Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CLOUDY TODAY: SHOWERS TOMORROW “I Recommend To All ORWICH, CON APRIL 19, 193¢ “DAY, FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DESPATCHES | RAD CRAP GAWE Monday, Who Wish To Reduce” Says Arbolom: Tablets “Is the Best Remedy | Ever Came Acress.” Tells Reagon for Successful Obesity atment to Thousands. and rains ove Winds O North of Sandy and northeast, South portion. variable east, TAF l V"‘! E 14 in Ponemah given by the A con Ave, cause Atiextion, Farmers! lace your orders for agricul- i as the freight condi- shipments slow. W" are snly sclling direct car. No yard stocl\‘ this year. | THE PECK-McWILLIAMS | COMPANY A. G. THOMPSON, F. S. Foot Specialist" OTECT YOUR FEET) ngs’ Spring Arch Support.| Suite 7.8 Alice Buiiding, 321 Main St. Phone 1366-4 5 and Trees. FOR ALL OCCASION Orders Deliveroa suul HURSERY CO. | T. M PEABCDY Chiropodist, morn! church Prennan, mind requiem high mas: ul of M street Whist club w 1 Mrs tables Phone 95s | street KINDRED FINISHES UNITED METAL MFG. CO,, Inc. Thamesville Norwich, Conn. Prompt and Satisfactory Work nis Houlihan, Tda Peebe. Clyae her home on Elm avente attack necessitated an operation i Vv.« ckus hospital. Christian Bacheler of Fast "rm-n ; returned from vacation &t het home $1—Introduction Special—$1 One dozen Photo Cards of the Baby. Sittings day or night, rain or shine, and Developing. MODERN STUDIO 18 BATH STREET Cosmopolitan Motor Life Photoplay Popular Science Shea’s News Burean *; MAGAZINE SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE WE DELIVER THEM ANYWHERE. WITEN YOU WANT to put your bus. the public. tners s no nan through the ad- Iness beform medium berter THE WEATHER border No unvomm: loudy, probably showers | to cloudy, Forecast New, biy fo and in temperature. Observations followini Bulletin’s observa temper. Comparisons Predictions for showers, for weather: V\HN\\W NORWICH TOW I‘« place on Huntiniton who Minerva in for Methodist church sventeen. his to the where ce of secretary nd cdale McKay dren Mrs. Beers' Jesus ning an winnere, nt to Miss Flor Buckley. s, cake and coffee while the Jarsonage. Hyde and W esidents. Mrs. . were recent Penn Bennett Benjamin Houlihan, nent of &pent a day recently at the home of Mr. Harold Rose of Uncasville. Montague Hut rived Satrday the Misses Hyde of Wasl Bailey of Hartford, parents, Re 2 ‘Weaver has returned to her home at Trading Cove, after p and daughter- Frank L. Weaver, of her son . Mr. and Mrs. West Town street. ten little Mildre was able t0 go ont for the first time Wednesday. Richard Carter, Glen cember 29, 18 now able (o get about by | w the aid of a_crutch Axd & casno. Maurice Gay of street, who has been passing & few days in Boston, has returned. Six men arrested in Greeneville Sat-jcame through the front door. .he ufday night in a place where it is al-. The pressure is abnormaliv high along :leged a crap shooting game was from New Engiand | progress and | westward to the Pacific coast. s for unsettled weather ' poace N of {ne Countcy esst | than usial “for some. time for the police. | ¥ night Sergeant John H. Eane, accompanied by Ofticers P. Dris- Murphy, made a sudden ar- -1\\'\[ at the cigar and mruy store, with | two men arrested potice were. too quick for him andpreached at the high mass in St Pabi { Market strect saloon for breach of the |of in alreached the back room where a gSroud rick’s church Sunday on the only com: a rather busier week-end |around the table where the game was in Parents, which the Creator could find Late Saturda; ‘\\cro gathered off th® table by the police | manifestly be made by any man, steep- {and five of the six men arrested were|ed in.sin as men had grown to be:. it [ Atlantic Coast: {wished thew had arrested him 15 min- Iy, then, such atonement must be made | {utes sooner as he was $15 ahead of the | game then. man, the God-man, as the Son of said to have been a crap shooting game extreme rear end of the place. was_ rrested on A gambling house, Hatteras—Moderate | ¢ showers weather. | {lice. the sum of $100 changed hands| There are persons, even some calling i charge of keeping nd the follow Charles Przygoda, and Jeremiah | urday night in the saloon at the corn-|di in Norwich their release ien brought to police headquarters. | counter. W | berry was sm_the front part by was coming just as the Y crooks, according "to Meransky, and it g been determined that Kayalonko has gone to New York. SCRIPTURE PASSAGES, CITED PROVE CHRIST'S DIVINITY Resuming his series of sermons on man, tried to warn those in the rear by | God's Works, interrupted by the special | whistling and shouting at them but the | services of Lent, Rev. Myles P. Galvin fiftcensor more men were crowded|plete atonement for the sin of our ‘First ! progress. The “bones” and $10 in cash {acceptable. Such reparation could ' not !sorted out from the crowd as having | couid not, on the other hand, be made by a | {been the omes playing. One man ar-|God alone, since God being perfect hap-| { rested remarked to a policeman that he |pincss, can know no suffering. Logical- a being of two-fold mature, God According to a report given the po-|became for sinful man's redemption. n the game in the place Officers Quinn, Pounch crrested Peter Cote, \week ago, | themselves Christia; maintain | a P. Murphy |that Christ was admittedly a perfect | ‘ew London |man, the Just Man, to be taken as men’s of i ' John Carberry. 24 of this city Sat- |model and exemplar, yot who deny His | iding. This, too, although, follow- | T et and Water strects, The |ing God's promise that the sin of Eden men are accused of breach of the peace, | Should be atoned for. during long ages T e e iy marics of {he ent | there arose prophets who foretold min- | ot olon arsived. Cap. [UIY the circumstances of the . Redemp- 6 R 1t tion the floor with Cote holding | o8- < 1 i hm there. Both wmen secured release| TO Catholics. whose. reliion is based § I thete .. Jpolh ien 3 wholly upon the /Scriptures, it _would | safe. e never occur to doubi the verity of these INTER-CIIURCH WORLD DRIVE BEGINS NEXT SUNDAY Following a s ries of conferenc & of Connecticut, program of Rainy followed | npletely set up in to so {appear the seal of the City of New |live as to follow as falthfully as. passi- n On side of ihe soal is the (ble in the footsteps of the perfect Bx- ir 1919, Burning lamps to the ex-|cmplar and Teacher. the compagsionate treme risht aua (i 01 tae center part | Saviour, Who became Man for Rhe re- mbolize the torches of liberty and |demption of a sinful world. eternity. wo of the leading e A e At ler to afford more room and ind o dolphin which is emblematic of | to be torn down between the |the marine service. To the extreme | gnd_the stenographer's’ room right is @ similar panel, the only differ- ogTrown Into- thels (D riy life t marl about later For map successful aclive Since t nd Mrs. Huntinzton Aministered to his necds : his of he has been confined since take to his bed u work 12 De has mad Frederick Bush- contrilmtions to -its share of £, i i Academy. Annapolis. Maryland, and for ! ;. |naval feserves in civil life who volun- ; SXPOrier of manufactures. In the year ooy | preceding the war (1913) s0 many yen Wity s He > of life atented is su two grandehil Rlzkeslee, Disaeasini'a hup benevolences he tay |dant of the ai nominations i nte: Charl route to Tlartford | will be held me in Noani at his Smith Crawford 1 ails and th: Washington = ol et heen the guest for a few days of Mr. ledge of thin ve to do their Allini of Hartford, ‘Washington, days at the | home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Den- | of Sturtevant street GRISWOLD HOTEL MAN Watson estate near the moy its grounds Pudgments and oy owner of ‘the ern Point and the Ho- Sellair Heights, Plant and during the w convalescent hospital ate it in conjunci on with the hotel adjoins the property of the on the north and on Groton Tron and on the cast. CAUGHT EGG THAT TURKEY LAID IN TREE A person residing at Gardner Lake | the vietim of a ¢ fliness with diph- Inership with him for the purchase of | stronomical and meteorological im- , \\'ho makes 2 ing one in part finally flew to the Washingtan ding in a chair under the predictions, so convineingly fulfilied.. The | i ¥ preacher cited the words of Isaiah, of | § BRONZE TABLET IS TO David, in promising the coming of the | REPLACE JIONOR ROLLS { dfiah. But even these inspiried au-! The two honor roll boards, which | thorities are surpassed by another proof have stood in front of the Municipal | —the: Saviour's own words when que bulld New London for the past |tioned i the tribunal, His assurance to year or £0 as a memorial to those who | the high priest, as well as the fact that | Served their country during the great|He did not controvert Peter who declar- |} ETars Sode ALk Rron T : ed belief in Him as the Son of the Liv-| world's war, are oon to be removed, by | 16 Peliel 1, Him as the Bon of, the L | order of a_vote of the Court of common | council Shist el nha oo R R R priley WL be replaced by a Handsome | g with the circumstances of the | PR g i o Ressurection. and 9 feet in height. 4 & Hving M ’ Believing firmly he Zhestanlet Ll ihe Scaat ot Y‘m(e‘ul'h-d- rmer,‘ !hrLS\‘TL\nEll‘O\’dnl‘rs:(xl‘yu?f :Im tes bronze. At the very top is 2! pjocged Trinity, what, them, the preach- o lany Inserted in er asked, should be the duty of all Cath- t s the figure of Columbia. Inlolics? First, whenever this fact of di- left hand she ‘no]vh the American | vivity s questioned or ‘assailed to do all quoting well known Secriptural rec- athed sword with the American flag, il | while in her right nd underneat ord There will be twelve bronze pancls| ENLARGE BAR LIBRARY AT e i o e B NEW LONDON COURT HOUSE the estreme Ieft of. the design is| . The bar library in the court house at the American 1agie on| New London will be enlarged. The li tap. Underneat, in orhamental succes: located in the southeast room s Lo T o cond floor of the court hous ence being that the insignia of the navy m.tll.v ,:”n about twice its y s used instead of that of th on 1‘ will also be necessar top of the tablet ceiling of th for an inscription and the ent s 10 the room about g of the en- rged library uniform. Work will be started at once. two fect to m foll us hold in honored | ved their country | those who ia the gre orld war, who fought for | B s e S e United States Largest Exporter of At the bottom there is another space | Manufacturers. for epec and ithe _f"”m\mr:‘ The United States is still leading ‘That their names|the world as an exporter of manufac r. this memorial | tures. The total value of manufac ¥ of New London. | tures exported from this country ¢ jo v the calendar year 1919 was $3,18 AVAL RESERVISTS MAY 000.000. ¢ JOIN PRACTICE CRUISE| This fisure of §3,456,000,000 worth of | |§ A very infercsting summer practice | MANufactures exported in 191 pise has n planned for the under. | Statement by The National City aduate midshipmen of the U. S. Naval|2f New York, leaves the United| States still clearly in the lead as an| s been s may our expor- to be visited are| (3D of manufactures amounted to Cuba, the Panama Ca- | $1:117:000,600, and in 1919, the first full the piace Guantanamo ¥ nal. the Ha : L peace year following the war. $3.4 waiian Islands, Puget Sound, | ot . o Washington and . San Franoisco, San | S E T s ke ”‘1‘ Diego and San Pedro, California S s aala gl = <o ASHTD e A Ar A e s b This phenomenally large total of G mspmen and. onnee. | manufactures exported in the first, full | il Bl " S vear, $7.486,000,000, keeps us, | [ e Ha v‘,h,‘r‘.h.\'n:l‘(hvfl n"‘:n" el o H‘”:k, el at the | e e st of world’s exporters of ) g 3 10 t t ‘,f., 2 -fwv"\‘ j‘lmwt{ls-_‘ S. United States ranked |hxrflhr‘jm‘r\:v:~ x::‘ RS R list of nations esporting manufactures, 3 1 Naval dis Great Britain heing first, Germany a sty SRdili 29th close second, and the United States | their daily nd ird Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. third, with France a close fourth, | factures. annourced that t vy department | With the beginning of the war the| As kas 'authorized sixteen hundred volun- | out of manufactures from the |, teers from amonz the cnlisied personnel | iluropean countries was greatly o | CNOTMOUS of the naval n to take this | duced. Germany, of cou was_cyt | MAnufactures cruize with ipmen and to re-|off absolutely from the world markets, | which jumpe ceive full active d the manufacturers of Great Bri- 3, the I Reservists, York [tain and France found it necessary to war, to $3.456,000,000 tate. Comnee in the | turn their attention to” the | vear following the war. countles of and | requirements of the ket, This | enal increal t the United States the chief manu. | facturing country unon wi e common- |lies could call for mili {upon which the o | world. Asia, * Afric | America, and of the United e ccupled 0. send their 'y supplies, us - clearl ndant ediately be E eir ship ansnoriation (o be borne by *he | to report to the . 10th. wheh they will im to Philadelphia to j cost of t | of cou | could draw for |mazde any i the 1 £l e | " | will all be rel : Quty on or be M. but any re v remain in the navy. | the end about August 25th tain, w SUES FOR HIS PROPERTY | 882,000,000, The case of Joh | mainly' m who has brousht 2 our | cut aistrict of the of s or against Francis I ticles in the s property custodian, has exc _Of course terest in law circles all oeer the c the Bank's try. The court is now in session in the ncrease in federal builc t New Haven. Judge win §. Thomas presiding. Rossic is a German and had in hi PROVERB—To say little and perform much, is the characteristic of great minds. OUR SPRING SHOWING OF YARNS FOR KNITTING SWEATERS IS NOW COMPLETE If you are going to knit a Sweater this season, we urgently advise you to start NOW, for many of the shades shown now will not be found later. While we aim to carry all ths wantzd shadss, we fea- ture particularly these colors—Gold, Creen, Tur- quoise, Copenhagen and Rese. SILK AND WOOL YARN This yarn makes a beautiful Sweater and is not as ex- It is an ideal yarn fer a handsoms, medium-weight Sweater, and comes in all th> most desirable colors—at 80c a ball. LUSTRE YARN This yarn has a beautiful lustre and mzkes a good year-round Sweater. We show it in a very complete line of colors—at 80c a ball. SHETLAND FLOSS This yarn still retains its popularity arnd is very much in demand at ths present time. cludes all the wanted colors in two sizes of balls—at 45¢ and 75c¢ a ball. pensive as silk. Our assortment in- OUR SPRING SALE OF Toilet Goods Will continue ail this week. Make it a point to attend this Sale this week—come teday if sible, as you may not soon again be favored with such an unusual opportunity. It is a most comprehensive Sale of Toilet Requi- sites, embracing 2s it does practizally complete lines and assortments of standard grade Toilet Articles. Buy Toilet Goods Now ! requirements manu‘|means a corresponding } avantities sent out of the country, a consequence $1,117,000,000 world's expor h the Al-|ports of our orid’s exporters of manufacture ters of the United possibly ablishment of their ns of manufactures. | Will Attempt New Aititnde | The only Record | imate those of. th ank's se” official miners strikes have Britain, Next to min 5 operators and coiton gures show products in the *ersistentCoughs | snerc are yrac o prompt_relief foom Piso's. Stoms irriteuon; soothing. Effective Many of the e for yousg and old. No manufaciures in 1919 over that n property and sums of oncy valued at almost $1,000,000 h belonzed to the firm of Gebrud Rossie, a corporation in Sechteln, Ger- meny, in which Rossie was interested. At the outbreak of the war the property and money in bonds and cash mount to $873,526 wore taken from him by the fovernment in acoerdance with I 8 alien property law Jossie is mow suing to regain seven per cent. of the confiscated propert It is generally believed that the case will g0 to the U. S. supreme court ud as it is the first of its kind, the ions handed down by | Judge Thomas znd the superior and s preme courts will have a t deal of | bearing on the handiing of similar | cases in the future. H Whether the Gebruder Rossie is stW in operation in Germany or mot is et definitely known. Rossie has a_brother Irnest, also of Mystic, who has a like e pending in the court. ROBS NEW LONDONER OF $1,015 BY TIME-WORN SCHEME “_’:fi““‘;:‘f‘“ \{f;;f"‘fi’,,n‘,,,n°f1n‘\,",;m,,m.', Amherst Coliege. Prof. David Tedd, in a factory in New London. was made has anmounced that in a few weeks of clever bunco he will attempt a new altitude ree- Wednesday evening when he was' ord in an aeroplane driven by Major relicved of approximately $1.015 by ' Leo Stevens, of the Army air service, time worn scheme, the crooks inducing | from the government field at Omaha, him to draw the moncy from the av-' Nop' = mhe. merial expedition wil ings bank with the understanding that o 5 the two crooks would enter into part- e in search of new data of | ¢ then substituted paper for | Portance. Althoush Met Pt e money, and he being rlruR:G(l D monay, and s sye by e Cus e ot @il digion SO Ty ing a_ comp! meantime the crooks had left the city. Mike Kavolonko was one of mel CASTORIA B AT A .= St s - EASY The airector of the observatory of | PAYMENTS The Norwich Electric Co “THE ELECTRIC SHOP” Eoeishe FOR FLETCHER'S PHONE 674 UNSIGNED. & A strong man-armed, we walk alone The bllndod stumble, whom we will not leud, The hu“l.:!t perish, whom we wiil not The lawless work ‘their will without reproof, Secure (the road to Jericho is wide We pass unheeding on the other side. lour work is over, though the earth resound With growing evil that our hand might sta Exempt exalied. move we en’Gwr AS though God made the ocean for ® bound To dnty's field? Our answer to her ) “Let Europe stand aicne, though freedom fali” Cold are we to the weariness, the wrack f wasted nations—mow that ecem- auered seas Tnvite our commerce—thongh we owe to these Long shielded vears of profit? Leek- ing back We know who barred the peril from our shore With broken ~ bodies—who our charges hore. | Lat, Jate to Kindle, yet we took the re. When noble passion. like a prairie flame. ept throngh the natiom, @44 1¢ e the same {Swift-fadinz embers? Tad it. mount- | ing hig | Consvmea t fish_creed That curse our councily, it were well indeed! narrow spite. the sele | SUNl hesitant, we stand to count the To glean advantazes, or to view with read { Some far, contingent peril seen 1 shead, | T valor iickens, and the cause 18 “Those voices from the flelds A to e not keep?” —Grace Agnes Timmerman. In the New York Times. the falth they will ALONE. T am alone. in spite of love. Tn spite of all take and give— In _spite of your wild tenderness Sometimes 1 am not glad to live. T am alone, as thowzh T stond On the hizhest peak of the tireS gray world About me only & Above me endies nx snow space unfuried. | With earth hidden and heaven hidde And only my own s pride To keep e from the peace of thoes Who are not jonelr, having —Sara Teasdale, in tie Yale Re HUMOR OF THE DAY big meeting?® replied Farmer Corntos- “The specches didn't much, but the heeklin' w restin’.—Washington Star. Pa, what is a pent-up emotion™ That, my boy, is when something happens which makes a man want 18 swear and he can't because ladies are present.”—Detroit Free Press. “You can't get an intoxicating drink except with a_doctor's prescription, Te- marked Mrs. Cornstossel. Yes" replied her husband. “I was jes' thinkin’ of writin' to our boy Jesh tellin’ him to drop law and study medi- | eine."—Washington Star. . St Peter looked with wonder at the two rusty coppers which the passing soul had dropped into his hand “Why, my good man,” he asked, “what is this for?” “War tax” murmured the soul !gloomily as it passed through the | heavenly gates—Home Sector. 1 should think that a stuttering mas would naturally be a good grammarian® Indeed. Why s0?" “Decause he is 30 famiiiar with the parts of speech.”"—Boston Transcript. Daughter of Scotch Lawyer — What did father say when you asked him {if we might be engaged? Suitor—The old beggar turned me increase in!down, and then had the nerve to |charge me a guinea for the consulta- tion! —Paseing Sho “When 1 was coming home last night,” sair Miss Skerry, “I saw & man skutking along in the shidow, {Oh, how I ran!™ An’ couldn't you catch him?’ ine quired her little brother innocently.—s | Edinburs Scotsman, | “I can't eat. “The hospital people seem attentiva® “It is not their fault. That mice nursq brings in supper on a tray and lets me look at it. And then 1 supposs she {1akes it to the next fellow and lets hire By {100k at it-and so on down the line."— present century | Louisville Courler-Journal. y in scems 1 & rapid of our pre e attention to| de by the man- e AS! Yancouver island has no navizable of Dueling w2 army ir 1544 A condor's foot is not adapted for perching on trees. abolished in the British no women auto drivers in Argentina. afe and cabaret orches- | tras in Buenos Aires have women mem- bgrs. In the “ountry st present there is & slortage of between 209000 and 300,080 - tacher during the fof kin tn eriranct e, ar Capadizn wonlen nex: lers and war nurses wers | Frea> vomen are taking up foot- AL ' mircasous English rugby now | having a great vogue with them. { When Jus. Ler seventieth yeir the ! st Quoew Vactoria studied Hindvs.aal ' jand learned to speak it fuently. 45 and musc of the Trams- emn wire conposrl ey i afile. Catherine I.'cle Attempis to discover the comnoxitien metais arsd in naking oy is n “urkey and China have proved !rwl‘N.' | The cinnabar miner of Alm:don, | Spain, where great quantities of vee- | ‘mnllun are produced, have been ml‘ for more than 300 years. The first Korean woman to recelve & medical degres in America was Dr. Es- | ther Kim Pak, who was graduated ren {the Woman's Medical College of Baiti- more, in 1906, ] In Ceyfon property descends n-\! mother to daughter instead of from father to son, with the result that vir. tually every woman in the country | a 1andowners. Polish women in some of the miniag regions of Pennsylvania celebrate close of Lent by switching thelr hia- bands and deluging them with water. It is a custom imported from Poland. The married and unmarried women in Colombia are distinguished by the way in which they wear flowers in their hair, the senoras wearing them on the right side and the semoritas on the left. } For the first time in history & &- vorce has been gronted in the mame of the king of Italy by a court at Fiume. A divorce law does not exist in Italy, but the court applies the Austrian in the name of the king of Italy.