Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 30, 1917, Page 4

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Bolletin Job 7 Church St The Circulation of The Bulletin has the largest eirculation of any paper in Eastern Connecticut anA from thres to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered o over 8,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- wich and read by ninety-three per eent. of the people. In Windham is delivered to over 900 houses, Putnam and Danfelson to over 1,200, and In all of these places It is considered tbe local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine fowns, one hundred and sixty- postofiice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of he R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 10T, AVerage...cccececsec... 4412 905, average...srxaaxaves 5,920 saniary 2o 9,309 THE PRESIDENT'S VETO. fn accordance with expectations President Wilson applied his veto to “the immigration bill, and he did it this itime on the same grounds as before, ‘ana that was because of the provision ‘which it contained resarding the lit- eracy test as a basis for admission to ‘this country. This is the fourth time such a bill ‘has been looked upon with distavor by ‘= president for this very reason. Pres- §dent Clevelana was unwilling to ap- Prove it. President Taft refused to ‘constder it favorably and on its pre- vious appearance before him President Wilson had vetoed it, while the action sehich he has just taken is in accord fwith that which he had indicated he would take if it became necessary. It must now go back to congress and in order to become a law it must ‘e passed by a two-thirds majority in ‘each hours. There were sufficient on the first vote to give it that major- jty, which causes those who are pushing the matter to believe that it will now bs passed over the weto, but the very fact that the pres- 4dent has declared that provision un- gesirable is ground enough for believ- 4ng that a sufficient numher will ‘change their attitude either in the up- per or lower house to kill it. It must be recognized that the lt- eracy test will not keep out the un- ‘desirable element, Wwhile it will eerve to prevent a large number who have been denied adventages in their own country coming to these shores where, as in the past, men of just such cali- have made excellent citizens. The by the president was what was TURKEY MUST GO. Lord Bryce has devoted much at- Now as the result of the condition in Turkey Lord Bryve believes that an ‘end should be put to what is left of that empire. He is not content with course carry a penaity for falling to register a be- trothal, other than such as would fol- low the inability to show that an en- gagement really existed in case the time should ever come when one of the partles should run to the court to seek financial compensation for the failure on the part of the other to carry out the agreement. Tt might cause certain ones to give deeper con- slderation to the advisability of re- straining their heart throbs until heir minds had been made up beyond any possible doubt, but to those who are in dead earnest it need cause no fear one way or the other. If, however, it would put a check upon adventur- ers who are out for the coin, first, last and all the time Michigan may look upon 1t as a good thing and adopt the suggestion. PEACE BY THE SWORD. An fmportant message was looked for from Kalser Wilkelm on the oc- casion of his birthday anniversary. It came in the shape of his announce- ment that peace will be forced by the sword and in taking that attitude he endorses the idea as voiced by the representatives of the entente that the war must go on to a decisive victory. Yet the kalser's declaration must cause him to reflect that such an atti- tude has failed in the past. The build- Ing up of a powerful fighting machine has long been the object of Germany. It has unquestionably one of . the Ereatest organizations in the fighting line that is known to modern times. It possessed this before the present war broke out and vet that condition was not able to maintain peace. He has used the sword unsparingly for the past two and a half years and yet peace is not at hand and in the mean- time the enemy has been able to de- velop its army and navy, with the necessary supplies to the point where they are as well able, if not better, to insist upon the same conclusion that he does. The policy of peace by the sword has resulted In the greatest war this world has ever known and the end is not vet. It has brought about the greatest havoc and the worst suffer- ing that the nations involved have ever experienced and active prepara- tions are underway for the continua- tion thereof and gpere is no reason to-belleve that the Taintenance of the greatest fighting machine in the world is going to do anything more than se- cure temporary peace. “There must be adequate defense for the upholding of rights but when it comes to perma- nent peacs it is going to require some- thing besides the sword to obtain it. A PROPER REBUKE. It is a sad state of affairs when a man cannot be given a fair trial be- cause of his color, yet that is the sit- wation that would prevail if certain people were allowed to have thelr way or if those charged with crime were obliged to be judged by such men. This deplorable situation was brought to light in a New York court recently when a man drawn for jury duty declared that he could not give the defendant, a Negro, a fair trial because ha was prejudiced azainst the black race. He was not of course given the opportunity to sit in the trial. He had disqualified himself as a fit person for judge another in ac- cordance with the provisions of the law and it is not surprising that Judge Rosalsky, in whose court this declaration was made. should become indignant and says: “Any man with such ideas should be disqualified from serving on a jury. I shall order that your name be stricken from the list. I think no man should sit in judgment on a human being in a case involving life or property who has prejudice against a race. Such a man is not fit to be a juror. It was perhaps an added reason for the malking of this statement on the part of the judge that the juror con- cerned was a college graduate. It is this unwillingness to put prejudice aside where justice is concerned which stimulates race hatred, and nothing 1s more responaible for the large num- ber of lynchings which .take place every year than just such an attitude and everything that is done to discour- age such prejudice is in the interest not only of humanity but a better cit- 1zenship. EDITORIAL NOTES. Gradually is it becoming apparent that Old Sol is working on a schedule which will produce more daylight. The number of accidents on the New Haven road of late recall days which it was sincerely hoped had gone never ‘to return. The man on the corner says: Will power is a great thing, but to break a Dad habit it takes won't power and plenty of it. ‘When the kalser announces that there will be peace with the sword, he appears to be in full accord with the entente powers. ‘When President Wilson made refer- ence in his address to the senate to the freedom of the seas, it isn't to be supposed that he had reference to the German submarines and raiders. ‘That New York boy who got a ver- dict of $1,500 against his teacher for the whipping he recelved, doesn’t be- lieve, from all indications, in the old saying, spare the rod and spoil the child. —— Consul General Bopp is to be pro- moted on his return to Germany. In other words he is to be punished in all probability the same way the com- mander of the submarine was who at- tacked the Sussex. Now that the kaiser is showing re- newed activity along the Riga and at Verdun, it is possible that he does not intend to wait for the big drive of the allies in the spring before Trushing the enemy. In honor of the kaiser's birthday the crown prince was made a general, but when thoughts are turned Verdun the appropriateness of it is not _disclosed except that the whole title is general fallure. > ‘Where the effort is being made to pins into her mou =& section of the mal she was ing and pinned a plait in it vicloualy. in her way. “You'll want your waist won' real well preserved, but I alway: that if folks dress too youthful there's ept €0 be remarks made. _ “Well, to ga back to Henry, I will say I don't know as I ever will quite get over it's happening the way it did. Tt was so accidental like, You see, Gladys roomed over to Mrs. Gallagher's that lives across the hall from us and I never did care for her appearance very ‘much, just watching her go in and out. Not that she didn’t have the appear- ance of being a nice enough kind of person, but you never would 'a’ thought of Henry taking a fancy to her no more’'n the man in the moon. Only I guess At all was said, it wasn't a case of Henry taking a fancy to her. “Well, as I was saying, Gladys had a room over to Mrs. Gailagher's and there was one evening I run over to her flat to take back a couple of spoonfuls of baking powder I'd borrowed of her. It just happened while I was standing in her front door that Henry stepped out of our flat to go over to the drug store. All he did was just stop and pass a few remarks with Mrs. Galla- gher and me, when who should coi along but this Miss Gladys. She sal he'd come to pay her room rent—iike she couldn’t find no other time to pay her room rent! Well, anyway, it seemed like there wasn't nothing for Mrs. Gallagher to do but introduce her to_me and Henry- ’ “About how long did you want your skirt, did you say? “Oh, is that so? Of course, they're ‘wearing 'em rather short now, but it always seems-to me a kind of fat, short person’d ought to be real careful about wearing something that makes ‘em lock any more dumpy, but it's your come home and it turned out af- terward they'd gome and went to movie show. Can you beat it? “Well, after that it was easy enough to see how things was going. 