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faculty to do but to approve the recom- mendation of the president tiat the ontire class be suspended. It was the one sound course to pursue under the circumstances. Discipline required it and particularly at a mulitary <ollege. To have taken no notice of tie affair simply because there was no ore bad- ly.injured would simply have encour- aged others to have done likewise, with consequences whick no ene cou'd foretell. Had there been more rigid opposition to hazipg from the very start of the practice it wouid have done more than anything else to eud it. Regardless of the fact that it has become more or less of a custom in some institutions it ought not to he tolerated and every move that is made THE REPUBLICAN TICKET For Mayor ALLYN L. BROWN For Aldermen to stop it deserves much commenda- GUY B. DOLBEARE tion. WILLIAM H. ALLEN For Councilmen JAMES J. HILL. - The death of fames J. Hill removes LU T sy one of the country’s sreatest captains JOSEPH C. WORTH of industry. To no ons man does the EDWARD CROOKS great northwest awe mora than it does ¥ to this ploneer empire builder. Im- For Gity Glerk Dressed by the peasibilities which ARTHUR &. CROWELL that section held for those who were For City Treasurer willing to work and work hard, Mr. WILLIAM CARUTHERS Hill put his shoulder o the wheel ana : as the result of a ceaseless strugls PO Sy - ho was able Lo witness the accom- GRORCH, W HERIEH plishment of his great task and see CHARLES H. RAYNES As - . the benefits which resulted in accord- For Water Commissioner ance with his belief. HUGH BLACKLEDGE A man of wonderzul insight and the backer of many schemes wiich were TIME FOR A CHANGE. looked upon as foolhardy by others When it comes to the conduct of|WhO had less confidence or a pocrer j 4 % o | understanding of their merits than he the city’s affairs, the running of its|g;q ne not only amassed much wealth several departments and the expendi- | g% I B0l OV SIASREC HUch WeR ture of the half million or more which | (07, (TSSIE, bUE o CLveloRed A VS is required to meet the wants annual- | peang of many others besides nimself ly, the citizens and taxpayers not only| ;. yng in the Lenefits. He was not have a right to expect. hut do expect,| .4i 503 simply to promote this devel- that those who are named fo handle| S7STE3 SRR 1o DEAmote Chis devel its business shall see that it is ear-| o 5 So 6 P oy It to ried on with the same desree of eX-|{he end and it is bound to rewain a actness and with the care and judictal | 15,207 T8 L8 POURE 0 TelA8 forethought that is expected of those| “7, 3% POIEET KBS MOMETE: who are placed in charge of a private i ] 2 . bab ettt ilization follows the railroad, he could chin were all wrong. She the fact that his office was in the front room of the fiat where he lived, so that his domestic - environment in- even if all these inseparable a part of dentisiry as amalgam or gold fillings. “Fine weather we're _having,” the /dentist continued. ‘Mrs. Dodgson’s gone nunting a spring hat. That's what comes _of having my wife for assists| ant. She goes away and leaves me| Late evening Whenever she thinks best., But, even|&2led hér husband with the incident. at that, I'd rather have her than—" Here began an exhaustive account « Mrs. Dodgson’s talents as a near| S0 much that I hadn’t enough in my: | Shews 2:30, 7 and 8148 ‘Mat. 10¢; Eve. 10c-20c THE PLAY THAT SET THE WHOLE m TALKING —RETURN ENGAGEMENT— “HYPOCRITES” 4 hér husbe e incident. - SYMBOLICAL OF THE WORST AND THE BEST IN LIFE en came away,” she o 5 el Came sWelaTe on. i} crIPS THE ATTENTION MAKES ONE THINK iE 4 ] g ii'é: ;’5 ri Mrs. Halliday re- g mii TRICKS OF FATE PATHE WEEKLY dentist, which lasted until one tooth|Purse. And 1 was thinking that if! 2 Reel Pathe Current Events was ready fr filling. Just then the telephone bell rang and Dr. Dodgson stopped to answer it. Mrs. Halliday V“"W“\Y. and there fie was, think- 1esented this. “And it was nothing but green tea, Today=COL ONI AL, = Today “Yes” she heard him say. “Wen,|after all. You see he thought I un- ¢ i el | derstood it was our maid that called \ ¢ jes”—. go; _motfor mome time yet'(-Some- | Lo R O ranted it s i} 3 Parts—“Golden Lies”—3 Parts .. Essanay Drama !u(&k," ‘Mrs. Halliday guessed.) “Oh, yes, I'll teil her. All right” ‘hey were Hving on out of season lux- urtes liks that he'd have fo. charse ing how extravagant we were! ‘heirs. ke must have got the idea il “ON WITH THE DANCE” ....... . Vitagraph Drama that my maid was cut marketing end | ¢ “THE TRAMP TELEGRAPHER” ..._Kalem Drama called the grocery. But, mer- “DREAMY DUD IN LOVE” Essanay Drama kg o Boas Toor | 7. George! lsmt it =ll yowd want to = “THE FAITH IN SONNY Ji e grocery for lunch, he confided,|know of a person that he'd be crticiz- |ROr_how T was convinced that its “a . Vlhgnph Ctmudy e | ing the price somebody else is paying | hard road and a rough one that leads ond Mrs. Haliiday, thorouehly mus |for peas? Doesn't it show he's a med- | to the poor house” and made thank- aews with a cold lift of the eycbrows. “She said something about company for Tunch, too,” he added. -Mrs. Dodgson ought to have been here to take that message. But green ‘poas— I didn’t know they were in the market —_— e Hine ot thing > ful that Marquis Lafayette would The Wheeler School low oW t " How do you mmihe was criticls- | REYer be obliged 1o | For Boys and Girls ‘Because that's what I was odern houses used as separate residences for boys and girl Large Joiis, ot coureel™ athietis fields, tennis baseball diamond, basketball and all outdoor G“e’%rge ol Win Cipar v hia dtps 3 sports. Every student Is advanced as rapidly as he or she is able, under the ful supervision of an efflclent tea chln force. A large endowment makes at Mr. Fanning’s temerity. Fi-ae ) hat th 1d obtain 1 ‘_e]‘vo el s ;:g t:or:];e‘;r‘;?:fiul' :ut t;\de fil,:h m: It's queer, isn't it,.that fo it~possible to offer the students conveniences that ey coul d ol n in of in n air. g ace warn that o e Yory high priced schools at the | e 7 ow oX pense of $350 & year. If ¥ e going “They must come mighty high at|thiS was no time for jesting. roads to ride on the tax payers of| to tend your son or daugh! m- board ing .his time of the year,” he rambled on. “But that's nobody's business 1if we | chansge. e Royal A. Moore, A M-, Pflm‘-lPlL North Stonington, Conn. choose to buy things out of season, I £lways tell Mrs. Dodgson.” “Bragging!” thought the dumb lady, 1nore resentful than ever just now, be- cause of the electric burr grinding away on one of her teeth. For a few minutes he gave his full|the city been attended to In a mas: attention to work. - Then, recalling so- tefly ‘way under the democratic rule cial obligations, he inquired casuali “A good maid, have you?” school this “year, Write us betore “I see” he m Eravely. —Bx- | Norwich have to go outside of the| you come to a decision. Fanning is quoted to have Said In his | ey speech, “during eighteen of the twenty LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |vears just passed the mayors of the| Petroleum as Locomotive Fuel. |from refineries operating in ever-in- 3 city have been re-elected from the < creasing number in Oklshoma and democratic_party?” No, perhaps it's| Figures just made public by the|ganqaq The Sgests RwutiSiew It not altogether that, but, however that | United States Geological Survey dis- | “TH0% 001 gistance covered by ofl- Mr. Editor: “Haven't the affairs of | may be, it's certain the street depart- | close a marked increase in the use of | purne “Gocon rooce, SOUReC W 00 ments of the last few years have had | Petroleum as a locomotive fuel by the| y55 595 mites and the average distance something to do with it. railroads of the United States in 1915.| sovered per barrel of ofl fuel con- These words of Corporation Counsel The city barn may have been use- The data at Hand show that the quan- sumed was 3.39 miles. Oil fuel is now X Fanning, as quoted in your issue of |ful as a political institution but it's|tity of oil fuel so consumed last year| ;.3 to some extent on 40 railroads It is difficult to express hauteur|May 16, 1916, uttered by him in ac-|heen a dismal failure as a producer of | was 36,645,466 barrels, an increase of vith one’s forehead tied into a bow-|cepting the chair at the recent demo- rnot and one's distinguished nose|cratic caucus, are pleasing to the ear | money enough. They've had mana- | the similar consumption in 1914. This pushed out of shape by a sheet of|{and imply ‘that only an affirmative tightly drawn rubber, but Mrs. Halli- |answer could be raised in response. cay did what she could. “Gossi; i ing tracks in Bood and clean strests. They've spent | 5,555,200 barrels or 18 per cent over|Jl the United States, having gers enough. If Erroll was up on the | increase is ascribed to the relatively farm, Henry, the thousand-dollar clerk, | low prices prevailing for fuel grades Mentioning No Name. It didn’t seem to me at all a self- 3 pto| I ; all a selt- | could excuse himself from aldermanic |of oll during the last year and a haif| In its whdle history this country s Fia|ho said to herself. “What interest is|evident proposition when I read it, In the estimated expenses for the| Dt Dhave been more successful. He Guties long enough to keep the ash|as a result of the increased produc-|has had but one president whose rec- ol sl % o : . |ana after my experience of a few days | carts rolling and send out the hoe bri- | tion of low-grade crude in the Gulf|ord comands the unqualified ap- ensuing year there is included the GrouEhy. Taeea 1A s DRk er since, I have been forced to the con- |gade. Coast States and In Mexico and of the | proval of Colonel Roosevelt--Wall sum of $18,812.51 which is to be raised | naUStrY in which he operated and ia clusion that at Jeast in one important | No, there’s the Tt £ rallroad bl & Senunt < T something different | augmented output of suitable residuals | Street Journal. e solution of railroad problems -he epartment of city government the af- | needed, perhaps it's a few of those by taxation this year for the purpose| .. o wizarq He was a leader in THE WAR PRIMER fairs of the city have been attended |men etthout. any experience what- of putting it into the reserve fund of | yyginess activities and what he didn't|| By National G i to in anything but a “masterly way.” | ever” referred to in the speech which the gas and electrical department| |0 anout tramsportation, by rail- ¥ o St g ot I refer to that which is perhaps most | nominated the present clerk of the / This ought to have been done at thel o4 o by steamship, was ‘no‘ h apparent-to all, the streets. city’ barn for mayor of the city of last city meeting, it is claimed, but, . The e Roht of Testcn As T drove back frorh the State Hos- | Norwich. Much as T'd hate to see the profits of the department were i ng. e een irsight of Jamcs - . pital the other day and made various] Henry out of a city job I'm inclined such that there was not enough money | 1 1l O any queston of the day Js| Tsinanfu, one of the chief centers of | calls about the city I took observa-|to cast my vote agajnst him, feeling in the treasury from that source to|SCinE to be missed bul how firmly | disturbance during the revolutionary|tions with Mr. Fanning's pertinent | satisfied that “inexperience” can’t de- o/ AEranury s ilse o and well he builded those proper- |outbreaks now occurring in China, is|question in mind. I had_no sooner | molish my Ford any faster than “old- meet the requirements. Nothing Was|ieq in which he had becn so long and | the Subject of the following bulletin | crossed the city line on Laurel Hiil|timer” does now. done about it. No explanation was| " itany interested, is indicated by |Of the National Geographic Society,|avenue than the macadam trenches| Yours for better streets, made of the condition and whatever| iy, foot that his passing had ¢. | issued from its Washington headquar- | supplanted the smooth macadam out- “TOO MUECH CITY BARN.” amount there was was used in meet- A he o Jtex side*and forcibly reminded one that I| Norwich, May 30, 1916. ing the gemeral expenses of the city|lcCt UPOR their financial standing | ““The disorders which are making a|was within the jurisdiction of the as those in power saw fit. The re.|Cven though he was well along in|political maelstrom of Tsinanfu (also|democratic town committee chairman, e 1t o thait whiktavis Sacasy: thes years the country can ill afford to|spelled Chinanfu), the capital of, the|Street Commissioner Lillibridge, and Too Much Freedom for Dogs. MUt e WIOVOE ponay 15030 SR Fome him. province of Shan-tung, China, es|after T'd been thumped by two or| Mr. Editor: In your paper of today available once is gone and the citi- space in the news of the day to a city | three of his fort-like crosswalks there |a man fromr Plainfleld signs “a friend zens must be taxed to make it up. EDITORIAL NOTES. of 100,000 inhabitants which has been|was no room for further doubt. After|to animals” has a curious idea about Does that show that the business has Peace talk gets n ai th poised on the brink of calamity for a|eating the dust of Franklin square | farmers keeping sheep.® - been conducted for the :interest of the [, S9€7 ‘ot £OI8 o “‘(‘ el‘"*d"“ e | decade. It is in this vicinity that the|and climbing CHff street hill T turned| It is the most unreasonable argu- taxpayer? Does it show good busi- i REON s constantly drowned relentless Hoangho (Yellow River)|into the bumps and hollows of the old | ment I ever heard on this question. He ness management, and are we to out by the pounding of the big guns.|each season threatens destructive de-|Wworn-out and long-neglected dirt road | would have a law that farmers must farm on |sheep away from doge Nothing but sentat} i s s i - |Scotland Road couldn’t rival it for|a wire fence would the Clent. o that It has throush hs en. |ToSentative to this country, but with- | it broke through its banks at Kiafeng. ng d D a oriencs Alnayerea pom L e o | out & note. Wonder where he got the |ful, flooding an area as large as the|bumps and hollows. Next came the |from the sheep. Such fences of rails, THESE ITEMS ARE REAL BARGAINS idea? state of New York and entailing the | broken macadam with its stone humps | or walls, as farmers use for this pur- own nest? ” <y Coacider Th. 18¢ Prime Steer Beef Cuts loss of more than a million lives. and water-holes on Franklin street | pose could be scaled by dogs and sheep “Tsinanfu, with its triple walls, lies |and McKinley avenue, When I reach- | killed. _Instead of a law to make ot e l;g:; ald that the people| To many Memorial day means the tour mites 5o ‘the. sonth of the Heang: | ed Broad stroet I couldn’t stand it any | farmers bulld such fences to keep off Ro AST BEEF many of themn are, whothee they fact | opening of the seashore seasom, but it | p,, whose river-bed year by year is|lonser and decided to risk the dirt|dogs, why not make a law that any y of them are, whather they like | certalnly did not get an auspiclous|elevated above the contiguots piains,|road again rather than be dashed to |farmer finding a dog on his premises it or not, but when they learn of such'|start this year. 1 ‘while hi i e yui fragments on macadam remnants. could shoot him at sight and that no mathads. they Are ot AkEIY 16 Vit e R e T e e o acror | e bounders of Broad street were | pay for the dog could be collected? Cured Smoked Fresh Cut Hamburger continue them, and in view of this ana| While Germany is preparing for an- | ring as long as possible the fateful|sc constant and So sharp that you| Why should dogs be allowed to roam OULDERS, b Ibs C other revelations as to poor manage- | Other winter of war, it is quite-evident | day whgn e u}:ressl:lre hof mi‘s.flmg ;z:lds J.":;g“; n':l{fifl:;edgeren‘:; o:::;: :{,9“‘?3‘3 the country any more than —,__;_--_-__- sereses ent i ev n that they do not consider themse! stream breaks