the wreckage from the dead and hrought the Vielet May back to her base, where she lies as a charred testimonial to the_ testimonial tosthe courage of British fisherman in WAr. Cost of Living in France. Tt cost about ofie hundred per cent. more to live in Fran a‘:;at the end of 1917 than in 1914, rding to stat- istocs aftached to a bill fécently in- troduced in the Chamiber 6f Députies to increase the Supplementary pay of non-commissioned of . 'Wages haye ificfeased 30 péf eént. for men and 50 per eent. for weomen in the same period. s “German” Cities: The Pan-Gefman Alljance fs dis- tributing in fleutral ebuntries a highly decorative calendar which is illustrated with pictures of 53 "Great Garman Towna of . the "Worldy” Among these alleged German towns are included New York, Chicago, Philadelphia, St Louls, Milwaukee, Cincinnat, Buffalo, Cléveland, and Baltimore, Holland is henored by the inclusion of Amsterdam, Rotterdam and the Hague. ‘The calendar gives the number of German inhabitants in each city and their b *mflidn to the total pepu- lation. It 'is alléged thaat néme of the citles listed have leds than 50 per cent. Germans, although the basis for this extravaxa,nr. claim is net given. Views of the Vigilantes THE HIGH HEART. ' By BLLIS PARKER K BUTLER of The Vigilantes., The Big Thing that Americans should cencentrate upon at thls time is_the high heart, No need now to ask wher_her oil and water can mix. We know that autocracy and demoeracy canmot ex- ist side by eide any longer in a world grown small. Autocracy must cease to be, in ofder that democracy may be safe; or democracy must perish in order that autoeracy conduct bloodfl forays of conquest at will. Amorica 18 u crusader for right—for our own national rights and for the rishtt of all just nations. Yeu and_1, beéi ericans, are comrades, HOW’S ‘l'm! w O g Bollery 2 a T e Ina e cured hy Hail's t&&fl: ‘Medl- - Hail's eatolne taken by nxmh sufterere lurh fl\am v.m;ty Ve veie, A wn as o=t 5 ge :‘k’u :‘f weflr lor on S, M%\‘ Yb\l ‘ha leen Hall's ve tal Kefllfin ‘ a short tl‘g. English opinion; was the destruction, gi'v"lxfi wil I her v thing in_this great erusade. That does not meéan that we are guests at a pink crusaders not drop dead if hmk dust alights on a patent shoe., With high hearts and haly _joy meet discomforts, wounds an 5 ‘Weaklings whine but strong men bear ail things wh.b high hearts and cleareyed courage when the cause'is just and the goal noble. I have heard men whine because’ they thou h\. un- lesi things chmg they mii t pos- sibly have to do withetit imp of sugar in their tea sometis in the future!’ What kind of crusaders are théSe? Rather than this Iét us re- joied that we at Home ecaii share the bufden with those in the fleld of battle. Party politiclans; cotton-weol weak- lings and German propagandists whine ahd eficburagé the whine. At évery deviation frem thé sineeth ecourse of things as they were in the dreamy days of peace the plotters whine and the weaklings éche the whine, Americdhs, our nation was 4 vast, peadcefitl 1and. 1t whas organized for peace and stddénly it has been driven ta war. Wa¥, we afe told, is Hell, but wé at home dé not siffer that Hell At the worst we face discomfort and tempor ary annoyanees Hue to sud- den shifting to war conditions: These things are inevifable. Let us not whine. Let us meet all with a High heart, with eager tpurage and with brave cheerfulneds. That i8 the big 6b today. 7 MEN WHO CAME BACK —“THE SONG In the Six-Part Artcraft loefcl-.lcd Bramatic Masterpieos in “MAN AB TODAY AND TONIGHT EXTRAORDINARY DOUBLE ATTRACTION ROBERT WARWICK N “The Silent Master” VIO'LET MERSEREAU ‘MorgansRndm CANNOT IMAGINE MAGNITUDE OF THE STRUGGLE: By Capt: B. Brooks Baxter _Of the 11th Essex Battalion The prisofiers we got at times were Hike babies after coming through our tefrific’ fire: I Was quite amused at some Huns we foek prisonefs. Down the lines they came, four of them, big and, striitting along be- de them, grinning from ear to ear, cafrying his rifle was a little Canuck about the size of a flea, and he was helping his prisoners along with his square-toed boot, What wonderful history we are making! In this great fush to victory oneé is lifted and carried beyond him- self, and there is no such thing as death. My heart has thiilled wi a pride and glory, in the mids{ of. it, that would be hard to describe—to think that,I am a Canadian aAd able to share in this great struggle for freedom, as a soldiér of.the greatest natien inthe world. Unless ofie has been in it he cannet imagine the mag- nitude of it all. One day on a taarch we passed a French detachment camp, and we were lifted off our feet by the strains of “Maple Leaf’ on a lcornét coming ffom one of the tents. Maybe that Erenchman didn't get a cheer. The terrible new war mathines, which we are using are marvels of in- genuity. “Devil machines” or “Land Dreadnaughts,” we call thetn. They just ride the smasHed trenches and HEARST PATHE NEWS OTHER VIEW POINTS Great is party—desirable, com- mendable, even necessary. But he isn't & very useful partisan ‘who can't drop, on occasion, the weapons of civil war to take up_ arms against the common enemy. Mr. Taft is the sort of partisan who can do that He's folng to devote as much as is ieedful of the coming two years— and more than the two years, if thaty bé necessary—to the job of whipping! to a standstill the world’s great | enemy. If that job laps over _inti the time supposedly allowed for electing the next president—well,| the people might brieflly vote that the eecretary cast the ballot of the meeting for somebody or other; we have a swift,way of disposing of such «THE EAGLE'S EYE” by WILLIAM J. FLYNN Recently CHIEF OF U. S. SECRET SERVICE retired With the popular stars KING BAGGOT nd I!ARGUERH’E BNOW Produced THE WHARTON! Twh\!y Great Epi Unequalled for of Facts, Realism, See it BREED THEATRE. things when we are interested in something else.