Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 18, 1916, Page 4

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since it is known that a large number of these have either broken from their anchorages or have been set afleat in the North sea. It is likewise natural that Germany should claim that they struck mines until evidence to the contrary can be produced. There now comes another story, with the arrival of the Fabre liner | Patria in port to the effect that an effort was made to torpedo that un- armed vessel carrying 902 people in the Mediterranean. From the fact that officers and passengers saw the periscope of the attacking submarine and the torpedo as it missed the ship by a short distance, the excuse that it was a mine cannot be offered. Such an attempt to sink the liner was of course wholly unjustified and fur- nishes another opportunity for trying THE MAN WHO TALKS Parents Should Know This Splendid Remedy Simp'e Laxative Compound Helps to Correct Consti- pation in Children With all children there are times when the bowels fail to act naturally and it becomes necessery for the par- ents to administer a remedy. Cathar- tics and purgatives should never be used as these zgenis afford only tem- porary relief while their violent action HAZARDS OF LONG-AGO VOYAGES How surprised the man who is de- celving his wife is when he finds she| (Written Specially for The Bulletin)|Town and Landing, an assortment of is Geceiving him. Ho recosuizes 8t| The second war with England, as|EBuropean and India goods. o = onco that, her conduct 18 perfidious but | q1ready meted, virtusily put an end to| 1787 John Moore has Irish linens Goesn't séem to comphrehend that his | Snos e ey e P %rade be. |and chintzes just from Dublin for sale. is, also. Deception is a two-handed|tween Norwich and European ports. 1792. Woodbridge & Snow have for e e Dt s o | aau {2, thet time such items as the |30, \515, 0000 Hmoncakiny same relation to it as light does to catnee | Db - Garkness. Trust cannot exist in the| o emi'g e e e gt 1793, Joseph Howland has for sale N : - atmosphere of distrust. The husband | ®ps P eare Taor: Coutier: brig Maria, {Manchester goods direct from the ne of thel ¢ or wife who think it is none of their | Afoses Hillard, 60 days from Lisbon. e partner's business what they are do-| ) 10 ntz, brig Trav- o Tng have a poor conception of conjugal | elor ralm rosior: srived gn | the|Vertise “salt, nails, crockery, and hard- life. The double-deeler always gets arrived 2" qays|ware, direct from Liverpool, by the founa out mot because some one| e ipyeaase 22 Octol ship Three Friends. squeals upon him, but because actions | "'3g0o snis Starbroeck, Charles Rock- | 1804. ‘Peter Lanman Jr. imports speak louder than words. No one can| ey jade a voyage to Cork and Liv- |from England and keeps for eand Goufied 120 YEARS OLD el e e Subseription price 12¢ s week; S0c a month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at-Norwich, Conn., as ‘second-class matter, Telephone Oalls: Bulletin.Business Office 480. ‘Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-3. Bulletin Job Office 35-2. Willimantic Office, Room 2, Murray Building. Telephone 210. i o R sale, | gpocks the system unduly. Mrs. Eva for long do things crooked and appear | erpool. 3 F. Gaff, 517 10th St., Washington, 'Norwich, Saturday, March 18, 1916. | to find out whether this is what can | 0¥ lons do things crooked and appess . Stvanith: ; - be expected from the Teutonlc allles | i uc Suio® 7 Jan. 1810: arrived from Xdverpop D. C., says that her little girl, Marie, It is only the fools Who|pbrig Fox, John Parker, with salt, coal, | But the history of early commerce in And how do|crates of crockery, etc. consigned to deceivers feel? Guilty most of the|Roger Huntington and E & E. Hunt- time, and their occupation CONSIStS|ington; duties, $343.73. The Fox clear- in spite of their promises to the con- trary. There is no chance here to blame it upon a mine. —_— had been subject to constipation, and fail to comprehend it. that she found Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin the best remedy because of its mildness, and mnow ancient Norwich is not always a rec- ord of “quick” trips of 60 or 100 days, with returning big cargoes from dis- marine commanders, it is entirely pos« .sible thet they ~encountered iThe Circulation of 3 T - = There was a dark side to these mar- a " . § o2 Novenber afec Y OO IR ind savintime ihhie: bese petetean || el CREWIE Syiep U Eig. 8 H - Indications of a new