OUR JUNE CLEARANCES CONTINUE
These wholesale rooms are right at their best. With a
sweeping clearance slashing prices to less than one-half and
all the summer white goods at wholesale, the bright rooms
are filled with bargains.
YOU CANT AFFORD TO STAT AWAY.
FRENCH CHIP,
HEMP
We
stocked
close out this great
stock. All colors.
Get them now, at
1-8 Wholesale price.
Hundreds
of best
Braid
SAILORS
now
WMte
Ratines
The ' neatest little
viry day bonnet on
the market. Just in
from Fifth Avenue.
Wholesale.
7gc up
JUSt Received
The Same to Individual Buyers as We Do to Buyers fatt
Big Firms. We Can Save You 1-2 to 1-3 on Your
Millinery Bill. Come in and See.
Broadvay Wholesale niillinery Co.
Over Hiker's, t t t ' Rm , Up One
Next to Keller's.
HIU XTlcllll OU six
I Hew York Boston HsmerhlH Watea-bury Manchester I
J . Iiowell and Portland. J ' 1
.mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmimm mm m-mmm m n m ,'mmmmmmm'mF'4
TT)
will put you m possession of a
Suitable for. Residence, Business or Both, at Center
Bight on Air Line Best Location at Beach
IT TCTLX PAT YOU TO LOOS OVER THIS PROPERTY
MRS. J. BROBERICK
PHONE MYRTLE BEACH
Fifteen Years of
THE ANALGESIC DENTIST
FIRST TO DO REAL PAINLESS DENTISTRY
The KEW ANAXiGESIO MTTTITOD tlw first postlvely
painless dentistry Is practiced by me. At Intervals during
the dental operation, the patient takes a breath or two of
ANADGO and is insensible to pain. No other sense is affect
ed no other function disturbed the patient simply CAN.
NOT KEEIi PACT birt he CAN HEAR AND SEES AND TTV
DERSTAKB all that is going: on obtra him. In this Ptate
(known as analgesia) the best dental work can be accom
plished because the dentist does his work unhindered by the
customary twisting: and Jerkins caused by pain and fear of
the old-fashioned methods.
Yes, I can extract- your teeth, pat in crowns-and bridges,
do any dental work WITHOUT PAIN TO XOTJ and best of
an I do this at FAIR PRICES.
DR. BLUME
IN THE ARCADE
ROOM at
P. O. Arcade
6093
Analgesic
Specialists in
Crowns and
3 And Always Abreast of the Times?
- JOHN 1FV FAY . .
610 FAIRFIELD AVENUE
Furniture Dealer, Upholsterer and Cabinet Maker, Super
ior Fabrics for Furniture and Draperies. Tel. 74
1 r"11" fi,
AND MILAN SHAPES
and
most
WHITE OSTRICH
SIIGK-UPS
These are amonglbe
White Goods already
received. Come in and
see the big variety.
Wholesale, direct to .
joo ....
78c up-
Black and ; White
Ostrich Bands.
Retail at $3. Now
$1.98
We Sell at Wholesale,
Short Flight.
Dental Experienced
Dentist
Full Sets
Bridges
Open 8 a. m.
to 5 p. m.
AXSO
EVENINGS
OVER-STUDY CAUSES
BREAK DOWN OF STAPLES
. HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT
Stanley Taylor, President of Soplio-
more Class Stricken While -at
School. -
(Specltl to the Farmer.)
Westport, June 20. A nervous
breakdown, . the result of over-study
Is Starfley Taylor of Cranberry, a stu
dent in the second year class of the
Staples High, school. Just before the
first session Wednesday morning fel
low classmates of young Taylor no
ticed the young man tighten his grip
on his dtesk: and almost fall to the
floor. The class room, was thrown
into confusion when the youth was
seen to We helpless. ' He was carried
into the open and a physician sent
for. Dater he was taken to the Nor
walk hospital under the care of Dr.
Baldwin of Nor walk. His physicians
describe his illness as an . attack ' of
apoplexy induced by the overworking
of a highly ' nervous system. Young
Taylor way the honor man of his
class and was known among his class
mates as a "grind." He was also In
tensely popular among his class mem
ber, iwng class president.
To-day It was stated that the young
man had recovered from his attack
but was still in a nervous condition,
His ' physicians have advised that he
discontinue school for the remainder
of the season and seek rest from all
school work.
The Staples High School baseball
team has closed its season with nine
victories out of eleven games, a per
centage of .83,8, 1 The team has a
batting average of .400. The con
tests of the team include:
- Staples 11, Mllford 10 . . ,
26, Stratford 7. ,
" , 2, Stratford 3.
8, Bethel 7. . .
.,"' 7, Seymour 10.. '
- 12, Stamford 11. - ;
6, Newtown 5
9, Conn. Co.. 1
; 4, Bethel 3.
9 Stratford . Cforfelted)
19, Conn. Co. 2.
The batting averages of b players
follow! 1 ' ' '
' A.B. Hits. Runs. P.C.
Lane, 30 18 15 ; .600
Eddy, - 40 - 20 15 .500
Colyar, 34 17 10 ' .500
Klnsella. 12 6 4 .600
Quinn. 30 13 10 .400
Bieling. 45 16 11 .855
J. Hubbell, 30 10 10 .334
Murphy. 12 4 7 .334
F. Hubbell, 34 12 -10 .324
Bradley, 86 11 8 .306
Childs, 8 3 4 .300
Lyon, 41 11 . 8 .270
Jones, 8 2 2 .250
Nolan, 4 1 1 .250
The batting and team averages have
been carefully, compiled by Kenneth
Barr. .
Mr. and Mrs. R. I. S.- Putney are
in New London to-day attending the
Yale-Harvard1 boat race.
The Boy Scouts are not the only
ones In town who are to go into camp
during the summer. The Girls' Friend
ly Society of Christ church met re
cently and formed the Camp Fire
Girls' Club. Mrs. R. D. S. Putney was
appointed chief guardian and the
Misses Ida Foote, Edith. Tovey and
Louise Sherwood were named, assist
ant guardians. The Boy Scouts will
spend two weeks at Long Island.
When they break camp the girls will
start in. They wdll be under the su
pervision of Mr. and Mrs. R. D. S.
Putney. ;
Work was started yBterday by the
Warren Bros. Co., who have the con
tract for- the laying of the permanent
pavement on the state road. Work
was started on the Southport side of
the Mill River bridge, where it was
abandoned last autumn. - The work
will be continued daily, it being but a
matter of a short time before the
workmen will invade' Wstport.
There will be a tea and' dance at the
Westport Country club, on Saturday.
Starting to-morrow the employes of
the Charles H. Kemper leather fac
tory will have their usual Saturday
half holiday continuing for the re
mainder of the summer season.
It Is reported that deer have been
seen in this vicinity during the past
Ofew days. Wednesday It was re
ported that two deer were noted near
the Congregational church, while
again yesterday a deer was seen in
the Cross Roads district.
A son was recently born to Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Buckingham of Compo
street.
, The Five Hundred club has disband
ed for the summer season, but will re
sume meetings again in September.
The club formed during the past .win
ter has enjoyed many social evenings
at the homes of its members.
A : new concrete walk . has been
placed in front of the Salmon store
in State street.' New curbs have also
been placed at this point continuing
to the right for the rest of the block.
80 Per Cent, of the World's Business
Done on Credit
Way back in ancient hlBtory, ever
since people first bought and sold
goods, credit has been 'In evidence.
Without it, trade would soon be at a
standstill. Large businesses and email
use it, for It is the economic way of
conducting any enterprise. Why, there
fore, should the private individual en
deavor to purchase their household
necessities, clothes, etc., in any other
manner? Yet hundreds do, handicap
ping themselves, denying ' themselves
all because they will not conduct their
own business the way big business
does. Cheerful Credit as devised by
Caesar Misch, Inc., is used to give
everyone the advantage of purchasing
the best for the least and enabling all
to take advantage of it. by dividing
the payments of the purchase price
up. into small amounts that no hard
ship is felt by meeting them. It
places within the reach of . all, the
world's best merchandise, it places a
better grade of goods before many
who otherwise if it was necessary to
pay cash could not afford them. It is
not a difficult matter to obtain Cheer
ful Credit, for it is freely extended to
all who are in receipt of Incomes, no
matter how rae-est.
