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3 have second class. rates = | by the establishment of a - Sorwich Bulletin ate gave full consideration to that and Gonfied matter and ‘it killed it. Its revival in conference ought to receive the same actlion. 121 YEARS OLD Subscription 3. - o Price 13¢ & weelis SO0 & Should such a plan be put into op- eration it would react upon the pub- ~ _ Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, &8s second-class matter. lishers - throughout . thé country in a manner which could ot help being Telephome Callss Businass Office 480. folt by the country itself. The estab- tin Editoial Egitosial Roomg 3-8 g lishment of a zone system would im“m Office, 625 Main Street. 210-2. e mean that publications in ti t or Norwich, Wednesday Sept. 19, 1917. The Theatre Wi\ere B n E E Quality Rules TODAY AND TONIGHT—REX BEACH PRESENTS “THE BARRIER”’ (S acr L = GRIPPING ACTS Adapted From the Famous Novel of the Same Title Burton Holmes Travelogue || Black Diamond Comedy COMING THURSDAY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HOME READING COURSE FOR CITIZEN SOLDIERS (Issued by the War Dej nflm-m‘ nd all rights to reprint reserved) LESSON NO, 21 in one place, no matter How well you | =l may be concealed. Your value as a Extended Order Drill soldler depends on your ability to ad- Lessons:. 1. “Four Post of | vance from cover to cover, -always se- e O osd ms & Holdiers| lecting before you leave one place the 8. Nine Soldlerly Qualities. 4. Getting| Position you are going ‘to occupy. Heady for Camp, 5. First Days In |iearn that “a man running rapigly ,Camp. 6 Cleaniiness in Camp. 7.|toward an enemy furnishes a poor tar- Your Health. 8. Marching and Cere|8¢t.” Remember also that a man of Feet. 9. Your Bquipment and|N8 flat on the ground is not easily Arms. 10. Recreation in qm?k 11. | obsgrved from the enemy's lines. in those in‘the west would be denied to many sections of Ythe country. Peo- ple could not afford to pay the price which would have to be obtained for them and the result wguld be that they would be denfed the information which they can now obtain from the different sections.of the country. The opposition to this plan is. not for the purpose. of escaping a tax. The publishers expect gnd’ ars prepared to pay war taxes just the i same as other lines of business, but I by this plan they would be singled out for a tax which would be infposed, upon no dthers. The consequences of | such a method of taxation, both upon those directly and indirectly affected, ought to be sufficient to cast the plan into the discard even as the senate aid. 7 TO GET IN ,TDUQH WITH WAR s e LEGISLATION. & Whether or not congress will feel that it ought to have more informa- | tion as to what other natlons are do- ing in order to better cooperate in the conduct of the war, is a matter which it will have an opportunity to express its opinion upon, if the plan which is being discussed of naming laying Gam . Team s principle applies also if you are b e oty Men| into | ever fired upon while scouting or act- ders. 18.|Ing independently; drop to the und Fighting 'Arms of the BService. 16.|2nd seek cover, and then try to locate Staft Branches of the Service—L 17. | the enemy. . Staff Branches of the Service—II..18.| These are some t¢ the main points Army Insingla. 19. The Army Sys-|to keep in mind; many others will tem of Training, 20. Close - Order|come’ up during Xour training. 'Grad- Extended- Ord wally you will become highly skilled o = ed-Order Drill) - | 12" i’ form of attack. Not gniy will Extended-order drill will give your|your skill increase but aiso your con- squad its first lesson’in the methods of | idence. ‘Ydu will learn in ‘time that ng against enemy lines ac-{troops standing on the defensive be- used in present-day warfare.|hind entrenchments seldom fire upon You will first be shown how to. de-|an advancing enemy with steadiness ploy as skirmishers. Moving at a run|and accuracy. The greater dctermi- you and the other men will place your- | nation and energy you and your com- self in one rank, the interval between [rades show in the advance, the small- y . men being about 15 inches, instead of | er will be the chances of your suffer- dispensed in this city by Chas. Osgood Co., Lee & Osgood, and all good 4 Ainches as in close-order drill.This|ing severely from the enemy’s fire. druggists. is the simplest form of deployment,| The advance of a company in ex- 5 which may be roughly defined as |tended order is directed by commands spreading out a body of troops In [transmitted to the individual soldiers thin open lines so that they may moré | chiefly by the use of signals, since the easily advance even in the face of |noise of the firing makes it impracti- enemy fire. cable to use the voice effectively. his means that you become to a G e Saber oxtont . fndependent amit BiSetjos Fighting en pushing forward In skirmish| The problem of each individual sol- lines you must rely In part on your |dier is to obey the commands and at own initiative and judgement. the same time to use his own judge- The next step in extended-order drill | ment and ekill in taking edvanteze of cover as he advances. It is especi- advancing at a run In the meantime, ally important that you should obey at you will be getting practice also in 2 joint committee from the two houses |rifle loading, and a little later will | once any directions that may be given to go to Europe following the adjourn- | Pe&in to carry your rifle when advan- |0 you as to resetting the sights on ment of the national. logislature for|CINE as a skirmisher and to practice|your rifie and that the rapidity of & T | loading aiming and firing from the Your firing should be controlled by the orders of your captain. the purpose of talking over with the | yirmisn line. 5 parliamentary bodies of the entente 7 e o Going a step beyond the extended countries is presented to-it for ac- .. - order drill your company and regi- tion. One of the most important features | ment will take part in field and com- There have been suth conferences |of this part of your training will corl. | bat exercises in which _conditions sist of learning to conceal vourself|and movements of actual warfare are B T i 13 afions | from ‘the view of the enemy by taking | reproduced as closely as possible, Here h Beneficial logiktation <l Té. |ndvantage of nillocks. trees, heaps of | vou will put into practice evervthing . s yoog earth, rocks, gullies, /ditched, doorways, | learned during your previous drilling. sulted, and the suggestion that this|ingsws, or any other object that may [ You will practice correct meti-ds of country should get the benefit of such | pe at hand. Your object is to reach |attacking and of defending vourself insight by sending a committee to|the enemy. The more skiliful you are |both with the rifle and bayonet and Europe comes from the other side of [in the use of cover the smailer the|with other weapons now in use. Don't | the water. It s the idea of Yice Pres- | chances of vour being disabled during|fail to enter into the spirit of these ident Doulllon of the’ French chamber | the attack. exercises with as much cnthusiasm ana of deputies, and in the Alscyssion’ cf| But you are not to remain too intensity as if you were on the actual puties, battle fleld.” Use your imagination. such a plan the suggestion Was been See the enemy in front of you and act made that such a committee be made rrecisely as you would act if the en- up of 25 members copsisting of e{ght emy were real. Only- in this way can from the senate and the remainder ‘you get the full benefit of these exer- from the house. cises. ‘Huw the administration will ,look ZDom't fal fo keep in mind also st on such an idea remains to be di B s e that every member plavs an fmportant :lt::: ;rim'nam;‘r:c:n‘e: ;‘;!!“::; part in contributing to the success of In the selection of the committee, but 4805, average. 5,920 the team. “The one requisie neces- sary to win the battle is intellizent there is an opportunity for the study of conditions from which much good September 15, 1917 ... %485 i teamwork. The army is handled just might result. Such & committee woul like a football team. A part is on the ar. 1o ha malt backe i herd Doek 3 of course have mo power to enter jnto : s, s MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED || &1y, afeements or o tike any ac- eI s el o o retrre: B PRESS d‘.(!u Bo5i it stoniabont e lg'(--' like each player, has a certain dutv br:.flml;‘d Prul-lh-xah:’-&v‘- lation to report the result of its ton of all news credited to 1t or met || VO UPOR the return. to perform. When the signal is -given, all work together—all play the game— t?lm:ork.” (Ml,r;;m;,rfor Nnncor‘\;n)b- sioned Officers and Privates, p. 149. rwise credited in this paper and Sis5 The focal news Dublished hereln || _VALUATION OF RAILROADS. § ghts of republication of Some time ago congress became im- special dispatches herein are also || pressed with the idea that there should be obtained a valuation of all the rafl- ved. road property in the country in order that it might be used in conmectlon with the fixing of rates. It appro- priated a large sum of money for the work and it imposed a part of the ex- pense upon the raflroads. The work has been underway by ‘a small- army of men. The progress has been slow and by the time the work: has been completed it will be necessary to start in azain to bring the valuation up to date. In other words the valuation will be of little use by the time it is Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York City Physician and Medical Author “There can be no sirong, vigorous, iren men nor beautiful, healthy, rdéy- cheoked women without iron-Nuxated iron taken thres. times per day after meals will increase the strength and endurance -of weak, nervous, run-down folks 100 per ‘cont. in two weeks’ time in many instances. Avoid the old forms of metallic iron which may lr#un the teeth, corrode the stomaeh, and therei do more harm than good. ‘ake only organic iron—Nuxated Iron.” THE RACING AUTO LEAP 80 FEET OFF A DRAWBRIDGE DIRECT FROM A THREE WEEKS RUN AT THE BROADWAY THE- Herbert Brenon Presents His Great Masterpiece THE BATTLE FOR WEALTH AND AGIRL THE AEROPLANE BATTLE ) ATRE, N. Y., WHERE IT WAS SBHOWN AT DOLLAR PRIGES. BARGAIN MATINEE DAILY. AN 2:30—ALL SEATS 10 “THE LONE WOLF” THE GREAT CONFLAGRATION EVENINGS AT 6:45 AND 8:30—ALL SEATS 16c With HAZEL DAWN and BERT LYTELL A WHIRLWIND OF THRILLS AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA that time he has besn put on to the|sought to exploit its triditions and surgical staff of the Backus hispital.|semtiments for ulterior ends. Some I wonder why? of these would-be leaders have been Dr. Tingléy has been connected with |paid emssaries of the Germap gov. the Backus hospital in the neighbor- |ernment—others, mere non-entitse: hood of twenty-five years as a sur-| who .ilattered by decorations, gew. geon. Dr. Cassidy has likewise been |gaws and audiences bestowed py the connected with the Backus hispital for | “All-Highest,” have vartered’ ~them- years. Dr. Gildersleeve is also a sur- |selves {o further the alms of Pan- Zeon connect®d with the hospital | Americanism. For twenty years these | These are all men of good reputation |false pruphets have been industrious- and years of practice. Might it not|ly spreading the temets of Kultur in be well to inform any possible prospect | the United States, ielling Americans who might desire an operation to rem- (of German descent of _Aaglo-Saxon cdy some defect of his that these men |decadence, extolling Ges sclentific do the same things which have been |and industrial efficlency, dviuding and suggested by the first named man. It |flattering their hearers with a sense of is barely possible that some prospect|raclal superiority as compared with might like 20 have an’old, experienced |other eiements in our population, surgeon operate upod him, in which | warning them again«t the jealousies case it is no more than just that he[and enmitiés of the “nativists” “An- should be imformed that the older and |glo-Americans,” and others, and urg- more experienced men are ready to do |ing ther to maintain racial solidarity, ithe same thing. o that they might participate in the Are hospitals run in the intefests of [Elories of the day when German any one particular doctor or surgeon, |thought, German sclence, and = the or are they run in the interest of ali | German language would Gominate the the surgeons connected with them, and | World. i in the interest of the public welfare, is| Twenty years ago the German lan- a question which everybody is askiug|guage press had fulfilled its mission nowadaye. —the only misgjon waich it ever had Hospitals need money to keep up|in this country—that of serving as their good work and they often wonder |3 medium between the (ierman im- they do not get more considera- |Migrants of the 80's and their new en- Sometimes if they would |vironment in the United States. In closely investigate their Own actions|the 90's that immigration practically they could answer their own questions. | ceased, -nflP Hio Gorman lsnguagy ONE OF THE REJECTED. = Wres guiesen wi e alter 2 atives of"either adopting the lan- Morwich, Mgt 38 11 3uage of the countly or of facing extincticn. Just at this juncture it received an artificial re-rudescence from this new propaganda. It pro- longed its life as an alien language prees by making itsclf tne mistress 2nd hand-maid of Pan-Germanism. Kulture has produced its proper fruit in the theory of the state as su- preme over the Individual, a theory that denies to government every mor- al attrihute and ma¥es power devoid of every ethical conmideration the only end attained. Against this Fran we_invoke the Declaration of Independence, with ite concept of government deriving its Just powers the corsent of the governed. Let our German-American friends expel ‘these false prophets in thelr midst, ranounce forever Kultur and all its works and turn to the life-giving principles which underlie our govern- ment. In countless churches through- out this land congregations dafly T peat the Apostles’ Creed. No believer has eve: suggested that this frequent iteration was a reflection either. upon his faith or his pety. Let our citisens of German descent, by word and déed, pledge again and again their devotion to their country and its ideals. Thelr isolation and thelr estiangement will cease and they STORIES OF THE WAR TODAY AT 2:15, 6:45, 8:45 DUFFIN-REDCAY TROUPE The World's Greatest Casting Act EUGENIE LEBLANC Clever Eccentric Comedienne QUIGLY & FITZGERALD A Pair ‘of Heal Irish Comedians 5 PART TRIANGLE FEATURE LOUISE GLAUMin GOLDEN RULE KATE A Western Picture That You Should Not Miss Seeing A HOTEL DISCRACE ... Komedy CONCERT ORCHESTRA AUDITORIUM TODAY AND THURSDAY SUSAN GRANDAISE The Bwastsst Girl in Europs in A NAKED SOUL SHORTY HAMILTON New Gas Shells of the Germans (Correspondence of the Associated | “Press.) Further details have been obtained about the new gas shells which the Germans are now using, and their ef- fect upon the persons who breathe the fumes, Armenticres is the first town in the annals of history to have been lit- erally poisoned fo such a degree that its civil population has had to be re- moved lest it should be entirely des- troyed. ‘While heavy shelis were rained on the houses, forcing the people to take refuge in the cellars, a multitude of small sheils, not powerful enough to smash a pavement stone, fell every- where in the street and coprtyary'and garden. These shells contained no gas or powder, but a calarless liquid which spreads over the ground. Only very slightly volatile, the liquid leaves traces for hours after the shell has ex- ploded It evaporates very slowly, p duces a heavy gas ‘which filters downward and reaches the cellars ‘where refuge has been sought. This gas, remarkaWty tenacious, has made moré victims among _women than ‘among men, because it penetrates the hair and remains there, while to- bacco smoke has proved an unex- pected protection for men. The odor is described by some as recalling ace- tylens, by others as resembling mig- nonette, but the majority say it is like hot mustard, It takes some time to produce its effects. Inhabitants of Armentieres who have breather its emanations {n the morne ing, when walking in the town, have Dbeen abls to return home without feel- ing any effect, but five or six hours la‘er they have been obliged !BJO to and their condition has rapidly Dbecome serious, The bronchial tubes are affected first the eyellds become swollen, and little Dy little the sight is lost. All the mu- cous membranes are attacked and the body seems on fire inside, while burns ‘which doctors described as of the iecond degree”) cover all the skin. Continuous coughing sets in, with a fe- ver temperature, the skin becomes dull and sickly and the afiliction proves fa- tal in many cases. A British army medical officer, prog tected by a mask, exposed himself to the gas for a quarter of an hour as an experiment, and was burned all over Ithe body, except where the mask pro- itected his head and on the wrist where The Bulletin has the targest circulation of any paper in Eastern Connecticut and from thres to four times larger than that of any im Norwich. It is delivered %o over 2,000 of the 4,063 houses in Nor- wich and read by ninety-three per in Windham 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson o over - §1.300. ana in all of these places it is considered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns. one hundred and sixty- Bve postoffice districts, and sixty iural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town end on all of be R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION average. ! long Made-In-Connecticut War Interviews 1901, 4412 “WHY ARE WE AT WAR?" An Interview by Richard M. Bissell Chairman, Connecticut State Council of Defense. As to—“Why we are at war.” Richard M. Bigsell, the chairman of the Connecticut State Council of De- fense contributes the following state- ment as one of the series of “Made- in-Connecticut War Interviews” being made public by the Councll through the newspapers. Mr. Bissell's ans- wer to this question follows “The question is asked: “Why are we at war?” That question s & strange cne when we stop to consider the specific and wanton 4njuries and in- sults which were inflicted upon us by Germany and patiently borne dur- ing a period excedding two vears in duration. During this time the armed forces of Germany murdered Ame fcan citizens, sank American ships en- gaged in perfectly lawful undertak- ings, and made but vague and evasive replies to our demands for redress. When the language and tome of our protests became Severe, assurances were given but were promptly broken when Germany’s plan bf campaign made a resumption of her attacks upon us worth while in her eves. Gefmany vras at the same time actvally plotting Views of the Vigilantes \ TO OUR CITIZENS OF GERMAN DESCENT By Guetavus Ohlinger of The Vigilan- tes. ! (Mr. Onlinge? is & lawyer of Toledo, Onio. His beok, “Thelr True Faith and Allegiance,” published a year or more ago, called the attention of the Americar. peopls for the first time to the perils in the wide-spread net of |German propaganda In the United States.) . GAUMONT WEREKLY et CAKEWALK CONTEST THURS. i| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Mat. 2:30, 10c; Eve. 7, 8:30 10-15c * PROFITING BY EXPERIENCE. It may be that Germany figures that Argentina and Sweden re going to accept whatever excuse and apology it offers concerning the manner in which the one has been double crossed and the other imposed upon, but there is nothing to substantiate such a con- clusion from the manner in which hoth countries have acted Yolldwing the disclosures or from. the reception Why All Ghis Medical Advertising? Mr, Editor: There seems % be so much news in the papers of late about the Backus hospital's offer to the re- jected candidates for the army, and Dr. Agnew's letters, that it causes us to wonder if there are any other sur- @eons connected ith the Backus hos- pital, or to wonder if we are right in asking if Dr. Agnew is the oldest mem- ber connected with the hospital staff and the only one who might render “Have we deceived our:elves? Are we Americane of Germarn descent standing in the way of our own pro- gress? Why are we isolated in this coufltry. of our adoption? Why, in this crisis, this feeling of estrange- ment which meets us on every s!fle?" These questions, recently propound- ed by a newspaper published in the German language, are the most prom- ising inéication that has come from thing but a mixture of sulphide anfl chlorine, already studied and known but never before used in this manner. The proportion of deaths to the num- ber of people affected 18 not high, not one per cent. for the northern tow but the number of people affected may be very groat. The public has been advised that i, during an air raid, the smell of mus tard essence 18 noted, to move to the which its notes of regret and apology | {ompleted and in the meantime mil |the dismemberment of this country. |such a service, or Why this special|thé German language press for many |Will Db children in their fathers |the strap of his watch offered protec- uppes storiss, and to breathe through have received. s CE e s o “No_nation.with resources and pow- |combination of the hospit#! and Dr.jyears. Many German-Americans are house. tion. o a compress soaked with a certain so- Ly the government and by the rail-|er gufficient to defend its existence has asking themselves the same questions. Father Camelot, dean of ‘Saint Vaast | jution. Women have been told to Agnew, and why not the otner sur- geons who have had many more vears| of experience and connection with the hospital? Why are they allowed to be dropped out of consideration for the more new and untried? Dr. Agnew is a very estimable young man: he has practiced medicine in Jewett City, and within a very recent period has located in Greeneville. Since land Argeatina naturally resents the way in which Germany attempts to re- ‘pudiate the course followed .by Count Tauxburg and to disprove the expres- sions that he used, by making a ver- baj statement through an under sec- retary. This doesn’t convince Argen-.| tina “that Luxburg did not do just avhat was expected of him and what may have been directed by the Ger-| man foreizn office. Certainly the ad- -vantage which was taken of Sweden at Armentiers, was poisoned, little by little, as he performed his sacred du- ties. The town, since November, 1916 has been reduced to a single parish and Father Camelot took charge of it, “wishing”, as he said, “to remain_there as ong as a single soul remained.”” He is the fifth priest of Armentieres to be a victim of the war. The_ British Armv Medical Servin is making every effort to analyze th Mquid thus used for producing the ga Its emanations have an analogy with wrap their halr In a wet cloth. Saw dust, sand or earth should be thrown on any of the liquid that may be seen before it has evaporated, the authori- tigs have warned; and finally if any seflous case arises and no d octor is at hand, vomiting should be produced as rapidly as possible and then large quantities of milk should be drunk Sounds Suspicious There's something suspicio That they may result in scrious heart- searching is the praver of every pa- triotic AMmerican -who has the welfare not only of his country, but of every section cf its population 2t heart. The German element in the United ever so patiently and for so long a time maintained peace in the face of such continuous and unrequitted insult and injury. The dealings of Germany with -other countries and the writings and spoken words of highly influential German officlals and professors have made it impossible to doubt that the German autocracy planned the econo- mic and political mastery of the world. One well-known German writer. before the great war began described openly roads. = The manner in which this &ffort is working out, and the' much greater need which the country and the rail, roads have|for the money that is being put into i, especlally since the im- pression is steadily growing that the completed valuation will be_ practically worthless, have resulted ih ands | being made for the abandonment of the undertaking. It will mean of Where Soap Powerless Soap, says Mr. Oswald Schutte in a dispatch _from. Switzerland- to - the Daily News. is one of the scarcest things in Germany. Probably _the States finds itself isolated because for |Kaiser, like Lady Macbeth. has been twenty years it has been deceived |trying to wasn_the blood from his led ‘astray by men ‘who have |hand.—Chicago Herald. about $1| the military steps to be taken in case _in Argentina was no different than | COUIS® lh“',:h::h:t"e’ve:':"‘ud;';fhv:he Germany should wish to “impose her the tear-producing gas, which blinds [a person of foreign birth who pro- that which was taken of the same | Coon 0 aiue » will” upon America. Prior to our en- for a_time, but the effects of the new |claims himself “pro-American’ in . © |promise’ that the compieted Job will | ¥ oty A e ohea oenr ‘evidencen Doisod are infinitely more severs, Stead of just plain American. Hyphens JEE— = Mexico, an the report|be no better it would appear to be|muyltiplied that the time had come when French investigation of the ljquid |are still in bad odor.—Cleveland Hlain tends to show that it is not a new | Daeler. ELECTRIC HEATERS wontained in a Stockholm paper is cor- Zect Germany does not intend to stop the practice. of refusing to reveal the ‘contents of code messazes which it Seeks to have Sweden transmit for it. Germany has given these countries fsomething to think about. Its action ude do not inspire further fconfidence and if the reports are cor- gect it is not surprising that these ‘countries have coms to the conclusion the freed nations of the world must band together to fight for the ideals of derhocratic government. The*time had come when the issue of the great war was plainly whether an ifresponsi- ble autocracy should hold the civilized nations of the world in a state of vir- tual vassalage or whether those nations | and peoples to whom Liberty is dear should put it forever beyond the pow- er of that autocracy to carry out its plans for world-wide supremacy. No gocd judgment to abandon it where it is and take the loss as it stands with- out continuing and piling up more millions to be thrown into the dis- card. At a time when conservation is being urged and the useless ex- penditure of money deplored, congress would do well to consider the ldv)l - bility of stopping this waste right where it i ‘Reasons Why Ydu Should Have - Grape-Nuts & » ; - in gust g the first sign of convalescence | 0. Important. o S . - Can Be Attached to Any Lamp Socket - WANTS POLAND’S HELP. ather, (v, MK slege @f pelt DaDIL, s e to/ recognize the & - j . DON'T START YOUR HEATER YET R : B Hirogged tand Sieices o . moring and late evening chill out of the air urked upon them. As in the other case there are some who are favorable to the plan and there are others who ©oppose it because in spite of what appears to be for the good of Poland on the surface it is imposaible to cover up the fact that the scheme is being put into effect for the strengthening . of Germany. Poland is just as far as @ jt has been for many years from be- ecoming the Iindependent nation that has <o long been its ambition. While it is planned to_hold oug cer- tain inducements in ordeM\to get the o Foles more favorably inclindd to Ger- many and to imprass them, with the idea that Germany is doing its utmost in "their behalf, it must be plain to those people after such experiences as they kave had thiat the real object of the whole scheme is to get Poland imperative now that we too have tak- en our place in the battle line. The z S S ECONOMY—Highly Nourishing—No Waste ECONOMY—Ready to Eat=No Fuel Cost ECONOMY—=Keeps Indefinitely=No Spoilage ECONOMY—Easily Digested—A Body Builder Secretary Danlels in referring to tie strengthening of the navy failed to mention that young woman typewriter who sank eix submarines instead of one. COST &c PER HOUR TO OPERATE Price $7.0C THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. 42 FRANKLYN STREET ideals are to be preserved. The was- tage of men and of resources in the countries of the Allies has been enor- mous. There is urgent need of ev- ery man, of every dollar, and of all the materials which this country can turnish. “We ‘are distinctly: & peace-loving people. But we must remember that the greater the effort the sooner peace of the right kind will become possible, He is no true lover of peace whose tardiness, lukewarmness, obstructive- ness, or half-bartedness prolongs the struggle. Every delay, every failure to measure up to tMe needs of the hour, means greater eacrifice of life and ‘greater burdens of suffering and Those members of congress who fully understand that they have got to explain to the people at home are not anxious to have congress ad- journ, There is littls wonder that many harsh things are Dbeing said of the weather man: when he furnishes an early autumn after having provided a late spring. It may be all right for Germany to agree to give up Belgium, but the time has passed when the allied na- Don’t You Want Good Teeth‘{ =% ¢ under the thumb of Germany for the > taxation. The men who have tak y p— 1 1 - 1 i | ! pnder b hump of Germany for the | icr "wi "aceept ‘any promises. feom | SRGon. | The men who have taiien PLEASURE=This whole grain-food with its ; MR s o the present German government: i Does the dread of the dental chair cause yo wiect S3" rather than for the benefit that might " - 5 war will do their utmost cheertully . . el B % - need havo no fears. By our method you can have your testh filled e Dot ey e Shesetny : B oot eomme 4l iinoush fhe ofieial seports: socoil| aikimately, Thon Bl thetetes of Lo rich, nut-like flavor i1s in the form of crisp, Growned or extracted ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN §5 iet the control of its army be vested | % dulet day on the battlefronts, it is b L A B TR AL : CC™SIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES & highly propable that those “quiet|4nd future generatlons of Americans b > B cither of these countries ana it win | WiEhly proteble that those “quiet|Sud fufis generations of Americans golden granules particularly appealing to CTRICTLY SANMTARY OFFICE not be a question of maintaining an army for the Gefense of Poland bat | the Poles will be forced to fight. for - whatever cause and wherever they order. Poland has good reason for pursue our career as a matlon without fear of attempted foreign domination, if but only if, the rest of our citizens, men and women alike, with an equal- 1y “high spirit of devotion give them- ment for the there. erage reader, if he was CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK the palate. - : Castro says -he has given up the 2 business of being a trouble maker,|Selves to the task df eupporting the E e L emtion o e [ 1 i ot aenin emounts 5 | o 8 the eont it the - Tur s : 5 cnatot" et SR o4 for examination and sriimaia Mo X no more than it does with many peo- DR. F. G. JACKSON OR. D. J. COYLS e resources of this country “At the request of the authorities At Washington the Connecticut State Council of Defense with its committees in every town in the State has been ple it will mean only until"the next outbreak. DENTISTS (Successors to tne ning Deantal Co. NORWICH. CONN. SHOULD BE THROWN OUT. All of the points on which the sen- &te and house have disagreed on the The removal of the civil papulation 203 MAIN ST. | ‘war revenue bill will be taken up by ~ the committee In conference, it is to De asticipated, but it will be surpris- and it is believed that a serious from Roulers and Ostend by the Ger- mans indicates that they are gettinz ready to fall back or ‘else they need more wotkers than they have pre- viously drafted. appointed by the Governor as the In- strumentality through which the peo- ple of Connmecticut may take part in this great task. It needs and solicits tHe air and s of every Connec- ticut citisen” ¢ - Costs About One Cent A Dish - Lady Asistant 4. Mt P. M Telephone