attitude on the| <pere is a saying that you must not former papers; Kr'll!c(‘lllc.!Tnl brnve“c‘mfl free from oplates or narcotic drugs of 3 e etm part of Germany relative to the long|jet good dollars follow bad ones. This| The Chelse: Colver, sailed for|Sctting forth down the Thames River. ; drawn out submarine policy are fur- The Bulletin has the largest i : O ‘the return|Sood-byes to home friends on shore, | SHIATON, becaune, of (08 TG REIGD MARIE GAFF circulation of any paper in Eastern §|von Tirpitz from the control of the|of the poord n]ennythw‘hxchm ne‘:;e(‘rk {:- voyage, arrived 17 July, i‘u days "?1“?: :!lup (y;\\»xc“::‘g:l:xnn:eemn‘m‘ i | strengthen the impaired bowel action o= e . Connecticut and from three to four § | navy. From the very first there has |turns. The doliars that come back In-|Alicant, and §7 from Center, with ][ TLEWERemade sqil (RS, S50 and restore normal rerularity. costs only fifty cents a bottle and can tion as to where he stood. | Sreased ten or an hun goods consigned to Peter R, Ay = ight | It is important that parents should proct at any drug ° Lies IErEec than (haricf Ay mg|iocano duce o ;|00d “dollars regardiess of the bad|Erastus Coit & Co. and others. The|tiny craft woulq be lost to sight|,;ow of a deperndable remedy with no|obtain a trial bottle, free of charge, Norwich. It is delivered to over §| He has always advocated the carrying ich th 3 ¥ around the bend in the river; then | 3 - g $ . N & character of the scheme by which they | Chelsea sailed again in October, bound unpleasant after ecffects, griping or | write to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 454 Wash. 3500 oratiead Sy mimetysthres per §| o0t of @ policy which would disregard | were' multiplicd. Good or bad as ab-| for Cadis, under Farewell Coit. hours and days and wecks and monthe | jorin. Dr. Caldwel's Syrup Pepein | ington St. Monticello, IIl. {75 delivered o over 900 houses, §| Provisions of international law. It|by sound coin, and counterfeit or de-|ver, 63 days from Liverpool; passen-|loping, with mo wircless or cable to $in Putnam and Danielson to over §|Was von Tirpitz who first intimated |preciated coin. A rogue’s money Is as|ger, Roger Huntington. se: ':"(. '1n - instead z to throw it into the |The Sixth ward representa: 1100, and in all of these places it §|the extensive use to which the sub-|S0od as a saints if it s of wight “The best that coud be hoped for was|Jjunk pil we can't raise brains | municipal body was prom is considered the local daily. marine_could be put in blockading | Weisht and true ring. A dollar to the| The same year, Capt. Walter Lester| ~The best that Coud b Mones For FoR | e o\ Bl G S | Wi G I o ldma i good is the dollar that can't get away | made a voyage to Lision in the schoon- | the remote possibility tha 2 e cal pi the thing ' on relative to an increase of Eastern Connecticut has forty- §|Great Britain. He was for making|g 1 vou, and a dollar to the bad is one | er Betsey: and tn April, 181 vich ship might be spoken by some ical plan e thing R B nine towns, one hucdred and sixty- §| them overcome whatever handicap ex- | o WTlich you received 1o adequate re- [ eator . romuinding | the her vessel, elther going or coming, e 535 and eiec- | for the assistant prosecuting attorney. five postoffice districts, and slxtyi isted in their operations through size |turn. Dollars cannot defile a person|cleared at the custom house for the | that some craft relurninfi to ;hu h "flv‘rhc“ Aot foma u?sbmm s St prosanmt- gimuzel Tioe aelivery iroutes. and vulnerability by dieregarding all |to whom they come honestly earned | Syime port, returning safely in July. |home port N e )t to pay the bills, |or received in Hartford. The reply was §, The Bulletin is sold In every {|laws, by tervorizing their oppoments|or honestly solicited. A guilty | "1\ seems strange, in these latier |Might risg back the precious mews jo'nt and is being |that he receives $10 a case and that glown and on all of he R F. D.3lana neutrals by the manner in which | knowledze and sharing ill-gotten gains|years, to think of Norwich as export- | that ship CEw e an e e e Ui i s SUGH. It s TS it § routes in Eastern Connecticut. tlicy sent to the bottom sadh veasels|lE wickednes honest dollar it-|ing flour; but that was profitable trade | Some forelgn harbor. 1Tt s <Asy ' 1o A TAXPAYER. |swer that caused Mr. Paonessa to H L e they |S€lf leaves no stain upon honest hands, | carried on during the early years of |fancy the ache in the hearts = = = 2 4 question Hartford " H CIRCULATION as ‘wereencountered, whether § theg| o anyipratseworth 1800, nd wives and sisters and sweet-| Norwich, March 17, 1916, question Ha i & 3 :"'emf";:;’_’ifis ‘;:ym:‘;fg,‘::‘l:’:e‘;‘;’ “l'ad ——— ol “Goddara & Williams had entered in- arts in the old to .“‘dr;ll:']l‘!i\;b:’hcs'l::‘f el s e ’ $|by mo g e What Germany fighting for?|to the flouring business Norwi v Bosa by s, to be d—wholl ;1901' e seveesecss 4412 3) human life involved. It was in accord- | When the war was in prospect we|Falls, and while ”l}:lh" bt 'l"'“l Gona | sreeted ]\‘\pfill'h‘t'lvm-r!:) ‘\r:‘d’rx’:“:rrr:tf wel- QTHER VIEW POINTS hcs‘i...mfmi. .::"um:‘:.:“zce:(‘;. rf“::lluy- ance with his ideas that the Lusitania [ have the Kaiser's word and the Crown | respondence was with Richmond and | #Tected w i of 5 s in the interest of accu- £ 1905, average... was sunk and he has steadfastly held | Prince’s averment that must win | other Southern ports, they enterprie- | ome, from the crowd on the whart at i e e . $ to his poiicy rezardless of the pro- |her place in the sun. This declara-|ingly ventured sending one vessel to T 8! T gl s L : H tests and the unjustified course that|Wrapbed up in figurative speech is|Europe, The Ann & Mary, Capt Rob-| 1 the long list of disasters appears.| “are they crazy up in Hartfora? | This, the originator ciaims, £ March 11 Germany has taken in this respect. | Dot OF ive expianations of the phrase| 1812, with & cargo of flour. in September, 1S3, the record that|jfave they no system at all™ "Coun. |a distinctive and brief mame for that 3 That this is to be changed is indi- |jack lucidity. In every phase of in-| Capt. ! h Hillard, who had sailed | jj, gelo M. onessa_asked | part of North America in sececesesccascooosceseseostee: s s a = . n phase of in 3 vl i Augiet, countered » ra in ver 3 T cated by Lis resignation. Ilness is|tellectuality Germany was looming far| These were the last undertakings | rom Norwich in Susist, cRrolntcrot|these quostions in rapid fire order at e - 3 RN = |given as the cause but it points more |above the earth and her industriallbefore the war. Direct transit to Eu-ig. .t a all on board perished, | committee on salarie Monday night. | ven Regist DANGERS IN COOPERATION. |directly to the fact that those who |Ereatness was recos the world | rope ceased with the risk of hostili- |O¥erturned and ol o BoAre BEMS TN | comm =a 3 5 Look at it as one will, it is impos- | 22Ve opposed his methods are in con- | OVer without war, so it ot easy 10| ties. No Norwich vessel was fitted out v (0 ihe wreck and after a fear- = — - = —— = : at i as one will, 1t 38 ImMpOS-1trol and that his successor will fol- |See just ¢ “Germany’s| for that coast until 1833, when the ship | ¢} e taken off and re- G S hnet \E}“?t ‘1\15‘ low a different course of action. It Place in the sur as made that} Boston was sent.to Bremen by Les-|iyrned hom ty. country on its search for Villa and| g & JHAFCRT course of actol. If|nation a hot pia ardly a place| ter & Co. : i Haegy e e roaw Eaptiie his bandits needs to take every pre- h 151in the sun since three per cent of the| Compared with the princely mer- |10 8 el Mg caution against others who may be|lOnS overdue. It means respect for|sun's heat is all the carth ever gets, |chantment of later days, the Norwich- | SRt Zac e Qisposed to interrupt the expedition, |international law which heretofore |and five per cent would 1ilt craft were mere toy boa (A e, oo S gyt Mg e 5 J While the United States forces are co- | }2s been winked at, and that while | uninhabitable. A piace s that period they were the equal of 2 ale, two other sloope be ( operating with those of the de facto|le Would not hesitate to arouse the|too hot for Germany, or any Craft dent oiit_from the poxts of Bos- ch, the St. Mark, R 1 government of Mexico, which is the |SHIity of the world, there are others | SOURtIY. In war Germany has | ton and New Yor and the John, Capt. quai- logical course for each to pursue, the | Who Tecosnize the lack of wisdom in | Be0 the world 5 n out to sea, suffer- . = i tirse. Tt ny ab the old- e age. reports of Carranza soldiers deserting | Sch 2 Soiise I b e ihonenitnat ovically Feld ‘gh-cd:i:°r<‘:::m?§-“',.d“mmfeqf\‘m 36 Aeuhge lty and GOOdyeal’ (? Villa and the appearance of the |tho dre DRenES u‘y:gr“‘:" - ahe references to goods received direct Henry Billings = old time animosity to this country in . from London, Bristol, Dublin and Liv- r Humbird, was cast construction are n sections which i a a = = erpool. As for example: the vessel and great many to seek safety in this SEAMEN’'S LAW OBSTRUCTS. 1 do not think pays to be too mat- Feb. 17, 17 Thomas Fanning has Cash_value advanta es to country makes it evident that the dan- | There Is plenty of food for thought |ter of fz just imported direct from London and the £! er of bei in a trap thro in the statement which is made by the | comfort now opened for sale at his store oppo- Billings. out~ Od . Sbbinencs! noari|besdior mship company which | tye. 1 site his dwelling house between th on the the GO year user. dship cannot be disre- to its tonnage by — - 1 and se of vessels of belligerent ¥ i el sCb et | opinions expressea would disgrace a ! He buys Goodyear Tires and here there must be a e tied up i m_even|goe. Do mot let your opinions get s of conditions to de- When | .18 from vou too easy. They hurt Tubes because they g7e Good- termine just how much reliance can own i & . 2 Fo Dlicedlfooon thosaiuitic ave e azil, in sitiing down in y year Tires and Tubes. offering ccoperation. If Carranz: to over detrimental our :‘}"“ ‘v-:‘.vnn]-; _:H‘.:! '1. e contnol was what it ousht to be there | features of S loc e T g could be no question, but if he pos- sessed that control the present situa- Senidindl) whether he previously paid more tion would have been avoided, vet = | WMarch 24th. 1783, Asa Waterman,| % - g, 4 A Bl nesdlae i Dot e e need of THE YEAR THE KING DIED. |nomeward bovnd from Port-au-Prince, or P:‘“d, less for his tires—Good Carranza forces working together is Is then cen — 5 " iz Fanny. was wrecked in 3 year will show the lowest last highly important to early success. in the year of a national Narragansett Beach. In No- That it calls for a careful sizing up c T ceived | op Pol . Capt. ;‘ Cook, of the Mexican attitude is a fact|time is a well understood fact. Ports In the Deer ad on the coast which will not eseape the shrewd lead- | e congested and railroads are forced ers of the American forc Reliance it is re led e s g different if you'd had the other fel- glory filled the tem When HE DICTAGRAPH. will be placed upon rranza ;:u:;‘)xer:;z}sixsle lto lset):uredln s:th('xn:L low opporfunity? You do. Well, | the grand monarch, renowned both in | .__1: I,‘_T’:_R‘PH forces to at least put no obstacles | BUM? vessels to handle the traf- | you are thinking right, but y war and in peace, who had reigned for 3 in their way, until something which | fi¢, and while capital has crowdea the [ not have been him E years in a perfect blaze of military LETTERS TC THE EDITOR warrants o hostile attitude. is re.|ShiP¥ards With orders for mew ves- |Wwould not have been like his s and commercial prosperity, died as - st s il sels with which to meet the unpre- |1:0ts of people do not know how to|leper the shock and sorrow of the lo: Being Used for Political Purposes. 2 Teis fo manifented By thell 0 le o 5t nothies tn e any e the most of an opportunity, and [ sent his patriotic countrymen into| g tor: Norwich has gone into accepimnce of the assistmnice offered| c il Toatuiniion WG souis o only the few who know how to|mourning that was no pretense. municipal ownership of a gas and elec- by certain Carranza troops soon after |y T SEISHUOn WRI % _ e an opportur for the: It was in this black hour that the|trical plant that represents $150,000 ng the border and by the pass- | oot SPIPPINg to American registry is | poing w! i ccted of you ry | young Isaiah got his revelation of God.|{hat the taxpay holden for. The ing of the large amount of ammuni- | °€inS offered. ¢ meritoric doing something nice | Within the temple he caught a heav-|guestion of buying light and power tions from this country to Mexico for | FOW this is viewed by the business |for yo r _that was not ex-|enly vision and heard the seraphic|fiom outside parties and allowing our the use of Carranza’s men. It is to|™eP Of the country is revealed by the | pected Seet; what to do|choir chanticg antiphonall The | plant to relegate to the junk pile or in- be hoped that mothing will occur ¢ |2Ction Which has been taken by 311 |always cuts more ice th t doing | whole earth is full of Jehoval To | vesting an additional $100,000 to put it e aiig e momhing 20| hoards of trade, chambers of commerce | What vou are told. Good pe: his sensitive mind the death of thelinto shape so we can manufacture light o the frlendly feciime, o do mlvel g L ot arpeme tons thecust.. | 90 Intlintive have to great King brought into strong relief|ang power at our own plant is before the impression that the punitive ex OUE tha coiaty b £ h —.