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- @lorwich Bulletin and Qousied 120 YBARS OLD Subscription price 13c & weekpS0c & | mont! 00 a year. cobtered at the Postarfice at.Norwich, i as8econd-class’ matter. Telephone Calls: usiness Office 480, tin Editorial Rooins. 35.8. Bulletin Job Office 35-2. Wilimantic Office, Room 2, Murray Building. Telephone 210, Norwich, Thursday, Bulet! ‘Bul o 24 3, 1916, {The-Circulation of | The Bulletin The Bulletin has the, Ilargest £ circulation of any paper in)Eastern Connecticut and from three to four § times larger than that of any in % Norwich. It is delivered to over §3,000 of the 4,053 houses !n Nor- § 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 "l,lflfl, and in all of these places it is considered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- aine towns, one hundred and sixty- five postoflice districts, and sixty ural’ fres delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of he R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. " CIRCULATION 1801, i H i SRSRST——— average....... 4412 seeeee5,820] i { | ; | 1905, average. HUGHES—THE REPUBLICAN NOM. INEE. census of opinion, that sghes, the republican n It is the cc ning jositiveness rather than ped- c manners would surely mark other way; and he knows government is a a science, not an experiment. He realizes that Mexico has been more pati than Wilson; and that Wilson with our forces been an invader of Mexico, and has failed ut- pose of increasing re- government because of his lack of firmness. Hughes is not for war, but for peace without of the law, or the which the breaches of neutral- nation has suffered for the past two vears beeause of a for- eign propagand: and alien intrigues which should not have been tolerated. Charles E. H hes fits the s on. He believes in the policies which have made the people prosperous and the country great. He is firm for the right nd representative of the American pirit. He 1| 1s dependable a was Washington Lincoln, and he has the full cc of the American people SOLDIERS HAVE A RIGHT TO VOTE. New York has 17,000 sc ers at the front and the authorities of that state are determined these men shall not be deprived of thelr vote in November f they are detained on the Mexican border, and officials of this and every other state should be active to prevent such an injustice. A democratic paper calls attention to the fa that “to reach this con- clusion attorney genecral has to hold tha sense of the New me of war is s is perhaps Zovernment by interpre- Washington says no war ex- Mexico City says no war exists. bany says otherw and the Al- bany view will prevail so far as com- pelling the collecting and the count- ing of the soldlers’ votes, unless the courts intervene and upset the attor- ney genmeral's decision.” If there.is no state of war. of course, thers is no defense for having’ 100,000 men on the border; and they may be, called home to flll thelr office as citi- zens. There need not be a legal contest. If the men are absent on war-duty the old.law for taking and counting the. vote will hold; and if they are not, then they should be 'sent home to re- oecupy their places in the ranks of TR TR should be looked into by the state; and this running of cars by unlicensed and Aissohute persons should be made an end of. The state is not in the business for revenue only. Its duty to its citizens requires . it ‘should safeguard life as much as-possible. COMPULSORY PATRIOTISM. The Bulletin is of the opinion if “The Star Spangled Banner” is not ‘honored because of its inspiring senti- ment, it had better Gle than to at- tempt to-compel Tespect for it by law. The action of-the city of Baltimore, in passing an ordinance compelling eople to rise when “The Star Span- gled Bannor” is plaved or sung, or else to be deemed guilty of a misde- meanor and subject to a fine of $100, is worthy a tyrannical government but unworthy an Amerfcan city. “The Star Spangled Banner,” an old (song which first saw the light under the title of “The Defence of Fort Mc- Henry,” but afterward was changed ana given the present title to make it natlonally acceptable, is more Balti- morian than natlonmal; hence there is a sense of municipal responsibility for its being preserved and respected if it must to be done by punitive ordi- nances. We are still freemen, not slaves to be rapped on the knuckles and com- mended to stand up when a national anthem is sung or the Stars and Stripes thrown to the breeze. If the old flag and the old song do not incite the Jove and respect of the peaple we can soon teach