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und Qoufied 125 YEARS OLD Sutucrpricn prics 13 a week; e & mooth; 00 » - Eatemd at the Postsffics ut Normish; Comn. as e classt matiar Teirpusee Caile, Bulcus Badass Oftee . Bulletis Ediiorial Roems, 854 Rullettn Job Oics, 352 ®Wixantic Ofice. 23 Church St Telephons M8 WERSER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Praw 3h exclusively enttied aae for republicatien of all iews daOateh Clherwise crediied te iocal roms published 'WEEK ENDING NOV. 5th, 1921 11,688 ARMISTICE DAY oy Pl Be & cerer i Joura tmor INTEREST ¥ eing o7 In the Wor t Rhat the repor . Rrranee terest w t s i fonly there faining the liation what was t > agh are those who have been ent be a should be turned . Brit ritory %es not wants tc ritain S, pecttve of a change or th et wants acquirs m those re Jhls eountry in f Puch terttory While Great Pritain Porrowers for war pu paying o ying the in Authdrity recently ‘been given a comx by congress to negotiate the paymens buch loane. In order to get out of the puddied financial situstion direetly fol wing the war there has been an under- Janding that:the payment.of the Interest the cans would not -be-forced for 0 along with other oses has not been thereon. thres years. That period !s drawing to s close and i keeplng with the under- standing the British are now placing in thelr-budget the sum that will be nec- essary to meet the interest on the loan 2nd the accumulated interest, which by the way is what this government in its budget for next year is already antici- Dating. Fifty million pounds is) anmounced to the house of commons as the sum ar- ranged to be pald yearly to this country @s interest. That means less in dollars than it “ordinarily would because of the depleted value of the pound but it will cpparently cover the interest om the BEritish debt of a trifle over four bil- lion whiie the aetual reduction of the debt will be left, to the future and time when such repayment would cost less than it would today. That detail, howaver, will rest in the hands of ‘the one just to see how she would look mak- They'll like it S0 well that I shouldn't be surprised if they toek to weaving their candle molds and curing hams and mak- ing maple syrup in the back yard!” “Pretty soonbwe'll be back in a rega- lar, nice, old-fashioned world," chirped the man who was reading the newspaper. “It is inevitable, now that the women have taken to carrying their market bas- kets and picking out food themselves in- stead of telephoning and getting the meals, because there aren't any cooks to hire or money to pay them, if there were. And the stores are ajl adyertising kitch- Gnette aprons with fluffydoodles around the edges to make them look Pute! Hardly any woman could Tesist buying ing a noise like a stage parlor maid own dress goods and pouring tallow Into “You ought to take something sirong v authorized commission to @ jrange. A SUPERPOWER SYSTEM. Engineers of the United States geolog- tua slopment i can e obtained therefrom 1 less figure. mueh as In the Noi wich lical survey after a careful stndy of the n have proposed an extensive de of the natural facilities that sre avilable in this part of the country it which for various reasons have been permitted to He dormant while great ex- !pense was invoived in producing results is to be one load statlons on this superpower r- | when you get this way,” the cynical man informed him. “Any woman who tried to boil a syrup kettlo in the back yard would be laid out cold by the Amalga- mated Janitors’ union. The kettle would have to be non-union or something. And all the women who wear Kkitchenette aprons live in Kitchenettes with a bed shutting into the wall paper, and the amount_ of housekeeping they do could be put into a thimble and rattle around! “After Claude leaves i the morning for work they sit on onme of the three a | chairs the apartment boasts and gaze in perfect despair as the two plates, cups and saucers stacked up in the sink wait- ing to be laved. It is fortunate there stem erest attaches hereabouts to the pro- more thay the usual amount of sa’. Nerwich has developed hydro ric power plants in two instances and it is so linked up with the power m through New England that it can in and give power for meeting the mirements as they may arise over a area, but under the coastal sys far greater development is consid- than has herctefore been contem- Vhen it is reallzed that a quarter of ry's population Is located in tha tes from the Mason and Dixor at there are 18 rallroads, | ndustrial plants util- and that there are tremendous sums coal bills while thou- housands of horse power nir waste overy day through | 4 proper’y harness it and als- | ! nts where it can be ut nd is desired, it ¥ plain that the| cheaper power wheth- water or steam is by no ‘ e that 50 mylicn | ries would be reduced that will cost rtunity for Imoress ed the’ good dations. TIE LYNN EXPERIMENT. Roge injon coneera- cration in this i heen shown to exist ays th tro'ley company, that the o L car filled With passengers rolley svstems shomld be pre- and rous ke asn't done ten cents and mor and more frequent e | of Bridee | 4 upon guesswork and hoyes . n approached through such carried out in Lynn, which ing of comsideration in EDITORIAL NOTES. Droper respect to th ied by in parade. | man on the corner says: Don't| vy failing to show pre er wo minut your flag, s of sil re- nt prayer the anniversary cele- ail his boasting, i nat- how much Senator wonld do If he was given plenty to wonder just expected Mayor nuance of the same methods Hylan omises the That js of course what kgrs called for, though Russia should partict- srence that would not be 1 such a country to any might be reached. ntly the weatherman believes to get a move on and fll up brooks and reservoirs and the way for winter, It impossible to think of the ap- proach of Thanksgiving without recall- the good points connected with do- your Christmas shopping ear!: Marshal Foch and Premler Briand | know better than to look or listen to Senator Watson When sesking the atti- tude of this country toward France. As Alexander becomes the king of Jugoslavia he eannot fall to reflect upon |the added uneasiness that mu nd those who wear crowns ponds, thus clear needs these - a by ite resly concerning its fail- to pay the loan from a Chl 20 bank when due hastens to give assurance tiy payment is only delayed. It appreciates if it docan’t pay that it can mever bor- krow any mors. the size of a times. rible on one's manicure? of prevaring foodstufis for dinner is to opens two and snap on the electricity under the tea Kett lalior removes the polish irom the finger- na are not invited out, th corner to the ice cream parlor and have a chocolate sundge, over police mob are no more, because the sink is about quart pan of the olden “Isn't cooking, they cry, perfectly ter- Their metfiod in_cans and six paper bags , but you've no idea how all that When 1t is Juncheon time, if they run around the About § o'clock, all ey have to call out the rves to save human lives iround every deljcatessen town, 1 n the crusk she had to buy one—and Wi apiece, June strawberries in January and lettuce from California, to say nothing of gold-plated tomatoes and artichokes that have just been released from the vaults of the jewelry stores. pies that are made for a quarter aad sell for 75 cents, cream pufls containing a teaspoonful of whipped eggwhite and meathalls comprising what- ever was left over from the day before— all hurtle through the air to wildly grab- bing hands of fratic customers who had no idea it wgs so late. “And, goodness, won't Claude be maa when he gets in to find that dinner isn't even started? But when you go' to the club for bridge or to the’other side of town to spend the afternoon it Is im- possible to get back in time—and this slaving all day long at housework just doesn't pay because nobody ever appre- ciates it. “Why, the’ day she stayed home and damned two pairs of Claude’s soeks, didn’t he raise the most terrible row when he found all the buttons gone from his best shirts and his spring overcoat full of moth holes? Men are absolutely unreasonable, my dear! o human man comprehends what a woman does for him or how she perma- nently wrinkles her forehead planning to save him meney by slaving economically, For instance, when the shops are charg- ing what tRey are for gowns and wraps, wouldn’t you think sman wodld be grate- ful to have his wife progressive enough to try to do a few things for herself? Of course, not having a sewing machine, le the elec tric vmes do cost, they are so much easier {o run—and, of course, it was a shame, letting the electric iron stand on that $20-a-yard dress goods while she an- swered the telephone, and then not being able at ‘all to match it, so the whole af- fair had to be discarded. “Besides working so hard has com- pletely upset her and she is leaving next wegk for a hundred-dollar-a-week sani- tarium to recuper: Where do you get this stuff about women turning old-fash- ioned and cnergatic? “I dow't know where I got it.” said the first man in subdued tones, “but I seem to know where I am going to drop establishmeni. Smoked goose at §2 a|it. and that's . right here!"—Chicago pound and African plums at $50 cents | News. c————es- | DOrarily called back from where he ODD iINCIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY The Explosion of the “Peacemaker” 1t is not possible te find on the pages disaster were marked, 4s MIgNU ve ex- of a hundred years history the record| pected t{) !':A;nl excitement. }1‘1 “}.‘&I ¢ catas ¢ than that| Dot .until the following day that the of @ more awful catastrophe than that| Nt untli the Tollowing day that the which occurred on board the shiD, washington. The hodies were carried Princeton, Commodore Stockton, on|to the Presidential Mansion at the the afternoon of February 28, 1844,| President's request and deposited in whilst under way on the River Poto- ””Sd'm;du‘}@":ds e o mac, some fifteen miles below Wash-{ fyneral and the city was filled with those who came to witness the sol- ar st r had just heen con-|emn rites and pomp of the occasion, structed in the city of Philadelphia|the bustle of business being hushed at coording to improved plans enthusi- astcally advocated by Capt, Stockton, who hdd also superintended the cast- e guns constitufing the steam- s armament. It was principally to exhibit the superiority of these new and formidabl> weapons of war that tockton iss A cards of invitation to| brifliant company of both! it the magnificent ship and excursion down the river. was remarkal The at 11 o'clock a large party of distin- guished personages assembled at thel wharf, including President John Tyler, | in glittering uniforms, ail of net except Mr. Spep as \ number of forcign ministers, | ere to take the trip of inspee- | - A boat was taken to convey the dis- 1 guests to_the Princeton and Siar Spangled Banner” was pla ed as they went aboard. Shortly after| the start was made there were a num- | haval manoeuvres and evolu-| stood just a moment None of the before. g dies were near enough to the explosion to be seriously hu although several of them had their gowns bespattered with blood and a few of them had narrow ecscanes The first hours after the appalling an early hour. There was a long fu- procession and minute guns we: fired from the west tqrrace of the Cap- | itol grounds, from the avy vard and| from other points as the cavalcade proceeded on its route. ©0 one was ever able to explain the reason for th¢ explosion of the big gun. It had been fired a number of times hefore the distinguished party boarded. the Princeton. It had been tested with a charge of forty-nine pounds of powder, had frequently heen fired with thirty and it exploded with twenty-five. (Tomorrow—A Nation's Ungrateful- ness) READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 The Mento-Vitals Stockton's great gum, called| Reading character is like most every- “The Peacemaker, was| (hing else. Theoretically you can draw h shot, with the intention hard and lines. Practically, you'll , triral of its strength and | find that not everybody fits entirely with; efficiency. The sun was i o lee- | in classifications. ward a behind it stood Capt. Stock-| for i ce, the three types bout it were crowded a number| o mental physical and vital, A ritarie great many people will fail entirely with- On firing t in one or the other of these classifications. succeeded—the whole s shook and dense of smoke = ————— = whole ipup on the| when this blew away ul and heartrending scene pre-* sented itself to the view of the hushed agonized spectators. The gun had | burst o a point three or four feet from | the breech and scattered death and uction all around Secretary of State A. P. Upshur was found to be badly cut over the eyes| legs, his clothes being lit- torn from his body. He expired in a very few minutes. Secrctary of avy Thomas W. Gilmer, under diréction the power of this cun was tested, was found equal- ¢ injured, and died before any assistance could be secured| 0 had recently returned | tion as charge d‘affaires to Belgium, had his arms and one of his legs cut off, and died Fhortly! after the explosion, as did also Mr. Gardiner, of Néw York, one of whose daughters subsequently became the wifc of President Tyler, and Com- modore Kennon. The flags of the Union were placed,over the dead bodles as their windin® sheets. Dehind the gun the scene was less alarming. Capt. Stockton, who was| knocked down and somewhat injured | and had the hair of his head and face| burnt off, was able to arise without| assistance. Shreiks of woe were heard from every quarter. In addition to thé deaths o number of sailors were badly_wounded and one dead. Presi- dent’ Tyler himself was saved only by the merest ccident. having been tem- CUT. THIS OUT OLD ENGLISH RECIPE FOR CA- TARRH, CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES If you know of someone Who is troubled catarrhal deafness, head noises or ordinary catarrh, cut out this formula and hand it to them and you may have been the means of saving some poor suf- ferer perhaps from total deafness. In England scientists for a long time past have recognized that catarrh is a consti- tutional disease and necessarily requires constitutional treatment. Sprays, inhalers and nose douches are liable fo irritate the delicate air passages and force the disease into the middie ear, which frequently means total deafness, or else the disease may be driven down the air passages towards the lungs, which is equally as dangerous. The following for- mula, which is used extensively in the damp English climate, is a constitutional treatment and should prove especially efficatious to sufferers here who live un- der more favorable climate conditions. Secure from vour druggist 1 ounce of Parmint (double strength). Take this home and add to it 1-4 pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar; stir until dissolved. Take one tablespoonful four Mr. Maxey. from his pos times a day. This will often bring quick relief from distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing | become easy and hearing improve as the | inflammation in_the eustachian tubes is | reduced. Parmint used in this way acts | directly upon the blood and mucous sur- faces of the system and haga tonic action that helps to obtain the desired results. preparation is easy to malke. costs s.pleasant to take. Ivery per- catarrh or head noses or is | hard of hearing should give this treat- WHAT'S IN A NAME? A name may mean nothing—or it may mean everything. A horse is a horse, whether he be drawing a hay cart or winning a race. A meal is a meal, whether it be served on .he crockery of a beanery or the delicate Sevres of the pre- tentious hostelry. Tea is tea, whether it be a flavor- Tess apology or the world’s finest. What have you said when you say “tea”? Nothing! Qualify it by the addition of one word— LIPTON’S-—and you've said everything—purity, strength, qual- ity, aroma and deliciousness, Because LIPTON’S means everything in tea, it enjoys the largest sale in the world. Ask your grocer for Lipton’s Yellow Label Tea. If he does not sell it, send us his name and address and we will mail you a FREE sample and give you the name of a grocer who can supply you. Thomas J. Lipton, Ine., Hoboken, N. J. THE DIME SAVING BANK OF NORWICH The regular Semi-Annual Dividend has been declared at the rate of 4 per cent. a year from the earnings of the past six months, and will be pay- able or and after November 15, 1921, FRANK L. WOODARD, Treasurer. “You Can Do No Better Than Buy Our Wurst.” No Salad Complete Withou Thumm’s Home-Made Mayonnaise THUMM'S DELICATESSEN STORE 40 Franklin Street many 1 » will partake of yome of Y.l;e cfimemua of each of two of these ¥ You know that the vital type for in- stance is muarked by the face which is another—and his not a-half bad sory for a financier. His wife, of the hale féllow-well-met species, 1s a highly entertaining type. There is | ja_versitility about th ntral character | Don Mike that makes him fmmediately {a graduate of th ‘types, and is in short, wh business man to have. The vital type has special advantages_in the acquisitlan of brogdest between the ears, with a round- ed chin, and that the mental type is broadest across the top of the head in the region above the eyes. But suppose you find a person who is broad above the oves and between the ears and whose chin, instead of being pointed or square is rounded. And supfose that in addition the bodily bulld of that person’ tend to the round rather than the square and big- bonded. Wflll, you'll find that such a per- son partakes of the menmtal characteris- tics of both the mental and the vital might be termed a mento-yital type. . It's a migitty efficient, equipment for a of the character of the Father of ~ His |ard for American patriotism. Country in order to set a higher stand- Stories That Recall Othars A Pointed Question. A youngster was playing football in his front yard. His father cautioned him about breaking a avindow, atd sug- gested that he go into the backyard to finish his game. The lad did so and about the first kick he made in the backyard the bail landed in the middle of a big window. Nelther father mor son sald anything till at the supper table when the youns- ster looked up at his dad and saide “Well, dad, what difference dfd it make which window I broke' Removing the Trouple. Drofits, as has been explained in a previ- ous article. Add to this Ppractical predi- leetion and Judgment the equipment of 2 high mentallty, and you have a combina~ tion that 13 suited not only for business. but for very big business if it is develop-. ed properly. Tomerrew—Limber Joints NEW BOOKS The Pride of Palomar. By Peter B. Kyne. Cloth, 372 pages, illustrated by Dean Cornwell. and H. R. Baliinger Published by Cosmopolitan Book Cor- poration, New York. Price $2. This new movel, without the custom- devices of exagzeration and distor- gled A prominent man whose hotme is on the outskirts began to miss his chickens and decided he would set traps and catch the rats. the air redolent with an unmistakable odor for in one trap reposed not a rat dut a skunk. The man was a bit su i CHILD TRAINING AT HOME i' to catch the chicken taker but troubles had only begun for it was neg- cssary to remove the odorous chicken thief from the trap in whkich been caught and it was not the job.he hankered for. . ‘The next morning found rised. He was it had cific Coasts Japanese question and shows pages of quick Irish wit and character drawings. bullds itself as a true blue good sport, her wealthy father is ana lasting] the author has presented an inte { swudy Our Debt to France—What did for us when no one else would help us and he belleves that a children of America services rendered by tion draws a graphic picture of the Pa- why the west has “been so pers its outerles. nt in Though dealing h a biz problem there is nevertheless a delightful story told in Ky clever style. There ar there are others of real pathos, pages of swift ad- veptures and intrlgue and of goiden ro- mace that seems to fit supremely well | in its plcturesque California setting. There are surprises in surprising number and there are excellent examples of The eastern girl about wh the story popula: In addition to writihg = fighting s con- that is in feminine characters and sts and produced a volume sure to be much read Lafayette | By James Hosmer Paper, 52 pages. Penniman, Phila- Did ¥or America. Panniman. Litt. D. Published by J. H delphia i dica 1 B | In a pamphiet dedicated to the fath- | erless children of France Dr. Penniman, | Free Academy, has told the wonderful story of what France long as the ave morsel of food they should sha it with the or- | phans of France. Likswise does he teli | in a concise and interesting w the { Lafayvette to this | | | country. George Washington ag Mt. Vermon on the Potomaec. By mes Ho er Pen- | niman Litt. D. Pa 72 pages. Pub- lished by the Mount Vernon Ladies | Association of the Union, Mount V. nen, Va. !‘ In Dr. Penniman's irgeresting style | there is told the story Washington | at Mount Vernon on the Potomac, writ- ten with the idea of giving a ciearer idea | pathy. { wor Music in the Home. By Edna Everett, Author of the Everett Kindergarten Songs. In speaking of the needs of a povert: stricken family of Gur acquaintance, @ icnd once said to me. in shocked and disapproving tomes, “And they have a ano! Think of it, a piano! And those seven children have not enough to eat, | and are always needing help. T think| that familgdeserves no help and no sym- | A’ plano, of all thing: ortunate children!” I replied. . “Per-| haps the piano makes them forget the lack of food and coal and kegps them off the streete. I must call and see that| piano,” which T dld, forthwith. T could soarcely conceal my astonish- ment at the transformation in this erst- | while home of poverty and uncleanliness. The piamo, which was the only object the name of a piece of furnifiire, shone from recent polishings, and fioor and -every object within range of vision had,heen scrubbed and rubbed to make it a prover assaciate for the piano. “Sure,""said the mother, beaming with pride and Dblissfully unconscious of the tales concerning t family extrava- gance, “'tis a grand thing for’ theschil- dren. They don't never go out nights | now, and.” mpressively, “you fust ought | to hear Ma play—néver had a lesson | and pk everythipg, by ear. And it's| the me with Eillen. She plays grand. Oh, they all take turns. It's too bad the girls ain’t here to play for you, and the they keep the house clean! You see r friends come to see them now.” 1 tried to look my grief at missing the musical (?) treat, expressed my admira- tion for the piano, my interest in the wel- of the family, and reparted re- ng. My theory had been vindicated, Music, in that home, as in every oth- er, is as much a ecessity as food and clothing Why expect the poor to be tisfled h food alone while their souls starve for the things that make worth-while, and, In many cases, barely endurable. Many compiain that the workins man is receiving hizh wages and.“wasting™ his money on a piano, a vietrola, or oth- er musical instrument and in paying for music lessons for his chfldren. Every child has the right to masic In the home. It 18 essential to health and thi re jo Electric Heaters B5.00 uuiives The Norwich Electric Co. It will keep chfldren in the| d cause them to carrs with them memories Which may save them in times of temptation, Afraid to View His Own Play. George Bernard Shaw went 1 during the first perf > sieep mance of hiy play The moral vaiues of “good” music “feartbreak House,” and siepl more cannot be overestimauted, w! the de-lthan than an hour. He's a fine play- unspeakable “jazz” has no more | wright and a better critic—Cleveland place in the home than trashy and im-| piain Dealer. mo: 1 literatyre. en will go where they find mu- c_and song, companionship and. hap- Diness. If they find these in tne home, they will not search for them elscwhere. and the problem of keeping children at home will be happily solved. Perents will find the following books helpful: Liberty Chorus Song Book, ed- ited by Anne Shaw Faulkner, published by McKinley Music Co. Chicago; What is Good Musle? by W. J. Henderson, pub- 1 C. Scribner's Sons of New re are a number of collections of ar so as Home Songs, published by the Oliver Ditson Company, which encourage children to sing with their parents Another singable lttle book is entitiad Songs For the Little Child” by Miss r, and Mrs. Ph n a by Abingdon New York. 014 used in it with vers- nson as well as s Baker. folk mu es by Ros original v Brewers Willing to Help. It Is sugzested that drugzists have the brewers deliver prescriptions. We hear no objections from the brewers. They appear perfectly willing to co-operate.— ling Plitsburgh Gazette-Times. His santanic majesty is alwave ting something for nothing. OLD PEOPLE Bitro-Phosphate feeds the nerves and old people need it to make them feel and look younger. It's the one best nerve builder for weak, nerve-exhaust- ed men and women and that is why Lee & Ossood Co. guarantees it. You want the Vitamine in Yeast Hereitis ina tiny tables makes it easy to take NDMA made a plaster out of mustard but it blistered and burned all the skin from your back—then science came forth with a mustard plaster non-blistering and better for you. And so—the world progresses and goes forward in chemistry and medicine as well asin ev,frything else. Now Comes Vitamine from Yeast Put up in Tablets—Easy to Take EBveryone knows the wonderful health-giving value of Vitamine—and now —out of the very finest yeast the chemist secures a “Concentrate,” four times as powerful in “‘Vitdmine B,” as yeast. He puts 5 grains (equivalent to 20 grains of yeast) into each tablet. Then in addition the chumst.add. 114 grains of concentrate, “Fat Soluble A Vitamine.” To this 634 grains of highly concentrated Vitamine substance he adds Calcium and Sodium Glycerophosphates, a tiny speck of Cascarine and Capsicum to make the tablets bring results quicker—more beneficial—more s‘cieghfically correct. A proper dose—made expressly for medicine with objectionel fermenting elements left out. These tiny “Phos-Pho Vifamine™ tablets have produced splendid and most unusual results for men and women who were in poor healsh, or troubled with complaints noted on the right. The tablets are easy to take and agree perfectly with a weak stomach. Be sure to get the genuine Phos- Pho Vitamine in orange colored carton. 60 Tablets $1.00 Irving’s PHOS-PHO VITAMINE TABLETS ASK YOUR DOCTOR Pho Vi .A Il. o by ted /o afford the public scientific, easy, reliable, convenient, and resultful method of procuring the Vitamine found in yeast and by combina- tion with other vitamine, etc.,to insure quicker and better results. YEAST VITAMINE FOR STRENGTH these tablets are used by men and women as tonic. Harmiess a8 food—build yeu ©p quickly. FOR THE BLOOD sadcomplesion—enrich.pur- ify the blood, banish pimples, carbuacies, bails asd FOR STOMACH and indigestion troubles these ‘tablets assist nature to assimulate tood properly. FOR BRAIN WORKERS who lack outdoos execrise and need @ streagthening tonic to keep them Stand clert. FOR THIN PEOPLE who wish toround out the hollow places and gain & few pounds of sclid Sesh sad weight. FOR CONSTIPATION, Vitamine is ssid tobo the only cure known. As a rule, relief comes very Quickly from reguler use of these tablets. FOR INVALIDS, these tablets sgree with the HARMLESS AS ANY FOOD~—Write for afres folder to Dept. 5. You will be glad you seat for it, o8 sk your druggist, IRVING'S LABORATORY; Dept. § Wheeling, W. Va. Send me free l-aaa-: Phamphiet, $1.00 plus e cax for oe laree Name £ Address