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NORWICH ULLETIN, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1916 s Glorwiclr Bulletin ’ and Qoufied 120 YEARS OLD T SuLscription price 12c a week; 50¢ a month: $6.00 a vear. 5 o +n-Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, *%orn., as sccond-class matter. ‘Telephone Calls: UBhlletin Businsss Office 480. " Bulletin Editorial Rooms 33-3. Bulletin”Job Office 85-2. 'Willimantic Office, 67 Church St Telephone 210-2. Norwich, Thursday, Oct. 19, 1916. o, REPUBLICAN TICKET. President. EB/ARLES EVANS HUGHES of =« York Vice President, CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS of Indiana. Presidential Electors, HIRAM BI New Haven, ew_London New FOWERS of Ma Bt United States Senator, SSEORGE P, M'LEAN of Simsbury. -] Representative in Cougress, = Sceond District, ®RICHARD P. FREEMAN of New Lon- 2 don, . Governor, BMARCUS H. HOLCOMB of Southington = - Lieutenant Governor, SCLIFFORD B. WI )N of Bridgeport. B Secretary SFREDERICK L. PERRY of New - Haven. z Treasurer, FREDERICK HAMBERLAIN of = New Pritain - Comptroller, MCRRIS C. WEBSTER of Harwinton. State Senators, RANK Q. CRONIN don. IS=JOHN H. BAE: 20:sFRANK H. HINCKLEY Ston- ington. 28-—ARCHIEALD of Putnam. 35—WILLIAM H. HALL of Willington. Judge of Probate, NELSON J. AYLING. - Represeuntatives, ALBERT J. DAILEY, JGSEPH H. HENDERSON, " WHAT HUGHES WOULD DONE. Once again has a heckler attempted to embarrass’ Charlés E. Hughes dur- Jng his campaign in the u but-.on this occasion Jowa, as on ths pr Leuisville, Ky, tho of New Ycrk stats Straight from the shoulder. This- fellow wunted io Lnow if he would repez! tha Adamson act in case be akovid cted and he followed up_his query h another which s0Ught to place the president as the chafipion of one class szainst an- other, and still another which was calculated to show that he would not have nad time tc fave done as .he #a{d he would. 0 the first of these Mr. Hughes de- clared “a surrender cannot be re- PEaTed” but he took occasion to make fPlain that, as the representative of ot one class but of all the People, he would have insisted n arbitration and that having been réfused, he added “T would have gone ¥ight to the American people, stated ¥he facts and put the responsibility $vhigfe it belonged. I should have at ersame time secured a“commission BT Taquiry so impartial, so fair, as to gompmand © the respect of the entire count: and directed publie opinion to that ¢ There is no group of men in thc United States who would have dared hold up the instrumentalities of HAVE ddle west, at Sioux City, vious jnstance at ITer governor answered him he e commerce if that were done.” And A8 “further made it plain the administration had had of warning long in advance as to what responsibilities it might be called up- 30 assume, and vet the crisis was lowed to develop. Tt is well known how the administra- tion disregarded the warning of the vending trouble and it worked itself iglg,a hole from which it was unable to extricate itsclf otherwise than by the surrender that it made. It per- mitted the holdup and then capitu- Is there any wonder that there osition to such kind of legisla- THE NOTE TO GREECE. The sending of the grave note to ece by the entente allies, without contents being made public, un- questionably means that those nations have reached the conclusion that the time has arrived when Constantine must either fish or cut bait. Things ion for en manifested people of that Venizelos, whichk has been r d by the al- B =There have been fu r indications of it T s to in the de- nds which have been made upon Feece for the demobilization of its of h the Greek cabinets, #my, the refusai the entente to ke terms w tRe chanze in police tastly in the insistence that the navy 3 turned over c French admiral authority and charge of naval ¢perations in that .gl}nil_", ow for the purpose of insuring igst the possibility of that country deeperatien throwing itself in with gentral powers, and thus setting 19 a menace agzainst the allied army 1§ Saloniki from the rear, the allies 3ave appare set forth what Greece :4n and cannot do. It is a new ecrisis which is doubtless intended to end upcertainty in that quarter and it ains to be seen whether King Con- intine will rise to the occasion, w off the German influence which been swaying him and comply the demands for the sake of the of Greece, or whether he will ¥ take the advice which has been of- fered him by certain counsellors and flee the country. The time has evi- dently arrived when he must make a decision. ARMENIAN-SYRIAN HELP. Next week a govérnment collier will be loaded at New York with supplies which are to be sent for the relief of the Armenian and Syrian sufferers. Permission has been obtained whereby it will be possible for these goods to be distributed among those people who so greatly need them to sustain and protect life by the Red Cross and the Turkish organization of a’ similar character. It is assured that the flour, wheat, rice, meat products, beans and a limited amount of eclothing to the amount of a third to a half million dollars will actually reach those who require fit. b Much has already been déne by the people of this vicinity and the coun- try in general in contributing towards funds for this very relief. The pitiful plighit of those people, persecuted and slowly starving, will continue to arouse sympathy and inspire further contri butions in their -behalf. That_there may be a general and concerted par- ticipation for that worthy cause Oc- tober 21 and 22 have been designated as Armenian-Syrian relief days by act of congress and proclamation of the president. —Speciali-appeals. aré to he made through church pulpits. Humanity in distress has never fail- ;nd to awaken interest and efforts tc bring about relief in the past among the people of this country and it is not believed that it will on this oc- casion. The need of it having been fully established, there should be a generous response. The frightful con- ditions in those sections of Turkey make an appeal which cannct be turned aside. STILL NEEDS MORE ATTENTION. Regardless of the excellent results of the federal drug act in restricting the sale of narcotics throughout the country amd therafore operating to discourage the habit among the ad- dicts and to safeguard those who have not come under its influence, service which is of inestimable value in preventing the further demoraliza- tion of humanity, there still remains a big opportunity for combating the evil. This is” revealed by the reports which are being made by investigat- ing committees in the large cente In New" York county it is found b the records of the commissioner of corrections that there were 1,300 ha- bitual drug users committed to ins tutions during the last year. A simi- lar situation was disclosed in Phila- delphia where almost as large a num- ber of addicts was revealed in a simi- lar manner. That many of these cases are revealed because of lthe op- eration of the federal law is rec- ognized, but it is evident nevertheless that the dope is being secured and that there are peddlers who are mak- ing a living off of the wrecking of others’ lives and according fo the New York committee it is not all con- fined to the underwogld but it has | gained a strong hold among the weal- thy class, where what would be a prohibitive price to others furnishes little or no obstacle. This situation shows the need of more determined action on the part of municipality and state to break the illegal traffic which is being ied on in this line and every such effort as is being made by these invertigat- ing committees is to be commended. Their recommendations will he enti- tled to weighty consideration. LACK OF MEN IN THE NAVY. Another new superdreadnought, the Arizona, has taken its place in the United States navy. It is a powerful battleship such as is greatly needed together with many more for the proper defense of this nation and, the maintenance of peace. It is oné of the greatest fighting machines which Uncle Sam possesses, having a main battery of a dozen i4-inch guns and has a cruising speed of 21 knots, and s sister ship, the Pennsylvania, recently commissioned, gives the navy two . vessels which represent the last word in naval construction. Other: of greater power are in the works, so that their supremacy is a matter of only a short time, but they are nevertheless warships of great value. The Arizona is to have a crew of 1024 men when 4t is fully maunned, and in this connection one of the great weaknesses of the United States navy is revealed when it was found necessary, in order to get the 911 offi- cers and men who now make up its crew, to draw these men from the battleships New Hampshire, Vermont and Kansas and place these vessels in reserv This is the second time that such a practice has had to be resorted to in the past few months. Two big fight- ers have been made ready but a half dozen or ‘more have been forced to go out of commission for lack of men. This calls attention in no uncertain terms to one of the vital weaknesses of the navy ‘and one which deserves to undergo an'early correétion. gt sey iy EDITORIAL NOTES. It is admitted by Mexican cfficials that_Villa is alive, but that furnighes no news to this counts The man on the corner says: spite of the high prices the hole the doughnut continues {0 more liberal In in become The recognition of the Venizelos government in the island of Crete Ly the allies must serve as handwriting on the wall to Constantine. A Kentucky mob has lynched and burned two negroes. It is strange what effect Georgia justice has upon certain sections & the country. The Carranza forces are reported to be moving against Villa, which indi- cates that the bandit leader has not as yet become thoroughly pacified. When King Constantine hurried to Athens in response to a note of “ex- tremely grave character” there is sort of a funereal aspect to thesituation. It is claimed that there have been 62,000 laws passed in this country in the past five vears, and yet it is held that ignorance of the law is no ex- suse. Sugar importations for 1916 showed an Increase of $52,000,000 over 1915 and $112,000,000 over 1912, all because of a lowered tariff and yet the price of the commodity is higher than ever. If the president is worried for fear that the history of the present ad- ministration be not written in accord- ance with his ideas, he will soon have an opportunity to undertake the task himself. AND SO THEY PARTED The very young man stared with undisgilised dismay at the pretty girl in the yellow sport suit. “N-n-no!” he stammered. Geraldine!” “Yes,’ nodded the pretty girl. “Next week. They told me just this morning. It's a horrid girls’ school, stuck_way off in the country out of New York. Father was per-fectly terrible! He said he hoped they'd get the nonsense out of my head and beat some ideas into it! He said he hoped I wouldn’t see a boy from the time I got there till I left!” “Oh, “Well, so do I!” agreed the very young man heartily. “But—but what'll I do? Why, we've séen each other every evening for weeks, and—" “That's why they're sending me!” gloomingly explained the tty girl. “;1;310)' don’t seem to understand at an!” “My folks are the same way,” agreed the very young man, frowning. “To hear my father go on youwda think I was still a child! T've tried to point out to him how serious this really is, but—well, it's no use! He says, when he was 18 he was still playing marbles and I ousht to be! Why, Geraldine, I simply can’t stand it to have you so far away for such a time!” n't it awful, Harry!” she agreed. I shall think of you every minute and then there will be letters. I've looked up the mail trains and if vou post yours before 9 o'clock-I'll have it the second morning after, and if you write twice a day I'll get another late in the afternoon! That will help an awful lot! And you must write heaps!” “I—'m not such an_ awfully good letter writer,” protested the young ‘man a bit doubtfully. Over her face swept a cloud. . “But writing to me ought to be dif- ferent!” she pouted. “You must tell me every single thing you do and think. Will you?” Y-y-es,” he agreed doubtfully. “Of course, I want to,” he added hastily, ‘but—but how on earth if I do that will I have time for anything else? I'm an awful slow letter writer, Geral- di » Well, but what else will there be to do?” demanded the pretty girl, with sed brows. “I should think ° it would fill up vour lonely evenings to talk to me on paper-— “Oh, it will!” he ‘agreed hurriedly. “That is, every evening but the bowl- ing club—did I tell you the boys had got that up® And whatll I do about the dgncing club?” The pretty girl looked rt. 5 1" she ecried wremulously. “You don’t mean--do you miean to say you could go to that dancing club without | me and have a good time? When we'd lanned to go together gnd every- 2 Think how lonesonie you'd be around without any part- ner- With a sha p cry the young woman had buried her face in her handker- chief. Iready, she sobbed. “You are thinking of other girls! e never ly loved me at all, time! v, I shan’t look at a man all the while 'm gone—nothing but study and think of vou—and youre planning to have a perfectly zood time with some one else the minute my back is turn- ea!” “I ne pianned any such thing!” the very youfig man protested ner- vously. 