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Telephone Z16-2. @ Norwich, Tuesday, Aug. 13, 1916 —_— MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclustve Iy entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news despatcher credit- ed to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also seserved. o b *Right is More Precious than Peace” —_— AMERICAN BONDHOLDERS, & The fact that there are more than 20 million bondholders in America $bows the faith of the people in their ‘government. « We had three Liberty bond issues Muring the first year of the war, and ‘pproaching ten billions in money was Taised. In May, 1917, there were subscrip- %ions for 3 dillions in 20 days; only 2 billions were allotted. In October, 1917, over 4 1.2 billions 3 days; and only Were subscrived i $0,808.766,150 were allotted In April, 1918, 3 billion were issued and in 28 days the subscriptions had exceeded the amount called for by more than a billion, so that the total allotted was $4,170,019,650. The fourth Liberty loan is to be galled for on September 28th and the jds will elese Oct. 13, d in these 1 days. whether the call is for 6 bil- dons or 8 billions, ghere & no doubt it will be promptly it more. ‘It 1s only by prompt action along fhese lines that we can assure our soldiers that America is with them. While they are staking their lives we subscribed and a home ould be ashamed not to fmeet every requirement with our money. Our loyalty is to be tested! We shall n found wan WILL PIE BE SPARED, The mouth for pie was born and Bred in New Enzland and the pie- It now extends nearly across the continent. There s alarm lest the food aGmin- istrator shall make an end of pie. In fact half a dozen great pastry estab- fishments have been ordered closed in New York as among the non-essen- tials; and the scream of Omaha is heard clear to the New England coast, which gives notice that “the biggest and brightest of all our local pie foun- dries finds itself tossed into the dis- Srat- 4 The Omaha Bee has this to say of Pie: “Pie and Plymouth Rock go to- gether; pie came to this country with Jamestown. Pie has been a basis for existence through all our days. It lightened the lonely life of the pio- neer, soothed the wanderer in the wil- derness and has cheered the exist- ence of millions who wrap their legs ground lunch counter stools, or carry their own fodder at automats or cafe- terias. Are we now to forezo our sustenance and solace combined, or shall we rise up as one man i our ipdighation and demand that the food Wictator leave us pie?” ! New England is calmer, for since the days of strawberry short-cake there has been created scores of other short-cakes, to say nothing of the doughnuts and cranberry tarts. We have not lost our love of pie, but the other dear charmers will soften the blow if the food administrator knovks' ple out. OUR WAR-TIME SHOULDN'TS. The Connecticut Food Administra- tion bas issued the following notices to the public which should be rigidly lived up to: Householders shouldn’t buy more at a time than half a barrel of flour. Shouldr't In the city buy over two pounds.of sugar; in the-country not to exceed five pounds. Shouldn’t anywhere use but half a pound of sugar per person a week. Shouldn't use wheat in any form for any purpose other than human sustenance. Shouldr't eat in excess of two Office, 675 Matn Btrest. that the soldiers committed ‘atroeities. Thess-are the qualities which guar- anty to German prisemers Christian treatment while they ars in the hands of the allies; and aiso are dis ing the character of German militar- ism which by its lack of honesty and honor hes demanded of ity poople a service of savagery which the world will never forgst and will find it dif- ficult to forzive. OCCASION FOR SURPRISE. Since the ways and means commit- tee of congress have found it neces- sary to put a revenue tax upon rail- road fares and theater admissions Boston rises to announce its surprise that the billboards which are a dis- figurement to all American cities and a blotch upon the landscape of the country adfacent to the railroad lines everywhere near large cénters of pop- ulation have apparently been eritirely overlooked. These eye-sores have heen a ecause of intermittent agitation in diffcrent parts of the couhtry for many years, and it has to be confessed that It is no easy matter to restriet them or keep them decent. These bill boards are preperty, and | the source of a large income in many sections, hence the plea that it would be illegal to appiy a tax to them does not seem to be well founded. Boston deems this method of ob- taining revenue not only ¢ommenda- ble, but hopefully looks toward it as 4 means of decreasing the number of disfiguring signboards which are to be found in her streets and suburbs. EDITORIAL NOTES. Obey orders first and kick wards, Gen. Foch adviges. after- —_—— e This is the latest way of putting it: “Yanks and tanks have turned