THE BRILLIANT STARS OP JUNE.
By the end of June, Mars, Venus,
Saturn and Jupiter will all be morning
stars, but Foley's Honey and Tar
Compound Is at all times the "Star"
medicine for coughs, croup and
whooping cough. A cold in June is as
apt to develop- into bronchitis or pneu
monia as at any other time, but not If
Foley's Honey and Tar Compound Is
taken. F. B. Brill, Stratford avenue
and Sixth street. Adv. 1 3 5
Parmer Want Ads. One Cent a Word, j
THE FARMER: JUSTE 20, 1913 ,
; SCRAP BOOK FOR TO-DAY j
Two year from yesterday, June 18,
1916, the centenary of the battle of
Waterloo will be fittingly commemo
rated. England and Germany will
take a prominent part in the program
arranged by the influential Belgian
committee vW is in chars of the
arrangements. The object of the com-
mittee is not so much' to glorify the
great victory won by Wellington and
Blucher over "the Man of Destiny" as
to render homage to all the heroes
who took part In that terrible and de
cisive conflict, French and Belgian as
well as English and German. The
celebration commemorates not only a
great victory over . the - French, but
also the rounding out of a. hundred
years of peace' between. Great Britain
and France, and this fact will not she
lost sight of. .- . .
A magnificent monument will be
erected at Waterloo and will be dedi
cated two years hence, as a feature
of the centenary celebration. This
memorial will take the form of a hy
pogeum, under- which will lie the re
mains of fhe soldiers who died on the
Held of battle. The base will be dec
orated with figures representing grief,
heroism and hope. The inscriptions
will be in English, French, German
and Dutch. The monument will also
include statues to Wellington, Blucher,
Napoleon and the Prince of Orange.
" One of the first actions of the cele
bration committee was to collect all
the human bones which were even yet
to be found In large numbers around
the field of conflict These are to be
placed In one vast tomb beneath the
monument At Quatre-Bras will be
erected another monument, to those
Belgians who, in the language of Sir
Walter Scott "died bravely for a
cause foreign to them."
. The field of Waterloo, as it appears
to-day, is thus described by a corres
pondent:
"The scene is peaceful, pastoral, and
a first sight it is difficult to believe
that this was the ground on which
was fought one of the bloodiest battles
recorded in all history. Yet in the
farmyard, and the orchard adjoining,
one still finds many grisly relics of
war. Pieces of cartridges are strew
ed about There are also bits of leath
er, once parts of caps, many with
holes- through them, and to some of
these decaying fragments the remains
of human heads are attached. In the
old orchard are decaying stumps of
trees with balls thrCugh them. In
the field the graves are thick, and
many of the skeletons hardly covered,
save by flowered twigs that hang beau
tifully over the relics of carnage and
the signs of tumult. A narrow rural
footpath winds among the graves, em
blematic .of the gentleness and peace
of nature, through these horrid mon
uments of men's fury."
The cunning of the "heathen Chi
nee" was never better Illustrated than
by the escape of the murderer of El
sie SlgeL It was four years ago yes
terday that the young and beautiful
granddaughter of Gen. Franz Sigol,
the civil war hero, was found mur
dered In New York's Chinatown, where
she had been engaged in missionary
work among the Orientals. Leon
Ling was suspected of the crime, and
a world-wide search, In which the. po
lice of . many countries joined, was
commenced. For four years the quest
has continued, but Leon Ling remains
at liberty, laughing in his sleeve, per
haps, at the clumsy efforts of the
"white devil" detectives to effect his
capture. 'The crime was peculiarly
atrocious, and , the white world de
manded the punishment of the mur
derer. That the police have been
baffled, as they have so often been
baffled in such cases, is a tribute to
the superior cunning of the yellow
man.
