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= Fear. t: at the Postoffice at Norwich, as second-class matter. ~ “Felephone Callas ifienin Baltonal Reotis 3-8 Buletin Job Offics 35-X. tlo Office, 67 Churct fiafl Norwich, Fridgy, April 13, 191 2 gl The Bulletin bas the largest circulation of any paper in Eastern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered fo over 8,000 of the 4,058 houses m Nor- wich and read by ninety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is delivcred 1o over 300 houses. in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it i considered the local dally. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five postofiice districts, and sixty Jural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every towa and on all of be R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, avera: 4902, average. April 7, 1917 THE GOVERNOR'S VETO. The veto which was applied by Governor Holcomb to the new Sunday law which had been approved by both branches of the legislature came not as a surprise for it had been indicated that he would take such a course, but whether as a surprise or not, it is believed that it will meet with the epproval of a larse portion of the people of the state. When the governor in siving his reasons for vetoing the measure de- clared that it might better have been called a bill for the commercializa- tion of the Sabbath he delivered a blow that was justified and he pre- sented sound arguments when he pointed out that if the Sunday law was going to be made more liberal for certain towns in the state it ought to be made the same for all. There is no good reason either why an ex- ception should be made of one com- munity in the state as was done In the case of Milford. The law is one more step towards the breaking down of Sunday ob- servance. It is of course particularly desired by those who want to carry on business seven days in the week and as the governor says, “It would be a demoralizing object lesson to the youth of the state and a baneful leg- aey to posterity.” It is of course possible that the general assembly will pass it over the governor's veto. Such a thinz can be done by a majority vote in each Body but in view of the opposition which has appeared and the action of the governor in applyinz his veto and directing attention to several of its features it is believed that many in both houses will change their opin- fon and kill it. Such would be wise action. SOLDIERS MUST BE OBEYED. Because they have not been used to such things and because they have not been used to thinking of what re- strictions are necessary in a time of war it is difficult for many to realize just what the meaning is of soldiers in the streets and on zuard at var¥- ous points. Citizens are not used to having their privilges, so long en- joyed, interfered with and they fail in many instances to show the proper consideration for the measures of pro- tection which are being taken. They are loval and good citizens themselves and they somehow think that the sol- @iers ought to be able to distinguish them from those who are not, but they must realize that when militia- men are stationed at %ertain points wnd given orders to allow no one to pass that they are obliged to obey. it is not for the soldiers to attempt to diseriminate and take chances. It is for each and every citizen fo do his part, to hait when called upon and % obey whatever other directions are T¢ is because of the failure of some to appreciate the situation that ex- ists, unless, they have been inclined to reach a certain point for a pur- pose, that the guards in different cit- fes have been called upon to shoot. Deaths and wounds have resulted, but it could all have been avoided if there had been the disposition tp respect the euthority of the guards instead of persisting in taking shortcuts or using ways of travel which are now forbid- den. Tt must be realized that the sol- diers are not on parade but they are on duty for business and they must be respected and obeyed. When that is fully realized little ‘trouble ought to result except to those who are looking for it. 2 CAN HELP RUSSIA. In the help which this country is planning to extend to the allies as a part of the service which it can im- ediately render in the war, there is need of keeping up the supniies which are going across the Atlantic but there is also a big opportunity to distrib- ute these of another character across the Pacific. * i ! i '? ; i it i i : i i ] i i i¢ ;;*iig rf put inte . The Russian resources mous but they need, as has been Jem- <onstrated in the past, the right kind of development. RIGHT WHERE THEY BELONG. It is but nmatural that the whole country should be interested in the attitudes which are being takem by the ex-presidents of the country. For a long time William F. Taft has been calling for the extension of the na- tion’s full support to President Wil- son. He has been advocating some poticies which were in accord with those of the president and some that were not, but the attitude of the ad- ministration has undergone = -some el which bring them practically nto accord and this is particularly true in regard to the raising of a large army and the introduction of universal military training. As a part of the ex-president’s work he has just returned from a trip through fhe south for the purpose of bringing to the closer attention of the people of that section the necessity of support- ing the chief executive's demands in the maintenance of the rights and ideals of this country. The turn which affalrs have taken and the position of the administration as set forth by President Wiison in his address before the extra session of congress has also served to bring Theodore Roosevelt into line and that means the addition of a_powarful force. He has been one of the presi- dent's strong critics because the poli- cies of the two men have been far apart but the president has now taken a stand which ex-President Roosevalt not only can but does approve and there can be no question but what he will be of much ald to the adminis- tration. The country is facing one of its greatest crises and in realization of it both the nation’s living ex-pres- idents are doing just what mizht be expected of them. They are inter- ested in the nation’s welfare and they are doinz what they should to make it easier for those upon whose shoul- ders the responsibilities rest and to insure a successful outcome of the war. Ggl a GOETHALS THE MAN. The idea of calling General Goe- thals from the position which'he has just accepted In the state of New Jer- sey as head of the highway depiri- ment to national service and placing him in charge of the work of turninx out a thousand carzo ships of 3,000 | tons burden cannot fail to be looked upon as an excellent idea. In order to offset the effects of the submarine campaign and to make up for the losses which ars belng sus- tained by the sinking of the merchant ships, it is important that the ship- yards of this country should be or- Fanized for the construction of as large a number of steamships at as early a date as possible. These shibs are going to be required for sorvice between this country and the entente nations. They must take the place of those which have been and are being sunk, and in their construction there can be mobilized a large number of men who are not rushed with such work and many who need not of nec- essity be shipbuilders at the present| time, since these vessels will be of wood and a different class of work- men can be employed thereon 'than would be needed if they were to b constructed of steel. General Goethals is a great orzan- izer. There could have been no bet- ter demonstration of his ability than that which has been given in his work on the Panama canal and there will be unbounded faith in his ability to tackle the proposition which is now placed before him in the way of turn- ing out a fleet of merchantmen at short notice. EDITORIAL NOTES. Basebail will do its best to call at- tention away from the war, but it is facing one of its hardest uphill fights. The man on the corner says: More people might succeed if they set out to mend their ways instead of darn- ing them. (IS S Ve ‘Whatever efforts have been made to guard ammunitionr plants have been | men. shown by the Eddystone disaster to|contain no elements e none too rigid. { i packed mixed up with the Christmas trim- mings and ornaments kept on the top closet l-halt.hur lll"flle it vwv.: pantry, er e sewing room—becau: 1 looked in all those spots. 1 dragged mother away from the club paper she was writing and the cook from her doughnuts to ask her where, in their opinion, & box of calling cards logi- cally ought to be—and the doughnuts burned up and I never saw such a iack of ideas, anyhow! I finally fourd them behind Shakespeare in the bookcase. “I went to eee Jane Ingram first. Jane and I attended school together and we wave frantically at each other at the Friday concerts and always meet in the foyer and pormise that we're coming over right away next week and tell each other how well we are looking. “I rang the bell at 3 o'clock and_the maid ‘hesitated and said ves, Mrs, Tngram was at home, she guessed. She'd see. She let me inside doubt- fully and stole upstairs in a furtive ‘way, as though a crime had been com- mitied. I waited a thousand years more or less and then Jane arrived. She had that flushed, disheveled look that. tells you a woman has had to get all dressed and do her hair on Your account, and the things she's said about you for making her so exert nerself are easily enough to account for the queer crackling in %:e air you had been hearing. ““Why, how do you de!” cried Jane. up to Kitty's expecta- ou are expected to re- it is simply impossible to ly that you've fust to call. I told Kitty I wws horfibly sorry mobody had died or eioped and for heaven's sake to go back to her ghampos—end € glid out the frant oor. “When I reached Milly's T was sort of subdued and anxious. I met Miily just coming out the front door as I entered. She grabbed my in her ex- citement and dropped her mesh bag, her muff and three letters. ‘Oh, I know something has happened!’ she shrieked. T can tell it by your face! You're engaged! Ol ' That's why you'v tions. ate “80,” concluded the girl who lkes to talk. “I just gave up and cam home and threw my caliing eards I to the waste basket and sobbed my- self to death. Wasn't it awful?” “Pooh!” sald the unwilling listener. “PIl bet you hated to make the calls talk. “secretly, Tl bet you're right Exchange. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Some Fun Through the Gloom. Mr. Editor: The amusing letters of the “Cloud Digger” cast a little ray of fun through the gloom of these dark days of strike and uncertainty. in spite of his surpassing knowledge of coming events, and his amazinz familiarity with the secretsgof na- ture, notably the virtues of planting in the full of the moon, and the rab- bit foot theories of cultivation, he is, so far as I am able to determine, a farmer of—shall we say—moderate success. He reminds me of a certaln very £00d gentleman, who lived in this vi- cinity some years ago, who wrote a book entitled, “Money, and How Make It” but who n-ver succeeded in making any himself. Jewett City, Women Coming Into Her Own. Mr. Editor: The answer to the anti- suffragist of Hartford, by the lady from Putnam was a point well taken. There are two tremendous movoments for freedom at the present time—the labor movement and the woman move- ment. The union of these two move- ments found expression in the fifth hiennial_convention of the Women's Trade Union League held in the city of New York durinz the month of June. last. That convention of rep- resentatives of wage-earning women was visible proof of the ability of wo- men to determine and manage their own affairs and to appreciate and as- =umn responsibility as members of so- ciety. Not only do they assume re- sponsibility, but they demand rights that go with responsibility. As a re- sult of former conditions, traditions and customs, protection and support have been assumed for all women. This fiction was maintained e though women went out of their hdfes to earn a living in shop, fac- tory or store. Some women have learned to bregk through stultifying tradition, to brush aside fiction and to recognize facts—they have learned that a free individual must stand erect, be responsible for her own life and acts, give and accept justice, not special privilege. If women would be free they must achieve their own free- dom. Wage-earning women have only begun to work out their own indus- trial freedom. The president of the Women Trade Union League said with truth, in her biennial address, there ere now two great groups of exoloit- ed workers in the United States—im- migrants and women. But women have felt the thrill of the Impulse that leads to freedom, in all walks of life they are demanding an equal voice in determining those things which touch the common life. This impulse stimu- lates protest against industrial ex- ploitation. Strong women who earn their 1iving in the struggle of the world feel "that this protection and salvation lie in organization. Women work in_industry side by slde with Their relation to employers different from those of men’s relations. Industrial vrotection and industrial betterment The killing of the large number of | With freedom involve no elements that women and girls in the Bddystone|differ from the problems of men. Eeo- ammunition factory will probably be pleasing news to the kaiser. If Germany accepts the advice of uomic organization is the jawel of hope. The discussions and addresses at that convention indicate, that wom- en realize they cannot establish and maintain industrial freedom and re- the Russians to fire the kaiser and|sponsibility unless they also have po- they will then talk peace, it will be | litical freedom and responsibility. ; a position to arrive at terms with | Wherever opportynity and develop- most any of the natioms. It required the revolution in Rus- sia for the kaiser to come to the re- alization that he was taking a sudden and unusual interest in the common people of his own country. ment are* restricted, their influence and power are also restricted. As clear as the noonday sun stands th woman cannot assume eg rights with free men in the indust- rial struggle . while classified with idiots and derélicts in political affairs. It is a matter of justice that working women demand the baliot. They have ‘When it comes to intensive farming | the right to participate in the deter- there doesn’t appear to be any good | minations of political affairs because reason why Connecticut cannot raise all the potatoes that it requires in- stead of only & part of them. they are affected by those determina- tions. And the ballot can not long be denied them. And the ballot will bring power, because it will bring full Now that Count Tarnowski will re- | Citizenship. turn without being received by this gov- Industrial freedom must be fought out on the industrial field. And let ernment he has at least been|me say it will come to pass when here long enough to get acquainted | wage-carning women hold in _their with the feeling and attitude of the|OWn hands, the right and the power American people. Mexico is to remain neutral on the question of Germany’s trampling up- on the rights of other nations en the | wish industrial freedom. yet it was only a short | road to be sure, but it high seas, and time aso that murder respected by the Uni sending an expedition after the bandit who was giving him and others no Carranza was holler- There is an increased interest inlend of trouble. to partieipats in determining the con- ditlons under which they shall work Tan Gelexais ihis power and responer. s or an - bility to no o le authority if they Ay into life is worth while, it is the beautiful ideal of 3, rational individual order- ing his or her life in full acceptation of the opportunities and the limita: tions of freedom. Protection and reg- ulation may offer immediate relief, but they are not freedom. Nor is indus- than 8 inches deep or more than 15. In determining the time to spade. squeeze z handful of dirt and If it trial freedom a sex problem, It is very much & human problem. ~ And. the same principles apply to men and wo- men alike. It is a movement that is full of hope and promisc, at the same time it is a movement confronted by dangers and pitfails, and protect itself it must, against attempts to dominate and use it for other purposes. Blind indeed are they who battle the uplift of society. The time is not far dis- tant when the men must join the wo- men in efforts to solve the common problem ot _else they will find women used against them as competitors. Women and men alike must bear in mind anything that throws light on the nature of life and of man or wom- an, his or her organic constitution and equipment, the laws and_possibilities of his or her mind and body, his or her place and fare in and relation to the rest of the universe, will appear immeasurably more dmportant than the fate of individual men or women or nations, for the reason those things have a fundamental significance for the whole human race everywhere and for all time and likewise have the deepest sort of personal significance for every one who is reflective encuzh to be comscious of tho questions pre- sented by his own being. Unity of mind and action is the only thing that will and can bring peace to the work- ers of the world. O fall the beset- ting sins that infest the pathway of mankind in the inferno of human so- clety with the harvest of wreck and ruin, none have paralieled, in trucu- lent atrocity and ruthless demoiition, the Just for power. Once the human soul becomes obsessed with its insid- jous influence, all the finer sensibili- ties perish and the mind becomes its loyal, ardent siave. The highwars of history are strewn with the bleach- ing bones of its victims, whose im- placable mind coliapsed with their weight of grief and remorse. g Norwich, April 9, i9; HOME GARDENS Spading. Pliny had the right idea. He shid, “Dig deep; manure well; work often.” Pliny the Elder would have been a good gardener. Twenty centurles have falled to improve on his advice. Importance of good spading or good rlowing cannot be over-estimated. The roots of plants must not be cramped for room if the plant is to thrive. Moreover, the plant feeds through these roots and all of the plant food in the soll should be raade available by deep dizging. No amount of cultivation of growing plants will remedy poor preliminary preparation of_the soil. Do not dlg so deeply that you turn poor soil on top and bury the rich s0il where the roots cannot reach it. The spading should seidom be less crumbles when released or dropped, it is right for working. Use a spading fork rather than a spade. 1t you have been able to procure manure, work it into the soll while epading. The sofl probably needs Hming for sourness. Ome pound of slaked Lime is emough for 50 square feet, but it should not be put in at the same time with the manure. Spread the lime iater when raking the top soil. In most back yard gardens the sofl is too heavy. A good finely sifted coal ashes, np cinders, worked in when epading will help to pulverize such moil ,but will not fer- tlize it Before spading. clear off wood and mesalmic rubbish, vegetable matter. Rake and ount of but spade in all il the spaded ground untl] all lumps have dissppearsd. Do not be satisfied with a emooth sur- face covering clods which will make alr spaces beneath and waste the moisture which the roots must have. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Soclety Damascus—Telling the story of Damascus which is often regarded the oldest city in the world, the Na- donal Geographic Society’s bulletin on the geography of the war says: “If the progress of military events in the Far Eastern theater of the war should bring Damascus, it ‘the British troops to will not be the first time that English soldiers have trod those historic streets; for it was in 1841, in the process of clearing Syria of Egyp- tian rule that an English army be- sieged and took this ancient capital. “Damascus is claimed to be ‘the oldest city in the worid.” Wether thi: ve true or mot, it is certain that its origins .are shrouded in mystery and that it can claim a longer continuous existence than any city that is stand- ing today. It was a'ready a noted place at the time of Abraham, David conguered it and placed a garrison there, and it slipped from the hands of Solemon to become the capital of the Kingdom of Syria the constant rival ond enomy of Israel. Swaying back and forth through the centuries with the varying fortunes of conquering races which have overrun the Hast. counting even the Mongol among those :0 whom it bas owed allegiance, Da- mascus, a garden spot of the desert, has been a prize for eternal confli Dattle without and massacre witnin its walls have been its portion. And yet its history has not lacked for ro- ————{mance. Antony gave the city as a loye gift to Cleopatra: Tiberius confer-ed- upon Herod: from Its pa'aces Pompey scattered the crowns of the East (o the vassals of Rome. Heres Paul pro- claimed his conversion, and here, t0o, Mohammedanism was emblazoned to a conquered province in the light of the flames which were consuming its cap- ital. et amid it all Damascus made progress in the arts, set a foothold for science, and made great libraries to measure its advance in letters; and it still_remains the most charminsly Oriental of any city in the world, 5et vith its back to the foot of its moun- tain where the Prophet made his gréat renunication, and facing eastward across the Great Syrian Desert of which it is a realized mirage. “Damascus bas a speil. Mohammed recognized it while he was yet a camel driver; and, viewing the city’s loveli hess from the heights of Jebel K yun, he refused to enter its gates lest it should tempt him'with lts beauties to renounce the glories of Paradise. Whether the Prophet ever visited the city is not recorded, but in the court- vard of ics great mosque, in_ the so called Dome of the Treasury, is reput- ed to have been the burial place of Ayisha, his favorite wife. “This mosque, not yet completely re- built from the serious fire which rav- aged it in 1893, is the city's chief mon- ument; it datés from pagan days and has been‘in turn both Christign and Moslem. Despite its mutilations and its haphazard restoration, it is most lovely. A thousand’ years Mukaddasi, writing In 985 A. D, clared-that the great mosque of mascus was “the falrest of any that continued, there gollect greater magnificence” Its inner wal he said, for twice the height of a man, | were faced with variegated marbles even to the very cei ing, were mosaic of various colors and in gold. Rare, he said. were the trees and few the well known towns that could be found figured on these walls. The whole revenue of Syria for seven years was said to have been expended in the work, together with “eighteen shiploads of gold and silver, which came from Cyprus.” From the western minaret one looks down upon “the Street Called Straight” and the gleam of the rush- ing waters of the Abana, one of the| “Great Rivers of Damascus,” may be caught at intervals among the houses. These beauty Whi wa.y one will court with marble with fountains and with ne hint of the their walls contain. and er and fruit trees and presenting to almost every sense a alluring fascination Lght. people to pass one: them are to be foun wealths of efik work, and gold simithing, Damascus steel, Wwhich cture of the Orfental de- “The bazaars aré a labyrinth of lanes and alleys, copnected by dark passages, often (oo Aarrow for wo but in bewildering copper, yet silver and examples of holds a foremost place in the world's armories. “The entire _trade of the Great Syrian Desert flows through Damas- cus; and in addition, the city's place as the point of departure of the great annual Haji pligrimage from Syria to Mecca gives it a large prosperity. In the day. the cox which has Damascus of the caravan this was of f more importance to Damascu: ruction of the Hejaz rallway, as_its northern for terminus, now renders unnecessary the former prolonged stay of the pilgrims at Damascus while outfitting. “Damascus s not alone in suffer- ing from rafiroad constructiom. its prestige as a center of commerce because it was | nsshipment ! stantinopie long held a point of barter and t Con- for the caravan traders who.now maiks use of the surer, quicker and Cheaper rail transportation: and that great imperial city 1s no longer the natural seat of empire which so attracted Constantine when he eet up his Em- pire in the East. In our own coun- try, to a lesser degree, this same de- terioration has taken place In many in ‘stagecoach a colonial town which, days, was a populous and enterpris- ing center but which now, phssed by :n ‘the const ction of raiiroads, has sunk into gefiteel semllity and inertia. “Demascus, however, will always re- geography main an important and faith alike keep it s0.” cits will contribute to e e OTHER VIEW POINTS i Syrups, denatured alcohol, condensed milk and candy are a few more of the articles now being made profitably where intoxicants were made before. Two former breweries in Oregon are being transformed into creameries. The manufaeture of denatured alco- hol is among the most useful purposes be put. But there is these varied productions. room i{to which these former breweries may for all It will be an interesting side issue to the spread of prohibition to see how many different activities find profitable development within the walls of old breweries. Meriden Record. (o AT A young man fresh from college has made $15.000 from one season's crop of onions, and this king” some rather short on whrt trained youthtul of California is the subject of ighted comment intelligence _yoked ‘onion with industry can aedomplish. Train- ed intelligence is valuable anywhere and in any line, but the little fortune mentioned was ‘the result of the sea- son’s accidental scarcity of the pro- college man will not make A FOE to the HIGH COST OF LIVING food is rich in brain and body and -mnhrfi;lly attractive the palate A SAVER OF MONEY AND HEALTH jduct rather than of brains. The young $15,000 € mLL . The Act Deluxe DOROTHY SOUTHERN TRIO Thres | ul Girls a High Musigal Offering “MORRIS GOLDEN The Yiddle With a Fiddie - VERCE & VERCI in the Nevel Comedy Skit A 20TH CENTURY ELOPEMENT Special Scenery and Effects ! CONSTANCE TALMADGE . n BETSY'S BURGLAR 1'I'bl Thrilling Adventures of = H Siave Whose Love and Wealth Cemes True in Five Part Triangle Feature. HER CAVE MAN Triangle Komedy FRICES 28¢ to $1.50 SEATS NOW SELLING COMING MONDAY~-BIG DOUBLE BILL PICKFORD in “A POOR- LITTLE RICH GIRL ALSO TRIANGLE FEATURE AND COMEDY E All Seats 4 Concert Orchestra | THEATRE 3 Shows Daily 2:30, 7, 8 :30 loc i ; TODAY AND SATURDAY ! THE EVER ATTRACTIVE SCREEN STAR MARY metyt SBlanche Sweet i UNPROTECTED A STORY THAT HAS THE CHARM OF A ROMANCE AND I8 BOTH SIMPLE AND STRONG PATHE WEEKLY. || CHRISTIE COM‘EY e ODAY. and [sATURDAY ’iU Evening 7-8:30, 10 WILLIAM A. BRADY PRESENTS Robeort Warwick--Doris Kenyon IN o OQirl’s Folly” FOX COMEDY JUST RELEASED Billie Richie in “The House of Terrible Scandals” the flag or the wearing brain for the crop of onions is go- |fiying of o e e mights * one.—Torrington |the national colors iy our never won a war. i ——— brawn of the men and women of 1 y zed. Mr ready to place them in the hands of [{3U2C% ¥ the government to be requisitioned at = any time needed and used for any puf- -_ — — ., In Massachusetts to overcome Acres of Officers. this attitude the government has given 2 guarantee that such machines will not be ued for anything but war puf- poses and not even for the carrying about of military officers and use in patriotic procession. “We want them only for use in the gravest danger, they say. Nevertheless people there, as around here, are offering up their machines, some of them saying that they do not expect to get them back in good condition. It is little they can do at best, but it is a good deal after all. Some men had just as soon let othe people wear their clothes and use their shaving tools as drive their au- tomobiles.—Waterbury Ameriean. There is no need for any shortage of officers with perfence. Let the President to the colors all thos have béen generals in the dragpas—Hammond Timee. m Edwards’ Olive Tablets are ' a Harmless Substitute Practically every individual has an opportunity to do something. There is hardly a home in the city of New Britain that is not surrounded by enough land,to make the cultivation of a_vegetable garden possfble. 1t is the duty of those owning or renting this land to see that it it made pro- ductive of something of greater value than grass and weeds. The closing of factories on Saturday afternoons gives to employes a much needed half holi- day. They no doubt are willing, how- ever, to sacrifice this in the interest of their families and their country. In- stead of giving up the time to the planting of flowers in an attempt to beautify the front vard, work for which ~ they are to be complimented under ordinary conditions, why not devote their attention to the cultiva- tion of the land in the rear of thelr homes, that the vexetable crop may be ample to supply the country's needs. The task is one that can be made pleasant if eniered into in the proper spirit and the effect even moré far reaching than the mind can gTasp Let us show our interest and help. The stitute for calomel—are a mild but su laxative, and their effect on the liver almost instantaneous, They are the sult of Dr. Edwards’ determination to treat liver and bowel complaints v calomel. His efforts to banish it out _these fittle ofive-colored tablets These pleasant fittle tablets do good that calomel does, but have |after effects. They don't injure teeth like strong liquids or calom They take hold of the troub quickly cofrect it. Why cure the at the expense of the teeth? C sometimes plz‘%’}s }!:vuc]vu! ‘: e str iquids. It is best 'sa'ied(:almnozf. but to let Dr. Edward Ofive Tablets take its place. Most headaches, “dullness” a a disordered fiver. Take Dr. Edw Oflive Tablets when you feel “loggy” an “heavy.” Note how they “clear” clonde brain and how they “perk up” the jts. 10c and 25c a box. pAll drug BETTER THAN CALOMEL ‘Thousands Have Discoversu Dr ! Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the sub- fazy feeling come from constipation and Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to negisct them? Vew Pave me foars, "By sur methed you Jam have your testh filed, Srotirned o exiracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. CCYSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY BANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUA INTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK 1§ these appeal to you, call for examination. and estimate. Ne eharge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON OR. D, J. COYLE DENTISTS (Buccessers to the Ring Dental Co) . NORWICH, CONN. bt WA M o8P M : Telephens For Rent Store, 140 Main Street, now occupied by Reuter the Florist, also 4 large rooms above the store which can be used with store, or will be rented separately. Apply to THE PLAUT CADDEN COMPANY E | | g