~_land is usually rewarded. the presence of the Lord God Omnipo- | ye. No Mr. Editor, what¥would a pedition is anything other than what |y 1% v asking for the revis- imake yourself common you_ only tent who lives and reigns forever. private corporation in like circum- it is. on of the seamen’s law, which is rec- | expect” common results. You have B stances do? Would the stockholders st ognized not only as an obstable but|not got to plod like the fellow-work- Calamity, not seldom, does just that| aliow the directors to make a contract NEW HAMPSHIRE'S PRIMARY. |28 one of the chief reasons for driving | man beside you. It is up to you to be|for people. It brings them into a real- |y thoso who would contribute Whatever determination there may ‘e been to secure delegates for the national republican convention who are favorable to Theodore Roosevelt, k factory into first class ehape to com- Biow-outs—By our On- : s & i€ “What do you think about Jonah |comes from religious faith. It reveals|peie with their competitors? Norwich % it has Deen disclosed by the New |'s PSn& furnished by other countries.|, ., tno whaie? William T do pet|to them the foundations of the King- | mith up-to-date appliances and brains Air Cure. Hampshire primary that even in that EDITORIAL NOTES. think about it. Too much useful time | dom not of this world. state, where there has always been = considerable Roosevelt sentiment, that there is still strong opposition to his candidacy or any effort to bring it about. New Hampshire has selected an unpledged delegation, but one Roose- B o X : pay to fool with any more than with a |Man has failed—armies, treaties, dip-|tect the $750,000 we have got invested Afi-w-chu Tread. VeIt advocate made’ o sirencons oe- | for an old fashioned winter. buzz saw. 1 prefer to think of how |lomats, governments. Hague courts, ~ deavor to secure a pl: & = the new map of Europe is going money—everything has failed. There resentation tror: mcfiffmi" t;rem:ege g"?;illi::eHZg:;pFord“p“?m’(Slnito]:nake look, and Wh-ILt the K:\.isner Wi Fgon:vi:; is 1;0 cerlaifmy“am'vwer& I haivc I 3 2 er, is to 't i i ity vill | s I 3 o was beaten by over wo to one 1s siE. | Seaclno,cheaDer, It 18 to be hisope.e: the fifty billions of indemnity he will|half my family—all my mneigh nicant. It shows that there is not a controlling sentiment for him in spite gnirolling sentime finger ‘at us. There arc ioo many live | People having nething to do with the i March 18, 1915. of the work that has been done in his| In spite of the alluring climatl - |Incidents of the present for us to let; War. We, here in this stricken, im- i nced furth behalf. ‘If it was cxpected that there | ditions below the Rio Grande just waw, | 46ad isstes absorb our attention. What | Poverished, devastated country hav Gelgian army advanced Surther would be a clean sweep for this man 0 who openly committed himself to Roosevelt’s nomination, there must be sad disappointment, especially when it is realized that only a part of the voters participated in the primary and those who stayed away failed to dis- Play any enthusiasm whatever in his cause. That New Hampshire's sentjmenit THE END OF VON TIRPITZ. nished by the resignation of Admiral to hold up shipments simply because to the relief of the situation to foreign reg- istry, which means that the encour- agement which ought to be given here The passing of Admiral von Tirpitz is another way of admitting the fail- ure of his submarine ideas. March has apparently driven to cover those who have been yearning forts for peace. not very many ars planning to go there unless they have to. There was one bit of consolation, however, for those taking part in the St. Patrick’s day parades that they didn’t have to march in the mud. The announcement that it is only a punitive expedition which General Carlyle: “Life is a quarry from whicn | never before, the final source of human || ** Crman * submarine sank British thus recorded represents the feeling |Pershing is leading must make a £00d | Geothe: “Tife 1o the 2;:%?:;@“3?;‘3 What is the meaning of the world's [§ S22mer, Glenartney in the English in the rest of the states might not be |Many Mexicans sigh for a dictionary. | mortality,” “Life illy spent is an in.|Pain? What is the interpretation of |] " Dnearic Mocwsy mud!