3ut, gee, Geraldine! You've got to consider me a little! You'll be busy, but what'll I do he I can’t go up to my room ever night after dinner and chew holder and write hours to you! “Don't talk to cried the prett girl tragically. “You don’t care an thing for me! You've bebn dGeceiving me all this sumer! Why, if you were I shouldn’t w: except zoing away single thing come back.” nt to do a wait for you to “Huh broke in the young man. “The week I spent at Geneva in July you went to a beach picnic with John and two danc with Clarence! I'd like to know-—" T explained all that perfectly to you!” flared the pretty girl. “That w decidedly If you c that, why, all I've got to “Don’t bother to s rupted with celd digr care anything for m n't is he inter- 3 You don't 2 if you'l! fly into such h temper over nothing! I'm surprised— e Temper!” choked the pretty irl. “You're a nice one to talk, with your selfish disposition! I-I'm glad I'm go- ing away and I'll not spend one minute thinking about you, either, I can tell you!” “Well, you needn’t worry about me breaking my heart, either!” he told her with deep sarcasm. so disappointed in a person 1ife!” s The very young man banged out the front door and the pretty girl swished up the stairs to her room, with red cheeks and flashing eves. “Thank goodness'” breathed a cruel parent in the library, who had listened shamelessly and _breathlessly- worked quicker than I expected!” Chicago News. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Proposition of Widening Thames Street. Mr. Editor: May I, through your columns, claim the attention of your readers with relation to one of the matters contained in the warning and to be acted upon at the special city meeting to be neld on Friday evening, Oct. 20 I refer to the proposed au- thorization for, an expenditure for the widening of Thames street. At the lannual dity meeting last June an appropriation of $7,500 was in my authorized for laying a permanent pavement in Thames strcet from Thames square southerly. The present city administration did nqt feel that the money should be expend=d until an effort had been made to ascertain whether or not the street could not first be widened to form a proper and safe main approach to the city from the south. It was felt that if a per- manent pavement were laid on the street as at present, the possibility of remedying the existing dangerous and highly objectionable situation which has been so much discussed for the past few years would be postponed for at least a generation. We accordingly first took the mat! up with the state highway department. We were informed by Commissioner Bennett that while the department would not ordinarily contribute to- ward the paving of even a trunk line road, in the thickly populated part of a city, as Thames street was one of the most dangerous pieces of road on the state’s trunk line system, if tisfactory proposition were submit- ted for widening the street.some con- tribution’ might be made by the d partment toward the paving. A 1 T vey was made and a layout with sidewalk six- feet wide all the way from Thames square to the junction treet, on twenty- a side- of High street and Tham the easterly side, a roadw seven feet between curbs w six feet wide fr square to a goint south of P: and from tiere southerly, , on the wi r] was Commissioner Bennett ied out rd of ate will contribute one- the s the expense of tne pavi nder the statute the trolley will have to pay one-third, thus 1 s but one- third to be paid for by the city. If the widening is not carried out the state will not contribute anything. We then immediately set to work to ascertain the expense of acquiring the land needed for the proposed wid- ®ning. With the exception of a slight projection on the east side which would be straightened out, all of the widening would be done on the west side of the street. All of the of these properties have been inter- viewed and options upon the ne sary land have been obtained from the majority of them. The expense of the necessary nging of walls, maev- ing of houses back, building of wal etc, and of acquiring the land rot covered by options has been carefully nd definitely figured. It is determined that the total expense of the widening as thus estimated will not exceed $45,- 000. These are the figures furnished in a written report by Chandler and Palmer, engineers for the city It is the administration’s plan to have the expense of this improvement paild off if the appropriation is au- thorized, by annual installments for y, five or six vears, in the same way in which the expenSe of the widenins of Water street and lower Frankli owners street was taken care of a few year: ago. It is perhaps unnecessary to dwell on the need and advantage of ng out this work. It will place of the present nar- m row on one side of the trol- ley track, there will be sufficient road- | way on both sides of the track w! h will then be located in the middle o the street. It will make the new Thames street at its narrowest point three feet wider than Main reet is in front of the Circulating Library It did not seem to the public works committee that any money uld be spent upon the Thames strcet pave- ment until the voters of the city had passed upon the question of whether Fourteenth Year Attention, Farmers! DOLLARS BONUS They must be natives—hatched and grown in these two counties. The Bulletin will buy the prize in addition to the prize to be awarded. 5 The turkeys offcred for prize must have feathers off, entra Heads must not be cut and wings cut off at first joint. The first prize of §1000 to the second prize of $5.00 to the second third prize of $5.00 to the largest London or Windham Counties. The contest is open to any man, woman, boy or girl residing in these counties. The turkeys must weighing the Fuesday kefore Thanksgiving at 12 o'clock noon. For the largest and fatiest 'young turkey $10.00 will be awarded in addition to the market price. Rock Nook Home. To the raiser of the second young turkey in size a prize of $5.00 in addition to the market price will the Thanksgiy To the r: er of the largest an prize of $5.00 in addition to the market price. This will go to the County Home for Children for a Thanksgiving dinner. The judges will be disinterested at Somers Bros.' market. All turkeys that are eligible for competition will be purchased at the market price, S0 any turkey raiser who enters a bird in the con- test is sure of seling the bird whether a prize is won or not. cing dimner for the Sheltering Arms. For Fattest and Big- gest Turkey Raised $10.00 Next Best $5.00 Third $5.00 The Bulletin proposes to capture the three fattest and largest Turkeys to be offered for ghe Thanksgiving market in Windham and New London Counties. birds at the regular market price Is drawn largest and fattest young turkey: largest and fattest young turkey and fattest turkey raised in New be submitted for examination and This turkey will be given to the be given. This turkey will furnish d fattest turkey over a year old a persons who will weigh the turkeys “1 was never |/ Tells a Secret Manufacturer of Famous Medicine Tells Ingredients, So Publicupln Appreciate Pure, Reliable - cine, 2 | Many people fear to take medicine {to check and abort colds, cure coughs, jcatarrh, etc. This fear is groundless with all the products of The Black- burn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio. Not one contains opiates, narcotics or harmful drugs. entho-| ene, for ‘coughs, colds, catarrh and all distress ifollowing a cold, is a compound of ‘Wild_Cherry, Tolu, Cascara, Grinde- lia, Menthoe Ammonium Chloride, iand alcohol sufficient to preserve and kel?) in solution. l very ingredient is in concentrated- iform and the medicine is so strong ithat only ten-drop doses are to be itaken in the “raw” state. But the ideal way is to make into a syrup by emptying a 2% oz. bottle of Mentho- Laxene into 2 pint bottle and then fll the bottle with . granulated sugar syrup, made pg- dissolving a pint of sugar in a half pint of boiling water. It is said by thousands that this makes a most_ effective home treatment for all cold troubles. The manufacturer -guarantees it to please or money back. Sold by all good druggists. or not they would take advantage of this opportunity to make this great and permanent improvement. Very sincerely yours, ALLYN L. BROW! Mayor. Norwich, Oct. 18, 1916, Bill With His Buil. Mr, Editor: A lot of good space has been consumed in your paper recently by an individual, = presumably from | aurel Hill, signing himself “Bill,” nother Bill,” and similar foolish nom-de-plum The contents of the letters themselves dre as roolish as the signatures which appear below them. It shows a great spirit of magnanimity on the part of the morning paper to concede this space to such nonsense, and 1 presume the source has to be | considered. He first commended ernment; now he cri they improve he criticizes the trolley road, and | gain he criticizes the gas plant. Is| there anvthing on God's earth that| suits him? i Men who are a success in their own line generally attend their business, buf it seems that there are some people who always know so much more about other people’s busi than their own, and that is why the are not so much of a s own line. A man who success in his own 1 not given very much comes to criticizing others. With his knock for the city govern- ment; with his knock ' for the gas plant, and with his knock for the elec- tric railway, he comes out and pats himself on the back, saying that a knocker is a good thing. A knocker is a good thing that ought to be put on a rail and out of town like all other n When a dccent man has a complaint, he takes it_to the proper source, where it is reZistered and where it will do good, but our stuffed-shirt orator always rushes jinto print with his ki so that he/can make a nol When has there been better service red to the city of Norwich by the us departments criticized than there is being rendered at the present time? Laurel Hill is on the way towards ter's Neck, and there are a great many patients in Brewster's Neck who write letters that are not very bad, either, but I think that it would be unfair to the general public to have them printed in the newspapers and consuming good space whicn ought to be d, and can be, by better ma- terial. As a closing rejoinder, I would sug- gest that you tie “that little bull out- side.” We have already heard too much of its Bah! Bah! A. B. PLUMBER. Norwich, Oct. 18, 1916. Armenian and Editor: For and Sy Syrian Relief. centuries the Ar- ians have held an honorable place in the national and religious history of the near east. They have been called upon repeatedly to endure flerce religious persecutions, but from these they have risen with honor and undaunted courage. vidence recently received from many widel, leparate sources, and all beyvond qn ion, 1ows that these peo- after enduring forms of cruelty h if named in detail would not be ed as possible to be inflicted by men upon human beings, and espe- cially upon ple: and innocent wom- en and children, are now in desperate straits, but accessibie to external aid. Refined men and women, educated in American colleges in Turkey and clse- where, are endeavoring to prolong life by eating scattering weeds and str spears of grass they may chance to find. <Cases are reported where both adults and children have recelved feod and refused to eat it because it came too late The Turkisk government has assured the American embassy at Constantino- ple that it wiil permit the American Red Cross to land and distribute to these wretched and starving people imported food. The American com- mittee for Armenian and Syrian relief is co-operating with the Red Cross in sccuning from the navy department a To Put On Flesh And Increase Weight Most people eat from four to six pounds of good solid fot-making od every day and still do mot in- crease weight one ounce, while on the other hand many of the plump chunky folks eat very lightly and keep gaining all the time. It's all bosh to say that this is the nature of the individual. It isn’t Nature's way at _all. lost thin people stay thin because ir powers of assimilation are de- They absorb just envugh of the food they eat to maintain life and blance of health and strength. & won't help them. A dozen meals a_day won't make them gain a single there” pound. All the fat-producing elements of thelr food just stay there in the intestines un- til they pass from the body as waste. What such people need is something that will prepare _these fatty food elements so that their blood can ab- sorb them and deposit them all about the body—something too, that will| multiply their red blood corpuscles and increase their blood's carrying power. For such a condition it 1s well to recommend eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. Sargol is not, as some believe, a patented drug, but is simply a careful combination of six of the most effective and powerful as- similative and flesh building elements known to chemistry. It is absolutely harmless, . vet has been wonderfully effective and a single tablet eaten with each meal often, according to re- ports of users, has ‘the effect of in- creasing the weight of a thin man or woman from three to five pounds a week. Sargol is sold by H. M. Lerou, HEATE T B el sROADWAY TRIANGLE PHOTO-PLAYS HAVILAND & THORNTON In the Plotless, Sobless Comiedy Trifle “At Trouvllle” — 8pecial Scenery NIP AND TUCK JOSIE LENHART Eccentric, Talkative Pair Clever Character Comedienne : CHARLIE CHAPLIN THMEA{mMARSH “.;;R In his latest and funniest 2-reel | comedy 5 Part Griffith Production “THE PAWNSHOP” Norwich, Chesebro's Drug Store, Wil limantic, and other good druggists everywhere on a positive guarantee of welght increase or money back. Thurs., Fri., Sat. New Show Today AUDITORIUM ™3 % 2 THE AUSTINS................Comedy Wire Artists KARLTON & CLIFFORD § CHAS. DIAMOND | DAILY & PARKS Painting Novalty | Harpist Sister Act LINTON & WATSON, Gomedy Singing and Talking — Special Scenery il GEO. ADE—Comedy REE[) THEATRE TODAY AND TONIGHT ¥ RICKFORD or nomaniry “THE ETERNAL GRIND” ErREL Granpin T 2™ The €rimson Stain Mystery ETHEL GRANDIN in COMING Mabel a]iafefl-o in “God’s Half Acre” KRAZY KATZ, Cartoon Comedy Mat. 2:30 Eve! at 7 and 8:30 Afl Seats 10c Supreme Photoplays RAA R FRI. and SAT. an old one that few are deceived by their tactics.—Rockville Journal. collier to fill wi and send to Syria as soon as possible. Immediate acti s imperative. Death stalks among those refugees and Estimates of the passenger traflic di- only prompt response will save tens of | verted from steam roads to auiomo- thousands of them from its - terrible [biles are offset by statements showing clutches. New England has responded [the advantages of the automobile liberally to the for aid, but we|trucks from the point of view of the annot withhold further sympathy and |freight agent. Now the managers of our gifts at a time I this. More |the railroads are learning that im- than $300,000 have already gone from |proved highways over which the comy New England for relicf for the Ar-|mercial automobiles are run are acd menians and Syrians alone. um |ing as feeders and are saving the should be dupl ted within *the next|companies the expense of building two weeks if we expect to save the|branch lines which hardly pay the remnant of these races. Henry D.|penses of operation. The point made that the highways are without ,issues of railroad Torbes, vice president of the National Shawmut bank, Boston, is the treas- provided bonds or urer of the New England fund. All|stock, and that for distances of thirty sums handed him will be sent through [to sixty miles on) each side of the the national commiitee. track they ng business to the The has been most generous |freight stations. Relief from unprofit- in its co-operation and, upon behalf able branch mileage thus is insured, of the American committee, I voice|and the railroads get business from their sincere appreciation. territory formerly inaccessible. For JAMES L. BARTON, this reason we hear of no prolest Chairman American Committce = for |from the ~carriers against railway Arrionlas aad Syrian: Roliet highway development. The communi- New York. Oct. 5, 1916, s tapped by long stretches of hard = and smooth roads also are benefited by being brought into closer touch with ||the market centers of the country. OTHER VIEW POINTS ||Gooa roads, in a word, help every in- | |terest—the ‘farmers, the city residents and the railroads.—Providence Bulle- tin. A good many people in this coun- Considerate of George. try play the game of politics like they | Another illustration of the mi'k of human kindness is the final refusal of Col. George Marvey to embarrass the administration.—Washington Post. No Progress Made. There is plenty of hard fighting in the war in Europe, but it does not suc- ceed in getting anybody anywhere.— Florida Times-Union. do a horse race. They pick out thel winner and then back him. Principles they are not concerned in, it is can can he win? And if he does they go around with their hand out and try to take the credit for his victory. You will always find them waiting until the nominations are made before they set up their howl. Their game is such Build Up for Winte Clear out the congestion that has disturbed your breathing and weakened your digestion, and re- invigorate all the bodily processes to do their full share in cold weather, and thus build yourself up to perfect health. PERUNA IS INVIGORATION §% 1t is a tonic that restores the balance toyour bodily funetions, clears 47#l away the waste matter in your system, and keys you up to increas- ed effort and better hoalth. For nearly half a century thousands have found it & valuable aid in all_eatgrrhal conditions. Their experience points the way for you. PERUNA hasstood the test that proves its value. Tablet form is convenient for quick administration. Pleasant to take and easy to carry with you. 3 ‘Manalin Tablets are the idesl laxative. They correct the habit of constipation, arouse the liver and help the kidneys. Your druggist has them. The Peruna Company, Columbus, Ohio REMOVAL The Norwich Fur Co. are now located at their new store at 45-47 Main Street, next to Shea & Burke’s Furniture Store. We are open for business now with a new line of Furs, Coats, Skins, and all kinds of Trim- mings for Fall and Winter. All Remodeling and Repairing at reasonable prices. Norwich Fur Co. M. BRUCKNER, Proprietor PHONE 708-12 18 years in Norwich Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to neglect them? Yeu need have no fears. By our method you can have your teeth filled, crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE 2 STERILIZED INSTRUMINTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKIN “LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK If these appeal to you, call for examinatior. and estimats. charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON DENTISTS (Successors to the King Dental Cc.)e NORWICH, CONN. é CUPS Ne DR. D. J. COYLB 203 MAIN ST. DA M toB8P. M. Lady Asistant Telephone