the tide.” Hay fever appears to be more punc- tyal than any messengér boy ever got to be. . It looks as if Alsace-Lorraine was sure of getting its divoree from Ger- many. Hindenburg is trying to find a hitch- ing post for the Kaiser's “wild horses from hell.” Two Yankee destroyers have gone over 70,000 miles in pursuit of the German U-boats. Germany has a new revelation which Is this: The fighters are only fit to inherit the earth. The Kaiser has decided to cut off our fish supply. That will not be so very embarrassin There is no evidence the Hohenzoll lerns are willing to die for the father- land, if the people be. This is the Crown Prince's compli- ment to American troops: “They fight with impudent audacit ture, they can hold them. been crippled by the war. a thing to be walked over. g mans is no sin” fortable pleasure for the hater. booze or freeze next winter. perfectly willing to give up both. T iy The sion. The tobacco users are boked to pay the government about a million a day sukface she is jusk to have pay n yet they ‘did not for this reason re- and youns, turned into Mrs. Roberts and terrified children, old find the dreaded business a jolly sort of treat. word |18 In_trouble with her youngest, ‘or to live g and_ cuitivate her gar- den\ Certainly = she no *beme- factress” in the usual sense, for she spent very little momey and never gave anything away—even medicine. She never ‘visited” anyene unless she wanted som or knew at first hand that there was something that ehe could do. And when the District Miss B, and what she had said to Miss B, and what Miss B. had said to her, then the viltage began, in its slow, silent way, to laugh; and the laughter, matur- ing at leisure into a rich and fruity Jjoke, warmed away the last lingering of suspicion. The Aunmt, at any rate, was goimg to turn into no kind’of District Visitor. What ehe had turned into it would be very difficult ‘to_ define; because she is an arrant opportunist. On the a_mpddle-aged lady who lives here- because she chooses to, and has no wish except to be left alone. And that, so far as it goes, is true. But she has a way of casually - mentioning that she is going to drive into the market town, five miles off, on such and such a day: and somehow many a hard- worked mother of children is saved a long trudge under a heavy load of shopping. Little Polly has to have a tooth out, or olg John must show his leg to the doctor; and the fractious Y | i Mrs. Jones in trouble with her ma and the Aunt, who for a spinster seems to know a mighty lot about mezried ‘folks andg children, things right when she chooses, and speaks very plain for a lady) She is a scholar, and writes letters as easily as one makes beds; that you are trying to eay, matters of business, that you ought to to. She reads a great deal; and It seemed merely a happy acei- in to be read to on Sunday afternoons. She s up to all sorts of dodges in homermanagement, ~ cleaning and cooking; but you never poking her nose in to see place is properly looked after. She seems to know where your trouble is before you know it yourself. She gives you a hint during a meeting in the lane or a chat over the There is always something that she whnts you to do for her, so that each is beholden to each. And, what- ever she may think herself, she al- ways wants to know what other peo- ple think; and, when you give her your views, she listens’as attentively s it you wers the parson or the po- liceman. 1t enough (though the Aunt would be sorry that it should be), it would realize that, since her coming, deal more interesting. Work has ceased to be a life-long losing battle, a doom of drudgery, has taken on a meaning, and shows results, while there is more spare time, and there are more ways of filling it. Troubles begin to 100k more like jokes; and iaughter blows away what grumpi- ness hnd gloom left the heavier. Without, we hope, growing conceited, we take a new pride in ourselves, our homes, and our children—who certainly look and behave their best when the Aunt is with them. Scarce- Iy realizing swhy, we are beginning to feel sorry for meighboring *villages, which .are stil, muddling along in the old and cheerless way. And-we have begun to say openly that, if only the clergy and the police, the Guardians and the magistrates, would listen, as Miss B. listens, to what we about things -there would be a sight less trouble in the world than there is. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Democracy Is Not Cheap. Mr. Editor: Demberacy is not cheap. It never has beéen. Blood and treas- ure almost beyond count have been spent to win and to Keep the precious privilege of the ballst. And yet in the long vears of their fSghting for it, the people have not often wanted to turn back. They have felt that even 2t this high price, democracy was worth while. And they have sacrificed and suf- fered and died for democracy not be- cause they thought that when they got it, it would be a cheaper form of government. They knew it would cost more for.a whole natien. to vote than to have ome crowned representative vote for them, They knew that .con- gresses and parliaments elected by the People would ebst more than con- gresses and parliaments appointed by a king. They also knew, from long ex- perience, that added cbst means add- ed taxes, that the only place for a government to gét money is from the péople. - They, the people, were going the difference. ~And nounce demoeracy. It seemed worth while even at that price. But perhaps none of us kmew just how precious democracy was to us until Geérmany threatened it. Now we know that we would sacrifice any- thing for hardly it, that without it worth while. And ‘vet “there comes a new cry life’ is If the Yanks cannot pronounce the names of the French places they eap- Anypne who locks at an ice-eream these days cannot help noticing it has The German forces in front of the British army have discovered it's not A western parsen says “Hating Ger. It is mighty uncom- We are notified we must give up We are coming draft. seéms to have been designed to make the bachelors ‘more conscious of their. sin of omis- from the anti-suffragists, that women must not now bz enfranchised because the election expenses would be tod mgch. And they feel particularly vir- tuous in urging that the 20,660,000- wo- men of voting age in the United States be.denied the franchise in order that some fictitious sum whieh. presuma- bly would have to be spent in provid- g additional polling places for wo- men be turned into the war—this war which we ure fightingfor democracy. and, which is securing this right to voté for both men and women in Eu- rope. For let us make no mistake. One form which the democracy we are winning in Burope has airsady taken is the énfranchisement of wo- men. 40,000,000 in the allied countries granted the franchise with- in the last tl years. And we, the nation. of al 's _that boasts de- moeracy accomplished, must lag be- hind because .it wiil cost too much. How will our soldiers fe¢l when the war is over if we solemnly present to_them our conclusion that democ- racy is all very well to die for but that it tice. To keep fit flll your mind with new| what Wilhelm is do just now. Sy The Kaiser and he six sons might be sent to Rheims and made to spend their lives in rebutiding the cathedral destroyed there, —— s Now that coal is recognized as black diamonds the icé-men appear to be ambitions to have ice rank as a pearl of great price. If the U-hoats do destroy our fish- ing boats on the Banks, we shall have Irish salt mackerel and Scotch cured herrings to comfort us. . The latest:—"Profiteer! Oh, prefi- pounds.of any kind of meat or fat (in- cluding all. kinds.of poultry) per week for each person over four years of age. Shouldn’t use more ice than Is ab- solutely necessary. Shouldn’t use an excessive amomnt Shouldn’t command tfansportation tor supplies which may be home grown. It is questionable if self-denial teer, you sure do make me sore. When you've taken my .last durmed cent, you come right back for more!” Our poptilar summer resorts must miss “the leedle Sherman bands” which used to play ‘Hail Columbia” and “The Watch on the Rhine.” 600 u; smm, or “about thoughts, says a philosopher. That's | the t:r'ty- Bbeing compelied to|has cost : ‘because . Attention is called to the fact that if German women wear furs in Sum- mer to please the Kaiser it is time that American_women forgot them. ——— Over a year ago the Germans thought the allies were whipped and wondered why they didn't surrender. Now they must be wondering what the Germans are fleeing toward the Rhine for! quits 166 éxpenisive to prac- But let us see Wwhat the actual fAis- in taxes next year. They smoke and [Ures are, the cost of adding the wo- forget it. man’s vote to that of Take New o AR RN . zm.h‘wbarem i n:ore thalfl People who také snuff do net haye|ANYWhere - else. goalcutation Jof} the influenza. “To some people the|SXPeris shows, :P“!“ many wo- prevention would seem worse than voting at the la ¢ n‘,un,ny' ':I:cgl:nl: the disease. 2 theicost would be_lifted from $300,- seven cents 10 vote as agairist thrée cents each which it for the men to vote. This is women use the polls at dif ferent hours from those at which men vote, and is also the working out of a perfectly familiar ratio of proportion- ate decrease in cost as to increase of use or output. But it is s 1y hard- Iy logical for anyone to decide that the seven cents each for the women and not the forty-three ‘cents each for the men shall be the limit beyond which the price of defocracy may not go. Fortunately there are not many men in our democratic' world who offer to die for democracy and then want to save seven c¢ents by refusing to prac- tice it. If there were any such, we might present to them the two fol- lowing observations: 1. If in order to win the war we must pour into our war fund the money it would cost to provide voting places for women, why not save still more money by asking 5 nchise. and closing up the polls entirely? 