| Sl admitted by his backers as an entire- famy” ‘Life, like war, is a serles of | those “sorrows for which there is no ly correct inference, but it nevertheless | With Bulgaria and Rumania shak- furnishes a basis for judgment which is far more trustworthy than a straw vote and it is but fair to presume that it shows how the republicans aug- mented by the return of the Bull Moose feel over the selection of the candidate for the presidential election. It certalnly shows to New Hampshire's delegates and to those who may be selected from other states how the people stand In the matter, which is that they are mnot in the proper “he- roic mood.” CANNOT BLAME A MINE. In the past several days merchant vessels have been sent to the bottom off the coast of France and in the WNorth sea without receiving warn- ing. These ships did not carry arms and were entitled to recelve notice ‘when there was any step taKen to in~ terfere with their operations, In addi- tion to which the necessary time should have been given the passengers apd crews to get to points of safety. Nothing of the kind was done, either in the case of the Norweglan bark Stlius. or the Dutch liner Tubantia. In both of these cases, though it is natural at first to attribute their loss to the unjustified acts of sub- 'mine is respomsible, ing their fists at each other, it ought not to be long before Rumania decides on which side of the fence it will climb down. The man on the corner says: No one stops to think that with this kind of weather we are skipping the dis- tressing conditions that go with newly oiled streets. —_— If the kaiser in declding against von Tirpitz did so to avert a break with the United States, it is unfortu- nate that he did not make the decis- ion months ago. If the German people were dis- heartened, which is given as a rea- son for the attack on Verdun, there has been little in that three weecks’ battle to cheer them up. From the offers of balloons, autos and acroplanes which are being made to the war department it is apparent that some people recognize the lack of preparedness if congress does not. Now that a Dutch steamer has been ‘Bunk and the claim is made that a it might not be 2 bad idea to cause a red light to burn when mines are encountered just suspicion from-the submarines, partly in inventing lies to keep their|eq for Cadiz the next July and return. | tant ports. true character from dlselosure. ~ pt. is presumably a speculative hint. The | Alicant in January, 1810, Asa Fitch go- bad dollar is the aristocratic reiative|ing as a passenger. ! Sunday Morning Talk S he writes, | Do you think you would have been | different, to be better, to be best. Work along these lines and opportunity will seize you—won't stop to knock. ing sense of the spiritual power that | undergirds the world. When every|y material prop has been swept away it | throws them back on the support that has been wasted upon this and simi- lar subjects. We should be surprised if we knew how much. If T knew it was true I could not make my boy be- lieve it; and if you knew it false you couldn’'t make your wife believe it. There are lots of subjects it doesn't A letter has been received in this country from the heart of devastted |y Europe which serves as a picture of what must be in the minds of thous- ands across the water. Let a few sen- tences from one paragraph indicate the writer's experience. “Everything h 3 make the entente nations pay; or how have lost someone. We have all lost we shall feel in 1920 when he snap: our homes, although perfectly innocent This i i we should think about is the things which are likely to have an effect upon this and coming generations. learned one thing, and that is there is no safety, no permanen refuge, no certain loy, no consolation except in religion. Those who ave not Christ here are of all men most miserable, for the world has failed and how variable the answers we get,|them.” There you have a cry out of “Every man’s life is a plan of God,”|the depths, but there is a note of said Horace Bushnell; “life is a little | Umph in it. The writer is cast down, gleam between two eternities” wrote | Put not destroyed, for he has found, as Carlyle; “Life i that no How often we ask ourselves what life is. How often we hear no answer, | { mistakes,” and “life is a mystery,” oth- ers have said. “Life is not what vou have, but what you are,’ is more mod- ern, and best fits my understanding. In other words life comes pretty near being what we make it, for our world is narrow or broad, billowy or calm uncertain or assuring, haunted by fear or lighted by hope in keeping with our state of mind. Our conception of things makes us full of doubt or blaz- ing with faith. We can live in the darkness