Married, twenty-seven years ago
to-day., at Cincinnati, Miss Helen L.
Herron, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
John W. Herron, and William Howard
Taft son of Judge Alphonso Taft
"The bride wore a charming gown of
white ' silk, with embroidered tablier
her veil caught up by sprays of white
lilacs, and she carried a boquet of
sweet peas .and lilies of the valley."
Other details of the happy occasion.
the anniversary of which will be cel
ebrated to-day by ex-President and
Mrs. Taft, include the item that "the
ceremony was performed . by Rev. M.
A. Hoge, pastor of the Second Presby
terian Church of Zanesville, O., who
married the bride's mother and fath
er, and the statement that "the bride
groom left immediately after the re
ception for New York, whence they
will sail for England."
Newspaper reporters, out ' of the
kindness of their hearts, always pic
ture a bride as a reigning belle and
the bridegroom as little, if any, short
of a genius, while the families of both
come In for much flattering comment
It was formerly the pleasant custom of
society reporters to Indulge in predic
tions as ,to the glorious future of the
happy pair. A ; Journalistic prophet
of the Clnelinati Commercial Gazette
in writing of the Taft wedding, had
this to say:
"William H. Taft is one of the young
men of the city who may be depended
upon in public affairs. He is one of
the highest standing of the graduates
of Yale, and his original powers, per
fect integrity and courage and correct
instincts, as well as thorough infor
mation,' have made him useful, won
for him the friendships and enmities
most complimentary, and opened for
him a career that has the highest
promise of great distinction."
"Betting is an ineradicable foible of
human nature." Thus declares the
Earl of Durham, who, being fifty-eight
years old to-day, and, from his youth.
a patron of "the sport of kings,"
speaks as an authority. - Lord Dur
ham, while declaring that betting Is
not a crime, yet admits that It la not
virtue.
"T 4a noiiallv ov, niMU.fiil .v-lt,--
ment and an expensive amusement,"
says the Earl, who is steward of the
Jockey Club and one of the most
prominent of race horse owners on the
British turf. "It Is very seldom. I
think, a real enjoyment to those who
indulge in it Legislation cannot
stamp out. this universal human pas
sion, but it need not foster It
Lord Durham has lately led in a
movement to abolish tipsters' adver
tisements in the English newspapers,
and to that end fathered a bill In the
House of Lords.
Whether or not the betting instinct
Is, as Lord Durham says, an "Inerad
icable foible. It has manifested Itself
in all ages and among all peoples. In
ancient England the loser of a wager
was often made a slave to the winner,
and sold in traffic, like other mer
chandise. The philosophic Wu Ting-Fang once
refused an invitation to visit a race
course, saying, "It is well known to
me that one horse can run faster than
another. I do not need an ocular dem
onstration." That Indifference is not
shared by Mr. Wu's countrymen, how
ever, for the Chinese are the most in
veterate of gamblers.
The first meeting of the American
Society of Mechanical Engineers was
held in 1880, and the society was char
tered the following year. The Spring
meeting of this organization will be
hold in Leipsic, as a part of a Ger
man tour beginning to-day. The firBt
engineering organization of general
scope in America was the American
Society of Civil Engineers, founded in
1852. The world's first engineeerlng
society was the Society of Civil Engin
eers, formed In England by Smeaton
and others in 1793. The English In
stitution of Civil Engineers was es
tablished in 1818. The first organiza
tion of mechanical engineers was ef
fected in England in 1847. The Amer
ican Institute of Electrical Engineers
founded in 1884, was the first impor
tant organization of its kind. En
gineering as a science had its begin
ning about the middle of the eigh
teenth century, and was first aptly de
fined by Telford In hs famous sentence
in the charter of the British Institution
of Civil Engineers, "Engineering is the
art of controlling the great powers of
nature for the use and convenience of
man."