2. The present and past expenses of elections are and have been paid out of the taxes. In paying their taxes women have contributed “their full share of the cost of men'’s voting. Isn't it time that men be asked to pay their share for women's voting? But it is not alone money that the anti-suffragists boast ‘of saving. They are -“saving the country from destruction” and they are saving “women from' politi- cal burdens and jury This is not so much the old boast of incompetence—“wve are not fit to vote.” “Saving the country from de- struction now means state’s rizhts, that false principle against which the whole north rose in our Civil war— an excellent skirt surely for a north- ern woman to hide behind. Our allies will come out of the war with democ- racy accomplished. We must wait till the voting ehemy alien, the slack- er, the negro have all been converted and graciously conclude that ths American woman s to be trusted with the ballot. And the American women are also to be saved from “political burdens and jury du Not if Ohio can help it. That anti-suffrage state is seri- ously considering a bill to require Women to serve on jury duty not as a privilege or as a punishment but for the very homely reason that men are scarce. And for the same reason, and also because -the American wo- man has, the American woman wheth. er they want it or mot, will have to take up their share of the political burdens, And in the end thev will do it Fith- out_complaining even as the Anti Suffrage Voters League is doing in New York. The spirit of democracy s abroad in, the world. We know that our dream is to be fulfilled NANCY M. SCHOONMAKER. Hartford, Aug. 1, 1918 STORIES OF THE WAR A.Mlle of Prisoners, The correspondent of the London Times with the American Army says: American Army, July 21. The number of prisoners is increas- ing hourly. I saw many on the road yesterday. In a puts (she can be alarming she knows what it is n and— better still—she knows who it is, in dent that the village boys should drop find her it your ‘wall. the village were self-conscious life has been a little more comfortable— life must always be hard—but agreat thing town behind the the deep, stretched for fully a mile. They were well-built, young, and ap- parently in excellent condition, and the happy smiles on their faces confirmed what 1 was tcld vesterday—that the enemy morale is low. As they passéd, the towr.speople ironically cried out, ‘Nach Paris!” A smile, with an as- senting shake of the head, was their only reply. Of two coionels captured, one, Bavarian, fell to the Americans. So rapid was their advance tHat they trapped him and his staff in a com- mand post in a quarry. He was brought in by a private, who ex- claimed as he passed, “Look at me; a colonel!” It seems that the divisions to which | the prisoners belong are in eonsiderable | confusior., An American unit near| Soissons brought in 56 prisoners from not less than five different division: So far, captives from seven divisions | have been identified by this unit alone. | Of three* divisions which have fought | this ynit, one was put out of action al- | together by losses, the second was bad- ly mauled, and the third is now fight- ing with the remnants of other div- istons. Such is the plight of the enemy in this region. Two American units in_the Soissons area alone have captured 123 officers and 5,027 men, also 460 machine-guns, a nuntber of fleld gums, and other bhooty. This is the' Americans’ reply to the German War Minister’s sneers. July 19— was this afternoon able to walk over the ground captured yes- terday, and to see the opening of an American attack on a machine-gun nest. Leaving the beautiful forest of Villers-Cotterets far behind, we arrived at a_town in which nothing had es- caped the ravages of shellfire. Wending our way through woods where trees lay broken and old treuch- es filled with water told tales of past desperate struggles, we crossed the American lines of yesterday morning. On wheat and beet fields lay bodies of Germans in all kinds of attitudes, while now- and again one caught sight of the melaneholy sign of a bavonet fixed in the earth, marking the last resting- place of some heroic American. arther on two Germans lay in a| hole, a machine-gun in front of them, | with empty belts that told of 2 desper- ate fight against the Amerfeans. Near by were the bodies of valiant Ameri- cans who had rushed at the gus In a small cutting by 2 machine-gun position dead Germans lay as far as the eye could see. They had appar- ently sought shelter in the cutting. de- termined to defend it, but a tank had exacted the hedviest price. There, huddled up in the most fantastic posi- tions, lay the victims of a ruthless| militarism. All round one could see such sights. Meanwhile the attack we were to see had started. The heavens were torn by shell-fire, and as we reached an ele- | 1 left, the American barrage reached its crescendo. The tall populars of the | Soissons. road swa in the breeze. 