Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 4, 1922, Page 4

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| . e air, and it 1s fo be expected tigt julty ag radical changes and quite js Hartling Sl NORWICH BULLETIN and Courier " 126 YEARS OLD Tiged e dag B e sger exot Sungg, fubeeription price 130 & week: 60 o monih: $0.09 » poar Eutwet «: o Posiofics @ Norwich, Cons, e dies mater Teleposs Norwich, Saturday, Nov. 4, 102 gl Sttt et i BLBEER OF THE ASLICIATEW PRESS, ™ B exciustvety entitied @ 0 e for sepublication ot vem dnpnich erecited to 4 or ot ot ted to pger aod also e iccal oews bublished o republication ot wectal cese g osiches hereln are also reservec. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING OCT. 28th, 1922 11,797 BEPUBLICAN TICKET ° United States Semator GEORGE P. McLEAN, Simsbury Gaverne2 CHARLES A. TEMPLETON. Waterbury Lieutenagt Govermer HIRAM BINGHAM, New Haven State Seeretary FRANCIS A. PALLOTTL Hartford State Treasurer G. HAROLD GILPATRIC, Putnam. Atforney Gemeral FRANE E. HEALY, Windsor Locks Comptroller FREDERICK M. SALMON. Westport Congressman, Second District RICHARD P. FREEMAN. New London State Sematers Dist. 18th—ERNEST E.. n. th—WILLIAM @. PARK, Sprague. th—-CLARENCE M. CHILD, Wood- RLES 'H. Count; SIDNEY A. BROW w London ING. Norwieh reseptatives cuu. V. WENDLETON, €. WORTH. THE SPELLACY DISCLOSURES. When Thomas J. Spellacy charged up expenses to the government when &s assistant attorney gemeral he was traveling into New England in the in- lerests of the presidential candidacy of A Mitchell Palmer he didn't thir would be known. In fact, he Qidm't : tend that it should be, Even when it has beeg brought public attention he doesn't deny it, cause the facts do not » denal, but he undert to draw the fire of the charge by directing attention $o_the manner in which the facts w pbtained. That doesn’t alter the situa tion as to his conduct and it certainly foesn't eliminate the fact that he was drawing governmént expense mon:y for other than government work, and wanted It kept quict. y As to thé manner in which it was lisclosed. that he had ofiarged up out- sde expepses to the government it might be 'said that that has no beari Bo his act, but on the ofher hand, as pointed out by Senator McLean when L Msked his opinion of the matter, it has, for even though it was revealed by his gpcretary it was for the purpose of pro- Yecting herseif against’ the possibility of being considered a party to the act tpat Wnch revelations were made, and it wiil Bo remembered it was at that time when all sorts of exfravagancs wis be- ing piled up\at Washington and when Ihere was meed of checking all, was jhd unfustified expenditures, wad large or small Thus Candidate Spellacy has phown up in his own nest. and it matter which the ‘negple of C ire interested in wiflle they are beinz falled upon tg suppart such a candidacy 3t the polls. » good 1o 3y out that the office records were stolen. If such records didn't exist they !Joulda't have beem stolem, bit: in their & servicd to the public has ,morflud, and under such circum- service {p the public is greater to the indiyidual FIGHTING MACHINES IN THE AIR. General Mitohell of tho government alr gervice wasn't trying to outdo Juls Verne when he made his predictisus conterning glant airships . tbat would permit of mirplanes taking of from* and landing on thelr backs aud hovering far up in the thin air waitivg to repsl umy attacks that might | be made by ihose logking for tfouble He is serious about it, quite the same 49 Be was when he expressed his confl- fencs | pthe ability. of the bombing planes and declared that they had beea feveloped ta.the point where they could . blow the navies oft the seas and thé® battleships were therefors ~ obsolete, 2 tact which has been'given a ‘greater de- ree of support tham was believed pos- sible at the thpe. Being put to the results have been obtained which ur. prise not & few. They haye indicated the development that has taken place in gomngction with the navigation of secomplishments | Will be chieved in the alr as have beed, on the water since steam driven vesséy re- | rl-e-d those depending upon the ind. itchell's idea cannot be bmes, but in view of what has been ac- romplished it s impossible so discredit |t e ecarrying out In time of his views It he idea of making war asd prepar- Whenever it is pletured that this or whiclr he Whe: .mm@"“‘”’*w m «‘2& but one which emphasizes the fact that limitation of armament should serve to preventsbetore the race to keep up with and outdistance the other .fellaw: g too far. ., WHAT CONNECTICUT WAN What Commecticut- wants 3; the hegd 6t its state government is a sound and successful business administrator, and that is what_it will be assured by the electio not Charles A. Templeton, at present lieutenant gevernor of the stale, who can be relied upon to continue thyt same financlally gound buginess gdm.n- istration which the state has heen re- ceiving: for the past several years. Connecticut has been doing businoss on the basis of its needs, and increas- ing expenditures only for such needs as have been imperative for the general good. Expenditures have beep cut, pro: jects which could wait have been made to and economy has been exercised, and as the result over eight and a half lion dollars -have been takem. off the state debt, there is -a cagh surplus of over three and a half miilion dollars and the sinking fund now amotnting to over ten million dollars will take caye of all obligations when due. That is a bysiness administration of which Connecticyt has .reason to b: proud. It is the kind of gdministraticn that should be continued, and will be if the voters of Commecticut o their du and place. Mr, Templeton in the gov- ernor’s chair at Hartford. Connecticut in the administration just ending hasn't been piling up debts but has been meeting requirements as went along, cutting the garment' accord- ing to the cloth. Its continuance i da: sirable ¥ .1t is quite in eqntrast, however, with the record of the city.of New Haven of vhich the democratic candidate for gov- ernor is now mayor. in which Mr. FitzGerald has been ma; or the indebtedness of that.city -has i creased each year. It has. almost dou- bled from the $4,496,500 when he was clected umtil no wit is $9,167,500. It will cost for 1923 $6,175,000 to' run the city which is nearly twice what it cost Defore the FitzGerald regime gnd in ad- Cition there has been an increase of nearly $75,000,000° in the grand list through reassessments apd an increase of five teills in tne tax rate. What Connectlcut wants is sound fi- nancial managemept. Tt will 'get it thrdbugh - the eltcl on of 'Templeton »s governor. THE BASEBAUL POOLS. Much Interest will be taken in the Dplea that has been made by Ban Johw: son of baseball fans to the effect that the time has come when steps ought be takeén' for the purpose of. placing checs ubn {he. bas<hall. pools. which aire conducted egeh seagon, He indicatés that it s not going tobs an easy matter to deal with sych pogls. Whetherhe Iy Interestéd or not in th: wpuression of ggmbling it js evident that he deslyed to have basebgll Kept fige from uch Influences and In. speak- ing now hopes torarouse such sentimer:t as’ will make. ft possible to avold 3py more baseball scandals. From ail imn dications he s speaking for' the good of the game and desirous that it ghould be kepi free from any intimation that it in any way Involved in_the ppgls. Thig is a matter which will develop interest in more. than baseball ,circles. What' Mr. Johnsgn wlll haye,to say tol N b permit of such | matter a ¥ bers in regard to the suggestions “he- has to makk will get widespread attentian. Th: fagt that he says it'fs & hard nut to crack can be appreciated by all who know anything about the pools and the fact that they do bysiness on certain features of the baseball games. It is. however, not of recent development, and gien thopgh be mefers. ta erpokedness in the conduct of the pools it is appar- ently the effect It s “ha @ of basebgll, or’ may prompts hié aetion. % THOMAS NELSON One of the tion whose touches of PAGE. interesting writers of- fie- nen gave some real insile that part of the cauptry in as born and lived, was Nelson Page, whose stories of hase left an it tiat cannot be JJost. e kpew (he. spuih thoroughly and he was able to picture it in a deljghtfyl'manner. And not gl of his work was in the line of fietfon for he/thoroughly understood the politi= cal iscucs the hiktorical (gvents that stirred the south add the men of that part of the country. He was the ty cal southern gentleman whose lator years found ‘him brought intg gregter publicity through his_ appointment hy President . Wilson as ambassador to Italy. He was not regarded as one of the country's diplomats put he' measured up well to’ the ‘requirementstot the office during the trying days when Italy was torn by thé war, ‘and’ patleularly se when the Flume question was to the front. He has left interesting stories of Italy during the, .war though his ambassadorship was un.. eventful in comparison -with ‘many eth: ers he met such demands as were made upon him. -His career as a dipltmat did not bring him ‘inte the pl'ummlnec that Lis pen did. BOITORIAL NOTES. ®ven the Lonergdn . supporte saying “T'told you so” at the n vn-mu; made regarding Spellacy. A vote for the entlre republicgn tick- et next wet is R d ernment tgb u&fi““p:dqw e L i B A The woman “who advised would-be umnmm speakers ;q sit down when they - haye noq‘m{ to s3F kpaws it u always 3 quick apd safe mov GO The man on the corner says El‘vc. tions are not wen by, -3t Rome. and hoping that othefs will g0 to the poll§ in Fificient pm\lfl‘ p do the trick, " finds it too Mot in [..’x..u'?,, During the time |3 days, gnd| el THE MAN WHO TALKS Anniversary days serve moye than eng importapt vurposs. Fhey temd fo Axity of leading events in the mind. We are justified in, making double quick time in “forgetting some things, and the guicker - Mhia la daue the Wsiter for all Gencerned. -Quite the reverss of Jhis, there are some- things that must.bp re- membered;* to forget them 'is nething | short of. crimhal. Anniversgry days. tend to fix,the salient points gf history in pur minds. - Along this ling, Celumbus day 18 OF the bishest imugriyncs. becaupy 1t €overs a larger, grea of the political woria than any historica] event up te that i I was ‘ot only the record of the sdgi- tion, of ‘a new. hemisphere to the kngwn surfacs of the globe, but it more or | inyolved the policies of all the states of Europe. , It fs hardly too much to §gy that the! great discovery of Columbns marked the birth hour of modern g8og: raphy; it <compelled the re-mapping of the world. For exploration and ai ery it was clearly the crowning e\el f the fifteenth century. Cotnmbs ds ng olpmbus dpy aferds abunde °m! “Georse P. McLean is ong of the 1 most usetul merd- bers of the Upited States senate. As a member of the finance committee he was always in attendance and constantly mi.x §iter the interest of hd: state and has a mare feithfyl senator thap George P. )lckma CHAfiLE§ CDRTIE United Btatey Senator, Kansas. (Republian Whip) “I have served on the fipande committes’ with Sen- atér McLean, ard I desire the peeple of Cpnnecticut to knew that ne member sf that committes gave more time, or better, r wiser service in the censideration of Dbills referred to the cgmmittes, ineluding the tarff bill, passage of which meant so much to Connecticyt, s did Seastor Mclesn. Ths wark of the senator has brought honor to Connesticut.” REED SMOOT, United States Sgnater, Utah. all ‘the America: te 12nd Is g mgx" s mongy marg freely that business is onihti ugh. Sfiéfl sples of this greup of perhaps no more rapidly at-this season of the year. R Fetall prices shortage, however, has mn‘cd u: make | W H“n at the this improyemeat gomew! Fpat thal Nfl!‘fifl‘ wol- cordink to Frederic H. ety punds, 8ni p)gr~ and federal reserve ;!em of the : the lgr valy Reserve Bank of Bosten In hiE meathi M Ile -hu; is passing revies. i i s, i Mwulacwnu activity in this dm;lfi will withe) 2t present is better than § has Been &t any time since Novemper last vear. At seagon of the 1 time the woelen snd worsted indus- tle s were operating practically capasl- |{ain 8 T 1¥ and this conditidn iy again \mn, 2p- 128 the 1y ne! lg.q:l q The people have recognized this fact in ceLebrun; the centenary of thelr indepengence. The year is algo. remarkable for the lopg- standing disagreement between Chile gad Pery being settled through the kindly in- tervention of the Tnited States, which was celebrated on Oct. 18. ‘The name of Columbus Is closely identified witl of Santo Domingo, as it Wi (mnv Jarge Tegee Betwesn l s uul! &t this retall trade s bank con- \fl', inasmuch iment stores !.ng r! e “other {n their stocks of lower now than at Qct. s year marked the withdrgwal of the United States from the actual con- rel of the affgirs of the MNitle republic, 23 evidence was given of jts ability fer self government. - The condition of Mp3 ico is the leagtesatisfastory of all Latin Awerica, and it hag improved pver lpst|f ¢ar. Gegerally speaking, the Americas age.fast coming to their own. For keeg aud perting: . President Wilson had very few equals. In referring to those officials who spend most of their time . in vlanning fo election, Tre has this incigive femarl You think foo much about being Fe-elest- ed, it ery difficalt to Be worth re- electing.” ~ Of caurse thig i the king of talk that the avprage politician very much dislikes to hear, heeause it strikes |2 the very nerve centey of where most of them live. It goes without saying that the coyntry canmot get the best serviee from those who receive §7,500 a year for | serving themselves. It may be as tsue today as it was centuries ago that “!ll cannot -sezve two masters.” Whew men | are wost of the time preparing for re- election, it shows that they are quite shaky as to how their recerd imprespes thejr constityents. Where 3 m3n has to move heaven and earth io gof Rominated sccond time, and still harder a thisd | progched. Cptton manufactur'ng i yet on a cgpacity basis In thif Ifm ajthough the volume of output is im proving @k 2 resnlt of mych activity |tHis timg er of the three previous in the clath merkets. Tphen gil in all, |years. Women's apparel shops in Bos- conditions in the textlle industry gre|ton cppert the spme condition. Mer- amm:m encouragin ”d in view of chants have an buying from hand to gct that this ingustry 18 uu JpTgest | mouth for somestime. and spparently the In'New Enpland and 1 peculiar] increage in Dusiness this fall, together tive 10 changes in gereral bu with delavs in' shipmexis caused by ditions, it tends to - rn I pgt~ c has reduced thelr stocks look good for the immedipte futurd In At than they had anticl New England. Pated. This is g somewhat mimilar ui Other prominent New En;lwd indus- that which existed in the lat- tries which are improvi e ‘meta] {teF part of 1910. In fact, the whole lrades TM) were greatly qvl r?xsuim lmmmflua #ituation recelis vividly mo‘gmld ) p I‘Ilunluzd ;m S pvenmns at ek y & serlpus shopt- capacity. Their rate of"mnu!m“ vallable frelght cars. activity at the present time is rgmlvtlv efuhn'! 8 aFe pow In foree in good, however, pertly as a resull of |tFicts en certaln semmodities. The num- the large output of railwgy eauipment{ber ‘of bex garg pvailable fop use has and plans for expansion in thasutomoblle | been dwindling for severgl months, indugtry, and the activity fn the buliding | while st the Wpme time there was sn 3 seareity of I.n(;”s demgnd wh‘vh could net be metal trades | b filled. The reapop fer the apparent urplus & Fiage 3t the n-e thm i3 simely t on Sojme feads number of cars and on E Joan Tee . ':M:‘n :hv flhl)fl!ttdfl ‘xz:lw d : e late gpring F et g8 peripus prepuriion y [ time. it ig about time that he be yng e, fa i Tords ehpu P el u 4o 7o § mously elegted to gtay at hom Vo indicate that building weilvily BF n I fl.;mcuu )]M lg it rozy be teo much to expeet unalloyed {ably will net deeline 28 much this Wis The situation s enjoyment gand happiness in life. In some ter a& usual. . fraught wl(h mum” of both geed way or gther, we pay for the thing rates have shown an upwyrd |sad get. This apall \most things anart , tendepcy duripg the past’ mopth, eoh- from the great gifts of nature, like tinying the rise which begen during the shine, gir and (he tike, But when it !latter vart of August. 1n canljunath;; ! cames to the betterment of life through With it has come 3 larger volu the ' activities of oue fellow med, we : ogns by the New Hngland banks o they demand for their !:bq" their custemers. The imprevement hes |a; irue especially in the great field been very glight so. far, however, and sclgntlfic Inyention and diseovery, Few has had an eppreciahle éffect upgn the ')ugy; usyas things we enjoy more today than the l0ans of lhfl federal Reserve W ot nm; i an éra of Yy when srovement that has been msds in gur: Boston to its memper bonise. stodss of mrmnuse ar &-; Not very long 380 we gnyld pot| Retail trade u!hollt r.ht eum-g 7o werraated W Rar o Tor into the eaunirs In apy dipcctign [P OF the eountyy Ras been very much | Fue i m{.;g‘ e | without. nlowing throurh sand or mud The represenitative gFoup . af der words, lu-l iy ¢ p' for without going up er down slmost fm-|>8C "Hl ately nfiz 3 | passoble grades. This' 1§ now far the |FeTtm § ¢ steres in New Engiand which | p flm;a:: hand, &p iops sh_ ‘tage " n goods $rveiops in several New Englan 0¥ The volyme of CORLracts aWay new coustrustion in New Englead this while consldevabiy less 1han the vec- oFd umouAts PlAC and early Bxpericiice "naw, of lnad Auate &ulmn;uon may m\d to ‘yo muuutmflnl from expa £ Terther than [H‘hmflnlfl eongi- nbn! vltwu, anl" g;l‘l, in turn, e [report ‘tg the Federsl Réserve Bahk of change the pric Y'tm\.er, for exagmple/ were .18 per cent, in_gome parts of the countrv: Tn Ohio' el "ty they wete I sem;bu Iast strangees ~arp warned against mwzunz year. This improvement contipued into on the highway at-nighy glepe. This IS ficroner. Merchants \report that s bets the humiliation: “We live In constant!ier grade of merchandise is being beught terror of the gunmen of the cities.” I8 |pow han last fall Fhe publie hes 4p- it possible that we have peturfed to the narently become sncouraged by the et thus be mpphd nee for steek |n days of Digk Turpin and Claude Puval? pect for general business improvel )UNDA'! MOWQ TM-‘ 'm"‘m s e e when they ean WIll someéons explain why we always underrate the money value of any relig: ! Jious work? <As an Hlustration. compare | the amount of money svent each year by | the American people for chewing gum with THE FAPING FLOWER. I”“’ ,h.‘g iy ”""fl" e ameunt devoted to Christian mIsSInS. | Phe grass witherath, the fiswer mm, -howm R ovoretens maui' will Trhen the Tenl Worth of any non-Tellglous hecause the soirit ef the Lord bloweth for cancsliations, as they wera \:ilndam!:ap is_forthey mal:;»’ but is gy Upen it. Isa. 40: 7. Thus gracefully It Is impossibl ef gourse, ia Meritorious causes. coming thiough 300 Gently wanes the dying yeer. The af time which ene church lines go a begging. Why thers beSULY of tie Waods lingers ete it finglly b St ot e e ,Zr;“l";m "3' % departs, 3nd each much-loved autyminal There wu conalderable duplication of R0t yet. beel expiamed. by pe;ycgél\:‘:\! fowsr geems frequenily 19 bid up Bk fideron T Siviemien T sentid Tl et o e ek well, in gradually sinking to the eas T, o o men seeme T e ile oumaBtYM | (i all Virls, "Svhre e By nnlean:la to have subsided somewhat, There w3y : % & natural emotion must feel a designed & tendency for Prices of seme aommedi- ; igoodness gnd graiefully acknowledga the ties o iy @fler heing marked up ra- unremitting care of g kind and heuntiful ther rapidic iy ember amd early “Father. 1€ wero oass t Daint, this gentle 2;‘;:’; '!“"mt" "‘l"-“"‘““"'t\hm hee 4 dy the year. ) . S :fi“;‘“’?fi'}‘:“:“;’ n:l";“ch,}m‘”,’:‘méf e daily )"mmlg;, v:u:'-‘: ?l?c" ::,]nmn o ‘:am‘u :l i :;n‘; a8 1.3::]‘ ence that has not experiehced this fact. t‘“ example, that Whish. ebising oy Ras g hine ) DAy | trade. Thery is mo such thing as confllet Bp-! S:e fl:flv 34 us; .gl(eglmbm of m. i tween religion apd geifnce. - Thepe 13, 1“ h'u impergesti] o emmats can- shipments a: et _the of 1920 mfl heylh du leati their ‘epders fn thi that they will &lpt ot legst & wt ©of the merchandise ey wish, then It {8 easily possible that prices will respond to the large incregse in the numr of unfilied nrdcu due to this dupl| of pjacing them, apd hulhm wi ;mnr to be Much bettsp than R really u Manufgcturers may _But for the|gostan sigte that their sales during By ln i farese PreS of the two coursss will buy a ticket 10 & good movie show, but however, room for conflict. and ‘enough of it, between our poor, faulty conceptiay ; of rgllgmn and our imperfect understan ing of seience. + But it is ipherently ime nosmue lar nvnl-f ;s m»", Z{"? g4l ‘mement's thoul B e T A el mmln e JOr 8 ey Real aciefce is the expression of law 1 nearest” is Teal Teligion. New law that owzm To en ,n"‘r&f”fio':l" Y in ome domain cannot contradict law tlut]! know T shall gee operates in any other domaip. The reg- | When I hive qrg-\ son why there is less so-called copfiigt ptween Tell and geienss is im oth are better understood today ever befgys. Oneof the primal lnw at C the in ) af matter, While it may change the ngumul of its operation, it never losds itg power. !":"0!!! maements |, wl g\fih n l.h?“"gmml. m“' mm N hishop of muu, hern In cuunw face to faee | SHigo, Iretarid, 90 years seo Dr. Robert W»B- of the University Nflfll 9unty, Liosd lrho\-. former United lwci ta Ty, born %,. we s U gears aw ety chhu Baker, u: A e “ihen the Mmerning wiars sang o - A bora. 18 "'“’“" m “ oy g0, sienee Bow. Nawued, 1t wery Died ot Boligwlley £ Warw T oo okt i Chvsidh oounty, Fa., ¢ ““"Nl eonpervation of Her euabe| o007y, g wi? Coldpization Sealety '.3,‘3'&,5‘.”' LT PR s A i “appears to be awake to m‘ummum‘x 1t] 15 h announced that weat 3 the state =m|th”rflmlulovnun.mm for tree 'seed an: Thet: s no tellipy myeh ew-m will some day befit.will' de, M through - that w'—h'& for . aimslanes Vessel be raa ly Almlpz the aatl postoffics can|Wwhich Cenada has established 850 miles from tha snorth pele it wil Ge possble to 1o think '.bm w 8 Warley, 3 Nm Yok, wure he hys. wha hes g Therq ng »mmipg TR ¢ Goyage 1o lm-c»m by that| r € an Tole- =x‘% )| CUTICURA HEALS SCALP TROUBLE. Blisters Gaused Sore Eruptions, Hair Fall Out, Lost Slogp, ‘1 bad bligtess gp my scalp which sore ififimd& Caticurs Bosp, ew and Tl sum are il yoy need for ail toilet ing on the side. and his wife glsa goes gut to work. Roth of them being fo- commodating and always =miiing, have many . friepds. It w@s rather a severs blow to ome housekesper, hawsver, when ths woman whoe w3e doipg the washing, that day, 4sked her to write g Istter for her. The Tajter was th a well known firm gsking that $75 worth of curtains be sent up for the new home. o IN THE DAY’S NEWS I 5 THE TRENTINO. The Trentino, “redeemed Jtgly"—re- cently the " seene of an anti-Austrian demonstration by Fascist, is the subject af the follawing bulletin from the Wask- ington, D. C. headquarters of ths Nationnal Geographic Soclety. 3 “The Trentino, the in'and portien of what_eonstituted ‘Itals irredenta’ befare thé World War, has become ‘Itale re denty’ singe the victerious perthward Push of the Italign grmies and the sign. ing of the peage treaties; but that fact has pot altogaether solved the glwiys created when twe peenle divergent culture must live tegether, moy has the shifting of the international border p number of miles to the north- Ward greatly-altered the attitudes of thy hereditary enemies whose lapdg ‘t divides. ‘What the Italiang oall ‘the Tren. the Austrlans called ‘Seuthern The region bad a more cheek ered .eareer even than. Alsaceslorraine, m of provinge of the empire ta which italiaps love to feel they Have beir, the district remained upder ar #nother iform f Roman, Italian or Lombard control upti] 1027 when it was gevered from Italy and given into the hands of Prinee Dlm of Trent under more or less nominal German control. !n 1808 the country became Austridn, in 1805 Bavapian . The ¥rench under Napoleon capturel it in 1803 and peld it untll 1814 when It was again banded over to Austrig. It yemained Austrian until Italy’s soldiers ‘Tedeemed’ it during the Wopld War. “During il these vielssitudes, hew- ever, the Italian language and Jallan culture persisted, with especial tenaeit of course, i the south, toward the pem- ing] Ttaliag border. That border dipned far south of the crest of the Alps to enclose the Trepiime in the ‘Austrigan Empire, crossing yaji¢ys and runming gleng hills vather than mountaing, The rredoptist movement not enly maine ed that the Italian-speaking peeple #{;.e Trentine sheuld he enfelded wifiin the berders of Italy, but it egheed thy ssertion of the prond old Roman Em- pire that Reme, for its protsctien, must Teach {o the crest of the Alp: ““Tyrol north Bf the Alps was German, cized egrly. But the monntain bai plowed up the southern advance. of ier. men culture, Despite direct Germanle eentrol for & century and German ine Eivilized by the Bomans and made \h: fuence for a much longer period, the . 'l‘nntlnn was gppreciably Germaniciged uu in the extreme nerth. In Bolsgro ich the Augstrigns caled Bozen), forty miles south of the main rides of the Alps in the Adige Valley, there w ” m.m”'& heemi!lcz between the twg cultures. s stregly and res htm German names and ‘& ‘W‘ man eharactrs. The .mn -u'm of tM ;-mu church was undeniably Gothjc. ut though eme of the prineipal streets bore the name enEasse the grace- tul grehes of itf praded sides claimed Italy, ahd !l\n trade u thety WS waa largely m'md [ “Soulh trom Balsene German Infhis ence earried on a losing fight Trento {called by the Austrians Trient, and by the English Trent), {hirty miles farther south, and almost an equal distanpe within the Austrian border, was 4n acknowledged. Jtallan city. varely heard except in Illfllhry orders, and itg upfamiliar letters appeared nnry m and tthen pelow proglamationsi in f,d [ girs R W, mmah taf b SATURDAY SPECIALS | CHOCOLATE FUDGE, pound .. ............. 3% MOLASSES and PEPPERMINT KISSES, pound. .. 28¢ MIXED CHOCOLATES, 2 pounds ............. 90c ASSORTED HARD CANDIES, pournd .. Just the Thing for Children. FRESH COCOANUT CARAMELS, pound SCQTCH AND FAVOR KISSES, pound ....... PEANUT BRITTLE, pound . CHOCOLATE AND V\NILLA CAR\MELS pound 50¢ PETERSON 130 MAIN STREET NORWICH, CONN. § . Depasits Made in Qur Savings Department on or Before the FIFTH Day of Any Month Will Draw Interest From the FIRST of the Same Month. . 4% Cempounded Semi-Annually 4% BANKERS' TRUST COMPANY Open Every Siturday Evening 630 to 8:30 feet Ip post-glacial time or tilted south- from New Haven about eight feet 12 the mile. Sixteen New England colleges and in- stitatiops, as well the United States Geological Burvey, were represented or 'and i them grow grapes |this excursion, in all an attendance of exoslient i made. | forty-cne selentists ‘hu which appear go deso- TR e T Wiare of full daylight arc| Jt seems to be easier for the aveage lided na tinted inte wonderiands by | woman to land a husband than o Keep the Fising and seiting sun, 3 fact which | him landed, e e S S - o New Method Of Reducing - Fat ‘Inferna’ and his item {rom Bbroad informs us i the American method of producing a im_ trim figyre_is meeting with aston- ing sucoess. This kystem, which has ade such a wonderful impression over there, must be the Marmola Preseription Tablet mejhod of reducing fai. It is safe fo gy 1hat we hate polhing Beter IOV thie in s coupiry.. Anything that will reduce the cxcess flesh gteadily and m ly without injury to,the stemac) the clulln' of weinkies, the’help of exers 4 dicting. or 'interference with GEOLAGISTS PTUDY GLACIAL PERIOD 1N NEW lxqun Th wm umw' - hlw some . y': o:l? . w an § mm irapartant | conclusions umw u:- 'lum his- tory of Nov ® cherished copception of nt oengss: bt byt of 3 the countries s Just such & catalogde tuits folfow he use of these harmiess and economical lite) Queers. We sav Marmols Prescrivtior scgordance R 'rescription) esn M obtained st the world over or from the Mar- Cnm-uny "I: Woodward “Ave, Mich., one doilar 4 case R cided) the momber of “ou each 5 They are harmiege LOOKS > &'ni Ni—'lpfi-n to all American and uropean Publications. SHEA'S NEWS BUREAY UNION 2QUARE nn it Gaer since the Jatter's retum ¢ Sweden. The chief cenelusion in this imvesti ion cisarly, and i s 1 epinjon tle fat re becanse ade tn Wutbmc. You want something that umwflnmmfofludplusunovaa : of years, That means good quality to _Then you waqnt furniture that you g(u;amu’d:utwo :

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