West Virginia will celebrate its fif
tieth birthday today. It was Just half
a century ago, on June 20, 1863, that
the "secession from secession" of the
people of the western part of the Old
Dominion culminated in the inaugura
tion of a new State government at
Wheeling, and the addition of a new
star to the flag of the Union. Wheel
ing, the first capital, will be the scene
of the birthday celebration today. The
"stogie city" will be the host to many
distinguished men, and oratory and
grape Juice will flow freely at the
great state banquet while the popu
lace will be entertained by parades,
pageants and concerts.
The "secession from secession"
move-ment the alliance ' of . the West
Varginla mountaineers with the Union
cause, and the admission of West Vir
ginia to statehood, bad a profound ef
fect on the fortunes of the Confeder
acy, preventing the success of the plan
for a northward Invasion to Lake
Erie, thus dismembering the North by
separating the East from the West
Eastern and Western Virginia were
at war with each other, in spirit, long
before the outbreak of the civil .strife
between North and " South. Eastern
Virginia was settled largely by Eng
lishmen of the higher class, conserva
tives in politics, and adherents of the
Church of England. Western Virginia
attracted sturdy pioneers of many na
tionalities, democratic and radical in
political tendencies, and non-conformist
in religion. The civil war only
served to bring these differences to a
crisis.
Fifty-two years ago today a provis
ional State government was "formed in
West Virginia, and application was
made for admission to the Union. Ex
actly two years - later the new State
government went into power at Wheel
ing. It was a day of great jubilation
in the little city on the Ohio. ' Flags
flaunted everywhere, and vast crowds
gathered to cheer the outgoing pro
visional Governor, Pierpont and the
new Governor, Arthur I. Boreman, a
Scotch-Irishman, who was formally
inaugurated. .Thus was the Mountain
State launched on its career as the
thirty-fifth in ' the Union, with the
motto, "MontanI Semper Liberi"
"Mountaineers are .always free." .
Fifty years after that auspicious
event, civil war still smoulders in
parts of West Virginia. Paint Creek,
Beaver Creek.-New River these names
are associated with -recent battles al
most as ' sanguinary as some of the
conflicts of fifty years ago. For sev
eral years, with only an occasional
truce, capital and labor have been at
war In the Kanawha county coal fields.
Martial law, the "bull-pen," dynamite
and dum-dum bullets, armored trains,
military courts, . the suppression of
newspapers, the spectacle of civilians
being driven through muddy streets
of dingy town's by khakl-clad soldiers,
Gatling guns frowning from extem
porized forts, churches -, transrormea
into prisons armed miners lurking in
ambush to "pot" a "scab," armed
guards attacking the defenseless, wo
men and children subsisting on the
crusts of poverty these are features
of the problem that West Virginia will
seek to forget -today.
"MontanI Semper Liberi," say the
miners, contending for "the right to
organize." 1
"Montani Semper Liberi," respond
the mine-owners, asserting their right
to 'conduct their business in their own
way." ' .
TO... A.af rASl -flttOfl With RfPH TT1 PT1
J 1 1 1 ,,101. . . . . .
n Anee Vvo Atlantic was the
BUCO , i w. -
Savannah, which reached Liverpool 94
years ago today. The Savannah, a
ship - of 350 tons, had sailed from the
fnr which it was named
on May 24, the passage requiring
nearly twenty-seven oaj. moi
GET ACQUAINTED WITH
OOD SODA
The
Best
Soda
In
The
City
PRESENT
THIS COUPON
and Jflve cents
at our fountain
. BEFORE
JULY 1ST
and get a
10 CENT
Ice Cream
SODA
Atlantic
Pharmacy,
990
Main St.
Next to Davis
& Hawley
Atlantic Pharmacy
( 990 Main Street
Next to Davis & Hawley
CUT
THIS
OUT
FINANCIAL
Firsf-Brldgcpor! National Bmli
CORNER MAIN AND BANK STREETS
the voyage was made under sail, the
coal supply having been exhausted af
ter ten days at sea. Six years later
the steamship Enterprise went from
Falmouth. England, to the East In
dies, the -first voyage of the kind ever
made. Thomas Paine was the first to
propose steam navigation in America,
in 1778, according to Haydn. Regular
navigation of the ocean between Eu
rope and America was commenced in
June, 1838, when the steamship Great
Western crossed the Atlantic in IS
days. In the meantime, however, there
had been several occasional passages,
the steamboat Royal William crossing
the ocean from Quebec in 1831. The
Cunard line's first steamer, the Brit
tania, a side-wheeler, began servibe
to Halifax and Boston in 1840.
