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L THE CASE OF INCURABLES. THE BULLETIN'S SHORT STORY. the. tion of how to deal with the fncurable sick has been prom- I:filtlzc ffiafl’mdhj ealth I.n(‘ltmflfna | } S o RELIEF FROM CARE the alleviation of suffering lead to . |-different conclusions as to best means | of meeting the demands in the cases. For years the Browns had planned a Mény have held that it was more hu- [ Buropean trip, but every year some- ' to_painlessly end the suffering, :fi:‘lg:gpefittflmmfi%hd' - 3 e n were ould be done in the case of an . ,;g thon Mrs, Brown invited guests for {a. short: time, who stayed several Bl ot The e abcbus accoun! “{mean t. ‘Law and gen- |1 -going abroad that year. Thus 'fmtn,tmdp w“'“‘umwmktlvo:'ndmu n_ab-. ] ‘with dear ones is hard| '1 ec] & = enongh, .even in cases of suffering, to | S SETI AN that Euope Tould ace - gotion: of that lind. friends were notified and everything subject has recently been|was done to make it impossibie for ttention by the appeal -of | their trip to be prevented. i sk tha s | WA GRieted By b e 1o secure, % who asks that some [ Was y o 1 i whereby her suf- | particularly Mrlaible c:hn(!;ct at ;xa' ended and (hat a daw) 050 TH RERRL & 100 (2 U Cthe of it will_be possible | ,ntiring effort—effort that could not to such incurables as|he put forth in Europe. an- instance, the most| Brown, however, had made his vow is to give all the com-|and he nfilhue&' mflet"hin hulllne“ 1{:- ¥ ttrfere wi family’s plans. e R R K R R couldn't. relatives O and, besides, he could send them wi é‘g fifgicy & g:w?. £ E ] §EEe Eg § g Grave danger would result from blawv‘fhmhu rztlnlxlr.hd ;uz. o B such legjslatio; t ht en he ed home, Ho Y bring r?l:e! t:' finy‘vhl.;chuulm:"m began to realize how lonesome it was | these days of wonderful results and ;l:m ]I: egetoo%o ):z_;dnerm nm:} surprising recoveries, who is to decide em’h“ood.n So he momamt'oua. Totel. the question—the patient, a doctor, | ok % realtives or friends? The danger is| Then the thought came to him to too great that many lives could be|rent his house for the months that it gfiiflud under the plea of incurabili- " THE GRENFELL MISSION. = | Great interest is attached to the|pe only too glad of the oppertunity to 0 in a well furnished house in a onaple suburb, with all the of “the Browns' home g comforts. one, no doubt, was searching ea-' ly for such an opportunity. ' So n hastened to advertise the treat in store for pnm& on;“ % Foe The number replies he recelv v ighly gratifying to him. After c out the letter written on the \appearing stationery he ciinched | over the telephome. ~ Of ats refused b g e g i the “how” of it was disclosed, £ s The Philadelphia Inquirer is the au- thority for the statement that the of the word Armageddon is ¥ 0ld fell in the | With Alice wanting to take tl otherwise interested stump for Pa, and with s bull moose at is m‘-‘ Jih Fellec. that the candidate in opposition in his district, o8 in the d will ' | partm ;fi""‘t" "m‘m“ Inter-{ Congressman Longworth s fguring il s AL small in the family. y Untll more serviceable roads can be gotten for the mouey, Ohio bdlsvu' it wise to proceed cautiously in bonding A By, thor- | the state- The $60,000000 bonds were 4488 - De E ; .“Thu ol Ople | therefore not authorized. e territory, but ont- Another, and no less a person than and thig is what the Hart- | pr. iley, has stood up to say that ‘Colonel Roosevelt violates the pure truth law when he says he instigated the pure food and drug mct. ¢ Roosevelt tells of the democrats preliminary delegates were | qodging the question concerning the ;0 ltariff, but he doesn't think the people “Next ‘motaing The Courant printed | are wise to hhg:o when he uses Penrose e Msts of delegates chosen in 152 as a red herring to cover up his part Te- fout of the 163 towns that acted. No|in the Standard Oil deal. other paper in the state even attempt- Fiekyile i SOy ed !l}‘a work, though the Norwich Bul- | . Roosevelt opposed any limitation in o4 . covered fts own vicinity, The | contributions to his cause because the | matter was too personal and. remote|{here are only & few Who will give. i £d | He'll expect the whole southern negro vote just because he kept them out of from | pig party. o The people used to associate Mr. Roosevelt with Lincoln and Washing- ton in their admiration of him; but now that he is speaking of “Me, Lin- coln, and Washington,” they have their érror revealed to them. B e LSS 5 2 RS Perkins seems to chuckle every time 8 y work he thinks of the taffy the . Colonel 0 addition to his W L EbIToRIAL: NOTES. - throws to him. But he should remem- issue explanations el é ber that President Taft, Root, Pen- c ns which are being| A striw vote is always a ‘yellow" |rose, Brandeis, all received like treat- e h'!“? its_pame. jment as long as they were servants, . Vermont is Roosevelt's Armageddon. || He was third from both ends of the battles . . g azgef aéé : e A i choden. The result of wholesale pardoning of criminals has its lessons. A life termer. released by Governor Foss of Massachusetts after eighteen years in prison is back in the toils of the law for allegqd burglary, his old game. _Taft,-Root and Brandeis are all gullty ‘of' infamy because they are against “Me!” ‘“Thgse who prefer to be n on the| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR floor have no use for thé dou- 7 | ble-decker cars. “In Behalf of Pure Miilk. —_— Syt 1f the Colonel views the results in mfiff» iR E;’“Y Domer “,“ g : Vermont right, he . | state has received personal and print- comes forward with a statement, that | weiting on St e st ee the hand- | oq instructions as to how to condtict osevelt's claim that he was respon. ey N %) i ; his business in a decent manner. e for the pure food and drug act is | Let us Bope that the . Septemb: The f?lluwinr is all we have ever [Wrong, and he has letters to! ptd 5 Sied o e a2 v s prove | sweet. corn will not be compelied to| Your attention is respectfully called . /that the Colonel opposed the passage |sleep under a blanket. to the following suggestions, which Yof tha bill at the time. This fy'mideh|™ " " " ' ° O A must be carefully followad if the mili Alke the claim of the ex-president, who | , No one is surprised by the prophecy | Which you sell is to coutain less than aintained that he started the bureau [of Upton Sinclair that Roosevelt wiil {100,000 bacteria in a cublc centimeter: : ‘of mines, when it was started .during |lead. the socialists in 1916. Fhe stablps BuBL. ha Kept Sifen and o administration of President Taft. ————— phoania ho whitewasbod ot st ones § The- tatest aceusation’ agatmst -the | - TRat was & rude shotk which Ohio | o, v Th - t i Jbull moose boss is that he called into|&ave the suffragettes, and after they |and 3, cfcr:: 1;:;' d;:):uir e Sy e - VR “his homie a prominent socialist, R. W. | had endorsed Teddy, too. The hands of the milkers must be ’ MBruere, who, edited and . revised, his. . . . washed immediately before milking iy confession of faith and contributed to| The American Bar association does |and all milking must be done with dry {4 s convention speech much in accerds | not belleve in intimidated courts, hence | Bands. JAmce with the socialistic dootrine, a |it declined to endorse the recall. © e“;:&‘;& i e, S e doctrine ‘which' hes’ such a leadet ‘as A' ‘w‘e!"em coptenisorgn . milk pail. > ‘W. D. Haywood, who has been termed, Foletts- an't 20 v says: “La| Al milk ytensils and strainers must s by the candldate as an ‘“undesirable DN r anybbdy. It takes|pbe thoroughly cleansed by ‘the use of g oltize: This action by the promoter all of his time to oppose Roosevelt.” bafll:xxhwlt:r,‘finddlltl' g&ng a&i bottles 2 g T P 2 must e sterilize efore ey re ;‘Oll.oc?:;'n:'a ;;?pb::m::y‘tf‘;‘ c::ei-!l:: Happy thought for today: Some | again used. ¥ "4 ¥ %Gvery possitle avenue 1n"hiy ‘Rppeal | TIe5 VIO BPpear fo be.dumb are only |, AL LIk Thie Tst be ent oo ; ; o prev % for votes, unmindful of, the fact, that :z’;: togact thelr ‘wives'a good k- | Fing the milk. ‘the voters have memorfes. ‘ P Milk utensils and cans must not be ———— left to air by the dusty roadside, near No .ome can deny that LaFollette | tne ‘sink drain outlet, the pig sty or ;uh the ,‘:”,f"‘,"' progressive leader. i the open privy vault. . e has a t to ask i A milk i e st bl el ks R e B Il T o e Hgndibn or more patriotic purpose than | ature below 50 degrees F, \faft has never ocoupled the -White| In 'a Pennsylvania town, buttermilk | F&ilure on your part ér on the part s, sells for 12 cents a quart, Tt costs | Of Your dairvmen to comply with these i . . {more: than beer; and it must be aq. | USEcitions may lead to @' revocation It Roosevelt made @ deficit of $50, | mitted it is worth mare, S S Rl n? 400 1 seven ¥ with & high and r . s was sent to every farmer prose- o pec v Cojonel Watterson is of the opinion that wken, history is written, it will Dessé m.fi & cu'.ear m& ltha government under the 8 ets e pace and |pure food law: narrow. skirts are to be continued. All | To Milk Producers: that lg necessary to make women hob- The department of milk inspection, ble is for her to speak, with the co-opeération of milk pro- e ducers, offers ‘rlhe enclosed suggestions, Fats which if intelligently followed would It 18 tq be "“P"f the Lawrence' mill |y prove the sanitary conditions exist- mén gre not a fair sample of New ||ng at the dairy farms from which our England mll operators In general. supply is obtained and indirectly im- pressive tarif, what is to be ex- cted of him should he get four yea: tarigt? o ! m\fl “down-trodden farmers” [l feel as if the Moen#c mule c them with both fe Wi th | ual butter knives! And the table linen .| der false pretenses! BULLETIN, ‘When he hung up the ' receiver he heaved & sigh of relief and content. He needn't even think of the house again until _his family were about to return. It was really a great idea of his to havp some one take care of the prop- ertyl for him; now he could devote his entire time to the task of getting/that C l G A R important contract. ¥ / It was about a week Ia.utqart that ovfi; B : the telephone he list o a ver { D e e Toies, cominsndine | IR TANDARD his immediate presence at his home. for B eiad to-tathche Bret train TWAY AUDITORIUM ToDAY B EE—— to the familiar suburb. 4 “What's the matter?” he asked of the woman who opened the door after he had established his identity. “Why,” she replied, without inviting him in, “I wanted to ask you where I can find the potato knife and the carv- ing set. And when you rented us this place you gave us to understand that it was completely furnished! Well, = d at ever since we moved in we've been 13 unable to find things we ought to have. Extra Bargaing in guaranteed Wheels. e e o oyster farks nor indivia- || OTHER VIEW . POINTS is a disgrace—we could never invite guests to dine with us with sueh lin- en! “And the water froze the first night| The positien held by Mr. Taft re- we were here, so we had to have a specting the tariff and business is the plumber, and that was §$7. He says|only one that affords any safety for your drains are in & terribly unsanitary | our great industrial and business in- condition, and If we get typhoidb:l: terests.—Springfield Union. shall certainly charge our doctor W SR to you! You‘vy; no business advertising | More diplomatic = discyssion with a perfect home—it's getting money un- Great Britain regarding our canal tolls - must precede any move on her to “We've had to buy lots of little| have the matter referred to The Enu_ things. our brooms are dreadful, and | —New Haven Journal-Courier. sbme .of your kitchen utenslls’ Were| .y vork women suffragists charac- absolutely worn out. We'll just take o terize the defeat of the equal suffrage the cost out of the rent—for, of course, ool ol gt L u’fld e the things will beiong to the'nouse” | ANENGEAN B NG B8, O r Brown had ceased to listen. He was - contempiating the gown worn by his| —Providence Bulletin. ; ‘tenant—a dainty house dress of Mrs, e Hiis ity i Joft. mich of | . It i not likely ~{he ber second her wardrobe at home, he knew, In|[housht of the | Restdence 29 Lincoln Ave. Tel 1101 ~ Fern and Flower g:vieku m:d m.. FANCY the di to recelve the first foot- the government mfiw‘?mmfll the Browns' }"'&‘::":”e’l'h" most valuable rug, ed as very | D o rip things up He wondered mightlie| Mddietown Sun. the first month 1s| NOW that Ohlo has emphatically stand usually for sflo’cll’dou - ularly repudiated.—Waterbury 'Jumj can. Beginning this month, the telegraph companies of the state must employ ot | young men who are of age to act as messenger boys, after ten 'o'clock ‘at Ta“the tiammoral Shyisonments. that. the oral tha - x rap! s ‘th brought into, was the cause of the tm.qw of the milk offered v —Weaterly | Senator Cummins’ For the education of your oyes it ia important it the sug- :e- lons be Joned ‘conspicuously in the o the s "‘:u; agents of this de near future agen i will visit all dairy farms vicinity of his h'h(::zum Canurd . 