1 did my best. Henry can't never complain that T didn't do all in my power. Many's _the time I used to go out to movie shows with the two of them Wwhen I was so dogtired I could scarce- Iy keep awake. I ain't got anything to reproach myself with, and if it hadn't been for that attact of rheumatism there'd been another story to tell. “Yes, I had one of my attacts, so's T couldn’t scarcely move at all. Well, it seemed like there wasn't nothing Hen- ry didn’t want to do for me. Right from the first he begun saying about how he thought what I needed was a change of some kind. He certainly was good to ma. T~ - -i+-A right out try- ing to find the right place for me 20, and taoueu . . < teJing him that all I needed was to stay in bed and rest for a while, in the end I had to go. S “He found out about some place down in the state where folks go and take baths in the mud and it brings the germs out to the surface and then they scrub 'em off or something—nasty squidgy things! I never took but one after I got there! “Well, when I come home—and I didn’t _stay but a couple of days at that—here was this Gladys peacocking around in her diamond ring large as life. Say, I could 'a’ cried quickern what I could 'a’ congratulate her, if the truth was told. Not that 1 said that to Henry. All I said to Henry was, ‘Henry,’ I says, ‘of course, you did it all for the best, but when all's said and done I guess I'm worse off than what I was when I went, Henry," Izavs That was every word I said to “Well, they're married,” said Mrs. Mimzey, dosing herself with pins again, ‘and I Certainly hope it'll turn out ali right, though when all's said and done I can't help having my doubts about it”—Exchange. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Society Totoi, Greece.—The National Geo- graphic society issues the following war geography bulletin on Tatoi, the village in which King Constantine's summer palace is located and which will pass into other hands if the Greek ruler is later deposed by the entente allies: “In the new summer palace of Tatol, 16 miles north of Athens by way of Kephisia, King Constantine has spent much of the last few uneasy months. In strong contrast to the harsh and stormy political situation which has encompassed the members of the royal family, their physical environment has been wholly delightful, for Tatoi is one of the most beautiful spots of At- tica, nestling almost at the foot of the Parnes mountains, while in _the dis<| tance towers the famous Pentelikon, from whose summit one may obtain the finest view to bé had from any of the Attic hills. “If Constantige has allowed his mind to revert to the ancient history of his distraught_adopted country, he could not have found a spot more freighted with unhappy associations than Tatol, for in this vicinity stand the ruins of an old fort, known as the Kastro, ‘which marks the center of the deme (township) of Decelea. z “It was at Decelea, 12 miles ‘in an airline north of Athens, that the traitor Aicibiades, he of whom Aristophanes wrote that ‘they (the Athenian sol- diers) love, they hate, but cannot live without him,’ counseled the Spartans to construct strong fortifications in order to intercept the caravans of grain from Buboea, which supplied the capital with food. Alcibiades, by his betrayal of the Athenian navy, which had invested Syracuse in Sicily, had already fulfilled the prophecy of the misanthrope Timon, who had said upon one of the many occaslons when the young Athenian's rash proposals had Dbeen indorsed by the populace, ‘Go on, my brave boy, and prosper; for your prosperity will bring on the ruin of all this crowd’ His advice to seize and fortify Decelea in 413 B. C. brought irretrievable ruin on his native city and resuited in an inestimable loss to the human race, for it crushed Athens. - “By one of the strange whims of ‘the crowd, the Athenian army in its dark- est hour sent a message to Alcibiades inviting him to desert the Spartans, into whose power he had betrayed his own people. And by an equally strange whim Alciblades accepted the invita- tion, rushing to Samos to assume command of his 0ld associates. But it was too late. Athens was doomed. Lysander, commanding the Spartan navy, administered a crushing defeat to Athenian sea power at Aegospotami, on ‘the Hellespont. Three thousand of the defeated Athenians were end Xenophon, the histo: with tragic simplicity, relates that when the news reached the capital, ‘That night no man slept.” < “Lycander’s subsequent _operations against Athens were effected with the 2id of a Spartan army whose base was in_the nelghborhood of modern Tatoi. When 'the city finally fell (404 B. C.) there were many Hellenic cities which urged the conquerors to destroy the capital completely and convert the site into pasture land, just as they had done at Plataea, but the Spartans clared with seeming magnanimity, but secretly, perhaps, with the shrewd de- sire to maintain a check against The- bes and Corinth, that ‘they could not put out one of the eyes of Greece’ So the ruins of the Parthenom, of the temple of the Olympian Zeus, of the Theatre of Dionysos and other price- less remains were ved to guide modern students of Attic civilization and to amaze the esthetic sense of countless generations. v “Perhaps Tatol would never have had such rueful assoclations had the impetuous young Alcibiades only Ms- tened to the teachings of his master; Socrates, but the boy, as he_himself relates, ‘was forced to stop his ears and fice away, that he might not sit down by the side of the great teacher and grow old in listening. “Tatol is reached today by a rallway {omimey of elght and & haif miles to ephisia, and a carrlage drive of seven and a half miles from that point. new summer paiace is occupied by king and the old palace is the resi- dence of the crown prince. A beauti- OTHER VIEW POINTS Somebody compliments the postof- fice department on the brilliant color of the two-cent stamp and wonders if Americans are making good for the loss of German dyes. But what do you think of the mucilage on the flaps of the latest batch of stamped emvel- cpes? They have to be held down till they stop curling up.—Waterbury Am- erican. Talk about women becoming hys- terical in time of danger, just put down in your memory the fact that mere men are liable to lose their head in time -of danger, as evidenced when a controller box on a Bridgeport trol- ley exploded and the men occupants of the car, who were working in an ammunition plant, and possibly thought some of their own product had been secreted aboard, jumped and jammed themselves in a mass until it was necessary to give them medical ald. Men will become excited when occasion requires just like women, minus the squealing proclivities.— Middletown Press. : A police force of any city should be almost as strict in discipline as the army or the navy, without, of course, resorting to the severer forms of pun- ishment. When men disobey their su- perior officers in this branch of the local government they should be first warned, then reprimanded, and on the third” offense dismissed from the ser- vice. Supernumerary policemen de- serve no more privileges than those accorded to members of the regular force, if, indeed, they should be so favored. They are paid for their ser- vices, and so long as this pay is in keeping with the good they _render they have no complaint. If there is any charge of favoritism, the time to make it is now. If there is any truth e compaint registered by _the mayor now is also the time to fully investigate. As Artemus Ward would say, “this iz 2 mutch”—New Britain Herald. The present laws in the state re- garding dogs are good If they were only enforced, but the great trouble is they are not enforced, which holds true regarding a good many other laws, which do not seem to meet the situation. It might be a good propo- sition_to compel every dog owner to keep his dog chained between sunrise and sunset and pay a bounty for all dogs taat are shot after dark when found roaming away from their homes and also a fine for the owner. In 99 per cent of the cases the destruction of sheep has been done by dogs at night and by the marauder breed and when this breed is kept within bounds by a stringent law, such as we just suggested, it is possible that Connec- tiut will again come into its own as a Sheep rajsing state. By all means let up dstinguish the good from the bad, and give Rover a fair deal, he has saved up many a step.—Rockville Journal. o The argument which supports the latest edition of Senator Hurley's perpetual bill to appropriate for the establishment of a normal school in ‘Waterbury is that in the matter of securing training as school teachers of Waterbury do not enjoy the advantages possessed The ~ ntention as to fact is, of course, MORE RHEUMATISM THAN EVER BEFORE Clergymen, Lawyers, Brokers, Me- chanics and Merchants Stricken. Our old friend Rheumatiz is his inning this year, and a few of caution fzom one who knows all your feet dry; drink plenty of and avoid strong alcoholic by those resident in some other cities. [ i verds| The Resinol treatment for . MR VINCIGUERRA Duffy’s Pure Erntieee labor of the digestive organs. in equal amounts of water or milk before el A T Ly i e i Malt Whiskey to throw off and resist e fmiborbn s SR L “Get Duffy’s and Keep Well.” Sold in SEALED BOTTLES ONLY. Beware of imitations. Usefui househcid bookiet froe. Get Dutty’s loeal druggist, grocer or dealer sul-r:'f.u-‘“y—.mu true. Prospective teachers living in New Britain, Willimantic, Danbury and New Haven may gain their train- ing without leaving home. Waterbury girls must travel to and from Dan- bury. But the theory that each com- munity is entitled to the utmost of much expense. 1f Waterbury is enti- natural development, lead us ihto school education will, if carred to its conveniences in securing normal tled to a normal school why are not New London, Norwich, Middletown, Bridgeport, Hartford, Ansonia, Win- sted and all the other places now without them? Mistake was made, of course, in_the location of three of the present four schools. They were established not where they coud best serve the needs of the greatest number, but whers log rolling, pork distributing politicians were successful in having them es- tablished. The institution at Danbury is very poorly situated to serve any- body, but that seems to furnish no reason for continuing the build- ing program. We already have normal school accommodation more than suf- ficient to provide for those wko apply for it. Until their capacity is ap- proached why should we provide an- othed midway between th e institu- tions at New Britain and Danbuary, which by rail are only 53 miles apart. —Hartford Times. | STORIES OF THE WAR Effects of Rumanian Campaign. Long lines of refugees waiting pa- tiently for a chance to get back to their homes farther in the mountain hundreds if not thousands of soldiers returning from furloughs and strug- gling to find even standing room in the irregular trains, timetables turn- ed topsy-turvy and 20 to 30 car tarins that begin their journeys two hours behind time and end them six hours to half a day behind schedule. Such is one of the superficial effects of the Rumanian campaign. The Ru- manians have long since been pushed back into and across their own coun- try, but it will be weeks before traf- fic .and other conditions will again have resumed their normal status; weeks before the festively clad peas- ants shall all have found their way to their abandoned homes. ‘With the entrance of Rumania, war in reality came home to lower Hun- gary for the first time. It had con- tributed its quota of men to the Aus- trian army, but that it had done in peace times. The Russian advances into the Carpathians had left it un- scatched. It was not until the Ruma- nians swept through the passes and occupied a of Transylvania natVthe Fiungarins of thelr section really knew that they, too, were in a fight to the finish. The majority of them were seized by the same panicky feeling that in the present war has seized the inhab- itants of Belgium, of Poland, of East Prussia and Serbia, and of every other district that has been invaded. With- out stopping to consider whether they would or would not be molested by the enemy if they remained, they flooded away from their homes in un- told thousands. Now weeks after Transylvania is as free and safe from invasion as Ber- lin or Budapest or Vienna today, the interior cities of Hungary, in partic- ular Budapest, are shoked and cram- med with fugitives who find getting back home still attended with difficul- ties. They fill every hotel to over- flowing, they clutter up every train and choke most of the roads. Their home coming, when such a thing finally is possible, is in feneral more fortunate than that of miost fu- gitives, however, for the Rumanians were in Transylvania for so short & time that they destroyed little of any- thing, and the men and women and children of the district, though they find little left to eat, at least are able to move back into houses that are fairly intacts, VIGOROUS CRITICISM OF NEWSPAPER CAMPAIGNS Against the High Cost of Living by President of Fruit Jobbers’ Associa- tion. New Orleans, Jan. 29.—Vigorous cri- ticism of recent newspaper cumpaisns over the country, directed against the HARRIS BECOMES HEAD OF FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION IN PLACE OF E. N. HURLEY —WILLIRM HARRIS On Feb. 1 the resignation of Bd- ‘ward ‘N. Hurley, chairman of the Fed- eral Trade Commission, goes into ef- fect, and 'William J. Harris, hereto- fore vice chairman, becomes chairman of the commission, which deals with corporations. Mr. Harris was appoint- ed director of the census soon after President Wilson took office and serv- ed in that capacity until he became a member of the Federal Trade Com- mission, about two years ago. He was mentioned in 1914 for the democratic nomination for governor of Georgia, his home state, but withdrew from the race to devote all of his attention to census bureau af- fairs. Mr. Harris is a son-in-law of the late General Joe Wheeler and was secretary to Senator Clay of Georgia. He is an insurance man and is an able executive and statistician. skin troubles Is nof an cxperi- ment. Doctors have pre- Thiey rely on Resinol Ointment because it usually ihe itching at once—giving the patient much- needed relief and rést—and trace of the distressing eruption. may be used freely on even the removes all = Ointment sensitive, TODAY AND TONIGHT SESSUE HAYAKAWA ““The Honorable Friend”” AN Vs in THE CREAT SECRET Elaborate Musical Pragram by the Breed Quintstts COMING WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY MABEL TALIAFERRO in “THE SUNBEAM" AVIS THEATHE Big Time Singing Duo CLARA WILLIAMS PATHE COMEDY WAY "Conlin Parks Trio THREE LITTLE PALS IN A NOVEL BSCENIC SINGING OFFERING KING & HARVEY ' IN THE FIVE PART TRIANGLE PLAY TODAY AND TOMORROW 2 PIG KEITH ACTS TRIANGLE PHOTOPLAYS JOHN GOSS The Minstrel Man Three of Man CONCERT ORCHESTRA VALESKA SURATT in “JEALOUSLY” 5 Reels Story of a Scheming Woman GH‘RLES' CHAPLIN “The Musketeera of the A Big 2-Reel Comed, PATRIA—MRS. VERNON Slums” high cost of living, which he declared unjust burdens and blamec upon fruit and produce jobbers, was made by Thomas D. Turner, of Oklahoma City, president of the Western Fruit Job- bers Association, in an addrees to the association’s convention here today. “The criminal carelessness of the newspapers in publisaing statements not founded upon facts ultimately wil injure producers and consumers " sal Mr. Turner. “As a result we can oni expect state legislatures d congross wil] attempt to enact laws restrictive and injurious to the fruit and vegeta- le industries.” ELECTIONS IN JAPAN TO BE HELD APRIL 28 Constitutionalists Are to Fight for the Formation of Cabinets. Tokio, Jan. 29, 4.50 p. m.