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NREW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 1916, RLINGTON WATER PPLY PROSPECTS ntinued T hen# I or the sVt 000 safe necessity from voir is ke b tion 620,0 d supply the city around ity , of © proposed system .8 sq fning ame or city i gallons per reservoir Brook 1,090,000 e and 1e water rom Seventh Page) cither into Shuttl the distribution Meadow reser- whole vield of th From this ssume that there will for providing extra the Whigville Wolcott the city until the popu- 2. 000 the Bur- the ed This popu- to around 7 With constructed on the capacity of be day system would 00 incre allons per until the 96,000 Watershed Burlington Brook. Proposed on extension of the col- total miles of drainage area. run-off is Wa and the cent., if to its full in dry will give a area that the the average Sudbury allons 10 is developed years for as on kage per shed n wet use It would have an average vield ppro day the om the he me the $vilie havs f diverting this Brook. od is the from dam he ana should he extension of Burlington, Burlington Whigvill line would 6,000 supply gallons the city ahout 1 mately 12, would population was ms evident Board that immediately water systen which means divert- 3rook into the Complete sur- two meth- The first of a pipe ed location of the arlington Brook Reservoir This be construct- above mbers of this started the be Reservoir. been made for construction the propos on the [ have to round the mountain east of the osed ey T ld be with 000 gallons per hry di -onstructed >k in o the future age: reservoir is location storage of the of th he total length approximately 28,000 lineal a capacity of at least 18,- 24 hours. A tem- dam would have to on -the Burlington to obtain the water until such a time in the main dam and constructed res- pipe rting order brook when he pipe line would be constructed g the highways and across about pty pieces of private property. he esti of this ater he other method, and or able ton ol as ely 4 aunt pugh roclk b o1 plders Brook POTAT sh to of of age Ftal he ok anc igville ngs alons have H. B. Gregory, nel been wi Brook oir is the veif the 750 about the ed .tunnel ich passes present mated cost of the const pipe line, not including damages, is $400,000 the most of diverting the Bur- into the Whigville Res- constructic of a watersheds. This would be approxi- linecal feet long, of this 4,450 feet would be and the rest of the dis- feet through gravel and The water from DBurling- would be taken from a intake dam, into an open north portal of the pro- through this tunnnel substantially under the to the south and from there of Whigville 1 along this brook to the STV oir. The necessary the line of the proposed been made and Profes- of Yale Universi regard to two laid out Burlington, the tunnel branch res consulted in ure:and formation of the rock to %Y encglintered in 1. h } tunne lows: ‘Tn plog: Ged tunnel! connecting ds-in t mit pt 2 i, The hnel put. av 300 ted ) From st prevailir of anite.) ( K s hounts arse 2r- per cent bhs 32 tutes ck bet the sot ike grec E a the d nne! lanes ctures The Toc £ of m to stand withot pt wher 11 proba 2, Water = schist ater Wh ,waward exD noun om the rge s at its ccted ckets of i1l fendar 3. Further ir ure of ater ore exa e of m ould e han 100 ¢ rock foe type o atcordance have made an the bed will be in about of the therefore arc south to be The occurrencee the content obt the construction of report on this is as pert Reports. with vour request, examination of the line of tne pro- two water- Burlington, preliminary re he town of and fellowing the rock located rock except the north end to and sand (glacial to station 32 the chist with small nd of pegmatite neiss s about feot at be in gravel tion 3 gneis forr between the rock sta- and pe of nd 44 matite con- the brook The 50 90 per cent. of station 44 1 of the linc vari from N 20 degree magnetic £ N W.: the axi the th to N mee dominant fracture obliquely. Cros numerous k in ici general to be ed pegmatite carry e decompos bly nat necd in the rock oneiss, and ) decreases v Below 100 feet parts of bl e dr for « of by are not to of umount little the tunnel Water in sy drainage nnel and pumping be ex- is to and 1 too end handlea out- north end large tapped ely water which when workmen is un ition. The (ttitude, and determined In drill 1ger na- its rock, it could he drilling the spaced at 4d feet and a three in My lang th ty by order to h value, holes knowle tunn appibmented by the results of drillin ¢t Phelps am, and e lory oo 18r8C prmation it is found desir ock 25 a to advise ag: drilling Brook the Nepat the Terryville tunnel, leads inst further "he alto, for the small amount of in- by this method ble to classify the basis for awarding contracts da explor: cost s abtainable or the excavation of the tunnel, the ECeSSATY ., Sufficient degree of obtained accuracy with data may be [ pout two days detailed geologic field pt udy. Mr. Hiram A. Another Expert. Miller, a consulting tunnel | for ! { | | | engineer of Boston, who has done more or less consulting work for the Board of Water commissioners in past years, was rctained to pass upon | this proposed extension in Burlington. After going over the work in detail, his conclusions and recommendations are follows 1. That the city, including is dangerously close ta the capacity of the existing collection system in a dry vear, and that the collection system should be increased without delay. 2. That if the present watershed wits developed to its fullest capacity, it would not yield a sufficient quant ty of water to supply the needs of the city for more than 10 yvears and water consumption of the gallons than water obtained by de- veloping an additional watershed. 5 That by diverting the water of Burlington Brook without constructing a storage reservoir there should bo suflicicnt water for the city for some six years without any additional dis- bution pipes between Wolcott and Whigville reservoirs and the Shuttle Meadow reservoir. . That with these pipes of syffi- cient capacity to equalize the storage. it will be 10 vears before it will be necessa to construct a storage dam Burlingtan Brook. 5. That with the storage reservoir constructed and connecting pipes of on sufiicient size to equalize the storage | the capacity suflicient to supply of water for now. G. That if the entire watershed existing should be developed to capacity the water supply ufficient to last the city 0 vears from now. 7. That the tunnel will he more cconomical for diverting the water from Burlington Brook than the pipe line, His lows: of the system will be provide the city with a 18 years from then ts fullest would for about be recommendatjon as That the city proceed at once to the construction of the proposed tunnel and subsidiary structures for the purpose of diverting the water of about 4 square miles of Burlington Brook into Whigville Brook above Whigville reservoir The section proposed to be for the tunnel is 6 feet high and 5 teet 4 inches wide. This is about as small a heading as can he worked the best advantage. It is not proposed to line the tunnel in rock unless the conditions found during the construction are such that it will be necessary to line it. It will be necessary to construct a temporary diverting dam on the Burlington Brook as shown on the map. From this point to the north portal of the tunnel the water will be carried in an open trench. The tunnel and gate at the north portal have beeu laid out with a view to the construc- tion, some time in the future, of a storage reservoir on Burlington Brook with a capacity of about 1 000 gallons, The ostimated cost for struction of the tunnel as laid out. including the approaches each side and the temporary diverting dam, is $325,000. This does not include land or water damages which will have to paid by the city when the water from Burlington Brook is diverted. In connection with the proposed extension of the water system in 3urlington, it is proposed to construct a reinforced concrete water tower on private property adjacent to the west leading into Shuttle Meadow reservoir. This tank will be con- nected with the pipe line from Whig- ville and so constructed that the top of the water in the tank will be about 2 feet lower than the overflow pipe at the High Service reservoir. This will keep the High Service reservoir very rly full at all times and also prevent it from overflowing. The of water from 'Whig- from this tank and run into the west canal and Shuttle Meadow reservoir. This will also provide a means of getting the water from Burlington Drook provided the tunnel is constructed into - Shuttle Meadow reservoir during periods of dry weather, when the Shuttic Meadow reservoir is low. Recommendations. Doard of Water Commission- the following recommen- was used to house the con- ne. surplus amount ville will overflow The submit ystem. appur- instead the water supply 1. That the tunnel and its tenances shall be constructed of a pipe line. 2, That a reinforced concrete wa- tower be constructed adjacent to canal, That steps be immediately taken for a bond issue of sufficient amount to cover the cost of the above k, including land and water dam- ension of ter the west be properly aa- ana as this work proposals received soon thereafter hat vertised and work started possible. Respectfully submitted BOARD OF WATER as BERG, Chairman, KEHOE, HUMPHREY. FAGAN W. B. RO THOMAS H. ERNEST N. THOMAS W GFORGE S, PALMER HEADS CONFERENCE (Continued from TFir: t Page) babies mean a money ast $3.000,000 without taking account the expense at expense during sickness. ment scheme to 100,000 babies calls on Connecticut to save 1,056 babies during the vear Prof. Fhe State Conference of and Corrections by unanimous vote went on record as opposing any legis- Jation, except that made necessary by extreme conditions, which would relax loss of at into 000 Farnum's Resolution. the safeguards to the children and wo- \ men employed in factories. It was Professor Henry Farnum of Yale Uni- versity who aptly called the attention of the conference to this possibility and it was Professor Farnum who of- water unaccounted for, Would cost more per 1,300,000 ! fol- | | fered the following met with favor “Whereas, be and | | upon | National Defen fense; and “Whereas, the experience of England years has shown conclusively that any relaxation safeguard sults consider: enacted | workers not an increased productions “Resolved, State Conference of Corrections would pension of our laws affecting the em- ployment of women and children e: cepting necessity in indi limited time, tion of the State of the governor our present standards.’ Afternoon Conference Talks. { and Luncheon special on at he his said In tion; old-time patients inals scientitic rible and pathetic conditions himseif to knew be one of slate or community to provide proper and adequate sane and wo conditions quent consequences of mental cers however early compelled atten- namely, and dependency, first the only organ- ized provision made for persons suf- fering from these disorders had erence to was the duty the poormaster to munity persons and pendent the organized community rish, or all was ir ber was and e tus out stin of To birth and the | The govern- | Charities | ment vide hcuse tion, leng derly shelter, vlation hoiwever, and departments in which the latter could separate lished at the almshouses. row barred cells, the heavy doors with peep holes, and the restraint appara- marked this be seen given which are still to houses from which the insane removed. and the lockup were still utilized, but an effort was services since truly said that in the organized | methods by which insane persons are dealt with amples can be found of every forin neglect and abuse to ineane have the past surveys made mittee for Mental Hygiene have fur- nished considerable evidence of this. any ! would suggest the ticle entitled “The Insane In a County Poor Farm’ mon, which appeared giene in January, account of sons by this country. “Notwithstanding of a former period, advances have been made in the cave of the insane. the cases nized philanthropists carly perfod of the nation’s develop- engaged them. e by heen for anne veloped separate management the applied ment grade institutions | standards could | the earliest institutions for the treat- | mental country were of this { Iy the legislatures in onc state :\Hcrj‘ of the general assembly of 1917 wisely provided that if the gov- | ernor found oc pend the labor laws of this state dur- | tention ing the period of the war, this should I he done the request and asks the co-opera- | was served the Center church parish house and at tables there charity orgpnization probation work. | of the conference took place this after- | noon at divection of Miss Pennimann. bert W. Parsons, deputy commiss of the Massachusetts Commission | Probation, the final paper { Charles W. Domestic | Judge Hoffman told intimately of the | work of his court and its many-sided | duties, speaking on the topic of of Domestic Relations.” Care of Insane as It Was and Now Is his address to the conference on “Community Treatment William tendent of the White Plains, N. method the present-day the Y. spoke on Hoffman of the Relations of Mental Russell, mentally paper on this subject Dr. these two conditions. It to felt it For the disorderly insane per- son the lock-up s pose as it did for the disorderly sanc person, and for the dependent insanc feeble-minded orderly the almshouse furnished food, attention as it other dependents. made, into the causes and conditions w occasioned rendency or to cial needs of individual cascs. ““As the communities and advanced the prohlems, connection method of disposing of persons who were mentally disordered. cemplex and wkich behavior difficult, sravity the inadequacy of the exposed, comment. it became distinction sane between to temporary this period in the care of the in: has not yet been completely eme: from. ITn many communities through- the country, the only organized agencies for deal- ing with those which have to do with behavior and gardless of the cause. Teen mental been two hundred by Dr. the provision which is ¢ made now for the care of insane per- prosperous community have some, institutions resolution which | avother {ook up