—Hartiord Times, SORE THROAT Colds, Coughs, Croup and Catarrh Relieved in Two Minutes. Is your throat sore? huge ghell holes as a ship sails on a rocky sea. Fritz must think hell has been let loose on them. One cannot imagine thée magnitude of the Work being done. Thousahds of moter transports, lorries; London busses, that are serving every emer- gency; the guns, troops; cavalry, the huge ‘ebservation balloons and s our fiarvelous battle planés. Gefmany wig Not in a thousand years. ir Sam Hugheés' son General Gar- het Hughes, was our Brigadier Gen- éral, and besides being a regular fel= low, he is a $plendid and efficient offi~ cer, Britain's work in war-riddén France is wonderful, Kitehener's new armlies, the heavy guns, the building of metal roads, feéding her men, eon= structing railroads and eguipping the ‘French army with all their require. ments as was hecessary in those early days—when one considers it he be gins to think that a Mightier Han than Britain’s is deing it all, as it is| grasp the power that lies behing. ver in my life did I imagine any- thing like it. Getting a Varied Experience. The flame-thrower is a hideous device of modern' warfare, but our boys have met it and put the flame- throwers to rout. Our Army may Btill be small, but it is getting a var- ‘ied expefiende. —Springfield Repub- ican. ] i [ PUT OLD ENEMY T0 UTTER ROUT Tells how to lift off that touchy corn without hurting one particle BB B BB BB S— Hospital records show , that every time you cut a torn you invite lock- jaw or bloed poison, which is needless, says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter gunce of a drug called freszone can be obtained at lit- tle cost from the drug store but is sufficient to rid one's feet of every hard or soft corn of eallus. . You simply apply a few drops of this freezone on a tender, aching corn and the soreness Is instantly relieved. Shortly the entire corn can be lifted out. root and all, without pain. This drug is sticky but dries at oncg 2and is elaimed to just shrivel up auny corn wmmut infiaming or even irri- tating the surrounding tissue or skin. ife wearw high heels she impossible for the huthan mind tc, Breathe Hyomei. Have you catarrh? Breathe Hyomel. Have you a cough? __Breathe Hyomei. Have you a cold? Breathe Hyoniei. Hyomei is the one treatment fof all nose, thféat and lung troubles. It does not contain any cocaine or méf- phine and all that is necessary is to breathe it through the little pocket inhaler that comes with each outfit, A complsta outfit costs but little at druggists everywhere and at The Lee & Osgopd Cc., and Hyomei is guaran= teed to bauish catarrh, eroup, coughs, colds, sure throat and bronchitis or money back. A Hyomei inhaler lasts a lifetime and extra bottles of Hyomei can be obta.!n?d frem druggists. Victrola? Well, we can show ,you @ plan Whetely the cxpente of a fow otats @ day you oan owm $nb of the best Victrolas in the world., (Cut out and mail coupoh today) (PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING) 135-193 Mhala St. Norwich, Cenn. Pleabs send mo catalogue and list éescbing cengitions, prices, terms and fall partioul girding your easy paymént phan. Namo Street Towa State ! DR.R. J.COLLINS DENTIST 148 Main Strost, Nerwich, Conn. Phone 1178 TuThS CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENT Is.a natural health method which en- ables nature to restore. your health more effectively and premanently than any known health meétliod, ' No medi- cine, Burgery or osteopathy used. Chiropractic Institute J. 0. Zimmermann, A. C., The Store). Reld Rathbone's Dru, Riekers Drug The Lee & Osgoed Co. g April 1 and 2 THETAGTES EXE “LIBERTY THEATRES"” Have Been Built in All National Gitard and National Army Camps i America. “Smileage Books,” issued by Federal Military Bntertalnment Council, vide free admission to these thestres. Send.one to YOUR soldier or to soldier. Price $1. For sale at the following places: ‘The Porteous & Mitchell Co. & Hughes Store. tore. Co. (Bostor The Wauregan Hotel Office. Mara & E George Eleton. en (Cigar Stote). bnzlers mmmcy Ring & Slok™D Dmsslm n The ¥, M. G A. Oifici H 4. M. C. Tou. [acpherson. The Thames I;oan " & Trust Co. FINAL pro- DIVIDEND NOTICE BY ORDER OF THE HONORABLE ' SUPERIOR COURT notice is hereby | given to Depositors in the Commercial and Savings Departments of said Company that cheques fof the amount of ELEVEN AND O NE-TENTH (111-10) and BELEVEN AND TWO- THIRDS (112-3)) PER CENT. re- and after tificates, gpectively, of their proven and allowed claims, will be ready fof delivery on MONDAY, FEBRUARY 25th, 1918, AT THE COMPANY’S OFFICE, 42 SHE- TUCKET STREET, NORWICH, upon presentation of Receiver's cer- ALSO BY THE SAME COURT Depositors are allowed DER, THI.RTY (30) DAYS from the date of this notice to call for their-divi- dends; thereafter, as soon as possible, the uncalled for amounts and the State.. Dr. Alired Richards -u LS MUQE"‘ 5 ) !oon % Tel. 299 - Residence tel. ; DENTIST Office Hox names of persons entitled thereto are to be sent to,the Treasurer of the (Time expires March 28.) JOHN D. HALL, Recelver, Norwich, Feb. 25, 1918. NOTICE I am going to. New York for a few days for a sale. place of business will be on Vergason Avenue, Norwich Town, Conn. . "YURMAN, Fureier now_on my

Other pages from this issue: