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The disturbance over nel and moving northwes! cordingly. The weather has becos tic states. There were ir weather was genera The outlook is of the Great Lakes and valley. Frost warnings were fair weather Monday. Sandy Hook to Hal north and falr Monday. For Tuesday probadly fair. following records, report ure and the N oAx T (New Sun Tises m igh Telowed Upwards of 400 men de movement of ty received ) mass in St morning. pastor, ri Mary s Rev. Wi commended of faith an urged his co r power to b our city. commenced ecsi the guest of Mrs, 3 Siaier avenue. nd Mrs. And with their orwich. Pa Connors h the fadeline Lariv! guest of fri has left tows Beardow _sper cottage at Pine @ funeral of Mrs. orz tie. NORWICH ch we cannot expec from our lives. cuble as the sparks ong i be sorrow and as swirl the dust on the will coufuse our path ihe temper and spirit simself. Some people pever to rise again. It £y, It may not be gri In Immortality and th less reunion. Norwieh, Monday, Sept. 20, 1920, THE WEATHER. #ea was apparently centered Sunday night immediately south of the Yucatan chan- in southern waters has been advised ac- over New England and the Middle Atlan- the last 24 hours in north New England 2nd the extreme upper Mississippi vailey. weather Monday and “Tuesday states east of the Mississippi. perature will rise Tuesday in the region for generally fair in + the The tem- Elsewhere ezst of the Mississippi river it will not change materially. momning for the nerth Atlantic states. Winds off Atlantle coast: Nerth of Sandy Hook—Moderate west! Forecast. New England and Eastern York: Fair and continued cool Mon Observations in Nor The Bulletin's observations iy and Sunday: GREENEVILLE sarish comprising the Third Sunday % regular at their monthly holy « wur 1t being Civic Sunday Father 3 dorsed the great work which th p imber of commerce is to enter I census of St. Mary Central avenue and ! With fair weather the work be completed in about three TAFTVILLE sia Laird of Ponemah Burial was in St. Mary's cemetery, Bal @ Sunday afternoon as there s sin in the uration of these periods firow off their grief and worry short time; others of a different temper- ament seem (o be crushed beneath them, FAIR, CONTINUED COLD TODAY AND TOMORROW NORWICH, CONN, 310NDAY, SEPT. 20, 1950, the Caribbean tward. Shipping me much cooler showers within 1 elsewhere. the unper Ohio issued Sunday tteras—Moderate show the ed from changes barometric read- Ther. Bar. % e Ther. Far. . 46 3030 | 56 3040 | 50 30.40 Fair; sore- Fair; westerly | northwes D TIDES, water it ts low by flood tide. of St. Mary s parish on iliam A, § the men d urged t ngregation to do ring about a bur- par- today and the week to visr and vicinity special sermons were deliver- ed at the Sunday services In recognition of Civic Sunday. In nearly all the churches of Norwich Large congregations were the rule and the ministers in their sermons paid particular attention to the importance of the present campaign of the Norwich Chamber of Commerce, in relation to the civic and moral welfare of text from Rev. 21, 1 saw the holy city, create ethical conditions which make the In these closing chapters of the Bible we have a vision, a revelation of the cul- mination and goal of all human history. History begins with a garden, it ends with a citv. The city is thus the full expres- sion of highly organized life. As hu- man life ifcreases in complexity it tends to organization through association and combination. The city presents us with the most com- plete concentration of forces for effective res The detached force of the indi vidual must be combined and concen- trated with that of a multitude of men to get its carrying power. Then the city is the scene of the most and varied activit This is due not wholly to the competitive strug- but to the complication of industrial s and social life, which alons can 1¢ out the full force of personality. ‘The city must take the initiative in all E hus the great movements of socicty, the na- ess, its national policies, its and cultural enterprises. It the genius of a nation's in- art. its literature. Tt gathers th which finds opportunity for pment of all the higher powers mind. It stands behind all those which promote the moral, gocial i intellectual well-being of a nation. Then cities are the great. distributing for all those essential products i are §o necessary to the life of the 1 a fact that admits the ethical and stimulate ventors i de centers n er sence. It organizes, concen- tr and d'sseminates the best of the ethical life of mankind or the worst. The o the depost of the best or the meanest in human naturs. Life risss to its full afflusnc= of splendor in the cities or it sinks nearest to beasthood. The c ty can be the brightest or the saddest sp.t on_the eart The inerease of material prosperity is not the stimulative force to the best of a city’s life or a restraint upon its worst. Appeal must be made to higher sourc:s of help. The chief business of a city's life s mot the increase of its population or the stimulation of its business enterprises, important as they are, but the making of men, the improvement of its citizenry. Not the building of mills alone, but the building of chyracter. It is one of the most enheartening sigh's on tht horizon that the reorganized ers of commerce of the country sing this fact and are adding to r objective of moterial prosp-rity the ife of their cities' citizenship. hey have added a word of tremendous in the term “Spiritual Wel- William McNall rew Frohmader d from a several day stay in | | Mrs. Archibald Kyle have loft| Mee® outh Windham where they son, Arch Ebald Godere have re-|mumb tte is spending a few cay: has resigned her Company. jerre who has iends for several nt the week-end Grove. Louis M. Gregory was held Saturday morning with ser- vlces in the Sacred Heart church at o 3 clock, with a large attendance of rel- ves and friends. The floral forms| Merc many and beautiful. The bearers ®eso Michael Murphy, Andrew LaFleur. Jeftery Blanchard and Amel Bezzron TOWN servics at the Iring Arms was eonducted by Rev widams J. Crawford, pestor ot (a3 Jrsi Methodist Episcovai churcia. A Cure or Worry was the topic of *a: comfort- sy sddress. The text was Philippians, 4: &7 Troubls is one of the things t to wholly elimi- Man is born unto fiy upward. As world there long as there is sorrow there will be those little cyclones & the mind, which, like winds ~ which summer highway, for a time. The is largely in of the individual seem able to in a may not be wor- it may be but tig shadow of a heartache in which they wro living and from which they will not smerge until this mortality is clothed e griets of earth Arg lost in the supernal glory. of an age- By this path God sometimes brings HAS HELPED Dverwarked Men Need More Strength A SUGGESTION THAT OTHERS who are in good physical con- do not feel the strain of daily It is those who are under- and allow their blood to a thin, devi always tired and italized condition consider overworked. It js not the e condition of body,, that many men here who can experience that _the remedy such men ‘peed. We know of many cases where * and 1" health permanently re- with a quicken- because it en- ‘makes the food build up bodily New York has | Our city's chamber of commerce wins our full sympathy when it sets it. ethical conditions which safe and effiicient for mak. | se1f to ereate hould we not weleome this new ture and aid our chamber of com- n its athomnt to make this ecity not only for its beauty and its a1 nrosperity, but for its high andard of ethical hehaviour, and for tre of hizh quality of ts citizens who a1l lahor for the descent out of heaven of the city when John say o8 the culmin. ation and ¢'imaxi of the world's bast his. tory—a Norwich that shall be a veritable City of God, United Congregational Church. The United Congregational church, in common with the other churches of the city, observed Civic Sunday yesterday, Wwhen a spccial sermon was delivered at the morning service by Rev. Alexander H. Abbott, pastor of the church, Rev, Mr. Abbott's sermon topic was The Cords of the City, and his text was Isa. jah 54:2, “Enlarge the place of thy tent and let them stretch forth the cur- | fomous tains of thy habitations. Spare not; lengthen thy cords and strengthen thy stakes, tev. Mr. Abbott's sermon dealt with Civie iRghteousness and was heard with deep interest by the large congregation Dresent. First Baptist Church. The topic of the civie sermon at the morning service at the First Baptist church was A Citizen of No Mean City, Acts 21:39. The sermon was delivered |by the pastor, Rev. George Henry Lalrouxa', Who spoke in part as follows: On any occasion—all the time and everywhere we desire to say with Paul: ‘I am a citizen of no mean city.” i or | perhaps in a more positive way: I be- {long to Norwich of which I am Justly proud. |, The city to which Paul referred was | Tarsus, the capital of Cilicia. This city was distinguished for its culture and its schools and on its coins it bore fthe proud title, The Independent —Capital be: Xenophon describes it as a great and | flourishing city and Strabo speaks of it as a seat of learning and science and the rival of Athens and Alexandria. Paul was proud to belong to this eity. Scott beautifully sings: Breathes there a man with soul so dead, who His loved ones home, and it is along this Valley road that their sweetest flowers are planted and their most beau- tiful services rendered. If we believe we have a living Father in heaven who sees and knows all our sorrows that the end is not yet, that in the wonderful af- terwhile there will be a readjustment that compensations will be rendered for the inequalities of earth it will go very spirit from which no one is entirely ex. empt in, this world. In reference to the text, if we can but bring ourselves to the attitude of the Apo e when he said: Be careful for nothing; but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgivinz, let requests be made known unto God, it will help wonderfully, if we all dispel worry. ‘Rev. Mr. Crawford was accom- panied by the Junior choir of this church which sang three anthems: The Path of Promise, Jesus Saves and Trusting in Our Redeemer. Hymns given includoc: God Will Take Care of You, He Leadetk Mo and There Is Sunshine in My Soul Today. A member of the choir, Miss Blanche Wheeler, gave the solo, Wen- if we are to have a beautiful city, we worth. respected ; The Lord's day honored. F. Bailey, Paul) had seen the vision, ately endeavored to go i receive piritua ment in a larger sense than |a better Europe. Idens are thesmost cx- Wwe_commonly admit. pensive commodities in the world's m: Then the city gathers and distributes | ket. . ifind their field in the city 1i far toward removing this depression of! 1t therefore we are to realize our de- 2. Our social, political and ind N 4.' God must be feared; His church| 1o First Congregational Church. At the First Congregational orwich Town, the pastor, Rev. C preached on Civic Betterment. |1 His text was Acts 16:10”. When he (St.| we immed to Maceds bu chureh, | Visions are seen by a few, t are realized by the cooperation of mar people, said Rev. dreams a dream projects a_play a blue print and then hundred set to work to put the or stitution of philanthroy print his work is not there vision is seen and | The story of the Hebr ham, and of tI bus, grims is fhe stor who could not b heritance. their grandfat! better Mr. BLail One man | a | mal of men | dream into wood crop, or an in- The biu & iron or a growing is often in t rd or But | ntil tie |n blue-print drawn. ; £ W er, 1 discoverer uilders 1k of vision satisfied tried to 1 it is no forw W § and mation witl abrove They than they Visions do not g cked by an ne to those who p: them. St 1 shores. of saw the ushes to be ire casual er th 1g od w an opportunity ars on the he alone Yet ideas are world better unt gible form and put vision alone could rope. But when S stepped forward and convey the apostle acros land him on the shores of ki then stood by him as he went from eit to city the vision became real ic land took on new life.” that We have no men of v some maintaiy, or is the ress to the relucta of the multitude to follow gleams our leaders? Supno: companions had gone on fused to follow out the blue apostle’s vision how soon would have been evangelized? We should our men of vision and cooper our leaders. It will not be giv imnotent to to woi not Ch Paul's | see the end from the beginning. the prerogative of the seer. T may look as dark to us as the tr: H shorel, ared to the ing with Ccqmbus; yet the on the vision of our I 1 on, and on, and on.” asked to go for our leader: When the v in 1, we may be pretiy its genuinene: In the moy make a better city for us to live will Tequire not only better city, which experts are to see, but it will call for a of men and women to come for immediately cooperate to put the vision into practical effect. wa a2y tol We a but sur in J nelping Federated Church, The City, the Center of the Civie Prob- lem, was the topic of the special address at the morning service of the Federat churck in Greeneville. I R. Daniel Trick pastor, who delivered the sermon, said in part: We come to the conclusion that ti city is the center of the eivic problem | for five reason: The cities are becor population and her the problem. The civic question ter and money is cities. Politics enter the civi and the cities are po The cities are the centers which have a the civic life, The influences for weal and for woe ing the centers decided factor \ a financial mat- i the | cducational | influence on | Since the city plays such a large part In the civic life, the problem of civics is a problem of the city. How can we | make our city the “Rose of New En; land?’ By every person making himself | the hest possible citizen. By m every other person the best possible citizen. By all working together for the development of the “Rose.” Central Bavtist Church. A special sermon in recognition of | Civie Sunday was delivered at the eve ning service at the Central B: church by the pastor, R rthy Purkiss. A Fighting Chareh w topic of Rev. Mr.. Puj sermon. part he spoke as follows: Can we have a nobled Norwich? C this new movement make good? Will | the people of Norwich respond? Some | say it is impossible. It is impossible | said the black man as Livingstone with | his little family was about to attemnt the crossing of the Kalahari desert. Even we black men can't do it. Living- stone smiled for he knew that the Im- ptist | . | the In 1 not in a million universes for both God and an impossibility. Rev. William H. Smith in speaking up- never to himself has said, This is myon Christian Principles in Our Clvig | the reflection of our total national char- the topic of the Civic Sunday sermon de- dynathics | be considered worthy of any place in the mass St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church. in the At St. Andrew's Episcopal church the would The Church of God the otj Chu city i i en, | 2 ] : L . said Rev. Dr. How resit | mighty ¥ 1 ic his sermon. A synopsis of the sermon |the “siuare doall L - ee|lofrier civie righteousness, said Rev. Mr.|ence follows: as well as be served. Varley. In considering what is involved in this t us remembor first that no movement Schools are for the education of the|you are called,” St. Paul's zdmonition to | - n permanently endure, or accomplish 00 you ar . T ot e P eh | young, to fit. them for a useful and hon- [the Eph the admonition to obacco abit there is behind it the power of |orable life. Remember that the moral €~ | Father T rers; this vocation ot oter. Civic fightcous- | ement in_instruction important as | is - that of _ followers of the e e tTn strome mnd stur. | the intellectual: The city is to be a wise | Saviour, chil of God, with an u angerous cnal rightcousness if it is to be her to its children and youth and teach | ‘ng rule of faith and of conduct, preached . their own sake and for the welfal guaranteeing freedom from the domina- tion of nobles and their collective capacity, what they ousht religion and good . mor: regard for the happiness and iwe! our fellow mission is of the hizhest use to Norwich. Rev. Paul Kosczyk as his successor. power in all the after-life of the student. 1 might speak of the cleanliness of the clty, its adornment, its parks and streets, and the homes <2 the people, for; unless | the habitations of the citizens ara right, adopted to the circumstances of the fam- re of the of the people dwelling with them walled town to demand charters o tie New London church Sunday. /The removal of Father Czarowski Kkings. But in those | their president, Mrs. John A. Moran, re- cefved holy communion in a body at the benefitthe city. Here are churche These the apostle rcbuked, urging that |Superior court. Kelly, 2 3 here are schools. Each should be used) ynity of faith and of the snirit which the | Shot, was in court with his chin. in eoming down from God out of heavem | . ' 7,7, "rore Soqutiful Norwich, the|livered at the morning service at the | oorS MO el 0 2 S whote body Saviour Himself had enjoined. Christ | improvised steel frame as a result of prepared, adorned. following are necessary: Taftville Congregational church by {the| e citizens, to enlighten and elevate all|eorminaeq His aposties ~Go, teach all | mjuries. . Our city's chamber of commerce wins | followins t have law-abiding citi- |Pastor Rev. ~Arthur Varley. Rev. Mr |9 ©C2e0e R =i . ety our full sympathy when it sets itself tof ‘. e must have = | Varley took his text from Genesis 11: @gcple. whatsoever I have taught you zena | : rches are instituted to promote true real piety. han love and obe: One, and true are of fulfillment of this ‘whatever you yourselves shall think.” He designated Peter as the defi- nite head of His cht and laid down a rule of faith avhich the duly constituted successors of Peter are teaching now as. Christ Himself taught it. “Walk worthy of the voeation fn which Windsor.—Mies Marjorie G. Lorentz East Windsor Hill. who was appoin nothing les: laboratory assistant at the bureau to God the Perfect ed assistant physicist. . men. The Fa- ther Kosczyk, who for the past three ars has been rector of St. Casimiers church, Bristol, conducted the services at | gomewhere I've read & the young man standards last October, has been appoint- is o Who_lived a life so m.,‘fl!;:m..m-v-'c-fit a The Fift of miracies: to heal the lame Or touch with light the blind. The saint Senlied. s Willlam Vera, Charles Vickery, Arthur [OF stricken sight, T brousht the © masscs was not 1ilics, there will not be clvic rightesusness. | said to be due to the fact that he was too own, my native land. Relationships, said that Christ repre. | itles the welfare of tho Mastes MAs W00 nicL " Who Would help Norwich must seck | deeply engrossed in Polish national af And this might well bo,sald of a man)fets and teaches the highest ideal ofl;,ioh; bg expelled, or made -to fight, or |these things. fairs. In fespect to ihe city in'which ho first|Numan relationships, and, therefore, the | TSR, ¢ SERCICL B TG 0 1 e s v saw the light of day, or in which for va- |bighest ideal of social, political, indus-|Srved. St A [ 5 e AR Tious Teasons has pitehed Ms tent, If|trial cormercial . relatioushipa: Tl\e[‘?;")l:“trgl; R s, “they | TEACHINGS To EPHESIANS s i L LI he st proud of his city there is Some- | Work of the church can never be done |Peoble. They: choose the rwers. WY it e bR g s > thing wrong somewhere. 1t may be |While these relations are not entirely | ! The members of the Rosary and Scapu- x . the city or it may be the man. But our|Christian in spirit. 45 ¢ they should hehave anid {Jar society of St. Patrick's parish. led by | Maynard, Charies Wallen, Daniel Chap- city is made up of men and women and| Imperfect civic relationships are but| We inquire how they shoi man and Maurice McCaithy, New London young men, who are believed to have been an his of | ted of the soul that ss and truth and | these are ou pur- | these are the motives that con the mighty forces that move us| ard a broader and loft civie | tcousness, then will our build impel honor 1 of men Baotist Church. to desired xpan- Do al n the but bus on ¥. W. Tholen, pastor of ity Baptist church, in his morning service. Relis < cither the city any other city can have of the other. Pei civic righteousness must have ation. No other foundation can n lay than that which has been ch is the righteousness of God ist Jesus, a foundation stone ome builders are rejectjng. Next churches e cham-| commerce is the most powerful to influence its citizens to right- £ ber o factor M. E. Church at hand when the citizen- shoud feel the amalga- of a common purpose to our c'ty a better, cleaner, happicr place to live, said Rev. Ernest A. Legg. in his sermon at the morning service at Trinity Methodist Episcopal church. Rev. M £\ took his text from Neh. 2:17. me let us build up the wall of Jerusa- | = that we be no more a reproach, and for his topic The Walls of Norwich. sermon Rev. Mr. Legg said in part who was once visiting t rta_expressed prise that and ancient city had no walls other cities had. The kinz said show you the walls of Sparta.'s n took his royal guest to the plains of the city wherz the Spartan wn up ,and pointing’ to it | There are the whlls of | every man is a brick.” prouder thing could every man ich claim to be than a store in | walls of the city to protect his own ome and family and secure peace, hap- iness and prosperity for his neighbors ne Every citizen must recognize the fact that he is bownd to veery . other citizen through the laws of social rolation: 1st as truly as the stones of a wal eld, together by the binding cement. To. disregard such. relationship, to live to f, to disclaim the duties of soci- to weaken the walls of protection e need about our homes and in- Co-operative citizenship is the secret of nity building and municipal pros- o perity. To secure such co-operative citizenship h individual Citizen must become d in the city problems, pub'ie wel- | fare and public works. The presidenti ndidate of the Farmer-Labgr party dancerously wrong when he si¥s that his onception of liberty permits a man to think wrongly if he wants to. Is that the Tind of liberty you would grant your vhysician, the automobile driver upon the strects, the teachers in our public 00ls, your cooks, anybody? Let tis here urge every woman to ex- ercise this new right and duty without | fail. Whatsoever may have been your revious convietions on the suffrage ques- tion there is now but one course open | and that is to register and vote. The time is at hand when the citizen- shin of Norwich should feel the amalga- | mating powers of a common purpos namely to make our city a better, clegner, happier place in which to live and bdu. cat our children. This means to build hich and strong the walls of manhood and womanhood and to feel honored to walls of the city no matter how humble it may be. possible belonged to the same reaim as ghosts and witches. He did it. “It is impossible,” said priests to Columbus. We can prove from the Bible that the earth is flat. The discovery of Ameri- ca was Columbus'- answer to the word impossible. “It is impossible” said preachers and teachers. Heathen will be heathen | and you can make nothing else out of them. Yet nation after nation has been raised from abysmal depths of barb: ism and lifted to a new place of Chris- tian _civilization. They did it. ‘When Robert Moffat set out for Wa- maqualand, the natives gathered around him weeping. The great chief Afri kaner, will tear you to pleces. Ho will make your skin into a drum, and your.| skull into a drinking cup. Yet only a few weeks passed, and Moffat and Afri- kaner were partners in the finest Chris- tian fellowship, and fellow workers in CIVIC BETTERMENT IBREAS M N NEW DAY FOR CITY If these ideas of civic betterment get into the homes and hearts of the people, a new day of prosperity and happiness will come to Norwich, said Rev. Henry T. Arnold of this city, in commenting on the ivic Sunday idea, fostered idea, fostered by the Norwich Chamber of Commerce through through the American City Bu- reau, as & part of the chamber’s re-org- anization plan. It is good that people are thinking about civic righteousness, for that is nothing other than the right conduct of it the right behavious of the rulers and the people of a city. What is right for one city may not be right for another, In the middle ages companies of intelli- gent, enterprising men grew up with common interests and found it right for | noble devotion. He aia it. Henry Martyn said that he would as soon expect to see a man rise from the dead as to see a Brahmmn become a Christian. Yet in the very pagoda where Henry Martyn knelt in praver, Christian Brahmins from every 1:) - ince in India met a short time past io derful Book. Miss Edith M. Dodge, tae church organist, played the pians ae- companiments, Babies Mothers Resstleep organize a native Christian missionary soclety. There is no room In the universe, no After Cuticura THE MANHATTAN'S September Sale of Furs ' NOW IN PROGRESS TR e ST R G PR [ Rich Furs and Fur Coats AT ACTUAL SAVINGS NOW OF 339, Women who have been debating the probability of buying furs later will wisely seize the opportunity to purchase now while thesz low prices prevail. Recognize the advantages of buying furs where you know th=y are of unquestionable genuineness and authoritative in fashion. This collection is particularly notewerthy for the qual- ity of the pzlts and diversity in style. To demonstrate the lowness of our prices we cite these few specimen values. 36-inch Sealine Coat, $145 30-inch Seal Coat, $255 Flare Model—Cape Collar Sport Model—Selected Pelts 36-inch Marmot Coat, $210 40-inch Seal Coat, $295 Handsome Raccoon Collar and Cuffs Big Sweep—Choice Skins 36-inch Marmot Coat, $185 | 36-in. Scotch Mole Coat, $395 Taupe Dyed—l‘leutria Trimmed Copy of Imported Model 42-inch Raccoon Coat, $275 | 45-inch Seal Dolman, $325 Prime Skins—Belted Model New Wrappy Model 36-inch Neutria Coat, $375 36-inch Seal Coat, $350 Smart Misscs’ Model Squirrel, Skunk or Beaver Trimmed We Cannot Duplicate These Prices Again This Year A small deposit is all that is required to reserve any garment included in this sale. Furs will be stored free of charge until wanted. Whe Minsihes 121-125 MAIN STREET FUR REPAIRING AND REMODELING NOW AT REDUCED RATES. 4 Ara thus he That sheds abroad swest perfume, oF warmer climate. Zenlied. B! l'l:ould do that. If to the palsied imb, i powe: ¥ The glory might be given me—not im. " - v and women of charac-|acter. They will improve only as there|to do as a city. But we must remember EL - D aastin: | Conoerned. 1 e hotang e 18, which | ~And-what. hen, 165 Feu it eSS B it i i t in all ois. No|that this depends on what they do as|7.30 low mass Sunday from ] onoeraed vt g ener A o ot ins 4 S5, Cltizani who Wil mat selliofit tand | 1a (go, tmmrovement (In all i resncols. gdlo}| (AL 4 s |Rev. 3. JL. Proderick. and his assistant, | John Kelly, another young man, was sho ? M itie ‘Sunday was observed in accord- |\ Uil spurn evil for some temporary | revolution, soclalistic or ther, ~ will |Individuals, and that sometimes a few | JO%: 1 B, FOGRCE ¢ in'the mouth on Chester strect, near the | 'Whal may I from the Heavenly Fither ance with the recent action of the CleT8Y | jqvantage. Men and women of lofty |bri much improvement unless accom-|Pbersons, or even one, will determine the Preaching " Sicmithe= aplétie | #oF cemetery in New Lcndon, a fortnight ago. |« oniy asx that he will e of Norwich and the proclamation issued |jjeals whose philosophy is permeated | panied with a wider spread and a deep- {action of the city. Sindayothe 170h AEst Dentacoel when an automobile containing & highly | And® hecine that, 1 e + by His Honor, Mayor Herbert M. Lerou. |yith ‘the conviction that “Honesty is the|er rooting of Christian principles. ' We| Wnat more can Norwich dodandkhnw RS NG DRk T oderis chiek ,:,,_(,c:;,d souns man Md‘w:m s Mings — i reh best policy” and that rizht will Win in|must all regard ourselves as responsi-!can it be done? I shall not undertake 10 | jiva C"uOna Lord, ome falth, one bap- | Stopped and the occunants of the machine |, B Park Congregational C';‘“mh the | God's beantitul world. 1n our desire for|ble for the civic Telations Of our city |answer these. questions; for the Wisdom | {igm.""as his text. Evidently St Paul | asanited. were on Saturday in the New | “But You rust ask some miracle dear At Park Consrelimo;nl]{:w: D. D, |a city where civie righteousness will|and country. ~ and experience of able men are occupied | found in Thesus dissenters, men such as | London police court bound over to the | oy SURIT 0 et Alip Sa-m?e ' at the Sunday |find 2 large place, the individual must Taftville Congregational Church. with this matter. I will point out a {eW | are found today, who will declare “Oh, | Superior court for trial. The accused == g Lo gy ‘Rev. Dr. Howe took his | be recognized and made conscious of his God's Interest in City Buildiff was|lnes of action which, it scems to me |one religion is as zood as another!" etc.|each gave a bond for appearance in the | “Then let it be that T shall do much good morning service. Rev. Dr. And ¥now it not,” the humble saint re- plied. And so this was the miracle: Whene'er He could not see the shadow which he threw, s t had the ‘power to comfort. bleds and el Dut all the £ood it did he never Jmew. imnly went along his path, we'nz wondrous fragrance, Wke the flower 5 mar That cgerrs by nizht, unconscious of its Power. Ah! he whose life is wholly lived for unewervingly - the pilgrim rih talk bout. Boulevards, parks, | them how to live in the best manner, and | and taught now @s it was preached and |savs Dostor Connor. formerly of Johns 3 g 5 i L ; must devise ways to accomplish this. It | inculeated by anostles deputed by | Hopkins “hospital, Thowyands ot " men | Knowe, nod the Balf of all the good extension, the location of railway termi-|must lead them in ways of righteous- | the Redeemer to ch all nations-—the |sullering from fatal disedses would be tn| o {°%, -oont ~ revealing Jogment R lesser | ness, carefully dirceting . their po unbroken in its unity. in its creed | DeTfect health. today were it not for th Day ! stations X esser | ne: i 3 ¥ roken in its unity. n its crved | feadly drug nicotine. Ston the habit now T e (N P uestions im the vital maiter of civic|mind and of bods, 5o that they wi ¢ Lond. one faith, one baptiem” | Befond (3o Tate 1 ook ot The Christiag The roots of a safe and|come the s and. ornament to rid yourself of the tobaceo habit in any . * run deeper than the |city which ched over them. % 2 |form. ~ Just go to amy up-to-date frux 1N TUE DESERT. e e [t thiy i met bofone thEw Removes New Lopdon Pastor. [store and_get”some Nicotol tablets: ‘take | Out in ‘the silence of the Gesert land of a city’s financial bud-|best teachers, they White on a visit to New London last | them as dirccted and lof the pernicious | The heavem's aich eneire et or the eclaration of dividends. The the Instruction be simple, clear, sueh as | Sunday to administer the sacrament of [HADIC QWCkly vaniahes, “Druggints refund | | WM 0 ceor ung 1 el 01 iame and glory of a eity, the civic|the scholars can reccive ‘and assimilate: | confirmation t0 a large class /at fhe |the money if they fall. De wure to read glorious Tight pride of a ‘community like Norwich |for no one teaches more than the pupil | Church of n"rY \\x of Perpetual Hely. | [octor Connor, soon to r in this;There gleamed o'er earth a beaty weirdly 3 ot something deener d re [learns. Let us not forget that the good | Rt. Rev. John J. Nilan, bishon fart- | paper. Tt tells of the d T of nicotine rand. ¢ e s 1o wwore than the lemahacktan | forts reiowed Fev Trsomilie sCmtos | R e o o e aotily iaties T articular political party. The|may have an nee which will be of |ski, pastor of the church. and appointed |meantime try Nicotol tablets: you Wil be f gand, L and political structures of men, | G fes Sy = Y = ide of the community, the|— ‘ers of rock crept slowly into glory #nd good name of the ity mus = sight b e o e l/ Through mists that gathered at unheard nen; the rich bleszed fruitage of those | command. the Arab bowed his head, "Neath shadows of unmoving midnight blue, \ And mused in wonder o'er the countless dead Who mingle with the dust long dges through Then night's sweet spirit shook her wings d spread The desert peace that close and closer drew. —Catherine Taylor, in the Poets’ Maga- zine. HUMCK GF THE DAY “So the doctor to!ld you to go to & ‘\\'hax was the nature of the trouble?” 1 went to him to collect a billy'—De- troit Gatewal. West—Why did Briggs give up his den?” North—He was digging in it and struck a lot of fishing worms.—New York Post. oobleigh's marriage was the result of love at first sizht.” : “Dut, he married a clalirvoyant, didn't “Oh, say love n—Buffalo Exprees. at second sight, zested that you quit the heetic X to nature, didm't o and sit in the —Poston Tran- well, palmroom seript. “How many hours a day ought & mu- sician to_practic “To what do you refer.” inquired the applicant for increased compensation ; music or economy?"—Washington Star. “A friend in need is a friend indeed.” smilingly said the pawnbroker as he reached for. a client’s timepiece, “I'm no friend of yours, Scrooge,” said the needy one. “Mebbe not.” chuckled the other, “but the fact remairs that you're putting up with me."—Buffalo Express. The Gir'—Do you think it is safe to be married in the ai The Aviator—Just as safe as om the ground.—Edinburgh Scotsman. She—You use to say that you were un- worthy of me. He—Well, what if T did? Sho—Nothing. Only, you seem fo be soending your married life trying to prove it.—Boston Transeript. He looked desperately into vacaney. “I have had | ¥ misgivings.” he said, in a dull, passion.ess voice, ‘but now I am sure. Your laugh shows me you are ut- terly heartiess.s “Heavens!” she cried in terror, did open my mouth as wide as that?"—Stray Stories. \ “How do you like your new car?” ask- ed the Lizzie driver. “Great,” replied the Big Six driver. “It runs so smoothly you ean‘t feel it. Not a bit of noise, you can’t hear it. Per- fect ignition. you can’t smell a thing. And speed—why it whizzes! You can't see it.” fust be some ear,” ventured the Liz- zie driver. “Canst feel it, can’t smell it can't hear it. can't see it! How do you know it is thore?"—Cincinnati Enquirer. THE KALEIDOSCOPE ° Miss M. Annie Poage, newspaper woman of Ashland, Ky., has been appointed aid- de-camp, with the rank of colonel, on the staff of the governor of that state. A race horse was tried by courtmar- tial and sentenced to death by the bolshe- viki on a charge of having won a cup of- fered by the former czar and 80, “having dealings with the old regime™ Agents of the department of the in- terior report that Indian women are rapidly tak'ng up the ways of wo- men in houssveepine and are fast ac- quiring the habits of tidiness that were so difficalt to teach them’ when work was first started. By ancient right the archbishop of Canterbury is the only man in England who has the power to give to a layman a degree of medicine. He may con- fer degrees of law, music or art on those whom he regards as haying proved them- séives worthy-of such honors. The daughter of a Parasian artist was married recently in a bridal gown -of white satin beautifully and uniquely painted by the friends and colleagues of her father. The colors used were so dainty and delicate that, strange to say. the effect of the dress was beautiful and harmonious. Every woman Ifi the village of Huspta Pelayo, in the Province of Gi ain, hes decided 1o emigrate to the United States, and the American consul at Mad-1 has jssued twent pags- ports, The familles of the emigrants will follow as soon as the men are settled in America. ] It is reported that a new light. greatly superior to any known, hca been perfected in London. shows the full value of colors most equal to daylight. It o be especally useful in