'Through them the Americans had already passed, and we ¢ them pressing on far beyond Then the German guns opened. screech of approaching shells greeted our ears. Into and round Missy they went and in a field on our left, but the American fire was obviously the heav- Aeroplanes circled overhead Suddeniy our attention was attracted by the spiteful whirr of machine-gun fire. It rose and fell, and would then | begin again eisewhere. We knew that the Americans had reached their ob- jective and were fighting away in the distance. ‘We returned through fields filled with Gefman dead. Smiling Americans with mischief in their eves were going for- | ward. Ungainly Tanks lumbered on. Wounded were returning. “Give them hell!” was their cry. “Sure!” see The came the answer. : July 21.—American troops are still advancing in their sector. More prog- ress was made today in the diréction of the Soissons-Chateau-Thierry road near Soissons, while northwest of | Chauteau-Thierry several villages have | been taken | The men are fighting splendidly, their spirit is'very high, and they are fol- lowing up their successes very rapid- Iy. The Germane retreated across the| Marne yesterday in boats and over bridges, but they left a number of prisoners, one of whom woke up “after a night's 'sleep to find that his com- pany had departed. There is a strange quietness all along. the Marne valley, which suggests that the enemy is retiring, that his artillery is well on the roads to the ‘rear. OTHER VIEW POINTS Some of the scenes in great cities such nights as last night (and Water- bury is a great city at such a time) are interesting and pathetic.+.For in- stance, the scene as described in the Sun, as follows: “In Prince street a girl in her late teens lay asleep across the sidewalk, -an old sheet wrapped around her night dress, her bare feet protruding, and With the ex- ception of a small pillgw under her bead, nothing softer to Fest upon than the stone sidewalk. Beside her slept soundly. her little sister. At a fruit stand close by a youth divided his time between tending the stand and keeping a watchful eve upon his sleep- ing sisters.”—Waterbury American. Within a measurably. short time —_— Dorothy M. Woodward, D. C. (Doctor of Chiropractic) ToLP.S.C, 1914 (Women and Children) 220221 Thayer Building Norwich, Conn. Alarm Clocks " ALL PRICES The Wm. Friswell Co. 25-27 Franklin Street DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Building I am a hell of a big guy bringing in a || vation that overlooked Missey au| CATARRH CANNOT BE -CURED Bois, directly in frent, with Breuil on|with local applications. as they cannot the right and Dommicers away on the | reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh EATRE ; . v TODAY AND TOMORROW BIG DOUBLE BSIBEER‘F!A'T”““ e e e s THOS. H. INCE Presents Enid Bennett In the Six Part Paramount Picture A Story that Every “Plain” Girl Can Draw a Lesssn From. WILLIAM DESMOND In the Five-Part Triangle Comedy Drama “CLOSING IN” TheAllizdNation’s War Review Official Moving Picture of “Our Boys” Over There. e Austria may be automatically elim- imated from the war by the disinte- gration of her armies. They are al- ready melting away under the stress of intérnal conditions of discontent and the whole interior of the country is filled with bands of deserters, who are only a shade removed frém the bandit stage. Necessarily these ma- rauders are a Mmenace to the disci- pline of the forces that still hold loy- al to the emperor. They have the sympathy of the civilian population in the country districts and troops sent against them ‘do not meet with much success, in many cases joining vith them instead of wiping thém out. Austria is in a perilous state and no one can tell when she will throw up. her hands had quit the Teuton leagueé. —Ansonia Sentinel A Jersey City man who was put in- to the army in spite of his protest that he was a conscientious object- or because of membership in a church that condemned all war, sign- ed an application for the governmient allotment given soldiers’ wives. It was later discovered that heé had no wife, but he was equal to the occa- sion with the explanation that he had spirit wife, as his church would not permit him to marry. Probably the religious sect that forbade all fighting naturally forbade marrying. The camp court martial at Camp Dix, not understanding his “religious . spirit” and finding no patriotic spirit in this very “conscientious” man, .sent him to a federal prison for ten years. is a local dlsease, gréatly influencéd by constitutional ~ conditions, order to cure it you must ternal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts through o blood on the mucous surfaces of e system. Hall's Catarrh Medicine prescribed by