0 1 t tl the second day of L Samples of milk s to_this city TP Ly by producers will be examined to deter- | Tl ow, and very rightly so, Eala 3¢t laws of (his.state are be- | -WhY 18 thia’ thust"—Litchfeld Eo- B e S e | oL Sl ope enc] suggestions T v may be of assistance in enabling pro- [ Fool correspondents ‘are the privi: ducers to ghip only clean milk. lege of every newspaper of importanee, Milk inspectors ‘do not make the|AmOng notable demonstrations in their laws they are sworn to6 enforce. A |line is a communication printed in the city milk inspector cannot be held re- | New Haven Journal-Courier. The au- sponsible for acts of courts or United | thor praises a recent article in States officials he does not appoint. Jjournal, and says he proposes to re- If you wish to educate milk pro- |Sume reading the paper, alt! h ducers you might publish these and by | quit a ‘while ago in disgust. he 80 doing keep your readers out of the | quit, how in thunder did he know courts. about the article he says be liked?— . WALTER O, SCOTT, Hartford Couraunt. 3 : Inspector of Milk. Providence, Sept. 4, 1912, Old Place Always Filled. ‘That vacant double room in the Ana- nias club has been % Odell and former Senator —~—Co-, lufbia (S. C.) State, g e ——— Music and Righteousness. mw UBBERS There is a profound connectlon be- i tween music’ and goodness. 1 know that lon;:rof thel’mnm:-ev; eratic stars are from mod of Short Sea m’ virtue, and ktmt loose and even evil T men can make sweet harmony upon in- | Norfolk, Old Point Comf: Rich- struments; but that is aside from the | mond, Bkhumon. Wuuu:’;. point. muda, Savannah and the South. ‘The harmony itself, when it is once T F mdixced, hn:.l a chm';:m o§ its own, o And rom Ewm cannot escape conviction that swest and moving sounds dre akin 0| cyn Hea Sta. Erench. Hilian Noreh noble generous thoughts. . x i Everyone who can play divinely on | S ®man Lloyd and other lines, Berths the piano or eello or what not ought to have 'a divine personality. That — IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN 24 BREED THEATER | . SENSATIONAL FEATURE TODAY Silver Wing's Two Suitors SUPERB PATHE INDIAN STORY UP-TO-DATE MOTORCYCLES EXCELSIOR, INDIAN AND POPE 1911 Pierce 4 h. p. Belt Drive Magneto | 7—Feature Photo-Plays—7 1909 Indian 4 h. p. Chain Mag- |! o sy (3 Drive Mag Second-hand Bargains 1 Prices Low. Terms Reasonable. C. V. PENDLETON, - 10 Broadway UK. C. C. GILDERSLEEVE OFFICE, cal equivalent of window smashing.| MeGrory Bldg., 287 Maln St., Sulte 7-8 | Hours—$-9 & m. 130-3 and 7-8 § 0 Nlamane s . Ihg -Dia,ast; THE EDWARD COAL AN August 29, 1912, EXCELLENT MOTION PICTURES “ Wharf will temporar ~ Having both Coal and Lumber i transit we will fill all orders later, Fortunately our offices are unin- jured and the creditable ‘energy’ the Telephone Company has stated our Telephone service. VAUDEVILLE Bargain Shows for .| Lbotured by Mr, Peiton at 330 and 841 9 { ?' 3 3 CHAPPELL C0. D LUMBER this is not the case only proves that something hll wmnrg sgmewhere. —jm‘ho ’F“ and Tourist Agent— T never-hear perfect music but I am raised out of ‘all my mean common- H A. DUNN, placeness into tha heroic plane pf feel- . 50 Main Street. ing. Make me the right music and I can euuy;! retu;n dgood !orfevn, sacri- fice myself, anc 0 any of the great spiritual deeds that in dull moments You Can **Whes hammony somes n at o x| S AV.E MONEY 11 the moral sentiments are set i - 5 der. g AR by buying your Ruskin says that w the Greeks the god of music was dlso the god of TRUNKS’ Hehteousness SUIT CASES, B St L S A Syndicate Candidate. TRAVELING BAGS: Somehow or other that talk about a ETC_’ from $3,000,000 preconvention campaign fund reminds one of what Governor Marshal s some ime sx0 sbout's | The Shetucket Harness Co., News. Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank. JOHN MARSA Says - HERE IS ANOTHER OF THE BIG VALUES THAT 1 AM OFFERING FOR THE Grand Opening of My New Store " at 145-Main Street--145, Norwich, Conn. opposite Plaut-Cadden Co. Sty'v'les of Men’s and Young 5Men’s FALL and WINTER "U SUITS, all new models, at L These Suits cannot be duplicated anywhere for less than $22.50. I own and operate 5 Stores in New York and Brooklyn. Headquarters 671 Broadway, Brooklyn. I carry a full line of Union Made Clothing. CAR FARE RETURNED TO OUT OF TOWN PURCHASERS ) FULL SET TEETH FIT GUARANTEED PURE GLUTEN BREAKFAST FOOD and BISCUIT CRISPS at CARDWELL'S F. C. GEER, TUNER ®hone 511 122 Prospect St Need Printing P ; 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 Franklin Street QLALTY in work should always be considersd especlally’ when It costs no more thans the foferior kind. Skillsd wen ars employed by us. Our price tell the whole story. STETSON & YOUNG F. C. ATCHISON, M. D. l PAYBICIAN AND SURGEON, Room i, Second Fk >r. Shannea Bidg. . BAkh: ‘sbone LS | | | THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY