Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 24, 1916, Page 4

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Forwich Ziiilletin \ and Qoufied 120 YBARS OLD Sulbscription price 1Ze @ weelk; 50c a month: $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as sccond-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Businass Office 450, Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-8. Bulletin Job Offica 35-2. Willimantic Office, 67 Church St. Telephone 210-2. Norwich, Ti uesday, Oct. 24, 1916, REPUBLICAN TICK Prestilent. CHARLES EVANS HUGH York. Vice Prestdent, CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS of Tndiana. Previdential Electors, HIRAM BINGHAM of New Haven, LUCIUS WHITON of New London, THOMAS L. WATSOY WILLIAM PARK of LOUIS B. CHEN, THOMAS BRYANT o ARTHUR E. BOWERS of Manchéster. United States Senator, GEORGE P, MLEAN of Simsbury. Representative in Cougress, Secomd Distriet, RICHARD P. FREEMAN of New Lon- don. Governor, MARCUS H. HOLCOMB of Sou Lieatcnant Governor, CLIFFORD B. WILSON of Bridgeport. ridgeport, ngton Secret. FREDBRICK L. PERRY of New Haven. - Treasurer, FREUERIC CHAMBERL. of New Eritain Comptroller, MCRRIS C. ER of Harwinton, State Seuntors, Dis. I8—FRANK Q. ingtan. BS—ARCHIBALD Putnam B5—WILLIAM H. HALL of Willington. Judge of Probate, NELSON J. AYLING. Representatives. ALBERT J. BAILEY, JOSEPH H. HEND . CONGRESSMAN FREEMAN. In connection with the presidential slection it will not do to overlook of ihe fact that it is important that | Charles E. Hughes, if chosen as chief executive ©of the nation, should be pport which 'is necessary lor the carrying out of the republi- can platform pledses and policies by having a congress which is in sym- pathy with him. The next few years are going to be Important ones in the history of this country. There is need of having men at Washington who will correct- ly represent the position of their con- stituents, men whe will look after the interests of their districts. men who will take into consideration the industrial and agricultural require- ments and those who wil] stand for the placing of the countr on the proper basis for defense and pecace with honor. The second - Connecticut congres- slonal district has had the service of a man during the past two years who bas rendered such service and who can be relied upon to continue it. He stands for the upbuilding of Connec- ticut industrial activities and giv- ing to them the protection which is needed to maintain the best condi- tions among the working people and to prevent their being thrown into competition with the lower wage earn- ers of foreign countries. He doesn’t want to depend upon the continua- tion of the European war for the prosperity of this country, but taroush the passage of legislation which would Prove an equal effective tariff wall. Congressman Richard P. Freeman has & commendable record at Washing- ton and it is for the district's inter- ests to see that he is returned.’ THE TARIFF COMMISSION. One thing which is being lauded as an accomplishment of the present ad- ministration is the provision for a tariff commission, but memory does not have to run back so many years to recall that in the last administration there was a tariff commission named for the very same punpose as the new one. It was this commission which the democrats put out of existence by refusing to provide the regular ap- propriation for its maintenance. They even fafled to pay any attentlon to the work which had been done by that board but proceeded to tear down the protective tariff and replace it with a tariff for revenue only which has proved such a failure that they were long ago forced to retrace thelr steps and replace what they had planned to_discard. The advocacy of a tariff commission comes as a direct reversal of their own actions, and yet they are claim- ing credit for it because they have proved the failure of their own' pol- icy. But how half-hearted they are supporting the idea now is shown by the fact that it has been denled a permanent appropgation and by re- ducing the solaries for the members 0 a point where the experts who needed are not likely to be obtaine: A tariff commission to do wha expected of it should be permanent. It should be made up of competent men ~ and its services should receive the full consideration of those who are jmaking the laws. There is nothing in _|the acts of the democrats which in- !dicate that they have any such pur- ”ou in view. They have played poli- which fails to show sincerity. CLASS LEGISLATION. The move of President Gompers of Amerfcan Federation of Labor to wing the labor vote to the president n return for favors received a seri- setback in the Philadelphia Cen- Labor union when in a stormy _ the president of that body the floor and declared that “The R body is representative only of the | that ‘the president 1w | persistent aszitat rengthened by the stand which Gen- eral von Hindenburg has {aicen, which is disclosed in the communication Zon-| 1der with that subject in a manner|ings and a $5 bottle of perfume out ‘workingmen who are unjon men and is no place for political discussions” and the move to endorse Wilson was quashed. There was resentment at being used as pawns and the resolu- tion which was in accord with the de- sire of Gompers was tabled Indefi- nitely. There have been effcrts in the past to deliver the labor vote and it hds invarfably failed. Undoubtedly labor men feel the same as does the presi- dent of the Philadelphia central that they have a right to thejr own minds. Concerning this move the Philadel- phia Ledger well says: “Nothing is more contrary to the spirit of demo- cratic institutions than to set class against class, and legislation in the interests of any class is certain t6 do more harm than good. Nor is it at all clear what the administration is credited with doing for labor is in any sense for its advantage. The Federation is not happy in its cita- tion of the so-called cight hour law ind the seamen’s act as examples. But even if it could be shown s labor's best friend, the effort to deliMer the labor vote as such to him would d condemnation.” HINDENBURG’S INFLUENCE. For a long time there has been a on in Germany for o resumption of the U-boat warfare ch called forth so much ecriticism th w {last vear and there are those who would even start the submarines on a campaign which would show past performances as strikingly mild in comparison therewith. In fact they would set forth under a policy of ruthlessness which would mean th: nothing would be allowed to stand in the way of German ‘success, the idea Yeing to cast aside the rules of war, intcrnational law, the risnts of hu- manity and torpedo whenever and wherever the opportunitv offered for the purpose of st: g terror to the rest of the world There is of cc rse those in charge of affairs at Berlin who are vizo; ously opposed to any such plan. Th realizo that Germany must stop and consider what it must confront fol- lowing the war. There have even been threats of forcing von Bethmanr Follweg to give up his portfolio be- causge he will not sancton such a pol- icy, bnt the he ha by him to the extremists ask on cease, ff stands well with e of Germany. They have ith in him and for that £ the, peos son 1 fluerce against such icy should carry great weight for it must be realized that his decision is the only sensible and sane one at any time, AEROPLANE DEFENSE. Long before the war in Bur broke out it was fully recoznized t this country was occupying a b at inasfar attention to the velopment of flying machines concerned, and this in spite of th fact that it was in this country that it was first demonstrated that ghe heavier than air machine was a pos sibility. But since the war opened new emphasis has meaning of this failure to see the im- portance of aviation service in con- nection with the defense of the natio: ope has reaped untold henefits been laid upon th from the attention which it long ago | and gave to develo! they are today one of the very tant factors conneetion with the operations of army and navy of all the nati The experience of country with the fiying machines ch e Mexico simply proved what was known concerning this coun- v in that respect. spite of that it was onl after a strenuous cffort fn behalf of preparedness that congress was made to see the advisability of doing some- for our own protection. The ncement that, as the result of which was appropriated for n purposes, there haye been or , or will be ordered shortly, 400 machines of various types, which will be for the usc of nal corps and the remainder to be hydroaeropianes and school machines for use in training aviators, indicate that o long needed been taken and it is to be hoped that this branch of the national defense will have no further ecuse for not developing an air service worthy of the nation. por- EDITORIAL NOTES. Rainbow chasers are as thick as ars in the milky way during a po- litical campaign The man on the corner says: In- stead of going to the ant, many slug- gards prefer to watch men work. It was a harsh method which that Vienna editor bad of treating an offi cial whose policies didn’t suit him. In Germany they are soliciting jew- elry for the melting pot. Pretty soon they can be expected to be gathering up the iron crosses. Coal has taken another jump be- cause of a shortage. If the barons cannot repeat an old excuse they find It easy to invent another. That report of the desertion of 10,- 000 Carranza troops to Diaz being true, it shows the character of thc control which the de facto chief maintains. It is a noticeable and {lluminating fact that few if any accldents happen to those drivers of vehicles, horse or motor drawn, who stop, look and listen at railroad crossings. The advance in the price of coal in many citles plainly indicates that this is one of the commodities whick the administration did not succeed in low- ering to reduce the cost of living. That German socialist who declares for an independent Belgium that is in- dependent aof Great Brtain and France oughy not to have been in such hurry as to overiook Germany also. A Chicago bridegroom of three days whose wife had purchased $6 stock- of a $20 a week pay envelope, went out end climbed a telegraph pole. No won- der he thought he was up a tree. The suggestion is now made by thc department of agriculture that we ez potato bread. And this when th country is going through a period c unprecedented prosperity and whe the administration promised to reducc the cost of living. < available for the service | p has at last| “On the whole,” said the man from Hyde Park to his friend from Wood- lawn, “I am opposed to higher eauca- tion for women! They should be sweet, trusting little creatures, con- tent fo unbiba their wisdom at vur hands and—" “I take it that your wife has put one over on vou!” said the Woodlawn man, with disagreeable cleverness. “Huh!” repiied the Hyde Park man, “Of course there are many different points of view and ail corts of peoplc to pick them out! Be that as it ma: 1 don't think any inarried woma: should take, up astronomy for a i occupation! “That was what I told Tmogene whe, she expressed her shame for know. nothing about the stars and vowed that she should repair the omission at once. 1 begged her in deep, rich tones to go in for hotany or tatting or some other interesting subject that could be tracked on its lair in but she paid just about as much at- tention to me as a woman married ten years usually pays to advice. “When we were coming home from the movies that night Imosene had her head bent backward trying to de- cide whether Cassiopeia’s chair wasn't the T per and she walked right into a young man whose attention was ompletely absorbed by the girl at his side. 1 m, eitogr, be- cause I was accompanying Imogene in her search of the heavens, and I step- ped on the young lady's e “Judging frem _her leg must have been broken sixteen places, but Imogene he did that merely to arouse € oung man's tender sympathy and erved her right for wearing su tight shoes! The young man s after the coll t of ccurse Im- ogene couldn’t t pected to know that he had five 23 cent cigars in the zainst which she had hurl- nd luckily his employment temand of his left ause even when explained to them tha astronomy they tisfaction whatever, he middle ine night and Imogene piunging headforemost throush a hedroom win- dow. At I when I saw her most of her A d with sieep 25 1 was, I made one g and bing her und | mented attempted < her back frc E us that w: T think? T not a star old Imogene rso. unrest and now Trknew v to the window since 1 was assured of that An't care whether the 1 ever got puid or whether U £ this being Capella v indo d my v that it 1deed Capells \ssurred o nd as for hersel %0~ into the spare might pursue her in peace. Thereupon she pur: so hard that she slept all :arough my breakfast hour and then had the merve to ask me what 1 expected if she had to yemain up most of the | “But I really struck when che shook me awake one night declaring she had | lights and I really | ew such a rare phe’ seen the northes must come and ed out to be the South 1 these roiling miils up ae: neaked out and built them and d the hlast:furnaces myself that very | s it's no use and that I have no mpathy with her higher aspirations. | assure her haven't when she aims as hic €0 the atmosphere at home ig a! trifle strained these gays i said the Woodiawn man. = got a hook on at our house—I'm goin; minute I get home!” the daytime, her husband’s POLITICAL purely political Tse of.the prepared- ness movement. An alternative theory is that he was grossly ill-informed on the itions of rcal defense. ither Twenty Reascns for Veting Against Frank Jew ago I voted for i, as the m vote for Mr. Hug the fair name of neutrality. He has creased confusion of though which deeply concerns us. ended a fu forget, our murdered dead of th His machinaticr without really gaining anything by support, moral or practical, {0 neutr: maybe « 50 bright. What deliberation, and made our national row anything more pleas- 1 eing awakencd from a sound the middie of the nizht to own st der. small jnclination to consuit persons s condoned and of welght and_knowledge. preferring v that behind all the reckless 5 gayety and cheerful abandon my long life there always had lain a to the lasting|terers. The perso qualit Cabinet shows his apacity o willineness to eniist competence i y over whether public service. tern star was | | seek a second nomination, ho is fri olously playing poiitics both with o domestic and foreign interests. He does nothing consistently or resolutely, and had en waved my arms and over the room, cr: by that it was, it must indeed Capella! Nothing iness, but has made execptions, the new tariff, when the great iness was Southern and Democra were forcelosed now that the vi- s and had a ns and| e room, ery- workable bill which puts the Govern- ment into the shipping ness, shows il Noth- \bsurd malkeshift of ly that 1 show what a when 1 ‘put and the realities of pollcy and action, ocourteenth Yoar Atiention, Farme reason that h ole career moral resolution which President Wil- son so evidently lacks. ind wings cut off at first joint. London or Windham Countses. Rock Nook Home. To the r: at Somers Bros’ market. All turkeys that are el the mai BN tional defense, but concerned with a ws him recreant to the most ortant of trusts. In all our European dealings he failed to_express the moral im- of the Nation. On the contrary, given to the indifference of a ablo portion of our citizens, irtually counselied us to be sel d callous, and has done so_In me of morality. Thus he has given place for discord exalted the “ostrich polic 1ding that we have mo inte: right to judge a great situation 3. He has forgotten, and bidden us re Lusi- has exercised a law: of our throughout indulzed the following h: or sheer surrende: or s offer the European power heckled the beil hile he has ‘ailed to give a vers. From the violation m on, he has shut his eves to 2itering of the painfuily built fabri public right. Declining to express judzment, whick was h and of leadership, he has us to a position of ignoble Under the lash of railrcad Notable Cast The Frohman Amusement Co. Presents JAFFREY Wm. J. Locke’s Great Story in 7 Reels Direct from Park Theatre, Boston A PHOTO-PLAY YOU WILL LIKE Mat. 10c; Eve. 10¢c and 206 Shows 230, 7, 840 MAY WARD of Pompell and Herculaneum were 1aid_bare. “Clay tablets bearing nscriptions in linear form far more graceful than any produced by the Phoenicians were found by the thowsands; remarkable | frescoes in brilliant colors depicting a {race of men and women Of rare phys- ical beauty and high mental accom- i plishments; pottery, bronzes, tools, and gaming tables that for perfecston of workmanship, elaborate decoration, and artistic development have hardly been surpassed in the thirty-five cen- turies which stretch between that day and this. “One of the most astonishing dis- coveries made in the palace of Minos (the name should probably be applied to a Iynasty, like the Pharaohs of Beypt, rather than to one king, as mythology recites), was the’ style of s cmong the women. Indeed, the sts who executed the frescoes might have had modern Parissienes for their modsls, judged by the deco- lette gowns, the rousea cheeks, the flaring hats, the high hecls and the tightly corseted figures. “A romantic reveration of _these ruins was & picture of the Cretan sport of bull-grappling, a pastime which was a forerunner of the tro- cadero combats of twentieth century Spain. According to eonjectures of leading authorities, bull-grappling oc- cupied the same place in Cretan social life that the arenic games and gadia- torfal battles did in Rome centuries Jater. with the exceptlon that captive ed for the hazardous sport of the is- land kings and patriclans. One fres= colors, shows two girls and a boy en- gaged in the confiict. The boy has mersault over the beast's back. The first girl has also completed the dar- ing evolutio: she succeegs or is impaled on the deadly poffits. “A sinister discovery in comnection with this fresco was the location of the gloomy subterranean cells in hich the captured youths and mald- ens were confined before the contests. and looking towards his own | Perhaps to these cells and these bull- forced upon Congress Adamson Law forse i and for higher wa : n e - lc yielded to coercion a 1se which reuired information and legislatu: hare in the shame of his his actions he has shown the advice of his inferiors and After accepting a pledze but at one fime or another throws out fine phrases to cateh votes. 18. He has generally showr now-minded ility to great His_foc mpionsbip of the un- the amateurisbness of the man in all busir 19, = has no_endeavor to public expendi- e, but has let it be an excuse for in- g the income tax with its un- narrow incidence and confiscat- intent. He has verbalized our states- 1ip, covering alike his_slackne: 15 a leader, and his_guile politician, under a bewilderi of incessant rhetoric, interposing mere phrases between u he has humiliated the own eyes and before the wo: people represented by a whose word is not current coin glittering counterfeit. I shall vote for Hughes for the single him to be the D of those qual- ies of intellectual intezrity and DOLLARS BONUS For Fattest and Big- Turkey Raised $10.00 Next Best $5.00 Third $5.00 proposes to rec fattest and largest Turkevs to he offered for_the Than) in Windham and New London iving market They must be natives—hatched and grown in these two countfes. The Bulletin will buy the prize binds at the resular market price in eddition to the prize to be awarded. The turkeys offered for prize must have feathers off, entrails drawn Heads must not be cut off. The first prize of $1000 to the largest and fattest young turkey; second prize of $5.00 to the second largest and fattest young. turkey: third prize of $6.00 to the largest and fattest turkey raised in New The contest is open o any man, woman, boy or girl residing in thesejcounties. The turkeys must be submiited for examination and weighing the Tuesday kefore Thanksgiving at 12 o’cleck hoon. For the largest and fattest young turkey §10.00 will be awarded in addition to tho market prics. This turkey will be given fo the To the raiser of the second young turkey in size a prize of $5.00 in addition to the market price will be give the Thanksgiving dinner for the Sheltering Arm: or of the largest and fattest turkey over a year old a prize of $6.00 in sddition to the market price. County Home for Children'for a Thanksgiving dinner. The judges will be disinterested persons who will weigh the turkeys This turkey will furnish This will go to the for competition will be purchased at ot price, so any turkey raiser who enters a bird in the con- test Is ¢ of selimng the bird whether a prize is won or not. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Soclety Crete, The Cradle of Culturs—Crete, the “half-way house between three contincnts,” whose citizens are re- ported to have revoltea against the pacific course of King Constantine, has given far more to the Greek na- tion than her native son Venizelos, the former premier who for nearly two years has been recurrently hailed as “the man of the hour” while his country has been poised on the brink of the Luropean conflict, afraid to vielg to his plea to plunge forward, yet fearful lest, remaining inert, she be engulfed and left without a res- cuer when the victorious powers meet to parcel out the rewards of w cording to a war geography of the National Geographic Society this island is viewed by reading sclen- tists and archaeologists as the very cradle of ancient Greek culture. “It was not the Phoentcians who in- vented the art of writing,” says the bulletin, “but the Cretans who, under the sway of their remarkable sea- king: antedated by several hundred years the culture of the commercial nation which flourished on the shores of Asia Minor. Recent excavations on this island, the home of Minos, of Arindne and of the horror-inspiring Minotaur of Homerio legend have dis- closed evidences of a civilization which reached its apogee fourteen hundred years before the birth of Christ and_more than six _centuries before the First Olympiad, the starting point of recorded Attic history. Nor was Crete’s a civilization which in any degree paled in comparison with the grandeur of the BEabylonian em- pire, the magnificience of ancient Ag- syria, or the remarkable achievements of the Egyptians under the early Pharaohs. “When the spade of the explorer un- earthed the ruins of the anclent cap- ital of Knossos, or Cnossus, near the site of the modern seaport of Candia, fights is to be traced the famous leg- in wo|end of the despatch to King Minos of seven Athenian maidens and _seven | youths every ninth vear, the human tribute being fed to the half-man and alf-bull known os the Minotaur, the offspring of Minos’ monstrous wife Pasiphae. It “s highly probable that | the story of Theseus’ staughter of the Minotaur in the Labyrinth had an actual _historical basis. Certainly, only with the aid of an outsider, such as the fabled Aridne, could a captive have escaped from the dungeons in which the Minoan rulers confined the unfortunates condemned to furnish version for t! ineveh, Assur, cities of antiquity, Cretan culture was not a victim of decadence, but fell hefore some mys- terious cataclysm, the exact details of which may never be known. The only certainty about the fall of Knossos and of sister cities of the isiand that they were wiped out by an al consuming conflagration, after the paiaces had been systematically looted of ail their gold, silver, bronze and other treasure. As to who the invad- ers were, or how they achieved their purpose ever legend is silent, but the Rev, James Baikie, who chronicled the findings of Dr. J. A. Evans and other excavators, has given this vivid sup- position picture “‘Of courfe there are no records, and If there were we could not read them (no key having been discovered as vet to the Cretan writinzs) but it s easy to imagine the disastrous sea fght off the coast: the wreck of the once invincible Minoan fleet driven ashore in hopeless ruin in the shallow bay, like the Athenian mect at Syra- cuse; the swift march of the palace guards, and then the horrors of the sack, and the long column of flushed laden with booty, and driving with them crowds of capture women. Sim- flar_scenes must have been enacted at Phaestos, and Hagia Triada, either same host sweeping around the is- land. “From this_overwhelming disaster the Minoan ‘Empire never recovered. The palace of Knossos was never re occupled as a palace, at least on an: thing like the scale of former magni- ficence. The invaders possibly de- parted as quickly as they had come, or if. as seems more probable they estab- lished themselves as a ruling caste among the subject Minoans, the: chose for theoir dwellings other sites than those of the old palaces. The beautiful house, not to rebuild it, but to divide its siately rooms and thoss of its dependencies by rude walls into poor dwelling-honses, where they lived on—a very different life from that of the golden days before the sack.” Warning to Japan. The new Japanese Premier says he does not intend to “wave the sword” toward the United States. He is wise, for there is such a thing as a nation gotting too big for its kimona— Savannah News. your botile of Foley's Honey and T e 4iop tho coughs and colda o airy f Farly foll brings ofoup, bromehit i “breathing, troublesome Di ouhe Whonping 254 tickling, = e g sy bk t tes of we{k.)‘nm! o e — 1l to infants and child; Tt givos “snufiles” taintan and provokes & und sors inflamed throats. L e s iy LTS i o by :?li put lnfl‘llr‘]F“( U;“B inflaced ‘mucous lini Dfi 0 throat ‘Mflmfi: Jog easily and quickly and relievescroup i""‘“id“iqu'm&h’s:m"fl'&fg e the. children ‘Qoso 15 Jusk a8 kood as the sk o o loeg racant 1A nesded chan of sy Gther Syru. rOLERLABREV IR SRR for Sl Tie there revealed to archaeologists treas- ures which had scarcely been equalled EATRE ARU One Night Only WED., OCT.23 ARTHUR HAMMERSTEIN ——r CrERS TME SRiLLUNT AND SPAUALING SUCSESS. OF INFINITE CHARM U JINE " AND. Tk ORE YEAR 4 THE LYRICAxo 447 ST. THEATRES, NEWYL # —PRICES— .. $150 and $1.00 -+ $150, $1.00 and 75¢ . 50c and 25¢ S AMBROSE’S RAPID RISE 2 REEL KEYSTONE COMEDY avTHOnS "GF Lower Floor Balcony ... Gallery ..... SEATS NOW SELLING DON’T MISS THIS SHOW TRIANGLE PHOTOPLAYS ADWAY Presenting the Unique Special Scenery ALVIN BROTHERS maidens as well as youths were train- | EXCLUSIVE SHOWING OF PARAMOUNT AND_METRO PHOTOPLAYS co, which retains its orizinal brilliant | succeeded in selzing the horns of the | charging animal and has executed a| second girl at the moment when she | reaching out for the horns and the spectator is left in doubt as to whether | Second Episode PRESENTING THE GREATEST ARTISTS THEATRE THE 'WorLp TODAY AND TONIGHT MME. PETROVA In “THE ETERNAL QUESTION” A METRO WONDER PLAY OF SUPREME POWER " COMING WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY EDNA GOODRICH IN “THE MAKING OF MADDALENA” of “THE CRIMSON STAIN MYSTER There is probably a good deal in the suggestion of the Waterbury Ameri- |he had such a number of can that if Governor Holcomb had 1ot | peen killed in BMexico In that Icalled that- extra session and then|<yet there is slight protest |gone down to the border would all be there still. that representatives of the state made nd when the soldiers would be re- | mov called was met by flat refusal and one | muc was told that we had not the power |What is the answer to authorize voting in the fleld. We the same, and it came out that the- only re- did authoriz welcome!— Hartford Courant. We have never acquiesced in the at- |titude of the dep: |towards the Nes The zovernment let its [ noranc: 1 horror of the manner in which certain | moments in which he spares hime! things financial were done mislead it of justice Bngland system of the consolidation transportation inciple is still sound, and no better prncl areiod "t the businees | vote. Perhaps in 1any cases, England than that |better so. And yet, tco often, forces of bad government “get out tie decided to let things |vote” to the last man, wk England | of g00d government are split up by When you news could be the government had cither reversed its position or had warned New months .ago not to let theircriticism |chose who stay at home. W company | hear a man make the assertion, as & attitude | boast, that he never takes the trouble anding of [t0 vote, put him down as one who is couples this boast, as is often the case, wi New Haven Railroa extend too would lead to a misunde; consequent mis- | mental application of judgment. “That is what has happened and that it is what is now hoped to correct. son in this which the business interests victors winding down to their ships, There is a les- Nineteen people were ki necticut by automobiles our bays|home where the needless Bvery effort |life jn so common. So ini the people that it will be the Legislature to -needed _protective He makes a compact with this nation sives him—the lacking. If he assertion that “politics is ru by other forces of invaders or by the{ Used for ¥ Century. broken fragmonts of the Minoan race | rept back after the sack to the| blackened ruin of thefr holy and L . & Med 7 A e % macren Muk CO- Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to By our method you tan have your teeth filled, crowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT FAIN, CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUMINTS need have no fsars. If these appe: charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON DENTISTS (Successors to the King Dental Ce.) 203 MAIN 8T. . NORWICH, CONN. Lady Asistant ouly zenuine, 8ud COBLEINS DO Opiates. since the secrets of the buried cities Lee & Osgood Co, Ask For and GET HORLICI(S THE ORIGIKAL MALTED RMILK from clean, rich milk with the ez tract of sclect malted grain, malted in our own Malt Houses under sanitary conditions. Infant: d children thrive on it. Agrees with the weahest stomach of the invalid or the cueds Needs no cooking nor addition of milk. Nourishes and sustains more than tea, cuffu.; ete. Should be kept at home or when traveling. Anue- tritious food-drink mey be prepared in a monent. A glassful hot before vetiring iuduces refreshing sleep. Also in lunch tablet form for business inep. Substitutes Cost YOU Same Price Take a Package #Home Don’'t You Want Good Teeth? CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK to you, call for examinatior. and estimate. OR. D. J. COYLE DA M toBP. M The Dresden Doll of the Screen in WHERE IS MY FATHER? (THE UNTOLD SECRET) An Adaptation from the Famous Novel “BLACK” By Alexander Dumas 3 BIG KEITH ACTS MON., TUES., WED MATINEE McCORMACK & WALLACE Ventriloquial Lititled “A THEATRICAL AGENCY” ALTHOFF SISTERS Two Gifted Misses in a Delightful Offering Muscular Marvels _in Wonderful Athletic Feats TRIANGLE FEATURE a musicar prav | LOUISE GLAUM The Triangle Vampira With CHARLES RAY IN THE WOLF WOMAN of New England will do well to re- member.—~New Haven Journal Cour- OTHER VIEW POINTS | |& ber. What a frantic vell there —Bristol I Tra Landrith, vice presidential nom- | Striction that might be made would |inee of the Pronibition Party, hit tha only prevent voting for state officials |nail on the head in ons of land not interfere with president and|Speeches when he declared that men tuation seemed to clar-]Who avold voting are a takers as if they recelved money for their ballot. The man who vote, unless his failure is du: unavoidabie cause, is a bribe ence, his laziness, not to say his ig- ¥or the price of a few lazv the physical exertion of going to rinciple upon | Polls and the mental exertion of mak- ot lines - of | Ing a choice while at the polls, he sells affected. The |the most precious birthright be thankful that he doesn't votc. isn't fit 10.—PBridgeport Telegram. eglect them? You Telophone

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