the question of tlm' { needs of the insane, and now in every | state may be found state hospitals, | medical institutions in which prov sion is made for t 1itment and which will promote cure these institutions were looked ; mercly as asylums where the could find refuge from the | and indifference which had | asion to modify or su | first for definite periods and | upon of the Council of | insane when essential to de- | igsnorance A. KATTEN Hartford One Price Clothing Co. & SON 114-116 Asylum Street. previously n.ent. medical characterized their treat- With the general advance of and France during the past three nursing knowledge and of the laws the health diminished ment of of | pessible and { curative | are the to elaboratc agen usually of separated anfd become into truly institutions | and still public, it has them These large there in a size widely | that the Connecticut are many daily of Charities deplore and | states in which they do not f any s rrovision for all the cases which auire hospital treatment. In several of the however, the number o1 whicl i steadily increasing. 1e | whole burden of providing institu- tienal treatment for the in- | sne has been assumed by the state government. Wherever this has oc- curred, the result has been a better i level of intelligence and humanity in noon at | €aling with the cases under insti- trtion care. State care is ! regarded. therefore, as a goal to | reached in the progress towards cfficient public system for ing with mental disorders. It the | complishes much more than For. | Mere transfer to = the state {oner | (N0 rosponsibility of providin on | Lutional care. Tt raises the prev “Probation~ and | °f Mental disorders with their cau siven by Judge | Prevention. and manugement into the Court .of | dimensions of a state problem of the e, first class. And, while, after state care has been adopted, the first task to be accomplished is to bring all cases which require institutional treatment into stote hospitals, it ! soon found that this no means ac complishes all that is required for dealing adequately with the needs. Tnless the vital issues occasioned mental disorders in the homes, the schools, the industries. and in social nish states, required by urgent idual cases for a very Council of Defense in maintaining this properly discussions D work and The closing lectures | were W. C. A, under Jence was at *Court by by Responsibility in the Government ihu Among ads Jead JERSEY hemselves For Lady and Miss knows. the the presented today papers, that stor; hove ditior trade such exist on of woolens, stop] R R P A MR P R T s & Son fac ind courage n immensc H. 0. P. CLOTHES which Suits fabric Coats, Jersey Dresses as a Jersey and Skirts can be found in the proper colors, styles and sizes at the proper price —BUY TIODAY—LIBERTY BONDS Disorders. Dr. medical superin- Bloominedale hospitl Y. compared the treating such class as crim- methods o ited some ter- of which and declared it to cardinal duti of relations are intelligently grasped and dealt with hy means of the state sys- tem, state institutions are liable to looked upon as a resource Which is unly to be appealed to when completc separation of the patient from his { usual environment has become im- perative. They will still be regarded | asylums. In such their de velopment is likely to ye in the di vection of great nmom‘ centers, and economic and so-called business con- siderations in their management are likely to prevail over those dictated by science and humanity. This has { happened in more than one state in which state care has been adopted under conditions of great promise, A state care system must, to be effec- | tive, not only be adopted, hut it must be planned and developed with ref- erence to the known needs of the suf- ferers from mental disorder. A well defined policy 1s essential and care- of the constable and | fully prepared plans. The best plan protect the com- js probably to divide the state into acts of dizorderly | districts containing not more than extend to the de- | 500,000 inhabitants each, and to pro- aid which the vide a state hospital for each district necessary to fur- This hospital should be so conducted to the needs of the district dealing with mental disorders to fullest extent possible. With this view, the necessity of educating public to a proper understanding the purpose and advantages of an institution should be consid- ered. Unless steps are taken to this L end, tI proc of subtituting, for | the prevailing views and methods the | newer conceptions and resources, wil require a generation. This necessity | is all too frequently lost sight of and | progress is thereby greatly retarded. The state hospital is to be regarded as a social welfare agency and a cen- ter of information and useful