—The gov- ernment bas fixed the date for the clections to the new house of- repre- Sentatives as April 28 and that for the assembling of the diet as June 23 next. n an_interview given The Associated Press, Yuzio Ozaki, the leader of the constitutional party upon whose lifo an attempt was made last week as he was addressing a_mass meeting called to demand the resignation of the cab- inet shortly before the dissolut the house of representatives perial decree, declared that the con- Stitutionalists would fisht to secure a regime of recognition of political artics in the diet as the basis for the formation of cabinets. M. Ozaki con tended that the accession of Lieuten- ant General Count Terauchi as pr mier, in defiance of the spirit of rep- resentative government, was made Posaible by the unconstitutioral inte vention 0¥ the Genro or elder states- Taen, who during the past quarter of a entury had been a powerful volce in affairs of the empire without any re- iponsibility to the diet, the cabinet or even the emperor himself. | SAFEST AND SANEST LENGTH OF A LOBSTER Pla | | | Maine Legislative Committes | at 10 1-2 inche: Augusta, Maine, Jan. 20.—Ten and one-half inches as the legal length of a lobster is the “safest and sanest length and should be sustained under all circumstances,” according to a re- port submitted to the legislature to- |day by a commission appointed last year to investigate lobster fisheries. ALWAYS THE BEST SHOW IN TOWN L and THURSDA Fulton Feature Film Corp. Prese FRANK KEENAN with ENID MARKE in the Cinema Protest to Civiliza tion Against the Violation Women in Time of War. WARS’ WOMEN CUPID'S _CADDIES—Comedy _ CABTLE PICTURE 800N Piano Recital FRANK L. FARRELL Assisted By MRS. GEOR GE S. PALMEE of New London the Colleg SLATER MEMORIAL HALL Friday Evening, Feb. 2nd Admission .......... 80 ¢ Tickets for sale at Crans Reid. and William H. X 500,000, was approved tod Canpenter in the United court. The_terms of the the purchase of $7,000 preferred stock of t pany by Mr. Red and payment by them of the costs of the litigatior IN SYMPATHY WITH WILSON'S PEA Sergius Sazonoff, Recently Foreign Minister. Petrograd, Jan. 2 p. m.—Sergius_Sazono eign minister who has pointed Russian minist commenting on Fres senate speech in an inte in the Russian newspap voiced the view alrsady t prominent Russians | President Wilson's effort repetition of the world v full sympathy, especia the idea of # peace failed to sce the practic speech at this time. New York city entertained ¢ ventions in 1916. PERSONALS J. Cornell, 7 I fam Mrs. W. Marlboro, Mass., Medicine keeps her Ave., Maywood, Il Father John's Medicine to Repeated efforts have been made to haye the legislature mak nine inches the legal Ingth to conform to th laws o other New Ensgland states. ‘The ‘question, long agitated by fishermen, was referred to the commission which was directed to investisate measures for more adequate protection of the industry. It found that the present laws are sufficient and satisfactory. $7,500,000 FOR MINORITY STOCKHOLDERS C, R. I, & P. Settlement Approved by U. 8. District Court at Chicage. Chicago, Jan. 29.—Settlement of the suit of the minority stockholders of the Chicago, Rock island and Pacific Railway Company against Donald G. Cchildren and {s grateful for good which it has accompl Get rid Of;ybli COLD 3y Takingis FATHER JOHNS MEDICINE No alcohol or dangerous drugs. Doss need have no fi crowned or extracted STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE Successors to the 203 MAIN ST. Lady Asistant Don’t You Want Good Teeth? the dread of the dental chair eause you to rs. By our methed you can have BSOLUTELY WITHOUT P, CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES | LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK ¥ eglect them? You | jour testh filled, STERILIZED INSTRUMZINTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS If these appeal to you, call for examination and estimate. N charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON OR. D. J, COYLE | DENTISTS Ring Dental Co.) NORWICH, CONN. 4 MtoB8P. M. Telephone (Street 37 OUR BUSINEESS IS» TO PROTECT YOUR SECURITIES AND VALUABLES Inspect Our Safe Deposit Vault The Thames National Bank 16 SHETUCKET STREET £ ) i “tivs Floor)

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