CITY WILL OFFER
BONDS TO PUBLIC
New Haven, June 20 The board of
finance yesterday afternoon voted to
offer the $200,000 in street pavement
bonds to the people of the -city of
New Haven by a popular subscription.
The bonds will be in denomination of
not less than $500 and will bear four
per cent interest
After some discussion Mayor Rice
said that It wouldn't do any harm
to offer some of these bonds, say $100,
000, to the- public even though the bond
market was in a bad condition at pres
ent He said he believed that the peo
ple of the city would take the bonds
at par. The other commissioners
agreed with him that the plan was
worth trying and the controller was
ordered to offer the whole 6200,000 in
bonds. , '
BRIDAL GIFTS.
"What to give," is the question that
is agitating you. We have the answer.
Our years of experience in supplying
wedding gifts that please will help us
to guide you. Such a variety of pretty
and useful articles, at all prices, to
suit all tastes, is carried at this store
that a satisfactory selection is an easy
matter. Everything that is desirable
in silverware, cut glass, clocks, cut
lery, etc, is here for your inspection.
Below are Just a few suggestions: Tea
sets, carving sets, bread trays, fern
dishes, sandwich plates, water sets,
salad forks, trays, vases, knives, forks,
spoons. M. J. Buechler, the reliable
jeweler, 48 Fairfield avenue, near Mid
dle street.
EDUCATION NOTES
With its newly established bureau
of mines, the University of Arizona
hopes to aid materially in the devel
opment of mining and other Industries
of the State. .
Using the library as a social center,
with study clubs and other activities,
including a gymnasium, is the method
taken toy Homestead, Pa,, to demon
strate that a library need not be
merely a ."mausoleum of books."
The distinction of having the best
paid one-room country school teacher
in the United States Is claimed by
Logan County, 111., which pays Its
teacher $110 per month for a term of
nine ; months. .
Through Its extension division the
University of Kansas will give courses
of lectures on moral education" in a
number of the largest cities of the
State during the fall of 1913. j
School lunches are served free or at
nominal cost to elementary school chil
dren in 41 American cities, In 200 Eng
lish, 150 German, and 1,200 French
communities, acording to C. If. . Lang
worthy, chief of nutrition investiga
tions, at Washington.
Thanks to the wide-awake leader
ship of men and women, especially
women, interested in the schools, a
number of Southern communities are
making a winning fight against illiter
acy. Wilkes County, N. C, for in
stance, reports together with other
notable .indications of school better
ment, -the fact that illiteracy decreased
from 13 per cent. In 1900 to 2 per cent
In 1912.
In the belief that rich ballad ma
terial still lies hidden in Virginia and
other sections of the South, Prof. C.
Alphonso Smith, of the University of
Virginia, is hunting down . all possible
versions of old" English ballads. The
Government has appointed Professor
Smith a collaborator of the Bureau of
Education in order to give national aid
to the work.
"For first-year, pupils only, la the
motto of the Parker High school at
Dayton, O. The object of this school Is
to carry boys and, girls over the diffi
cult "freshman" period. Supt. Painter
has recently put Into the hands of ev
ery 8th-grade pupil in Dayton a book
let describing the purpose and value
of a high school education with spe
cial reference to the advantages of
the Parker First-Year High School.
Canada is appropriating money lib
erally for school purposes, according
to Miss Anna Tolman Smith, of the
United States Bureau of Education.
"The older provinces, like the long
settled States of the fUnion," says (Miss
Smith, "are readjusting their systems
of public education to the new condi
tions growing out of modern lnade-
T..fDm() that shall Include the
best of the old and new in education."