service which can be confidently appealed to in ling with the problem of men- tal rders in the district which it serves. In states where a state tem of cace of.the insane has been most fully developed, the lines of pro- gress have been towards the applica- Developments have | bring moro of dise from that in the hospita other mea tment & greatly different the counties nearest Unless, therefore, for obtaining available for the latter, many for whom such treatment must fail receive it. The to which a hospital be utilized, even by the community in which it is located, is also limited by the conditions under which patients may he admitted. Certain legal definitions and formalities prevail in determining the cases to be admitted to a Statc The patients must be the meaning of the law. This indicates that cases admission must be differentiated and selected from a larger group of cases of mental disorder which exists in the community. The best system of state care which has yet been established does not undertake to provide hos- pital treatment for all types and grades of mental disease. The acute deliriums of fevers and intoxications, and the large groups of cases which are designated by the terms neuras- thenia, hysteria and psychasthenia, and several other forms of mental disorder, a with the exception of a few of the cases in which the symp- toms are unusually not I dinarily included in the class of cases for which hospital treatment is pro- vided by the state. There must nec- essarily also, In all of mental diorder. be a period in which ob servations must be made, diagnos determined, and arranzements made for admission to a state hospital when this is found to necessary. This be a very critical period in the of the illness, and as first ala in an injury case may de- termine the final outcome, so the early treatment furnished a case of mental disorder may be of the great- est importance in determining the { further course and outcome. The first treatment of case of mental disorder of any other form of dis case, must ordinarily given wher- ever the patient may happen to be |} when the need becomes manifest. Tn many instances the condition is only recognized when the need treat- ment has become imperative It seems quite unlikely that any state best he inclusive or claborate to provide for the needs of all grades and forms of mental case which require hospital treatment Needs will still remain which will auire that some organized be made by division he some ns of same hospital tre cases ile re to extent as case, stato can treatment for its in- unbalanced. 1n Russell hospital. which fre- disor- are insane in disorders of behavior ref- the as in the in the of such serve rved the same pur- severe, or- who were not dis- did to attempt inquire ich de- spe- Little cases days, to s those disorders provide for or the grew in in knowlc which arosc this simple pop< may course with applied grew more the num- cases in method excited more interest To meet this situa- necessary to make a the disorderly disorderly insane, and de: and the dis of sVs- tion of this view bo been made for the purpose of ing the district hospital into intimate refition with the needs the various communities in the trict. In some states nurses from the | state hospital and sometimes a physi- | cian are sent to the communities to bring the patient to the hospitals. Out patient departments are conducted in various of district where | persons who wish advice concerning | mental disorders may apply. Social | service workers are employed to vie- | it, at their homes, paticnts who have been discharged from the hospital or who may have applied at an out pa- tient department. These contacts with the communities have an educa- | tional value and furnish means by which the hospital may contribute to | its operation 2 the management of the problem of | viqual cases. mental disorders as they occur in the | of kind i Neve home, in the school and in the com- e i e talnin e the mercial, industrial and social life of provision: employed in the people. Lnstructive literature re- | the treatment S e lating to the naure, causesand treat- | rrom . mental disorder previous to ment of mental disorders, and to the | ¢neir admission to the state hospital utilization of the resources of the hos- | This study e i pital, is widely distributed. The ph (UG L CTl G S ey i S sicians of the hospital aim to inform el the medlcal practitioners of the dis- | |\ ctica of sonding . trict and the public, Dby means of | ng patients from the communities to scicntific papers and addresses, COm- |y ol - cerning the conditions met with in S H | their patients and the purposes and e e plans of the hospital. By these meth- o - ods, a state hospital becomes an ag- el S gressive agency for dealing