them to hate them by such laws as Baltimore bas enacted. Let us teach people to love our songs ang flag, and set the example our- selves by saluting them, that they may pay both due respect. It shouid not be done by law. A REVELATION. There has been encugh of a cou- flict to show that the Mexicans are really better prepared for war than our own forces. At Carrizal they had machine guns to Mow cur troops down with, and our troopers had none Although trouble has heen impend- ing for years we have not taken steps to match the Mexicans in their equip- 1d them arms and r and we were So short vhen the troops a hurry 1 miilion cartridzes was gi ‘e did not have a able ma- n when Vi Columbus, Ne chine gun unequipped. guardsmen been fc It took miss quite wake up. The pacifists have every reason to with the e of unpre- ness the government found itself Tommy Fritzy could and knocked our men without winking, EDITCRIAL NOTES. ov ¢ the score the hot article there, The joy-ric 2utomob! thing of a temptation to the house and do likew! ania now bod o There are of mosquitoes remain in the number ided to re and now we are remen do likewise. The man who does not know be: if th inues to s 1il to @ have become luxuries. The Am nickel may have six cents wor metal in but the fact is not noticed at the soda foun- tain, If the war does cost § a minute in cold cash, to say nothing of other costs, the parties to it are all still resolute, The democratic editors who were anxious Hughes should start some- thing are up against a flood now they cannot stem. ‘When Great Britain receives a sharp note from the present administration it realizes there’s nothing very cut- ting about Next to the game of life the game of baseball is the greatest game ever in- vented. No ome is likely to deny this but the politician: California’s protective scheme: To have hurdled roads approaching grade- crossings which compel chauffeurs to slow down thelr cars. The Deutschland commander and crew are such brave fellows that we should share in the glory of a suc- cessful trip for them. A general railroad strike would be a public calamity. Let us all hope and pray that such a turbulent state of affairs may be prevented. This summer appears to have been specially designed to knock out the the industrious and to enjoy thefr priv- lleges as citizens of the United States. NOT PREVENTING PREVENTABLE ACCIDENTS. The toll in fatal accidents because of the slack way in which automobiles are-being handled would have horrified. anysother age but this. As_the automobiles are increas: and the. accidents multiply, it is ap-. parent those owning machines anal using them need protection as much as_the, pedestrians in_the streets. When one or two‘children are;cTip- pled for lifs, or swept out of exist ence.fn.a moment, it s not:consoling) to parents to hear that the infants) “should have known better than have taken tho risk”’ or to witness a few tears and'hear: “I couldn’t pre- vent it—I wouldn't have donme it for the world ‘Thereare &omewounds in this world regrets or money cannot even soothe; and the. inefliojently handled automo- bfle,is increasing them from day to, day and week to week. The stato should take heed that there is a way to prevent these pre- ventable. accidents. The ability-and dependaiility,, of, the iperson licensed | exeorata swas extorminated: . . N - weather prophets. They are all down and so is about everything else. Every fool who can pull or push a lever Tuns an automobile in these days; but the day is dawning when fitness is all that will take a license. Galicia, Serbia and Poland, twico ught over, are marked by the crosses ot the burfed dead as no natfons ever have been before In the world’s his- tory. The primary cause of the tremen- dous explosion with its loss of prop- rty ‘and lives on Tom's Island was violation of law. We wink at wicked- mess and' suffer the consequences. Those who approve of Wilson have to approve of the appointment of Eryan, of Bryan's resignation, and ev- erything elso, even to the shaking by Wiison of his admonistary, pedagosic finger. Those-who advise the death of cats to save the birds, and the death of birds to save the crops, are told it is time the disease-spreading horse with his glanders and tetanus-laden A soldicr’s mail has to be paid for, | a cong s goes free. Why? Do not imagine Col. Roosevelt ha been quicted. He is only gathering force for the future In Europe thev ora mot taking so much notice of the temperature. Man “You took your vacation early, didn't you?” asked the friend that Crompton met _at lunch. “Yes, I suppose 80" Crompton. “Why so doubtful?” “To tell the truth, Tm uncertain whether it was a vacation or not. I'm inclined to think it wasn't.” “Why, that's too bad. 'What was the trouble?” “You eee, our friends, lent us their cottage.” “T've heard they have a very pretty little place.” “Yes, it's pretty, and you're right ahout it's being little. You remember those stirring verses we nsed to cite In school, beginning ‘We were orowd- ed in the cabin’'? That line ocourred to me over and over again while we were at Mayhaven. When it rained, which it did e good part of the time, and Molly and I and the children and the maid were 2ll squeezed in together in the tiny 1i room trying to keep warm by the fireplace, that line seemed singularly appropriate. We certainly were crowded In the cabin, and when Molly had her way ‘not a soul would Gare to speak,’ for fear of waking the baby, who Lad the good sense to sleep nearly all_the time during the bad ther. But the older children were to be quelled into quiet. They continually went out and came in, and steamed thefr dripping clothes by the fire. answered the Havens, ot “Although T've been a proud parent ve vears, I never realized how 8 Ave children are 1t up with them at May- name is legion. I couldn’t move without Sstepping on Bob’s toes or upsetting Betty. who isn't any too steady on her pins vet, and as for the twins, they were posi- tively 1mtous. They have and_thev were so a of kerosene for light, was new to their expe at the Jecided to have an illumination, and he one pleasant evening when I_tool n- hed which LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Norwich for the Crowd! ditor: If Mr. “One of the Peo- more pr le him At had = of the democr by arge promise s for 1 the pres: e He id seems v that present Glad nd he ask Zovernme r look around Guestions, or kee t 'f“.w 50 b and 1 but, then, don't | ‘Abuse was never argument. | »od-natured in vour retort, a | way. It hurts oftentimes to tell thel | the truth should out at all soked in print the othe see where a couple of ¥ prose vefore the court nd fined bec: they had left their vehicles on the street over 15 minutes Fine stuf! One of them was from | out of town: had come here to spend money in the town. That is the w they had to spend it. We find no fault with t surt, or with the of- S cd these people; simply e original source of can be remedied. In the meantime— HO! FOR A CROWD! A Voice From Voluntown. Mr. Editor: Let us hope that this will be the last of the letters printed n the “Traffic-Non Traffic” newspa- per squabble. To the few who have been trying to make a nasty mess, by ng for “more traffic, uncivilized | nd ordinance ill-regulated | tem of city safety,” they would b e very first ones to complain of the laws, if they were knocked down or | hurt by an automobile in one of their | much wanted “grent crowds,” that they are clamoring for. They holler now for “more trafic—- never mind the safety!” They demn those who are authorized, and who are doing thefr best to m Norwich streets safe for everyone, these “rattle-headed know who just want a chance to air their worthless views in the news paper. Tt is breake incinding these dizzy-headed speed- or maniacs, who are a hin- drance to our welfare, on the streets any place where they are encount- | cred. - They need a prairie, whers | they can be turned loose, and rear and | tenr all they wish to. They are “cooped-up” too much in Norwlch They think they are credits to Nor- wich by shouting “more traffic.” That In itself does not boost the town less the traffic has a system of own. The larger the crowd, the more care should be taken for safety. The laws need more enforcement when the trafic is heavy. Some of these writers don't seem to think of that. If a man is too laz to park his car, and walk to a store to trade, then his avoidupcls needs careful attention, or his conceit needs turning down. If he is “too nice” to mix with the erowds on th sidewallk. They are part of the “crowds” hol| wants to see, and yet he wants to roll | by in his limousine and look over their heads. and park his car in the busy sections and_expect trafic cops to vor kim. He is no better, nor half as censible, as the common peop who can walk and go by the rule of 50-50. Common sense and character shows up unexpectedly some times, and these unlevel headed writers who ha; permitted their thoughts fo escape them, ‘ahould’ keep thefr mouths clo ed. The laws are made, and will be en- forced, whether you or your rabble like it or not. The mayor pavs no attentfon to you. His business Is the welfare of the elty. and “cranks” have no effect on him He can enforce the law easier because he hasn’'t men In public offica of your stamp. We would have no laws and Norwich would be bedlam let loose, with vour idea of government. Tt you don't like the way its orwich laws are made and kept, why don’t you go cisewhere? You wonm't be missed, and yowd never make any im pression on_anyone, no matter where you live. We want no “bullies,” and | your letters show you belong to them. It might sting vou a little to have to obey the traffic laws, but fust try to go against them and see who has the authority to chanze vour_ opinion of what you think ought to be dona. Your letters are disgusting, and we want no more of them. SAFETY FIRST AND. LAST. -~ Wolunt: July: 3323916, CLOSE QUARTERS Molly and the youngest for a row they poured kerosene into every bowl in the house and lighted rags in them. “Of course it was a plain miracle that the whole house didn’t burn down. Luckily, it mesrely proved a pleasant diversion for the youngsters. Betty was ecstatic, and when Molly and I returned, frightened out of our wits nearly, she was dancing around the ilghts which those twins had deposited on the floor in front of the fireplace. Selma, the maid, was washing dishes in the Iitchen and entirely unaware of the fireworks. When she learned what was going on she declared that she wouldn't stay alone with the chil- dren again. After that Molly and I took our brief qutings accompanied by the whole clan and Selma, who was too timid to remain even in broad daylight by herself in the bungalow. “My advice is to take a country breken girl if youre going into the woods to keep house. Selma's delicate feelings were such that she could not brin gherself to dispose of the garbage, and when I wasn’t otherwise engaged I passed a good deal of time digsing last resting places for our table re- mains, “Also Selma wasn't accustomed to pumping and Molly said pect her to do that or chop any wi or kindling. so of course all the howing of wood and drawing of water fell to me. The twins' interest in the pump was t after they had re 1 lost the red the bolts. the wor: we were Ie sters sent them o station. ey must entertain and Betty, and they aid - “Ju nto my town othes ng my hat Bot to their chins, Ma funny PRIMER aphic Society of royal his | reached towa horizon gray | father- of S died | Sy is streake eir gaunt arms. |} Flande the | And the arms c rumbered crc ria Theresa, she |run out of the picture o € i urechead at the| “Tha later French court duri 3 notorious Mademoiselle and Mme. De Montespan a s of the devout Mme defeat at 7] Dra g the sway of la” Va 1 in intenon. Loui: to the ss of the city's ga ison but to the self-sacrifice of her people | she says. who employed the irresistible waters | th of the North Sea to fight their battle |0 t for them, as has been the case so |Stretch 1k s f many times in the history of the Low |the horizon. One looks from Count e dykes were cut and |forest of crosses in Russfa to he investing army of the Grand|vest of crosses in France, and fonarque fled before the flood uses (silently one thinks) “Kr During the war of the nd, (omitted by the censor. ¥ Succession nonde bravely e mother overhie b h_ genera; a ten days s forced to yield the famous camp: aring ~ wh in ign »uzh ed h Ramil- | efforts to Secure its pa: As at| 0 mileg tc t, where | present pending the measure does not | French under Villeroy |in any material w it lost 15,000 m lish and their Dutch allies loss of - ‘Om_many c5 by its Flemish name of Dendermonde At the outbreak of the war it was one of he five fortified towns of Delgium, but its defenses were not of modern | design. city is 25 miles by rail southwest of Antwerp. It is nine miles from Lokern and 13 miles from St Nicholas, two other towns of Belgium where rlotix ccurred simultaneously h the outbreaks at Termonde: “The most interesting buildings in Termonde are the Hotel de Ville {formerly the Cloth Hall), a fourt centur: nd the chur > W eenth two valuable pictures of Van Dyck “Termonde is only 20 foet above sea- leved, a fact which accounts for the case with which the surrounding was flooded w 0 besieged in cou 166 POLITICAL Still Wedded to Its Folly. That remarkable literary docume sent out from the St. Louis conver as the platform of the Democr party ie_emphatically clear scattered poix unqualified endo stration before Co; was rejected a yvear sen the devotion of on some no v this l The War A Year Ago Today August 3, 1915, Germans forced Narew line near Ostrolenka and the Bionie line. Prince Leopold of Bavaria lead- ing attack on Warsaw. 1t ns continue advance Trentino. in the —_— ] est, spiciest ginger snap tickled z palate. man, and get a whole pack: a nickel. UZU © Zu%o * ZuZo * Zg o Zi ZuZu e+ ZuZy e« ZuZu o Everybody!! Know Zu Zv! EarZu Zul The crisp- Make a bee line to the nearest grocer NATIONAL BISCUIT ' COMPANY that ever ageful for %07 » DZOT, o OZOZ o T s o FnZu o Do Zoe W du ar th ot Ge tin ito ty rmonde was due not | Over of | his secreta lin art mental pictu hui trenches the here Crosses Stretch Like Ficlds o Wheat. And when one go ibition to the great lier- of the in a senti- | 1ds that war pro- » ction of From th ctches done on the 1 paintings in the g The German soldiel e canva: em in_death are dirty, n beings. Most of the ve been struck less by life 1 by death in th the hes in tren erywhere are huddled corpses; oft- | the corpse clutches a ment of | ! hat was once his next friend. The rman artists have seen var x amour, d No; it is not sen- nentality One is sez I rching still for the sourc depression when vith a German family world as The father of G of med Termonde, a prosper town of 10,000 inhabitants at the beginning o fier dinver | ots, according to recent despatchss, the yo spreads over both banks of the Dend- Y a p er River and the right bank of the v Scheidt, the D a junc- ture with the 1 at this point, says today's hy a icty on one of the citics of Belgium | What this far bich is feeling keenly the pinch of |2 the world “Situated only 16 cs east of |you that every ol hent, the great heart of Flemior lio: | trifle depressed? ry, onde itself has a past t 1s upon one reely | which™ its citizens may w foel | "Of course, we are depressed. Wi proud here that Louis IV |shouldn't we be Gepressed? Look!” cuffered minous defeat at the |She hands one two photographs. Iier Very be lis war of Revolus |husband took the pictures himself. The tion, or ur, in which he set | first is a for about tc political customs and |feet tall, substitute n feet. A dies ther § one. the secontl, picture: “Kreuzland (o ovision And 1 have not heard youngest boy at Verdun for beats low, her brows are intent, because her children—h who are dying in unhappy far sles she cannot see—Erom a dent LONG ISLAND DUCK RAISING. pulse Single Farm Hatches 573 Ducks ry 24 Hours, or More Than 200,~ fixture the is a 2d menu of hotels. But it took s and pains,” disappoint- and losses, to learn how 1o put after obtaining a mar- 1 product, you must u_keep it steadily the market peters out; and 1 or artificial enemies which 1 the earlier duck farming e the supply unde- de ns in the waterways and o ed the that were finally found keeping off the muskeat hich would _drag under by the feet and drown and improved methods of and feeding have made the ugh the duck far- nees in the way of wi utilize cr therwise yield noth chiefest wholesale arly Lty uneven v luck biliti s to and partiy by 3 > land, wins ave become BART! LAYPG In the Big To FRIDAY VAUDEVILLE in the Clever Comedy Skit With Songs and Dances Entitled “Marooned” day | AUDITORIUM | TRIANG O & CLARK & BENJAMIN Athletic Novelty En- ed “Roses” rchestra In the Two HIS = £75s THE GIRL WITH THE GREEN EYES A POPULAR DRAMA IN FIVE ACTS TOILERS OF THE SEA PATHE NEWS FILM Three Reel Comedy Drama | The Latest Events COMING HAZEL DAWN in “THE SALES LADY” NEW SHOW TODAY KEITH VAUDEVILLE PHOTOPLAYS MAE MARSH and ROBERT HARRON in The Five-Part Griffith Feature THE WILD GIRL OF THE SIERRAS FORD STERLING WIL SHOWS 230, 7, 840 Mat. 10c; Eve. 10c-20c LE PHOTOPLAYS Part Keystone D GATS —TODAY— & Miriam Nesbitt—Five THE CATSPAW h_Marc MacDermott and Parts—Five COMING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY In “The Soul Market” FIVE WONDER NMIADAME PETROVA tain small de | medical, service and (b) the citi: bracing eve Iy excp 14 and 28. | |1 jana | instruction | swimm: t nj ed fr bed exe pres: mou | —including |a | trat Norwich .... New London Watch Hill and the rendezvous 1dents; and the pros- fertile lands was lifted discovery that potatoes there than elsewhere. g pictures are of the g Island duck farms largest duck farm farm at Speonk of more y the tter klings are s and car- house at heir admit- houses_they. rooder 1 srooder along s old a killed. are shipped to ssed for mar red with ruising the 1 new farmer rema ng the other d only Australia’s Military System. |be sold or leased to pri | Commonye sts of (2) parma. with the provision t s rees, admin- {ment has a prior c | he services in event of bl e a | “This means the investmer | gar artillery regiments and cer: { money in rise in . vate capital hesitates to ve o absurait whole thix HIVES, RASHES L the ) - |SUMAC & IVY POISONING | Do et P iy are common summer complaints which | kind, especially from the affect thy , but prompt and ef- | ment of subsidies or bonuses. It is also | fective relief is always assured if part of the record of Democratic E. L. M. OINTMENT admiinistration that it forced American |, Tee e e s ships to pay tolls through the Pana- n"')lei:l ealer of Skin Discases,” is ap- ma Camal, a concession to the s v e e ving Interests of Europe. A further D Pret el e IR e g e foreign built vessels, thus compell In the hopes of gotting Telief served to, it 'by protective laws. the places on my limbs which I had Objections to the Wilson-JMcAdoo | ST od until sores had formed heal- and 90 ot loss any weight hecause Of has done more for mo than any e ; X e remedy I have ever used. Signed- 5 certs a box onzo L. Glines, Jr., 11 drugesits, CARBONOX Carbon deposits are the “death responsible for 75 per cent. of motor germs” of the gas engine and are troubles and service repair bills. CARBONOX does not dissoive the carbon, but attacks the charred oil that fastens the flakes of carbon piston head, etc. After destroying t in a loose, flaky cordition and is bl BONOX is positive and thorough. to each other and to the cylinder, his charred oil, the carbon is left lown out with the exhaust. CAR- THE C. S. MERSICK & CO. STATE DISTRIBUTCRS 276-292 STATE ST., New Haven, Cenn. Hallock n es with regu- 120,000 ducks a r, hatche: 500 to 7600 a week, and collects Breeding pens con- 0_ducks. Most of the by _incub The pro- ither the 1500 eggs laid them on trays, push Twelve | i WATCH and Block company on | STEAMER BLOCK ISLAN WATCH HILL and BLOCK IS Bleck Island Due P. M, Adults, 50c; Children, 25¢. | NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO. its of engineer, ade to attain 2nd_veterinar e zen o man, bet ted, partic n system is distineeeve | ruction is given under mili- the hemselves | as no co seven languages. A M. A M. P. M. ceee.Lv. *8:55 %#0:15 | Block Island .....Lv. *2:15 % ceee. 10:25 10:45 | Watch Hill ......... 3:45 11:30 12:00 | New London ........ 5:10 1:05 1:30 | Norwich ...DueP.M. 6:3C Daily, except Sundays. **Sundays lowing, bettar the as a which the train- age is begun. At 12| boy enrolled g commences | serving in s or the public |attains his eighte The course of|passes into the of calisthenics | vided he is not z and first ald to| DAILY SERVICE Until Sept. 5, to efficienc: teach them of 14 the Au: Senior zation until year, whe! Torces I rejected that of ite as the common- ntrol ov choo RESTAURANT ON MAIN DECK Table d’'Hote Service MEALS SERVED DURING ENTIRE TRIP AT 25c.—50c. and 60c. SPECIAL EXCURSION. TICKETS AND RETURN | HILL Adults, 75¢ land. For further Shetucket Street, Nor h. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, June 28 to September 1 BLOCK ISLAND » AND URN Childrer, 40c. Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill information, party rates, apply at office of C. J. ISBISTER, Norwich, Agt. e e sead) at a physi tion; it and the trouble of attend you require no reom for sterage; no back-breaking sc tles to be carried from the cellar to the kitchen. fire in the gas range burns steadily and without atte or small quantitie THE CITY OF NORWICH GAS & ELECTRICAL DEPARTMENT Cellar Stairs I ng to the fire. o More Back-Breaking Scuttles To Be Carried Up Those If you buy coal in large quantities you must have room to store it; if in small quantities, it is expensive. When you want to use it you must carry it from its storage place to your range, and of all tasks that is one of the most weary. When you burn wood or coal you have the heat, dirt, f you use gas The always ready, without dirt or trouble, in large Alice Building, 321 Main Strect [ STRICTLY 1§ theso charge for CO? DR. F. G. JACKSON 203 MAIN ST. ir cause you to neg By our mathod you can have SANITARY OFFICE TERILIZED INSTRUMINTS CLEAN LINEN DENTISTS (Successors to the King Deatal Cs.) BA Mto8P. M. Lady Asistant Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental ch: need have no fears. crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. NSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES lect them? You your tseth filled, RINKING CUPS estimate. Neo ASEPTIC D LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK appeal to you, call for examinatior and consultation. ol R. D. J. COYLE NORWICH, CONN. Telephone vice. The | which is wholl the r cadets , but it exercises complete con- Gver the military trainigg. — American Review of Review King George of England epecaks i