through_ the banks an mm| ? n o p::h: :s Ch-::;:t !::\:et g_:; ;}m:“ ci): DHEL ity oz R e st b e e most :cce{.ltuate._d cmu('lwa.lklu,(and fl:mfi 73 l:!nrmers had to bulla !uc}ndn. fen?c Nicely Cured BACON 17 conditions will be assured by the elec- o victimn b they waksn now: ohBE [E e BAERG Rea e L was | Tat them naRORIY L T st o rex. LI S, 1D c tion of the republican ticket next| Many a motorcycle rider must real- | ML 12 e sea Sline, the abundance of lost motion | son why Tarmers should Rave 1o build s AL L Seutay. ize at one time or another, that it is|_ Lhe Hoangho is one of the great 3 y ha easier to break a neck than it is to GREEK FEELING MANIFESTED. |2lter a record. That there should Pke rioting at Athens as the result of the invasion Amateur gardenérs come and go, ] but if they are actually interested it of Greek territory by the Bulgorian |takes more than a backward May to forces, and the occupation of Greek |discourage them. forts which King Constantine’s troops — were forced to evacnate is not sur-| Tt is possible to find yards and al- prising. It is but the outburst of leyways, the owners of which have pression that should have been ex-|apparently not heard that clean-up pected in view f the feelinz that has|week has come and gone. been manifested in the past over the _— attitude the Greek governmcrt hes| It is with increasing sorrow that taken relative to standing by its trea- | there is noted each year new gaps in ty with Servia. The people of Greece|the already seriously depleted ranks have witnessed the extension of Bul-|of the Grand Army vererans, garian lines with much rosentment. e e, S b They have recognized the menace to| Dr. Arthur Warren Waite is not ap- their own nation, and since there hus | Parently willing to go to the lengths not been the best of feeling between | that Harry Thaw did to save his life the two nations since the Balkon war,|and escape the punishment for his it is but natural that the Greeks |crime. should Interpret the seizure of the outposts as the preliminary step to-| The man on the corner says: It wards permanent occupation, regard. | there weré no other reasons for living, less of the promise that is made that|the fact that it takes all kinds of peo- they will be abandoned following the | PI® to make a world would be suffi- g clent. 2 The purpose of the Bulgarians is of course. to strengthen thelr position |, Th&t angel-faced boy who managed and to bprepare a stronger defense |0 St away temporarily with J. P. against any aggressive action upon ?“mn & Co's’ péy zoil Srobably. 18- the part of the allied forces at Salon- | .4 UPOD the fact that appearances iki and they apparently base their|2r® decelving. action ‘upon the fact that inasmuch as the allled armies have been per- |y orrony o o In which some mem- mitted to occupy Greek territory that ot O Soaerocs @te standing in the Bulgaria is entltled td like conces-|pu% ©f SOINate Bropereances they o take the bull by the horns sions. The Greek government may be | ang start an anti o willing 1o accept such an interpre- st saincoomgs sl tation as that but it is quite evident that certain of the populace, and es- mv’vn P ::xé‘:u ot ‘:: mm: pecially the large following of ex- Premier Venizelos, view it otherwise. The Bulgarians are traditional foes of the Greeks and are now making use not only of Greek territory but’ of Greek fortifications by taking. advan- tage of the fact that Greece is mnot prepared to resist, and the rioting which 1s following indicates that there is a point beyond which™ it is impos- | the man is telling the people that they sible for Greek patience to remain|must nominate me, In Philadelphia-there is to be adopt- watercourses of Asia, but it very ap- propriately bears the name of C‘hina’s sorrow’, for although it is almost as notwithstanding, finally jounced me |a fence to protect their sheep from IEAN off the edge of Roath street hill into |a e ‘where l& the midst of that monument of street| I see in your paper