with men- | 10 Malke reports concarming : N dition and environment in which they | tal disorders throughout its district. found each pationt. The state care Hospitals ShiouldiBe/ Near. system of New York is consldered ta be as good any in the country it not the best. The law under which it wag established defined the type, of cases which could bo admitted ta the state hospitals and the conditions on. Tt was left to the however., and to ate physicians to for observation determination” of of hospital care, and for treatment. The study which made revealed that throughout the state, little advance had been made in the local provision | and methods since the period wihen the behavior disordér and dependency ol an person were the only neces- | sues that received or attention sary to the higzhest usefulness of a| The law authoritics and the po- hospital. The proportion of in | lice were still 1y offi who the more distant or less accessible | were required to see that an counties of a district is not likely ro‘,,,k‘.‘,“ P! d attention. Tt care were estab- The nar- development many alms- were The constable at dis- parts the re- made to restrict their each of the needs. Now ane | ged state and each community. Some Terrible Examples. “The best test of any viding for the suffering from probably in most, | treatment of disease is persons to examine number of indi- ears ago a study disorders are =till disor- dependency, re- In fact it has this was for the methods and in this country ex- - which the subjected during years. The the National Com- coverc made e nad nurses which has been may be sceptical I reading of an Yorlk e adopted nurses were operation in State years a3o. ar- Care as co Thomas W. Sal- in Mental Tly- Ths is a true to the 1917. “The usefulness of a state hospital = to the various communities of the dis trict which it serves is, to a consider- ble extent, dependent upon its prox- imity and accessability. When a dis trict contains several countries, as is usually the case, the largest number of admissions in proportion to pop- ulation is usuaily from the county in which the hospital is located, and the proportion diminishes with distance inaccessibility. Tt ds thus possi- gradually [ ble to obtain statisties: which will departments or | show that proximity to a hospital for under 1edical | mental disorders increases fthe pre- Private funds were | valence of insanity. What is establishment of high | really ~shown is that case of where the best : access, and possibly correct informa- prevail, and some of | tion, are conditions in these residuals however, great | of their admi local authorities, relatives and pri provide the means diagnosis and The medical needs of always been recog and physicians and have from a very need temporary efforts to of the and in any pro- ailms- was eparate insane s 4 which are inized poor the ¢ sials law this Kventual- disorders in type cases by son r is Indicated ! for | provision | | basement cell, syvstem of pro- | | nude was found that in only in the state outside of greater New York was any organized provision made for tempor hospital care and skilled observation of nursing. In greater New York provision for the temporary hospital treatment of men- tal cases wa furnished at Bellevue and at the King's County Hospitals, More than half of the patients re- ceived at these hospitals were brought in by the polic In the portion of “he state outside the metropolita district, seventy-five per cent. of the patents admitted to the state hospi- tals in the first year covered by the study were brought directly their homes, and it was found that, of these, fifteen per cent., or 410 per- sons during the first year covered h the study, had suffered from gross neglect or unintelligent harsh treat- ment Some of these instances were ag follows: (1) A woman was brought from her home where she had been in a disturbead state. She had been held in bed by a network of ropes, her ankles bound together, her strapped and mittens on her one country mission and an rupture of the stomach was found at home fastened in a chair about her and nailed to the wall She confined in the room with her hushband who was dying of pneumonia The chair in which she sat was nailed to the floor. The doors of the room were nailed up at night. She dressed in an undervest and men's trousers, and had been bound hand and foot in bed for a few days before she transferred to the hospital. Many other instances could be cited More than seventeen per cent. of the patients, or 466 persons, reccived dur ing the same period, at’the hospitals from this portion state, were found in jails, and police stations Eighty-seven these patients were women. The sons for confining the patients in these places were not always apparent from the reports