one of thé best phy- sicians in this country for years. It s composed of some of the best tonics known, combined with Some of the best ood purifiers. The perfect combina- tion of the ingredients in Hall's Ca- tarrh Medicine is what produces such wonderful results in catarrhal condi- ns. Send for testimonials, frée, J_ CHENEY & CO., Props, Toledo, O. All drugzgists, T5c. Hall's Family Pills for comstipation. CONFIDENCE TJewelry buying is largely a matter of confidence. Your confidence will not be misplaced in our fine line of DIAMONDS and* SNAPPY JEWELRY WATCHES (American Only) k us questions LEE CLEGG (YOUR JEWELER) o Opp. Chamber of Commerce Bldg. REPAIRS A SPECIALTY Step in and DR. R. J. COLLINS DENTIST 148 Main Street, Nerwich, Conn Phone 1178 POWER CONSTRUCTION AND SUPPLY COMPANY ENGINEERS and CONTRACTORS Power Piping, Heating and Ventilating Mill Repair Wark Promptly Attended to OFFICE, ROOM 112, THAYER BLDG. Phone 1582 Norwich, Conn. Whe ‘Wants a Victrola? we ean show you expente of & few osnts & day you ean own ome of the Best Vietrolas In the workd. ; (Cut out and mail ooupon teday) (PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING) 135-143 _Main 8t talogue NOTICE DR. A. RICHARDS OFFICE in Thayer Building will be closed until September 5th. ST SR T The Chelsea Savings Bank Norwich, Conn., August 5, 1918. The Board of Directors of this Bank have this day declared a dividend for the current six months at the rate of four per cent. per annum, payable on Auditorigm | mres-mon—ssoron | —TODAY—" . - yrone Power “THE PLANTER" A _Seven Reel Adaptation of Her- man Whitaker's Celebrated Novel. CRARLIE CHAPLIN Easy Street Latest Screen Telegrame WORLD’S BEST NEWS GRAPHIC This “New” Nation of Ours. Remember, that while they call us a new nation, we have behind us a hun- @red and forty years of tested prac- tice of the institutions that we enjoy, a#d all of the great nations that aré how efigred in thé great contest in Burope, While their blood may bé 6ld- er than ouh, are far younger in civil forms. The German empire has had life only since 1870; modern France dates from virtually the samé period; the union of England, Ireland and Seotland, since the beginning of the nineteenth century; Austria separat- ed from the German federation of states in 1886; Italy dates back only fifty years. and Japan woke to the toueh of the world by the guns of Perry. (James A. Emery before Na- tional Association of Hosiery and Un- derwear Manufacturers. —TODAY— LAST CHANCE TO SEE THE MAMMOTH SIX-PART PATHE PLAY ADAPTED FROM KIP- LING’S FAMCUS BOOK THE STARRING ANTONIO MORENO and DORALDINA LAST CHAPTER OF “THE EAGLE’S EYE” HEARST-PATHE NEWS —eeee e WHEN YOU WANT 1o put your bus- iness before the public, there is no medium_hetter than through the ad vertising ~olumns of The Builetin. The Automobile Situation, Washington, Aug. 12.—Representa- tives of the National Automabile Deal- ers’ assotiation were asked today to meet the automobile committee of the war industries board next Friday at 10 e'clock to distuss the board’s re- dent advite to passenger automobile manufacturers to get on a 100 per cent. war basis by Jan. 1, 1919, We Sell Thrift Stamps SERVICE FLAGS If you are entitled to fly one of these in front of your home, if one of your household is a unit in our great American Army or Navy, get that flag out and display it. Cotton Service Flags, 2 by 3 feet. .. Cotton and Wool Flags, 2 by 3 feet.............$1.39 Standard Wool Bunting, 2 by 3 feet............$2.25 Turkish Tow.els These Towels were bought some time ago, and we can afford to sell them at prices considerably under the present market. You can hardly have too many of them. Add to your stock at these low prices. 19, 25¢c, 33c HOT WEATHER GOMFORTS From the Hosiery and. Underwear Department WHITE UNDERWEAR AND WHITE HOSIERY Women's Low Neck Union Suits with lace trimmed or plain knee ......,....c.0000.....50c & suit Low Neck Union Suits with shoulder straps—a splendid suit for the money. Lace trimmed knee. Common sizes .................«59c a suit Extra sizes ...... .65c a suit Nushape White Lisle Union Suits, with lace trimmed knee and with or without shoulder straps. Common $izes ................,..85ca suit “Sealpax” Union Suits—the latest designed after same models used in men’s suits—cool and comfortable. All sleeveless. White Nainsook ...........++..$1.50 a suit Boys’ and Girls’ Union Suits, light weight suits with elasticity considered first, will wear well, sizes BB i e is s e B0 8 suif Infants’ and Misses' Mercerized Socks, with either plain or fancy tops, sizes 5t0 9.........39¢a pair Women’s White Cotton Hose which are made with 4.inch garter top, double-spliced heel, sole and toe. These are seconds of our 35c grade and are nearly perfect. Sizes 9, 9% and 10.- For sale Saturday on one of our Hosiery Aisle Take elevator Shetucket Street entrance. Phone and after the 16th day of September. FRANK HEMPSTEAD, Treastren.