The spirit of the new country life
was fittingly celebrated in the pageant
just held at Merlden, N. H., In con
nection with the hundredth annivers
ary of Kimball Union Academy. Be
sides portraying the history of the
town and school, the pageant symbol
ized particularly the school's purpose
in the new country-life movement:
"To prepare the young people of the
surrounding agricultural regions for
the life they are to lead, and to train
them to make life on the farm a high
source of joy, culture, and inspiration
for fine citizenship."
Another cut in the price of dry goods
tomorrow-at Radford B. Smith's sale.
Boys' and girls' India rubber suits,
dry goods of many kinds, hammock
hosiery, gloves, underwear, blankets,
pillows, as well as many small articles
In hardware and notions can be had
i c.tiJ"'i3E- Tpit tiila saJ
13
for forty-seven years we have been
conducting business at the same old
location, corner of Main and John
Streets. ridgeport. Conn., and ool
Private Bank haa been established
there continuously. We have received
and paid oat on demand without no
tice millions of dollars of money de
Posited with ns and we continue ta
receive money subject to deposltor'f
check at Blent , on which we "M
three per cent per annum, credited
to each account monthly. We solid
the accounts of Individuals. bnrfnej
men, lrnw and corporations, and a
who want a bank account where they
can deposit money, checks or drafts,
and leave it for one day, one week, one
month or one year, and draw Interen
on It for any time It Is left with m.
We rlve to the business our careful
personal attention as the oldest flras
of private bankers In this state.
T. L. WATSON & CO.
PEOPLES SAYIHOS BAI.X
824-926 MAIN STREET
RridgegKjiFtt oimL
June 19ft, 1913,
The Trustees of tbto Bank have this
day' declared a Sienri-annnal Dividend,
for the six months ending June 30 th
1918, at the rate of POUR (4) per
cent, per annum on all accounts of
JVrar Thousand Dollars and nnder, and
at the rate, of THREE (8) per cent
per annum on the excels above Pom
Thousand Dollars, payablo on imd at .
after July 1st
WILLIS H. LYON, Treasurer,
Deposits made oxtor he
fore July 5th will 'draw: in
terest from July 1st,
James Staples, fi Co.
Bankers and Broker
18 a State
BrldjreporVOtKin,
" rrrvm ensttrancts '
HtlKlf l"ir BONDS TtELAEi - ESTATE
Boticht and fold m CBmrnhsloa
Loan Made on Apptow
City Real EMata
Mive depoalta subject to check and al
low Interest om balancea of 8&ua and
over. We will me mm Trustees and
Administrators of Katatem,
P. L. HOLZKR V. T. BTAPLE3
IT'S TIME NOW TO AIL-
RANGE FOB THAT
TBIP TO EUROPE
Ton would be sir prised If yon onlj
knew the number of Bridgeport peo
ple who have purchased their tickets
to Europe tbronght ns for the coming
season. They recognize the fact that
they canont see, learn, or enjoy them,
selves aa much for the same money
expended and the time employed, aa
In Europe.
WK ARRANGE AIXi DETAILS
S. toewltti x-o.
I ' AGENTS
Tel. 99 na-BAinzsr,
bout pm nair
; . BEXOUiOTTIt VT-:
L AITD;L"OSJ s
We Have CtottagepiS TwoH
Family Houses locate2f-. ia
the best sections fcf thSiUast
Side, North EnSfSxicst!
End of Bridgeport
Part CaslvBalansJ 1
-1 on Mortgage . 1 i '
Lists f irrnishVd andffuH par-"
ticxilais on appUoatiortq
Burr tk
923 MAIN STREET!
BBIDGEPORT, CO .Nit .
L ' A ' S
sao UPWARDS
Yon can arrange to get a loan In
less than (five minutes and we do not
bother your employer or neighbors by
unnecessary Investigations. House
keepers or anyone earning a regulaj
salary accommodated confidentially.
Same Inducements to new customers
The patronage of ladies solicited.
' M1ERICM
GUARANTY CO.
B9 GOLDEN HILL ST-
Open Saturday and Monday Evening!
until 8:30
Over Caesar Misch.
1M 'ir&M
Om Cent a Wort