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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 2, 1916 @nmm‘h gulletm and Qouied 120 YBARS OLD THE NATIONAL ENCAMPMENT. The Grand Army men are looking forward with féelings of interest and pleasure to the national encampment ‘which is to be held in Kansas City the first of September, although the rail- roads are not making the concessions expected. A one-cent-a-mile fare was asked for the round trip, but a two- cent-a-mile rate was given between the east and Chicago and from Chi- Subscription price 12¢ a week; 50c a | cago to Kansas City a little in excess month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postofrice at Norwich, Conn., as second-clags matter. Telephone Cal Bulletin Business Office 4S0. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 385-3. Bulletin Job Office 35-2. Room 2, Murray Willimantic Office, Building. Telephone 210. Norwich, | Wednosday, Aug‘ 2, 1916, H 3 §T|1e Clrculatlon of : ’The Bulletin i The Bulletin has the largest} circuxauon of any paper in Eastern3 Connecticut and from three to fours times larger than that of any in$ § Norwich. "1t is delivered to over} 3,000 of the 4,053 houses ‘n Nor-3% $ wich and read by ninety-three per§ cent. of the people. In Windham § it is delivered to over 900 houses,$ in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it$ is considered the local daily. H i Eastern Connecticut has tnrtys 2 nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five postoftice districts, and sixty$ ;.ural free delivery routes. H 2 The Bulletin is sold in ey own and on all of he R. F. routes in Eastern Cbnnecticut. o i CIRCULATION 3 ;‘QU' , H AVErage...cocveansnnens 1805, average. PENSIONS FOR LETTER CAR- RIERS. The bill to retire the letter ‘carriers and postal men generally on a pen- sion of § a yvear, has been reported out of the committee, with the recom- mendation that ss pass the measure. Since most of ou porations 500 cor large private cor- re pensioning old employe who have devoted their whole lives to their interests when they retire; and municipalities are pensioning their aged and Incapacitated policemen. there is no reason why this great gov- ernment should not take care of the men who so faithfully serve the whole public in all sorts of weather. The letter carriers are the public’s burden bearers; and they are loaded two and three times a day with p and letters and travel rezardles the heat or the cold more miles a day than most of us imagine. It is a hard and responsible service in which they suffer for our convenience many dis- comforts and hardships. Many men who have rendered less valuable service to the people are drawing pensions today; and there is no reason why the handlers of our mails should not in old age have sus- tenance and comfort assured. s A SHAMEFUL CONDITION. According to careful estimates re- cently made England has 800,000 school children wanting meals and not get- . ting them; and this does not include the children under school age who are not getting the food they need to sus- tain them in health. This is an appalling state of affairs of which any country should be ashamed, especially a country worth eighty billion with an annual income of ten and a half billions, and which boasts of its great intelligence and power, A country that is breeding paupers by the million and undermining the health of millions of her working pop- ulation because of a rotten and arbi- trary system of government should not be surprised to find her citizens slow to respond for defense, or her subjects y victims of the tempter when the reward is ample, England needs a great humane and industrial reformation which will place her people on a par with the well d and well fed people of other civ- ilized lands. Her present system of treating la- bor is a menace to her future prog- ress. HOW OLD ARE YOU? Age is more a matter of mind than of years. Some people look as old at 35 as others do at 75. The saying is that a man is no older than he feels.” The Psalmist's limit of three score and ten has had a depressing effect upon men who have accepted it as true. “Shut the door to the sun,” says an Italian proverb, “and you open the door to the doctor. Youth doesn’t accomplish everything If Hercules in youth Gid perform the Twelve Labors. There are great young men and grand old men fizuring in the world’s history. Raphael and Byron and Keats and Shelly did their great work in the 20’s; and Jesus and Alexander the Great theirs in the 30's; but Galiles was about 70 when he wrote the laws of motion; Ludovico wrote the memories of his times when 115; Noah Webster studied 17 lan- guages after he was 50; Longfellow, Whittier and Tennyson did their best work after they were 70. Every man is the superintendent of his own energy and may conserve or waste it. Many men who were inval- lds in youth have lived to be centen- narians because in the morning of life they were compelied to learn the laws of health. ‘We hear of men nowadays 70 years young. These are not thinking of death, but of the blessing and abund- Imes ef dle. of two-cents-a-mile, and the time limit of 30 days was cut in two. Since there are less than 47,000 of the fighting men of the sixties on the pension rolls, it is not to be expected that they can command the same con- sideration they dida when there were many times this number. The matter of a few dollars of ex- pense will not deter many who have planned to go; and the reception and entertainment being prepared for the veterans by Kansas City will make the trip worth all it costs. The tickets may be obtained on and after Aug. 26th; and on Sept. 10th the start for home will have to be made. The ages, of the veterans and the distance of Kansas City will oblige many new England veterans who would like to attend to remain at home. WHEN OLD SOL MENACES US. When Old Sol sends a heat wave across the country and the people of half a dozen cities fan themselves in the shade at 100 desrees he is a men- ace to our peace if not of our safety. How many more degrees of heat do you suppose humanity could stand? Twenty degrees more would make us feel like a lobster in the pot when the water is reaching the boiling point; and 50 more degrees would burn the earth barren of all life. 1t queer, that when the sun is farthest away it gives the most in- tense heat: and when nearest to us we get a temperature of 45 or 40 de- grees below zero. E When Gen. Humidity and Old Sol make it too hot for us, it is kind of to commence a drive with the north wind and knock the ture down fifteen or twenty The balances of nature seem nicely adjusted, and to operate for the well-being of all life upon this planet. ot ‘we shall experience year than the heat- st experienced: and that we may now have good weather enough to cure for harvest the hay- crop. us hope EDITORIAL NOTES. Green corn for a place beans n. and in the are calling The old swimming hole remains as vopular as a five-cent w. kaiser ought to see that he can’t The terrify John Bull. He can only irri- tate him. The bell nt progressives haven't horse sense: They decline to come for su We should raise our hats to the east wind as well as to the flag. It is a protection, a wonder some of these over- It is ¢ nice people do not object to a second- hand breeze. The man who thinks he is always right isn’t anywhere near it. His thought prohibits the possibility. The German princes having British titles have been shorn of them. They can keep their uniforms to look at. s now charged with having made this country inviting to sharks. And the worst of it is this seems to be true. Wilson There may be just as much inquiry la: why the Deutschland does not arrive, as there has been why she did not leav Roumania. raises the bristles on her back like an irritated bull dog once in a while; but she has not been heard to bark, yet! Prince Okuma of Japan at 79 is sure he will live till he is 125. This is a good feeling to encourage, but all the chances are against him. The Turks and the Bulgarians begin to fear they have been misled. They cannot see what they are to get for the price they have paid. If the kaiser could capture Petro- grad he would delight in annoying his Cousin Nick by changing the name right back to St. Petersburg. The kaiser gives the world an in- ventory of what Germany has won in the wa but the world knows It hasn't won what it went after. The army doesn’t recognize an eight hour day or the summer half-holida: A warrant officer writes he works from 4 a. m. until 10 p. m. daily. It will be a trial for Wilson when informed after the adjournment of congress he has been renominated to look as if he had never before heard of it} The board for the equalization of the taxes of Connecticut has got more money for the state; but it can have no hope of making crooked ways straight. About forty banks in different parts of the country have denationalized and are back to the old state bank system. This couldn’t have happened under a republican administration. A democratic congress could not calmly consider preparedness; but when Villa and his men got it excited, it voted $685,343,017.27. That 27 cents must have been appended for luck. The decision of Judge Waddill that the belligerents have no right to take prize ships into neutral ports for safe keeping, will not please everybody, but it sounds like pretty good law. ‘When th)s great war is over this will be a different world. Democracy will be in trim to express itself, and royalty will cease to look divine to any one but the royalists themselves. We are told Sir Roger Casement’s great desire was to become a citizen of the United States. Had he no- ticed the welcome from the Goddess of Liberty he would not have been where he is now. What Did She Mean? Miss Bright (to her small brother)— “Willie, put Mr. Borleigh’s hat down; vou might damage it—besides he will want it in a few minutes.” DEEP PROBLEM ! “I am trying to solve a mystery,” said the amateur philosopher, “and I would fain confess that it has captured my capricorn.” “Your whom?” demanded his friend. “My capricorn, which is an imag- inary goat that serves as one of the twelve signs of the zodia “Ah, I see,” said the friend. “Well, what 'is the problem that has your goat?” “It is this: Why is it that when a fellow is most anxious to make a good impression he always makes some fool break?” “I don’t know, but what's the an- swer?” “There isn’t any that I know of, but the thing is forced upon my attention at every turn. “For instance, T was invited to my rl's house for dinner last Sunday and felt pretty good about it. I thought of the old saying that the road to a man’s heart lies through his stomach and it cheered me considerably to im- agine that the idol of my dreams was thus laying siege to my heart, which, needless to say, in its present stage of unpreparedness and dodoism, would have to surrender at the first sign of a hostile intention. “So I dolled up to the limit, re- agreed with her father in his political opinions, praised everything in house and was getting along excellent- ly and then dinner was served. “I do not cough once a year on an average, but at that dingdonged neal as soon as I took a bite of food some of it slid clandestinely down the inner tube of my esophagus and immediate- Iy there was a blowout. I felt as if T had been marked down for a special sale, but wasn't through yet. Next I upset my peas in a horrid mess. “Her father was a good sport and tried h& best to make me feel at ease, but his remarks only added to my nervousness. 1 overturned the coffee and in reaching suddenly to prevent it from goimg over got my elbow in the gravy. “They served me another cup of| coffee, but when they handed it to me | it slipped out of my finsers, but that was an accident, pure and simple. I wouldn't have done it if I hadn’t first got my fingers in the butter.” “Well, you had a streak of bad luck, that’s all.” “It'S worse than that, my friend. Such an experience shows that some- thing is at work teaching humility to the fellow who is trying to put up a good front. And the worst of it is that the girl cooked that dinner all by solved to make a good showing. I her little self.”—Chicago News. Stories of the War I ’ POLITICAL The Kaiser's Letter to the German| A Sensible ‘Southern Protectionist People. The battle is raging, huge beyond all previous imagination. Rejuvenated, perfectly equipped with all they wan Russia’s armies again hav against our bulwarks in the e: has eased the situation in Italy has experienced a regeneration in this war of ch she hardiy believed he: self pable. S dragged her dilatory English joining the offensive on the Somme, and whatever inward worth the Brit it has an abundance of has, Face Storms of Steel. “The iron hurricane rages brave German men at the ces and white >n come us in wave after wave in storms, and sullen is at s The ice sh- ers on the Thame d for our holi things. The he: and life of our women and our children are menz Even neutrals must bear hung the depths of the ocean are open to us. What, German people, in this hour? The army hortations. It has fou ly. It will fight until But the people at home duty; to suffer in silen renunciation with digni home are not all doing o Not all are alive to the tremendous seriousness of the times. Are our peo- ple at home the same people at the beginning of the war? The writer fears not. Suffering Necessar “Le. us remember that thi dinary rupture of ording the hour of destin land the hour whic for centuries. We must position to the entire world. co-operate in the struzgic “Any man or woman wh or her head or suffers despondency to enter his or her soul is guilty now of treason. ery word of complaint or discouragement is a crime against our fathers, our sons and our brother: Let us show the greatness of the s no or- life. It is for our father- will influence us unite in op- We must hangs his man nation. Do not jeopardize e thing by petty squabblinz. It is no time for st but it is time for ho ing together. In this hour the bes blood of the nation, mature men and budding youths are presenting their breasts to the iron hail of the Eng- lish, Russian and African hordes. erything is at stake.” T QTHER VIEW POINTS | friends debt Some of our who are busy pro-German pointing out the ization ow Germany, empha sizing Liebig's co! ution to chem- istry, Ohm's to ics, Helmholtz's to biology, etc., stran i about Von Tirpitz’s -contr “frightfulness.’— Waterbury ~Republi- can, If von Hindenburg’s line yields in any material degree to the pressure of the Russians, Prince von Wedel's or- ganization to secure an honorable and reasonable peace ought to get big boom. Tt is believed t Hindenburg has the strongest defense along the entire battlefront in the east, and the Germans regard him a ene of their very ablest commander: Mg yieldings as the result of inanilit to withstand the Russian attack would inevitably shake the confidence of the Germans in the army, General von Did anybody ever see a convention of public’ offi 1s- -like these postmas- ters in W rington—which made its politics so conspicuous and was encour- aged by the head of the nation in h address to consider themselves as Dem- ocrats rather than as public servants- In old days, before c ervice reform came, they vsed to charge that the Re- publican postmasters were the most of- fensive partisans in the whole bunch, but they didn’t get together and label themselves a partisan organization.— Waterbury American. Harold R. Durant, formerly of Wa- terbury, once representing that town in the general assembly, is now an editor of plays for the Famous Play- ers Film Co. Tt will be recalled that Mr. Durant was elected assistant clerk of the house and was in line to go through the other positions of clerk of house, clerk of senate and so on, but for some difficulty in practising law which forced him from practise. As it happened, this was a good thing for him. He took to story writlng and made a marked success of it—Bridge- port Post. Germany 1s frank enough to say it wants peace. But President Poincare of France says Germany must ask and not proffer peace terms. This appears to be a bit stilted and affected. Eng- land is presented as wanting to try out its mew million-men army for a drive against the German line. Any such desire is not creditable to the hu- manity of the Enelish government. There must be frankness before peace, and Is it not time for all the warring powers frankly to declare their wish for peace and go about to get 1t?—Torrington Register. Consider the Delivery Horse. If every housewife who reads this page would see to it that the delivery horse has to make but one trip a day to her door, a vast amount of work and actual suffering would be saved thousands of horses. The orders of the day thought out in the morning would make it unnecessary to ask for a sec- ond, sometimes a third. delivery.—Qur Dumb_Animals. _John A. Guice, a provision broker of tchez, | Mi writes the American Bconomist as follows: I have Dbeen reading your paper for some time. I enjoy it very much, as it expresses my views on the tariff. I believe in tariff for protection. I an American, and I believe we ougr to patronize American-made We ought to protect manufactu country. If we do not, this war is over. nd now that the free trade proposition will not do, and next No- vember will cast their votes against free trade. A Straight Issue. The republican platform declares The Underwood tariff is a com failure in every respect.” That rai a direct issue that permits of no quib- m.nq over definitions. 1f the demo- ats think it is not a_complete failure, 1ot them comc bt e specifica- tions showing wherein it has succeeded It proposed to reduce the cost of liv and it failed in that. It proposed e rev respect did it accom American people wanted 1? — Wilmington (Del.) Only One Conclusion. laboring men of the The learned in not ‘reduce the cost of ioving. millions lost their jobs or w time. From their point of view, fore, they couldn’t have been werse off if the protective tar continued. They were consider worse off with it reduced. Now the war has brought another e prosperity and they have work good ges, that it is tne Underwood tariff wh the! an«l they cannot be convinced has brought about such condition There is only one conclusion for the to reach as:to their interest in the tariff question—Doylestown (Pa.) In- telligencer Striking Extracts From Hughes’ Ad- dress. We desire that the republican party shall be the agency of national evement. * * * I mean Ameri- ca first and America efficient. The dealings of the administration with Mexico constitute a confused chapter of blunders. A short period of firm, d friendly dealing will (in Mexico) more than many of vacillation. ‘We stand for no aggression. We want none of its (Mexico’s) territory. What does it avail to use some of the strongest words known to diplo- macy if ambassadors can receive the impression that the words are not to be taken seriously? We denounce all plots and conspir- acies in the interest of any foreign nation. Utterly intolerable is the use of our soil for alien intrizues, We are woefully unprepared. Adequate preparedness is not militar. vears %0 ism. Tt is the essential assurance ot security; it is a necessary safesuard of_peace. ‘We believe in an upbuilding protec- tion of our industries. We must build up our merchant marine. It will not aid to put the government into competition with pri- vate owners. We demand a budget. simple, businesslike LETTEEETO THE EDITOR The Municipal Peril. Mr. Editor: In regard to the traffic laws created and made cffective by the late democratic administration; also the hurdles’ which it took the late street commissioner four years to build and which after 30 dayy of republican rule, were removed, “One Who Likes to See a Crowd” thinks they should be made good. Is there anything au- tocratic about that? He further says: “If I should leave the city there would not be anybody here to oppose these ridiculous laws.” Great Scott! What would become of Norwich if he should run into a trol- ley car, or tear out a store window with his automobile and get killed? I shall have to acknowledge my shortcomings on the Latin proposition; but few of us common people have had his advantagesc, so to speak; and as far as advising him to go to 5 a member of the Y. M. C. A. and our aim is to help such as he to keep in the straight and narrow path. As far as the present street committee, and other city officials are concerned, they are simply enforcing a law which was left them by the late departed demo- cratic administration, of which I should judge by the “One Who Likes to See a Crowd,” one of the chief mourners. He says, “If I left the city there would be no one left!” Great Scott! Just think of it! Anything autocratic about that. or is it just plain bristles, or self conceit? Mr. Mayor, is there not some way! to provide for the future existence of our city in case anything should hap- The War A Year Ago Today August 2, 1915, Germans took Mitau from Rus- ans. Warsaw battered by 42-centi- meter guns, Germans won fight at Hill 213 in the Argonne. Australasians won Gallipoli peninsula. British notes upholding blockade and German note on Frye case re- ceived. victory on the | am | nue, and it failed in that. | ish | WHY WOMEN WRITE LETTERS | To Lydia E. Pinkham Medi- cine Co. ‘Women who are well often ask ‘““Are the letters which the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. are continually publishing, genuine?” “Are they truthful?” ““Why do women write such letters? ”” In answer we say that never have we published a fictitious letter or name. Never, knowingly, have we published | an untruthful letter, or one without the | full and written consent of the woman who wrote it. The reason that thousands of women fromall parts of the country write such grateful letters to the Lydia E. Pink- ham Medicine Co. is that Lydia E. Pink- | ham’s Vegetable Compound has brought | health and happiness into their lives, | once burdened with pain and suffering. 1t has relieved women from some of the worst forms of female ills, from dis- placements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, nervousness, weakness, stomach troubles and from the blues. is well and who has never suffered | to realize how these poor, suffering wo- men feel when re- stored to health; their keen desire to help other women | who are suffering as they did. pen to the “One Who Likes to See a Crowd.” And now, Mr. Mayor, and fellow members of the city government, if the opinion of about every one you meet is any criterion to go by, you are being commended for making a city beautiful out of a dump that has existed for vears; and the very radi- - the benefit of the com- you have brought about “One Who Likes to I should think from his mon people the nerves of he wants the earth; but not got the price to fence it in, will not be contaminated by common people whom Lincoln so well. His address on trafiic will never be cast in bronze for > benefit of future generations. Good 2 OF THE COMMON PEOPLE. THE WAR PRIMER By N tional Geographic Society x German tor- tleet of British , is the subject ng bulletin issued by the Geographic Society from t cruisers | of the follow; tional ther small islands of the and Maas (Meuse) and a marrow strip of the constitute the province of iland in the kingdom of Holland. island, which has recently been thrust into the news of the day by the clash of small hostile craft off its s, lies 300 miles due east of the seaport of Harwich and 160 of London, It is al- from the west for most the land is below sea level and only casional church spire peeps above Scheldt Sea. Behind thos how he sea-clay is extremel: fertile, and large crops of wheat, rye, barley ar d flax are raised. In addi- tion to r agricultural and dairy intere people are profitably en- ged in the manufas building, salt refining and yarn is connected with the | more e land of Duiveland by a dam across the Dykwater, while three of the islands to the south are connect- ed with the mainland by naturally rmed mud banks. Seven hundred ago the seven islands were sub- divided into many smaller bodies of land, but the silt from the Maas and >1dt has served to ‘weld’ these ments together, and the process ntinuing through the centuries. chouwen is now 15 miles long, with an average breadth of five miles. “The largest town on the island is the quaint old seaport of Zieriksee with a population of 7,000. During the rise of the Dutch Republic Zieriksee ven played an intel ng role, suffering like the rest of the cities of this un- happy land under the six years of tyranny perpetrated by of the Netherlands,’ the Duke of Alva, whose boast tkat during his career he nad caused the execution of 18,000 men would seem fully to justify Motley’s estimate that ‘such an amount of tealth and ferocity, of patient vin- diectiveness and universal bloodthirst- iness has never been found in a savage beast of the forest and but rarely in a human be: “It was du ig the regime of Alva's moere moderate successor, the Grand Commander Requesens, that Schouwen fell before the Spaniards. The man- ner of its capture was almost as novel as the manner in which the Siege of Leyden, onc of the most memorable in 2il history was raised. In the latter case, it will be remembered that Ad- miral Boisot sailed a rescue fleet to the inland city over land which had been flooded by the tempest that drove the waters through opened dykes. In the case of the capture of Schouwen the Spaniards, 1,700 in number, having been told by traitors of a way to avoid the defenders’ fieet, marched breast- h through the waters in the dead of ht and gained the shore of Duive- land, although during their advance they were beset by the Flemish island- ers who from their boats attacked the foreigners with daggers, harpoons and boathooks. After the fall of Duive- land all Schouwen was taken except Zieriksee, to which the islanders fled. The town held out against the besieg- ers for several months, but after the futile attempt of the gallant Admiral Boisot to briwg relief by sea, an at- tempt in which this deliverer of Ley- den lost his life, the garrisen yielded. This gave the enemy their much needed foothold on the ocean, from which they could make some headway against those terrors to Spanish commerce, the Sea-Peggars. “Almost immediately after the fall of Zieriksee the Spanish soldiers mutinied because they had not been paid, and the island was soon aban- doned, the mutineers swarming through all Zealand and Brabant and commit- ting outrages even more horrible than those to which the distracted people had been subjected under the organ- ized barbarity of Alva.” D aliila”ren Cry POR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA DAVIS T EATRf BROADWAY LAST CHANCE TO SEE THE BIG SCOTCH REVUE WYATT’S SCOTCH Hgsae LASSIES 11 People in Kilts and Tartan, Pipers, ingers and Dancers WM s HART In THE APOSTLE OF VENGEANCE = - 5-Part Triangle Ince Feature FATTY ARBUCKLE In THE WAITERS’ BALL 2 Reel Keystone Comedy COMPLETE CHANGE OF PROGRAM TOMORROW Today and Today and Tomorrow Tomorrow KLEINE-EDISON FEATURES PRESENTS THE CATSPAW An Enchanting Tale of Double Identity Founded on the Novel by William Hamilton Osborne—Five Parts. THE INTERNATIONALLY FAMOUS COMEDIAN HARRY WATSON, Jr. in “THE MISHAPS OF MUSTY SUFFER” A_Scream From Beginning_to_End. Z HOUR SHOW . _ALL ¢ s—)fi's S 10c 2 HOUR SHOW 8 _REELS_8 Threo Shows Dail 8_REELS_3 Wednesday Thursday It is impossible for any woman who | s NEW SHOW TODAY AUDITORIUM CLYDE FITCH’S THE CIRL ¥I" CREEN EYES A STARTLING 5-PART PHOTO DRAMA ON JEALCUSY TOILERS OF THE SEA Pathe News 3-Part Comedy Drama WCRKING FOR REFORMS Chemistry London, of the most vital of the after-the-war reform crusades which the public mi Cambridge traditions of room for delta, | and philisopher the lords net. for and Sir one of the "F("H minds of the country, and paid in_prepa Tord a plea for s sciences, plea for more schooling. reg: ure of linen, in| you _come to the hangman | OF EDUCATION IN ENGLAND. ! the United States as a witness and Engincering to Sup- |15 ¢ase- plant Latin and Greek. rowing with a mote of optimism. Aug. 1.—Education is one FLUMBING AND GAS FITTING are agitating advocate for the old-fashioned train- ing in the humanities, and summoned for Viscount Bryce concluded a debate which ranged from Greek to d. The Oxford and instilling a Robert J. Cochran2 little old-scnool learning in the way of Latin and Greek, hand in _hand GAS FITTING, with really expert knowledge of cricket and judgment of the vintages FEUMBIN G ASEE W IEITTING of port, are to be scrapped to make | Washington Sg., Washington Building chemists Norwich, Conn. and engineers, if the reformers have their his| Agent for N. B. O, Sheet Packing. burning topic. was by House of Lo Tecent- iy the American ed- ucational be, cited Phone 531 . the sid es’ FODERN PLUMBING pub- to the professors| is as essential ir modern house as to keep in touch | electricity is to lighting. We gu Tt was, however, > PLUMBIN ¥ of both 'the prac. | tee the very best PLUMBING WO audl e i e byl cxEecERworIIsuE R E S Lin E tary The deba largely a compar- | prices. ison of t of the Bri Ask us for plans and prices. man and American _s | Haldane, the former W former lord chancell as respon- N DTG sible for the discussion. Lord Hal- J F l Ol\l P1 10N dane, like Mr. Balfour, is a student of losophy for recreation, and as he 67 West Main Sirce: aid, has devoted much of his time for twenty vears to the study of ed- ncation. Iis hooks are well known to RIIDAL American educators. He is being de- - inal> nounced now by the German haters -l F fil}fi;\ij for his famous saving: “Germany is e : my spiritual home” and largely be- . £ 5! cause of that remark and all that it Heanng ahd h;.‘ was taken to imply the Scotch jurist s 2 plaln member of nstead of one of the cabi- Time may change his s 92 Franklin Street Tov s like Mr. Asq Grey consider i him IRON CASTIHNGS feld Marshal French ~ i34 hish tribute to his work ing the army for war Haldane had much to say the German system. He made boling in the practical first and throughout a His figures of Britain were recently FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY CO No. 11 to 25 Ferry Strest ut but rding the yvouth a revelation, if not a sensation. Lord| wwrree < 2 e . © To put yo - | Cromer, for a quarter of a century the | 13%a berore thg Dariic. thers. 1s mo sh ruler of Egypt, although | mediunz better than through the ade himself not a university man, was the | vertising coiumns vt The Bulleu=n. The Wheeler School For Boys and Girls Two modern houses used as separate residences for boys and girls. Large nr!\lnrh s, baseball diamond, basketball and_ all outdcor anced as pidly as he or she Is able, unc officient teac hing force. A large endowment n tudents all conveniences that they could ob at the low expense of $350 a y If you are hter to boarding school this 'y write us I de; Adcress Royal A. Moore, A. M., Principal, North Stonington, Conn. to offer the 1001 DAILY SERVICE Until Sept. 5, to STEAMER BLOCK ISLAN WATCH HILL = BLOCK ISLAND A. M. A M. P.M. P. M. Norwich o= IV (#8355 #%9.15 Block Island Lv. %2:15 #2:45 New London . 10:25 10:45 | Watch Hill .- 345 4:20 Watch Hill ... 11:30 12:00 | New London ety B IO 6ERE| Block Island Due 1:05 1:30 | Norwich .... Due 6:30 6:50 BoM." POM P. M. P. M. *Daily, except Sundays. **Sundays cnly. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, June 28 to September 1 WATCH HILL AVxn | BLOCK ISLAND % RETURN Adults, 50c; Children, 25c. Adults, 75¢; Children, 40c. Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hiil and Block Island. For further informatien, party rates, apply at office of company on Shetucket Street, Norwich. NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO. C. J. ISBISTER, Norwich, Agt. Don’'t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to neglect them? Vou nced have no fear y our method you can have your teeth filled, crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHCUT PAIN. CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES 6TRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUMINTS ) CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK If these appeal to you, call for examinatior. and estimate. No charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON DR. D. J. COYLE DENTISTS (Successors to the Ring Dental Co.) 203 MAIN ST. NORWICH, CONN. BA. M ta8P M - Lady Asistant Telephons ]