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i i i T 2 H Eoy i % f 'A Corvect Reproduction of the Fassous Storics 'THRILLING, SPECTACULAR, DRAMATIC, UNUSUAL THIAHAN- "‘HR‘:‘W OF THE OCEAN THE BA’ H The Mast Remarkable Photoplay Ever Made | Tenth Episode of P With MRS. VERNON CASTLE i ] i " Al Seats § » Bulletie _hea ihe bucsest eirculation of any paper in Eastern Tonneeticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwteh, It is o, ever Eastern Connecticut has forty- aine townw. one hundred and sixty- ive postofiice districts. and sixty Tural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold In every town and ou all of he R. F. B\ Toutes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION April 14, 1917. EMBARGO ON EXPORTS. There can be no surprise that there bas becn a demand made for the e tablishment of an embargo on cx ports, to be put in effect whenever the president considers it necessary. This is a matter of much importance in cornection with the efforts which are being put forth in behalf of 3 greator production of agricultural products, for such increase would amount to little it by any scheme these which are sent out of the coun- try should find their way into the hands of the enemy. Such an embarzo would course be applied to any les. They would have no reason whatever for permitting supplies to reach the central powers, but every reason for preventinz it. There are many ef the neutrals where no such shutting off of foodstuffs would be required because they do not possess the. means, even if they had the in- clination, of turning over anvthing of the kind to the benefit of the cnemy but it has been suspected for a long time that there were neutrals which were importing a much larser amount of goods than they haa use for, and that these, or others which they may have produced themselves, were be- ing traded to the central p.wers. As a neutral nation we were in the past as ready to sell to Germany as to any other country. Now that we are in war the situation is different and we.must take care to see that . such trade as Is carried on with this country and Furopean neutrals does not result to the benefit of Germany It is for that reason. and that alone, that there will be a careful scrutiny of this foreign business, and it is be- cause of the possible transfer of our supplies to the central powers that an embargo on exports is desired. not of of the al- MAKING GERMANY SQUEAL. It has been Germany's pollcy throughout the war to make a great hue and cry whenever the allies have turned upon them the same sort of methods which they have practiced upon the entente nations, so that it is enly in keeping with its past con- duct when it refers to the dropping 9f bombs on the unfortified town of Frelberg as nefarious. It such a war measure could be sin- gled out by itself, it would be gen- erally admitted that Germany is right 5 holing up its hands in horror at such treatment and deploring the loss and injury of many non-combatants, including women and children, and only one soldier, but such it is im- possible to do. This air attack upon Freiberg, like other attacks of simi- lar nature, would not have been re- sorted to by the allies, if there had not first been a transsression of the rlles of war by Germany as shown in Zeppelin raids upon the coast of %‘nd on many occasions, - where result was the same as at Frei- Ders. The innocent have been made to pay the penalty but it is simply paying back the Germans in their own opin. They are being made to real- _ige how it seems when such methods are put into operation. \Such acts as Germany has com- mitted from {ime to time call for re- taliation. By such a course can the lésson be driven home and that gov- QNG e s to roslize that if war rules are going to be lived %o in regard to thelr people it must more attention to’ the principle forth in the Golden Rule. Retalia- of § course does not make such any the less deplorable. It is unfortunate that anything of the has to be resorted to, but it must be realized by Germany that the rem- edy for it lies in its own conduct. INTERNING THE SCORPION. The Unitea States ship Scorpion, a converted yacht, has been stationed at Constantinople for the use of the ambassador from this country, and it was expected that it would be used in bringing him away from that coun- H it took was in accordance with the laws of nations. It was nothing more than this country would have had to do under similar conditions. LAWS SHOULD BE OBEYED. gdrivers for the viclation of the spled laws in this city was a step which was nDeeded for the purpose of m- pressing upon the users of such and similar vehicles that there must be obedience to the laws covering the use of the highway. Safety demands the establishment of laws regarding ox- cessive speed and it is necessary that such laws be enforced if they are going to amount to anything. Just as long as excuses are accepted and vio- Jations are winked at, just so long will there be a constantly growing dis- rezard for each and every regulation, und the burning of the highway, whether it is by motorcycle or aute- moblle, ought never to be tolerated. But there are other ways-in which the laws can be énforced with zood results. There are most of the driv- ers who obey the law regarding the slowing down and stopping of their machimes where passengers are alizht- Ing from electric cars but there are still those who porsist in driving ahead regardless of who may be en- dangered thereby or. whether there is any regulation covering that point. And the same is trve of ths use of the cut out on the mufficr. The law may be considered to be elastic in regard to this, but there is no possible excuse for excess in resorting to this prac- tice, whether by motorcyelists or au- tolsts Yet there are those who d not consider they -can cet speed snouzh even on level and improved ctrects unless they resort to the cu‘- out and race throuzh the streets at reakneck speed and In many in- stancos far in excess of the lmit which is allowed, to”say nothing of the ammoyance which is caused by the gatling gun racket. This is one of the instances where there 15 too little enforcement. OBSERVING THE FOURTH. It is some time vet before the Fourth of July will roll around, but it is not too scon to begin to think about the ohservance thersef if the conditlons which prevail today exist at that time, At first thought It might seem that it would be the most appropriate time for reieasing all restraint and encour- aging one of the old time colebrations on this anniversary of the Declara- tion of Independence, that it would be just the occasion for a monstrous demonstration in behalf of liberty and frecdom, but it Is a matter which calls for sober second thought. This is well pointed out by a cor- respondent of the New York Tribune who suzzests that the indiscriminate use of fireworks and firearms be pro- hibited this year. This of course would be In keeping with the safe and sane efforts which have been put forth with such excellent results in the past decade, but this writer has more than that in mind, if in fact he had taken that Into comsideration at all, when he refers to the possibility that great damaze misht be done un- der the cover of a patriotic celebra- tion to public works, and industrial plants. It can be appreciated that it would give the chance to those whe are secretly and openly in sympathy with the enemy to get In some mighty effective and destructive work under the cloak of celebrators. It would be a grand time for touching oft bombs and explosives for an ul- terlor purpose, and it can be appre- clated that this -“country has had enough such experience without lend- inz encouragement to any more. The safe and sane Fourth is demanded this year more than ever. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: 'Tis better to pay as you go, even though it may be necessary to walk back. It isn't necessary to put in a long distance call these days to discover the fact that the Hindenburg Ihe is busy. With all the trouble éxisting on every hand it is not surprising that Spring hesitates about coming for- ward. It is going to keep somebody busy keeping track of the kind of a gown Congresswoman Rankin wears every time she casts a vote. From all Indications it locks it that Hindenburg line would prove to be the shortest distance between the Somme and the Rhine. Colonel Bryan is filling a new role, when he declares that this is the time ‘when the peoplé should make supreme sacrifices for their country. From the steps which are being urged and the preparations which are being made It is going to be either a £00d or a bad season for weeds. Now that it Is going to inquire of Germany about the sinking of one of its vessels, Argentina has apperently arrived at the note writing stage. With strikes and rioting in Berlin, it begins to look as if the German people had come to the conclusion that the Russian course is the proper one. Just how much sympathy Germany has for Greece, because it Is being so roughly handied by the entente, is fully disclosed by the manner in which it is sinking the ships bringing the supplies for which it is so greatly in need. - beg. T dropped it until this Im teling you about j and yelled. It had from the c I think T must have been traveling at the rate of about a mile a minute, when I looked up and righi “He was skating with the girl who had come with him, and, really. when I saw the solicitous and attentive way he was bending over her, teaching her the strokes, I felt that he had a lovely character. He certainly couldn’t have wanted to epend time on that giri — if you could have seen her! I expect his mother or somebody had wished her on to him and he was just rising heroically above his_trouble. . “To my horror, 1 found thet my «peed was so greai that I couldn't tack way, and I found myself sliding those twe! Don't you re- call how, in your childhood’s bicycle days, you simply couldn’t avold run- ning into anything you had your eves 'd on to ‘Quite so!" eaid the curly girl. “You banged right haired {to try them myself! into thatihave all the luck!"—Exehange. worked very well and I believe I'd like Some people do LETTERS .TC THE EBITO Another Big Waste to be Stopped. Mr. Editor: I have read with inter- est your abje and timely editorial “Stop the Waste” in April 16th edi- tion. There is not clarion call is not sounded in our daily papers to stop the waste in food. One would suppose that the safety_of the nation depended the housawives of America. that we housewives must heed the Qay that the|shells upon the European front ing to fight, incomes should fight AMOS PINCHOT, Am-rican Committee on War Fi- nance. New York, Apsil 17, 1917 Univessal Training. Mr. Fditor: I have observed thls war ‘at shert range, having dodged and having visited the camps. munition works and_hospitals of England and France. I have seen the wounded and upon | the dead, the widows and orphans, and Tt is trae | the ruins not only of buildings but of broad fields which can never again warning on even the very crumbs that [De tilled—none of the pomp and cir- fall from our tables. How is it that|tumstance of war but all of its hor- in all the many editorials I have read upon this subject not a wgrd has been said about the greatest and foolish- est waste which is devastating our country—aicoholic beverages? ror. Azain and seain I have heard the remark England had only listened to Lord Roberts! If we had only T sat | been ready this would never have hap. it stated the other dav that if takes|Pened!™ every vear 60,000,000 bushels of.corn to supply the brewers; bushels of grain. waste of our very best and most nour- ishing food produets! The most sen- sible step that has vet been taken to conserve food, has been taken by the officers and delezates of the farm bu- reau and agricultural association, rep- resenting over 25,000 farmers in New York state in a petition to the fed- eral government to prohibit the man- ufacture of liquors made from grain: The federal Xovernment must eoOp- erate with the people, as Russia has. Russia wanting strength and money too, has found both in prohibition. The industrial eficienc® of Russia has in- creased by 30 per cent. I deem it my duty to.declare In the most emphatic manner that there cannot be any re- turn to the past” sald the czar's fi- nance minister. 3 It Russia can be so wise and proud, why not America? Tt has been proven beyond dispute that two billions dollars are spent yearly in America on drink—and it costs the country another two billions to care for the wreckage that is the work of rum—four millions spent on drink and its derelects and our na tional Civil war debt was $300,000,900. More than enough to pay our war debt. No need to worry about money to meet our war with Germany. The drink question is & more fearful ene. my than Germany. We are cowards before it. Mr. Lloyd George, premier of Eng- 1and, sald: We are fghting Germany. Austria and drink, and, as far as I can see the greatest of these three deadly foes is drink.” This is a_time to think and act, ta frec ourselvés from perils within which we have deliberately fastened upon ourselves. National prohibition and a heavy tax on tobacco will save our country a mint of money and do more to make fit our men to conquer our outside enemy than any other preparedness outside _the defenses which every country should prepare for_her own protection. 5 ‘Women must do their utmost fo save food. The men who make the laws are in duty bound to protect th home and the nation against our dead- Iy enemy—intoxicating drinks. MARINDA C. BUTLER ROBINSON, Danleison, April 16, 1817, Incomes Should Fight Toee. Mr. Editor: May I suggest that at this time your paper might perform a useful_service by demanding that the 900,000,000 of war bonds and certi- cates should be paid for by an in- come tax. Moreover, it seems to me that the absurdity of the, proposal to place only a 40 per cent. war tax on incomes over a million dollans a vear should be commented upon. Food stuffs and clothing are already soaring. People with small incomes D going to suffer actual hardship as the war continues. The main thing is to have the war burden adjusted fair- 1y, so that there will be as little hard- ship and poverty as possible while the war is on. A tax of only 40 per cent. on $1.- 900,000 incomes, leaving the poor mui- ti-millionaires 'with only from $600,- 000 a year up to shuffle along on, seems, in a war-pinched country, a travesty of justice and of the pay- as-you-go war_finance plan. Incomes of more than $100,000 should be taxed to the disappearing point in war time and continue to be so taxed just as long as the war debt lasts. This is not a matter of sentiment: it is matter of sheer and practical justice. The war wili not be popular until the people feel it is on with jus- tice to all classes. Get this before the people. Recruit- ing may be @xpected to pick up as soon as the public realizes that the rich are willing to volunteer their sur- plus wealth. If our youns manhood + quiekly became convinced that 625,000,000 | What I saw was no more the result of Think of the wicked | War than it was the result of the pacifist. Noble buildings which wi the work of the Imasination of e ancient artist are now in a condition which may truly be sald to be the york of the lack of imagination of the modern paciffst.” Hia smooth fat h&nd has wrought as much destruc- tion as the mailed fist of the kaiser. Since returning from batte scar- red Europe I have travelled our' own land from merth to south and from east to west. Everywhere I find pros- perity, but there is lacking that pres- ence of a national soul (which may b~ nothing but the sense of a common unselfish purpose) which pervaded my days and nights in Europe. It lies in the power of our congress to give our people that feellng of a common cause which alone will give us strensth, which will bind the rich to the poor and the poor to the rich and make sach onme of us feel and know that we have a truly great country not be- cause of its resourceés but because of its ideals and because we have the strensth to mako those ideals some- thing more than idle dreams. - We only value that which has cost us something. Let every vouns man give but his little share of time and work to the United States and he will become a true patriot. The plan pro- posed is so simple. so small in_cost and so immeasurably great in value that it should not be necessary for a single man to raise his voice in its favor. Bven if no emergency were now apparent. universal _trainng should be adopted without delay for the unifying effsct that it would brinz to our people, and even if we could see in it no sech spiritual benefit it should be adopted t6 stralghten the backs and fil out the chests of our slouching bovs and to teach them the first_principles of hygiens. There can be but little doubt that our congressmen are individually in favor of this measure, but perhaps they are not sure of the attitude to- wards it of those whomr they repre- sent. In this case it may .be sux- Fested to them that they visualize the supporters and the opponenmt of uni- versal service. In one ramk are seen those whose faces ave bright with knowledge and ennobled by the desire to serve. In the opposing ranks are the uneniightened. those who have never felt the thrill of a common cause and who “have no sympathy either above or below themselves in the social scale. Shall we permit this fair land fall an easy prey to the wild bea which bave devoured Belgium and harried all of western Europe? In later years shall one of us sav to an- other “That ruined_echurch shows the hana of Villard"—“That man makes me think of Pinchot?” Save us from the work of these architects of destruction, you our representatives. Yo t a ours tU oMAs ROBINS. Secretary, Naval Consulting Board. New York, April 10, 1917. HOME GARDENS Watering. Frequent hosing will ssve much Dlanting fo cat the garden is that it makes a dust cover around the plants. which keeps the moisture from evaporating. every person has seen how a “dry. farming” central west. it is pecessary to for best common tering the garden every if a Hittle water is better. Wait that they weed week is usually enoush, in the dryest weather. After a rain or such an artificial soaking, test the soll squeezirs a handful. When the soil fails apart sfter equeesing the surface crust formed by the water should be broken up by hoeing. You can safely water the garden at' any time during the day when it is most convenient. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Society. St. John, New Brunswick—"St. John, rival of Halifax for the commercial favor which war is bringing to eastern Canadian seaports,” says today's war geography bulletin of the Natlonal Geographic Soclety, “lies about mid- | way of the Eay of Fundy upon its western ehore. at the mouth of the Si John _river, so-named by Champlain and Des Monts, the founders of France, because, on . St. John's Da: (June 24) 1604, their sturdy ships first stirred its waters. Early the scene of strife between rivalrous—and some- times traitorous—French leaders and later a prize to be contested by Eng- ish and French, St John for nearly two centurics failed to rise above the status of a miitary and trading post: and it was not until 1782 that it began to_take on municipal form. “In that year, following the close of the Revolution. began the emig-ation of the Lovalists from the successfully revoltég Colonies: and in the first three weeks of May there arrived at St. John no less tham twenty ships from New York, laden with the de- voted ‘men and women, adherents of he Mother Countfy, who, to retain} their allesiance to the British Crown. ! sacrificed their possessions and sousht a home upon the nearest soil where the | Cross of St. Georze still waved. i “At St. John they found th forest scarred only by a sm i ing about the site.of the oid fort: and ; Wwith great energi they set mbout the bullding of the @Ry of the Loyaliss. At firse_living in tents. then in log cabins, they speedily prepared for more | permanent habitation—and it Is sig- nificant that the first framed house which they put up was a place of wor- | ship, which served also as a _court house and for the meetings of the: Comon Council. At that time the ! Province of Nova Secotia included what is now New Branswick, and the ! settlement was first named Parr Town | in honor of John Parr, the then pro- | vincial governor. Two vears, less a day, from the date of landing of the ts their city was erected by 1 charter. “The natural advantages of the site —the deep and safe harbor, the rich forests adjacent to the noble river, and the productive agricuitural land tributary to it—all responded to the enterprise of the settlers, and the srowth of the city has been continuous As a center for shipping, as an en- trepot for the vast lumber trade of Eastern Canada and as an especiaily advantageous =pot for shipbuilding, St. John soon became known. At one time it ranked fourth among all the cities of the Empire in the tonnage of ships constructed, and for more than fAifty_years it has thought of itself as the Liverpool of America. “Among the first comers to St. John after ‘its_establishment was Benedict Arnold, who epent several years of his exile by the waters of Passamaquoddy. on the islands and on the inland At St. John he engaged in trade, ard in 1783 in his etore occurred the first of the fires which have so frequently ravaged St. John. The loss was heavy tut, zs the chronicier takes pains to set’duwn in italics, “it was said to have been well insired.” One of the results of this was a libel suit, brought by Arnold against his partner, who had chargéd him with seiting fire to the store In order to gain the insurance. This case was one of the first to oc- cupy the attention of the nmew ccurts of the Province, which had been set @p only four years prior, and Arnold’s verdict of two and sixpence was a Pyrrhic victory. It is recorded that Arnoid’s_“known fraudulent deatings 2nd haughty department made him very unpopular with the people” who on one occasion “showed thgir resent- ment and contempt by suspending his efigy in public labelled Traitor, in such position as to be easily seen from his house. It was then committed to the flames amid joud huzzas” - In. 1794 Arnold closed his business at St. John and sailed for the West Indies whence he made his way to Engiand and to an unmourned “The tractive | chance to ‘That the governor can be thorough- expenditure.~ the well koows. He is to the core and has no love for extravagances or excessive ex- penditures. The whole state can feel assured that he has ail the cash he needs and that he will faithfully ac- count for every penny of it—Bridge- port Post. The fact Hartford’s mayor suggests that the finances of the water board of that city be%turned over to the city treasurer seems like sound logic. Department after department in the average city only adds to the bur- of the people. Public money is for one purpose and the city treasurer of every city should have control of it. —Afiddietown Press. Publicity for income tax will, in all probability, be a feature of the new war revenue law. Secrecy leads to tax dodging. and it is only fair, say members of the house ways and means committee, that the public should know the full extent of the sacrifice which the wealthy are about to make to help finance the war. This will be in line with the precedent set during the civil war when all income tax re- turns were public. They continued so until 1869, when Senator Morrill got the publicity feature repealed om the plea that it was “obnoxious to persons paving such tax” Immediately the number of pérsons paying taxes on incomes over $2.000 a year dropped from 94,837 to 74.775 and in 1872 the number dropped to 72,749. Which shows how secrecy leads to tax dodg- ing. In North Carolina when the state passed an act making public income tax returms the number of taxpayers were more than doubled.—New Haven Times-Leader. The bill which has been favorably reported in the house to require a license fee for fishermen the same as for hunters,” allens paying more than citizens meets a hearty re- spense on the part of a considerable number of sportsmen who argue that as places in which fishing may be enjoved without trespass grow less, and as the state spends much money for stocking open waters, it is just to exact a fee. There will of course be much dissent, t0o, as it Jars one's sense of liberty in the fields. {We are apt to forget this lberty or privilege, o long enjoyed, is necessa- rilly curtailed and limited by the ran- idly growing population. In many re- spects this ancient liberty has be- come an imposition upon _property owners, and. as their rights are supe- rior to the desires of the outsiders, re- strictive measures become more and more necessary.—Bristol Press. Some of Thomas Mott Osborne’s ex- cellent ideas for siving convicts a improve themselves mor- ally, mentally and physically are of- fered in the nation’s present need of cultivatinig every possible inch of eoil t0 increase the food supply. Take the men and women out of their cells into the sunshine and let them get clos: to the sofl. The great outdoors is a great soul purifier. Canada has been drafting able-bodied convicts for this trade. The surrounding country is charming and natural features abound, the most interesting being the so-cail- ed “reversing falls” where the-nigh tides of the Bay of Fundy cause a cat- aract in the river to reverse itself with each ebb and flow and twice in every twenty-four hours, actually to fall up hill! “St. John is already the winter port of the Canadian Pacific Raiiway and the aim of its people, of course, is to secure for thelr city these advantages for all-the-year-around. To this end they have taxed themselves heavily to provide terminals and other facilities and it is easy to surmise their mis- Elvings as they have seen the increase of favor shown to Halifax since the war began.” SAVE YOUR HAIR AND BEAUTIFY IT WITH“DANDERINE” SPEND 25 CENTS! DANDRUFF DISAPPEARS AND HAIR STOPS COMING OUT. TRY THIS, HAIR GETS BEAUTI- FUL, WAVY AND THICK IN FEW MOMENTS. If you care for heavy hair, that slistens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an Incomparable soft- ness and {s flufty and lustrous, try Danderine. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imme- diately _dissolves every particle of dandruff; you cannot have nice, heavy, healthy 'hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen ; then the hair falls out fast. If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too oily, get a 25-ceht bottle of Knowl- ton's Danderine at any drug store cr toilet counter: apply a little as direct- ed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made. . ‘We sincerely believe, regardiess of everything else advertised, that if you desire soft, lustrous, beautiful hair and lots of it—no dandruff—no itching scalp and mo more falling hair—you must use Knowlton's Danderine. If everitually—why not now? ~ Feat Photool ‘Concert Orchestra 3 Shows 2:30,7, 8 P a0 10¢ _ VIOLA DANA “THREADS OF FATE” R bt o S kst st i ey Burton Holmes Travel Series || Their Week End, Comedy T ComiNG FRIDAY AND SATURDAY LIONEL BARRYMORE in “THE END OF THE TOUR” A FIVE ACT METRO FEATURE OF RARE POWER AND CHARM NEW SHOW TODAY THREE BIG KEITH ACTS TRIANGLE PHOTOPLAYS TRIANGLE PHOTOPLAYS ENID BENNETT in the Five-Part Ince Production “THE LITTLE BROTHER” A pretty story of g little girl who has s be a boy, sell papers, put on trousers, and fight just like » regular follow. A play brimful of ughter and just plain every day sweetness. A SELF-MADE HERO Triangle Komedy —_— 3 Shows Daily at 2:15, 6:46 and 8:45 KEITH VAUDEVILLE &ILTON & DELONG SISTERS In the Rube Picture Show “THE DIAMOND PALACE.” Intro- PISTEL & (USHIRG in a Breath of Old strelsy “¥HE STRANDED MINSTRELS” DELL & EVA Sensational Trampoline Novelty fare. The best possible methods mus: be employed and the best possi spirit of cooperation maintained. Co: servation passes from the status of theory and becomes a maiter of s emn patriotic concern to everyone Here is a branch of the service which every American above ten year of age is eligible. It recognizes neit er sex nor family obligations the crippled and the decrepit can r der some small measure of servi Raise more crops and bigger Put more acres under cultivation tll them with Increased intelligen and earnestness. America can be a vast harvest field and perhaps before in history was the need purpose with good _resuits. A repre- sentative of the Domilnion government has been touring all the penitentiaries in Canada, making a Personal inspec- tion -of the prisoners, and discussing with wardens ways and means of put- ting them at farm work during the summer. It is believed that the great- er part of the prison population can be used in the manner. It's a wise and justifiable thing for the commun- ity to do. The open-air exercise and sunshine quickly substitute a health- ful glow for the prison palior, an crect and self-respecting posture for the prison stoop and shuffie. And as far as the public is concerned, it's vastly better than making brushes, chairs or doing any other perfunctory work to n great. which convicts are so often driven ’ merely to keep them busy. Let them | Democracy defended by the ew be made genuinely productive, creat- |y be saved by the plow.—New ing the one thing that the country |Ven Union. needs most.—Waterbury Republican. The Union Metallic Cgrtridge com- pany set a good example for other factories in discharging an employe who openly voiced _his treasomable sentiments against the United States and the flag. Previous to this the offender had been given a severe drubbing at the hands of his fellow workers. He deserved both—and then some more. If aliens within our midst won’t nat- urally back the country of their adop- ‘When a child is hurt, mother rubs the spot. is one of the principles tion, or even as a matter of policy— | Jamen backache, sci then let them feel the heavy hand of | atica and all rheumatis patriotic America. pains when by rubbing “ We don't want them around under any circumstances. . Let other factories follow suit.— Bridgeport Standard. ‘with Minard’s Liniment’ y almost instant relief is at hand and with this delightful, creamy lni- ment, of every kind is sure to go. available | ¢ icisns have recommended and ground should be put under cultiva- | @ruggists advised- that the always de- tion this spring. Waste land should! idable Minard's Liniment be kept be made to work for the national wel- | in every home ready for instant us Every . square foot of MARSHALL’S DRESS GOODS AND SILKS, LININGS, CORSETS, GLOVES, HOSIERY, UN- DERWEAR, PETTICOATS, HOUSE DRESSES, APRONS, SWEATERS, BRAS- SIERES, WAISTS, MIDDIES, ETC., ETC. We do not sacrifice Quality for Prices. Our prices are always as low as the lowest, and we give TRADING STAMPS. 101 Main Street, Norwich Receiving office for City Dyeing and Cleansing Works Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Doss the dread of the dental chalr cause yeu to negieot them? Yeu seed have no fears. B thod you can have your testh lied Srowned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. COYNSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE STERILIZED INSTRUAZNTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK # these appeal to you, call for examinstion. and estimate. charge for consuitation. ; oRt. £ C. JACKSON OR. D. 4. COVLS 7 DENTISTS , . (Swccessors to the King Dental Co) »yr—"7 " 203 MAIN ST. NORWICH, CONN. Ne A . M.tasP. M. Lady Asistant . Telophone