today where a |l PORK R()AST, B . long as our own Mississippi and drains | building and maintenance, North Main & Dasin of nearly 300,000 square miles, | Street! It must bring tears to the|sheep and 10 lambs killsd by dogs. it is practically useless as a commerce carrier, its waters being to shallow in ‘winter and its current to torrential in farmer in Ledyard had 20 nice large eyves of the tax payers to have to look | Dogs are a great nuisance and should on helplessly as their automobiles of | be destroyed at once. The country is the gas and electric department are|full of half-starved dogs summer. It brings down from the|d2y Dy day ground to bits in this|around looking for food. 9 thoroughfare, the department's very 2 A o Detiow St thente 1is mamey. wiigh | front yard, so to speak, because of the | Dantelson, May 27, 1936, FRESH EGGS PURE LARD 15¢ cause the bed of the stream gradually | smasterly way” in which its sister dozen : Ib. . a7k to rise. The natives endeavor to check cpartment of stree as een ad- By sm 1 D."v"v. ses e s cssrsnsse ss e sevee the waters as they begin to spread |ministered under democratic rule. B out from the elevated channel, and —e ‘Well, I won't take the space to tell| If any collector wants the Colonel's out Trom e ievatod Channel. and |, Well T, Yor', take the space fo tell] ¢ suy collector wente, the Coleris|ff WHOLE MILK. COTTOLENE the eurrounding plains. When the|S0 carefully applied by the “May-day | ‘the only man” who should be nomi- CHEBE' Wi break occurs the waters often find a mow channel and besin again their|uP to greet me on the West Side hills, | in an early mail. — New York Sun. -;l-mng up’ process. The extent of the nges in the course of this erratic river during the last 2,500 years is in- dicated by the fact that some of its mouths are 50 miles apart. “It has been computed that within the next 36,000 years the Hoagho and the. other important rivers of north China, the Yangtsze and the Peiho, will bring down enough siit to fill the Yellow Sea and the Gulf of Chih-li, thus connecting Manchuria and Korea with Shantung, and giving rise to po- litical complications which need hard- ly disturb even the most far-sighted statesmen of the present generation. glass from Po-shan-hein, chief ocity of the ‘black country’ of Shan-tung, where it has been manufactured since the sixth to the north. Peking is 245 the northwest. “One of the widely appreciated na- tural phenomena of this section is the spring of warm water, near the west gate of the city. It is supposed to have great bealing powers.” The War A Year Ago Today May 31, 1915. French made gains between Sou- squad” of the street department flew | nated at Chicago will surely bring if FANCY Sunkist GRAPE FRUIT |OQRANGES 4 for . 25¢c|18 for ..... 25¢ Large PINES each ..... 12%¢c PETELER AUTO JACK s vt 44 Old P(YTATOES ‘The P_ETELER AUTO JACK embodies fi"!l'“l. sim- plicity and power, and is the only jack with an automatic peck ... s . peck /. .. - - - 40ciiarge, Ripe A drop bar. It is designed to cminate the faults of other | CUCUMBERS BANANAS Juicy LEMONS jacks and give the motorist a feeling of confidence that 17for . <. .. 25c|dozen ...... 15¢ it will not only do the work asked of it, but do this work (5 s dadided in the easiest way, day in and day out—indefinitely. For sale at all garages. ' THE C. S. MERSICK & CO,, _DISTRIBUTORS 274-292 State Street, New Haven, Conn. have no fears. 'K r method y Illl crowned or extracted ISOLUTELV WITHOUT PAIN. CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUNZNTS tumbler - CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS BT 3R 10 B Does Un dread of the dental chair -uu yw neglect them? Va a.owtn PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK 1f these appeal to yw. call for examination and estimate. No charge for consultatio DR. F. G. JACKSON ? DR. D. J. CO¥LE QEN'I'IGTQ (Buccessors to the King Déntal Co.) NORWICH, COKN. wmvu.mn.u.wn P. M. 203 MAIN ST. 9 A M. to8P. M. Lady Asistant