in some instances they were said to have been violent or otherwise dangerous, but othe ap- peared to have merely been wanderers, to have shown eccentric behavior expressed delusions In public Many of these patients were found in unsanitary, uncomfortable, some- times filthy and vermin infested celis. not infrequently in company with per- sons accused of crime In one in- stance the patient was found in the same room with a person accused of autopsy was tied where she by a sheet was of the Tockups, of rea- or or murder and developed a delusion that | rccused of the crime In another a woman was found in a without windows, with no toilet facilities, and separated only by a slat door from the quarters of a drunken man. The patients some- times reccived what care was gi from prisoners, or they were found in a common room with drunkards and tramps. In a jail in one of the larger cities of the state, a woman was found by the nurse in a cell which was so small that she could scarcely sit up in it. Therc were na toilet facilities accessible to her and she was entirely naked and extremely filthy and dirty. In a police station two male patlents found con- fined in a Wbox-like structure with board sides and an iron grated top. hinged and fastened with two locks When the top was closed. the patient could not rise from the recumbent position, and as he lay there, the dis- tance between his chest and the bars of the top was ouly six inches. An- ather patient was found in a cell which was not heated though the weathe was cold. He was insufficiently clad and was so ill that he died two day: after admission to the hospital In a large number of instances, the re- port states, women were confined in station houses and lockups without attendance by persons of their own sex. One insane waman was entirely in a cell and there was no onc to wait on her except a man who handea her food in. she herself was were “To appreciate the significance of these methods of dealing with persens -uffering from mental disorders, it is necessary to keep clearly in mind that they were found to prevail throughout one of the most progres- ive of the states in the care of the sane, in which an excellent system state care had been in aperation for nearly twenty years. This system was, however, devoted practically al- together to furnishing institutiona of from | knees.! hands. | The patient died a few hours after ad- | disclosed a | (2) A woman | was i | | care to r to it by Nurses from the sent to bring the patients in, but the active interest of the state s ended, and those who werg in its developthent” paid little c attention ta what was the « outside the | inferior methods jstill the communities were the persistence of which regarded who were the state hospitals ¢ persons deliver communitie ther intere happent ses ospitals employed the views outcome of and methoc the dependenc (Continued On Tentl PR. CLINTON J. HYDE THE PRICE YOU PAY treatment; gged out ht to take nning dow am all f worry f “I know I ou 1 have been v vear or two. I have no ambition ing till night, don't ¢ am dead or alive, have lost iei cannot do the 1 used do some years 1If I were strong as 1 good nioney. I know 1 with a good specialist, but T affor to pay the treatment.’ You paying for it friend dearly get it Liet Your working ire drawing A good manager never s than his interest Should he begin capital his interest ald, of decrease. And what are you doinz You allow vour health to run mere and more; therefore, not work and earn what Do you see the point? You capital allowing it last om morr whether same work was, could earn ought to treat for are NOW and hy your me tell you health is apacity. is the to dre course, down vou can- to. aw- vou used —which is to vour Rrowing make good half of ¥ ing on your your health—Dy and the capacity) 1 You used now vou used to To make two Sy was play to 1 had your heart 1 ir v These happy -gone You now barel ke a find it almost And shudder at what will happen breakdown comes Figure out what vou have will be amazed what you are gong mation The dollar don't, is an a You spend it for it. Worry, want and deprivation for your f The dollar talke pocket and spend for an experienced specialist expense. It is an investment return you get increased ability, higher wages, health and hap- piness at home Which will you choose Can you hesitate? Dr.ClintonJ. Hyde . Chronicg interest steadily to about smalier mor earn get hat 3 four dollars all living and strength of beyond your the thought fina you the in doliars cents lost and and ount i beyond already the am to 1 is MIGHT ¢ tual expe And what d anxiety vou treatme And working Specialist in Nervous and Diseases. ASYLUM ST.. COR. FORD S7j HARTFORD. CONN, 12, 1.30 to 4; 7 to 8. Sund and Holidays 10 to 1. 373 10 to