or in the light as we may choose. If our love is in harmony with divine love there is no discord in the music of our souls. medicine that earth can supply, consolation that man can offer”? have always tried to answer such questions. The problem has been taken up by the wisest heads and the warm- est hearts in each generation, not in the expectation of finding a complete solution, but only of throwing some light on the age-long mystery. One who can speak with authority on the matter will find an audience to the re- motest corners of this planet that men call earth. no Men i | One fact emerges clear. When every human resource fails we are all, saint and sinner alike, thrown back on the ultimate fact of God. There comes o point when, if Providence takes no Since men differ so In opinion it is a pity more of them do not learn how to agree to disagree. There is no rea- | hand in our affairs, we are doomed be- son why the other man’s opinion|Yond hope. It sometimes takes fright- should anger us. He may not be po-|ful disasters to burn the fundamental lite in his manner of delivering it to|fact into men's brains. But He who us, and the spirit of him may give us|Oorders our lives evidently counts the to understand that his opinion weighs [lesSon worth the pain necessary to more than ten thousand opinions of | learn it. ours. If you keep cool you will find| Of old, fire ran along the Pyrennean his judgement is poor, that is all. His | Mountains, destroying scores of vine- estimate of himself and everything he | Yards, but as the villagers mourned fo possesses is simply inflated. If he had | their vines they discovered that the a dozen apples that cost ten cents he|heat had opened up fissures in the would aver they were more valuable|Tocks through which gleamed rich then your oranges that cost 70 cents|velns of silver. That is a parable, the & dozen. Do you realize that our opin- | meaning of which may become clear in fons put we in the vaudeville class be- | time to thousands of suffering lives ir fore we kmow it. What are our opin-|Our modern world. That is not less ions? They appear like subliminated|but gain which leave us, in the end. ideas that have been put into our|With @ possession infinitely greater hopper that we have passed out|than that which has vanished. without analyzing. One-half the THE PABSON. s scanttes with captains and crews waving fond nd | ber can make light and power just as cheap as of our intelligent citizens. elect men bottle of it in the house. any kind, and is an children because ays keeps a leal remedy for day” as it ie recorded, Feb- and part of the lum- h their competitors because they were in a position to furnish cheaper han they could manufacture or would hey instruct the directors to put the anyone on earth, and the idea of ing light and power and letting our 0,000 plant go into the hands of the unk dealers is about the size of some It is about for the taxpayers and voters to vith callber enough to pro- ime War A Year Ago Today in Yser region. Germans vainly shelled heights Notre Dame de Lorette. Turkish soldiers killed civilians in Urumiah_ district, Persi British battleships Irresistible and Ocean and French battleship Bouvet sunk by in Darda- nelles; 600 lost ’ submarine sunk and other warships cf allies damaged. protested against sh blockade of Germany. Bombs _from a Zeppelin killed seven in Calais. ¥ Roumanian government seized shells in transit from Germany to ri =CONSTIPATIO s the big trouble in every serious sickness — causing depression of spirits, irritability, nervousness, imperfect vision, loss of memory, . . ete.s oo Shee. luuflnw.t‘l‘h ~stop Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to neglect them? nced have no fears. crowned or extracted STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE If these appeal to you, call for examination and estimate. charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON 203 MAIN ST. PA. M to8BP. M. Lady Asistant He knows that in the end— are fortified agaiast: 1-cutting—By our No- Rim-Cut Ri Loose Treads—By our Rubber Rivets. ¢ urity—By our Multi- :"ple Braded Pano Wire Punctures and Skiddi; our D«fifim You our method you can have your testh filled, BSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STERILIZED INSTRUMENTS " CLEAN LINEN ~ ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK DR. D. J. COYLE DENTISTS (Successors to the King Dental Co.) NORWICH, CONN. SUNDAYS, 10 A. M. to 1 P. M. Telephone

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