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CLOUDY, WARMER TODAY; UNSETTLED TOMOEROW The Bulleftm |[PASSENGER IN AUTO SUES FOR $10,000 FOR BROKEN BONES Norwlch, Thursday, Nov. 30, 1932, THE WEATHER Winds North of Sandy Hook, fresh westerly and_weather - partly clqudy Thursday. 3andy Hook to Hatteras, fresh south- west and west and weather partly cloudy Thursday. Conditions Wednesday night the air pressure was high but falllng over ths Atlantic and East Guif states, high and rising along the north central border and low over the Canadian maritime provinces and the Rocky Mountain and platean vegions. The disturbance over the Ca- padian maritime provinces is onc of marked intensity the lowest pressure reported from near its center belng 28.94 Inches at St. Johns,' It will move east northeastward. The disturbance over the far west was central Wednes- day night over southeastern Utah whence it will move east northeast- ward. There has been a general rise In temperature since Sunday night in the Middle Valley and all d!stricts east thereof. In the -New England states and east New York the weather will ha cioudy and somewhat warmer Thurs- day amd unsettled with probably rain Friday. Forceast New England, cloudy llght snow in extreme mnorth Friday unsettled probably rain Northern Thursday portion ; or snow. Southern New England, cloudy #nd warmer Thursday; Friday unsettled with probably rain. Observatlons in Norwich The Bulletin's observations show the following changes in temperature and barometric changes Wednesday: Ther, Bar. 30.00 $0.10 30.10 6 a m. P m Highest 40, lowest 30. Comparisons Pradictions for Wednesday Wednesday's weather: Fair, northwest wind. m, Fair, milder, MOON AND TIDE Bun il _High || Mosa || Rises. | | Water. || Seta. m. || & m. Sets. .06 04 .59 .53 I 815 49 Il 804 3 water it is low wed by flood tide TAFTVILLE Thanksgiving exerolses were held on ‘Wednes: at the Wequonnoc school. The program was as follows: America, The Beautiful, school; Psalm C, echool; The First Thanksgiving, Grade ¢; The Little Turkey Gobbler, Edith Adams; Sieklo Song, school: Thanksgiving Day, Anna Boenig; What 1s New Engiand's Gift to Us, Irene Desmarais, Andrea Legarde, Mildred Dunlop; Thanksgiving Hymn, school; Thanksgiving Dream, Jane Meyer and Edith Heap; The Tur- key and the Pilgrim, ten children from grades 4 and 5; Prudence, the Little Pllgrim, Frances Bribeck, Mildred Yer- rington, Gladys Kinder and Gertrude Boenig; Song of Gladness, school; Thanksgiving Day, Freida Saroski and Selena Adams: Thanksgiving Day, Grade 4; The American’s Creed, school; A Thanksgiving Song, school. Postmaster D. C. Marphy calls at- tention to the hours which the lacal post office will be open Thanksgiving Day, which are as follows, 7 to § 2, m.; 12 m. to 12.30 p. m.; 7 to 7.30 p. m. Miss Ruth Kupky of Blssville road s spending the holidays with relatives In_Hartford. Conn. Mr. and Mrs, Harold E. Linderson of Grosvenordale are spending the holi- days with Mr. and Mrs. E. W, Yerring- ton of South Second avenue, Harold Heap of the New Bedford Textile School, New Bedford. Mass., is spending the holiday vacation with Sy rarents, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Heap of South Second avenue, 4 Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Hindle and Edmund H. Hindle of North Third ave- nNue are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Singleton of Providence, R. T, Miss Roberta Crowe of Mouth ,Man- chester is spending the remainder of the week at the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Crowe of South A street. y Miss Anna Morse of Hilside, N. J, !s smending the holidays with Miss An- na M. Beardow of Providence street. James McSheffery is spending a waeelk Rt the home of his parents. Mr, and Mr#, Charles McSheffery of North Third avenue. < Miss Marzaret Quigley of North Third ‘venue g passing a few dayvs in Man- *hester, N. H. Miss Rose Murohy of Rasthampton ind Miss Mary Mumphy of South A treet are spending the holidays in Bos- on. Mass. - Mics Alma Frechette, who has bean t the Backus hospital reveral weelk: ‘oliowing an_operation for . appendicitls, as returned to her home on .South A itreet, \ _The regular weekiy meeting of the Thursday Evenlng Basketry class will 26 omitted this week. A party of local men who had heard 'mout the automobile wreck north o village. Tuesday evening, started In a car owned by one of the party o/ visit the scene of the crash/ but in some . manner, lost their /bearlngs and were unable to find the'r Way out of the illage of Ocourn. When they finaliv found. the proper exit, ‘they distoverd® the wreck on their way home. Lester George Adams of Ocoum road s.mending a few days'in Washington, D. C.. with his daughter, Mrs. Charlgs} A. Embler. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lea Miss Doris Learned of -Meriden, : and Mrs. Harold Learned nnd son 'of Middletown and Mr. and Mrs, James Grjdley apd son of RBrockton. )fats., are! holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs, Georga H., Young and Miss Gertrude M. Young! of North Third avenue, o ¥or Annual McKinley Banquet™ Senator-elect Ernest E. Rogers, rep- resenting New London county, is & mem- ver. of the executive committese which Jas in charge arrangements for the.an- aual banquet of the McKinley association >f Connecticut, The banquet this year will be held n Waterbury at the Hotel Elton. I i 9 Six hours after high watere, which is f d ‘and M HARMLESS MEANS OF REDUCING FAT Many fat people fear nary means »f reducing their wWeight. Here is an ex- raordinary method. | Extravrdinary be- sause while perfectiy’ harmless no dieting o/ exercise are necessary. Marmola Presoription Tablets are made exactly im wecordanes with the famous Marmola Prescription. You reduce steadily and sasily, with no Iil effects. Procuro them' from your druggist at one dollar for a se or send price direct to the Marmola Jompany, 4612 Woodward Ave., Detroit. aich. The faliowing new cases for the m- perior court, returnsble in Depemier, were filed hero Wednesday at the offics of Judge George K. Parsons, clerk of the court: Suit for $10,000 damages has Dbeen brought against Artemot C. Angeloni, alias Artimio Angeloni, of New London Ametta Basill of Londen for urics she recelved while 2 passen- in the Augeloni automobils which It is alleged that Angelon was driv- in s Ford touring car on Montauk avenue near the Mitche!l estate about 8.20 p. m, July 15, when he drove oft the traveled portion wof the highway o the space between the troller s, which was rough and full of On account of the speed and ent manner in which It | Talm- ed Angelon! was driving, ! that Angelonl lost control of the ca turned back onto the highway 2! = impreper angle and the auto overturn- ed, throwing Mrs. Basili' out and. erush- B fier under the machi She re- celved 2 broken left clavide, br n sacond rib, fraoture of ocapula, ture of left radius and bruises and lac- erations .on the body and head. By reason of her Injurles she has been un- der hospital care up to the present ti and will continue to be put to great ex- pense. WANTS TO SEE CHANGE IN AUTO LAW ENTORCEMENT Saying that the present system of law enforcément as vertains to motor vi cle violatlons i3 all wrong. McMurtry, formerly consulting e ef the Connecticut Department of Vehicles, presented an address the Soclet; week in New York city, which evoked an enormous amount of comment and which is having an extensive influenca in agitation for the stady and reform of present mystems of supervision and control of operators of -automobiles. The statisties and ideas set fort the Connecticht engineer's report Deing given wide spread publicity and have evoked the comment of many of- ficials ~ cannected with motor vehicle control. A printed book containing the }address is soon to be released, according to a statement just received from the Society of Automobive Engineers. “Under the. present system of enforee- ment in Connecticut the arrest and co: viction of an operator carry with the no thought of accldent prevention. The operator -does not feel that he must be careful not to get arrested. The psy- chelogy of the thing is all wrong.” The speaker further stated that too many arrests are made for mere tech- nicalities and that too few, if any ar- rests. are made of the flagrant violators of common sense rules of safety. He also lamented the great increase of in- ‘ DENIES SETTLING Suit For 5745.08% ; Callendar, Mcduslen & Troud O, of| Providence has broughl suit on the common counts against Charles IL Ken- yon of Groton on a ciatm for 3743, Asks East Lymo Pereclosure. Foreclosure of a mortgage for $i,000 on East Lyme rcal esto! sought against Stanley Stephansk) of that town by Paul Pysarchuk «f Tamaqua, Pa., formerly of East Lyme. The mort- gage was given No 1921 Three Suits For Diveree. Divorce from Johr I. Br tertord is su Brown London. The ground alleged abitual intemperarce £ more than a year past and intolerabl i 1887, with deser- : 1897. Tha couple was married June 24, 188 harles A, Es of New london secks divorce from Louise Carrige Es- ser of the same place. TThey were mar- ried July 6. 1922. Divorce {s sought on the grounds of infideilly between-Oct. 1. 1923 and Nov. 1. 1923 at New London with Thomas Vincent ramed as co- respondent. Mary S. James Perham of New Lon- don sues for divorca from Cornelius B Perham of {hat city. ‘tney were mar- ried June 1. 1970, The divorce s sought on ound of corporeal im- ectiity. ASIDE LUTHER WILL. VERDIiCT Jennings has denicd the sido the verd'ct and for case, iz in New verdict last aveek Af estate of abont Judge New the superios returned a which nieces and nephews who ied to break. Judge on: t e apnellecs burden Jennings’ nave ne sustained vlaced on as a matt to be well founded or require aany dis- cussion. On the qv question ot fluence from jury, the el the ion of removal of the the claim of undue the consideration of the im of the appellants is that elf s so af rmal and natural its provisions that from the will taken in conmnection with the opworiunities for the exercise of un- due influence enjoved by the Armstrongs and Mrs, . Lewis, the jury might prop- erly infer the existence of' undue in- fluence. Under the decisions in this state quoted by both sides during the trial and argument of this motion, I cannot agree with this claim. Take the will itself, for instance. It was drawn ip in. toxication which is bringing about many more serious accidents each year. He quoted a report from Detroit which showed that out of 505 revocations of license, 403 were for intoxication. “Since the advent of prohibition, not only the number - of intoxicated drivers has in- creased, but the condition~of intoxica- tion is more pronounced; it even e tends to partial unconsciousness,” In Connecticut the number of motor vehi- cle violations due to intoxication reach- ed the number of 1,412 in 1921 in com- parison with 544 in 1919 and 888 in 1920. Mr. McMurtry stated that the differ- ence between a fatal accldent which is caused by gross carelessness of a reck- less driver and what one generally terms a “close shave” is generally a matter of hundredths of a second In time or a "|fraction of an inch in space. Yet the first driver may' be inflicted with a long prison sentence or a heavy fine, while the second driver, who is equally reck- less and as equal a hazard on the road, is allowed to pass unharmed and even unreproved. “This,” declared the au- thority on motor vehicle accidents and their prevention, “is the unfairness of the present system of prevention which picks out a few who happen to be a little bit unlucky, and leaves unharmed ghe: oth- es. A new system whereby suf- fer equally is to be desired and must come about if serlous accidents are to be prevented.” Mr. McMurtry is greatly in favor of using methods of proper education to bring about the desired reforms in the motor vehicle law enforcement. - DISCONTINUE EAST LYME TROLLEY ON JAN. 1, 1933 Receiver Robert W. Perkins of the Shore Line Electric Railway Ca. is to be allowed " to discontinue the trolley service on the East Lyma section of the road from Flanders to Keeney's corner on the first of January, 1923, accord- ing to an order passed by Judge L, P. ‘Waldo Marvin of 'the superlor court hers Wednesday. Judge' Marvin heard the evidence and arguments last Friday.on the receiver's petition to be allowed to discontinue the service at once and to dismantle and gell .the equipment of that peif of the line. N In the order passed by Judge Marvin contemplation of 'Capt. Luther%s pre-de- ceasing his wife. This was practically sure to happen since he was a man 93/ years old, and even if he survived her he had ample funds to support him for such time as he should survive her. Mrs. Luther had no children: she was estranged from her own relatives. and seems to me to have been singularly tree from any obligation to will her property to anyone. She chose to fulfil her husband’s wishes in the matter. A bequest to the Armstrongs had much more reason behind it than wor a be- quest to some distant charitabf® or edu- cational institution with which the tes- tatrix had no close personal relations. The Armstrongs must often have put themselves to considerable persomal in-! convenience to accommodate the Luth- ers and to take them around in their automobile ; that they apparently did so willingly and enjoyed the trips is to their credit, and the fact that they were remembered in Mrs. Luther's wtll, the captain’s desire, is perfectly reas- onable and natural to my mind. Not only is there no direct evidence of the exercise of any undue influence whatever but at least one bit of evi- dence coming from the appellant’s man- ifestly prejudiced witness, Miss Sistare, points to a directly contrary conclu- sion. I have not the transeript but it my recollection serves me, M Sistare testified that at one time Mrs. Luther was very much exercised because she had heard that Mr, Armstrong had de- cided that he qould not spend time driving her any longer, and he was go- ing to give it up. Such action on the part of a man who is surmosed to be plottinz and scheming to get Mrs. Lu- ther's property away from-her is aboit as far from what one would expect as possible. Furthermore, under the definitions of undue Influence repeated over and over again in our reports, Mrs. Luther would seem to be about the most unlikely per- son to be subject to such influence. All the' testimony indicated that she <was ot a strong dominating personality. The Wwilole case of the appellants was based on her fixed idea drom which no argu- ment or persuasion could move ther; that she had no mse for her own rel tives. ‘The motions arc denled. H ‘Wednesday, he sald in-part: “From and after Jan. 1, 1923, Robeft W. Perkins, regeiver of the Shore Line Eléotric Rail- way Co., is. authorized’ to suspend oper- ation and discontinue service of the railway -line running from Fldnders in the town of East Lyme to Keeney's cor- ners, so-called.” ’ The order migo authorizes Recelver Perkins_to dlsmantle and sell,.at pubHc or' private sale, but subject to confirma- tion by the .court and. its further orders thereon, the real and personal property included in this portion of the line, the same to he so0ld free and ‘clear of any iens " thereon and the proceeds thereuf when sold to.be held -subject. to the same’ llens and equities as now attach to said .properti S 4 —— RELYEA DENIES ‘WIFE'S .~ ACCUBATIONS OF CRUELTY : CLERK CUNNINGHAM RESIGNS + AT NORWICH POST OFFICE John Cunningham, who has been employed as clerk in the Norwich post office since July 1, 1908, has tendered | his resignation to Postmaster Murphy, efféctive Dec. 1. Mr. Cunningham has been most effi- ‘clent in each department assigmed - to duty and for many years was & sta dlerk where 'he proved ,most obliging and “accommodating to the many pat- rons, who did business with him. Since his return from the World war service he 'has been”assigned ‘to ‘the finance di- vision of the office. ‘Wednesday afternoon the' clerks as- led in the. postmaster's room, to which he invited Mr. Cunningham, sey- ing that he wanted to explain zome- thing to him, When 2ll were assembled Postmaster Muiphy, in behal? of the The trial of the contested divorcs case | clerical force of the office, presented Mr. of Bmily Elizabeth Relyea of New Lon-| Cunningham a. beautiful . brief . case, don against Willlam H. Relyea, alse of Suitably engraved, as a testimonial of that city, was completed before Judge! the good fellowship - existing between Newell Jonnings in- the superior court|them and best wishes for his future suc- there Wednesday morping. The action| 638 and welfare. was ‘brought .on the grounds. of intol- Mr. Cunningham Is to engage In real ki Ry estate and insurance and the post office When ‘court came~in 2t ~ 8 o'elock fmnlo‘yes are confident of his new én- Blanche Irens Smart of Brooklyn, the) “eTPrise proving suecessful daughter of. Mrs.: Relyea, gave testl- mony that Mr. Relyea had choked her| Grace Church Thanksgiving Serviee. - mother and had used vile and fithy| The Thafikegiving service at Grace language toward Mrs. Relyea and-thai|Episcopal church, Yantic, is'to be held she had seen black and blue brulses on|at 10.45 a. m. with sermon by the rec- her mother's body. for, Rev. Robert Day. Mary Florence Hill, wife of former golieunm Braxton Hill, told of seeinz lack and blue marks on Mrs. Relvea's| EXHA! RIPP; body from a bottle which Mr. Relyca ATHD TR0 o had broken in striking Her. - She aelso| L2 grippe coughs rack and tear the told of vile and abusive language by the|sufferer to & state of exhaustion. *“Wouid fla’fg‘flm; ’wl;"_lxélde;\llhml: 'w get completely exhausted . from. violent : only’ 83 for the defense was & ooughs,”. wrl G. Collins, Bar. Mr. Relyea, who dented all' the chavzes| St S “mricd FoTars ponsy Dars of offenses made by his wife. the{Tac and the - cough ceased entirely.” conclusion of “his testimony, - Attorney |Used Dy three generations: for coug Morris Lubchansky made his argument|colds’and crouv, throat, chest and bron- for the plainti? and Attorney Claytos|Cligl irritation, Foley’s Honey and Far Judge Jennings took the papers and rc- iner, Largest selling cough medicine in served decislon, ? Ithe world. Lee & Osgodd Co. FULL ASSOCIATED 1 i PRESS DESFATCHES ‘ SPECIAL FOR THIS WEEK IN OUR NEW SILVER DEPARTMENT - Sterling Silver Individual Exceptional Value Not Over Two Sets to One Customer. FERGUSON’S: FRANKLIN SQUARE WHERE ALL CARS STOP RADIO PROGRAMS E———— ———_ Thursday, Nov. W4z Nowark (360 Meters). ‘Thanksglving Day 11 n Thomas’ churc! rest M. Stires, on stocks, V. m—Resume of sporting events. n—Muslcal programice. | Jack Rabbis Stories, by Da- v . --Story of Thanksgiving. . m.—Concert by Pat Kelly, I m.—"‘Impersonation ttle girl, Joy. Railing. 9.45 p. m.—Concert by Leo Linder. vi- olinist, of ; Mary Ludington, accompan. KDKA Pittsburgh (360 Meters). 10.45 a. m.—Thanksgiving wervices of the Point Breeze Presbyterian church, Pittsburgh, Pa.aDr. P. H. Barker, pas- tor. Dr. Francis J. McConnell, bishop of the Pittsburgh Conference of the Metho- ist Episcopal church, . Pittsburgh, Pa., will deliver the Thanksgiving sermon. 3 —Play-by-play report of the University of Pittsburgh-Penn State foot- ball game direct from Forbes Field, Pittsburgh, Pa. 4 p. m—Concert by KDKA Symphony orchestra. 7 p. m.—News. 7.30 p..m.—Bedtime story. 8§ p. m.—Hints on modern and prac- tical home furnishing. of by Mrs. her Cur- Little Santa Claus Coming Saturday Good News for the Children SANTA CLAUS Is On His Way Here Santa Claus is coming Saturday, December 2nd. He will come on the “Santa Claus Special,” by way of Moosup, being due there at 1 o’clock in the afternoon, due at Plainfield at 1:15, Jewett City at 1:45, Baltic at 2:03, Occum at 2:10, Taftville at 2:21, arriving at Franklin Square at 2:45. He invites all his boy and girl friends to meet him as he journeys from his home at the North Pole to his headquarters at The Porteous & Mitchell Company’s Store. Store Closed Today, In Observ- ance of Thanksgiving Day 8.30 p. m.—Concert by the Collegiate Sextet orchestra; Thomass Rennle, pi- anist; Homar Graham, violin; Fred Faucett, banjo; Harry Hill, drums; Richard Hurrell, solofst and Lilllan Frazier, accompanist. WBZ Springfield (360 Meters). 7.30 p. m—Uncle Wiggily bedtime story; produce market report. 8 p. m.—Special concert by the West- inghouse WBZ orchestra. WOR Newark (400 Meters). 6.15 p. m.—Dr. Doris Doscher tafk on “Physical Culture.’ 6.30 p. m.—Special Thanksgiving Day programme, under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. of the Oranges. Samuel H. Libby will talk on “Why Be Thankful?" Soprano solos by Mrs. E. H. Whitney, accompanied Ly Mrs. T. M. Pender. WYG Schenectady (403 Meters).. 7.45 -p. m.—Instrumental selections, WYG orchestra. 8 p. m.—Thanksgiving cantata, by a quartet from the. Presbyterian church, Johnstown, N. Y. WGI Medtord Hillside (360 Meters). 4 . m—Twilight programme. Con- cert by the world renowmed Rhondda Welsh Male Glee- Singers, - -Viscountess Rhondda, pr.)idant. 6.30 p. m.—Boston police reports. 9.30 p. m.—Concert. Miss Edna Banks, soprano. will i THANKSGIVING ENTERTAINMENT GIVEN AT .FALLS SCHOOL The puplls of the fifth and sixth grades of the Falls -schools ,of - which Miss. Elizabeth -Hayes-1s -principal, gav an entertainment on Wednesday morn- Ing to which the other .grades were in- vited, The costumes, poems, stories, and In- dian dances were entirely original, be- ing planned and carried out by - the children. The progran was as follows: Plano solo, Dorothy ' Harnis; Thanksgiving poem, Mabel Riley: The. Pligrims, Leonard Clapp; Indian song, six girls; poem, Janet Harris; Thanksgiving, Wanda Przytulska; Indian dance, Bar- bara Burdick; The First Thanksgiving,| Statia Dudek; Harvest song, boys; The Great Feast, Dorothy Harris; poem, Te- resa Przytulska; Harvest. Home, girls Grandpa's , Farm, Barbara Burdicks: Thanksgiving, Elizabéth ‘Noyes and Ja- net Harris; Thanksgiving Time, Ger- mania Kocaj; salute to. the flag and The Star Spangled: Banner. The. difference betwsen slender and bony girls is & matter ‘of income. 'Have the - good * qualities . that made “crillers” fam- ous' ‘without the greasy heaviness that m: them ind’xgufi@le., h THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. COMMUNITY THANKSGIVING SERVICE AT CENRAL BAPTIST At the Community Thanksgiving vice in the Central Baptist church at 5 at o'clock this (Thursday) afternoon program will be as follows: Hymn, Come Ye Thankful People, Coms Invocation, Rev. E. C. Dunbar. Reading of Governor Lake's Proclama- tion, Rev. A. H. Abbott. Scripture, Rev. ¥. C. Williams, ‘Anthem, Prase the Lord, Maker. Prayer, Rev. G. F.. Bailey. Oftertory, Sing Unto God, Schnecker. lcoLoxisL cLus PINOCHLE CONTEST GROWING CLOSE Tuesdey evening’s pinochle games e Colonial club, Higgins retaitied tha|first place by a lead of only 15 points. when Plerson with a high score of #:- 155 for the evening rose from third to second place. Lamb was low with Ta score of 5,640 and fell from sixth fo eleventh place. The scores for tho-ex- ening: Plerson $,155; Sherman 7,955 Allen 7.940; R. B. S. Washburn 7,885 {Willis 7,770; Church .7.440: Higgins 380; Lillibridge 7,190; McNawsht §- POETRY OUE OFEERING. g Day. 1922, Thankngi Father, rec Thy Aear Eon—TH tne o en. st nraise we bend: Thr hies 0 Lord. we eome appealine! Restow Thy wrace a1 Thy . aeeent cur offerin; -TTgwe1l. ir Bos! gertly falling dew for winter ice anc | Por whispering wind and purifsing storm ;1’»‘4- the reft clouds that show the tende R nd long, tumultzou t wash the dim cart the seven-folt sunshine and the st night ; {For dimpled lausliter { seas: | For latticed snlendor moon ¢ For gleaming sands and granite-fronted caln soft summe the “- sea-born For fiying sume and wa ~ siles For rushing gale and for the great, glai calni; For Might 'so mighty and for Love = true. With equal m!ad, e thank thee. Lord? —John Oxenham that whij ty HUMOR OF THE DAY Histery Lacturer—Can guy. of Y0 1 me what makes ti: Tower of Pis lean? A Corpulen’ Zady—I don't know, or would tak: some myself.—Lohdon Opia Boston Transeript lae—1 think I'li ¥57¢ my beauty nu now. Marion—Taks dear.—Life. “Do the ineag “Whea a bill annoy e ‘good, long slee; oes annoy you?” presented it alway me."—Boston Transeript. “Your ancestors camé over on Mayflower?” “I'm_told so,” replied Miss Cayenne “Poor- things, The boat must have beer crowded to suffocation.” — Washingtos Star, © “Why, what in the worid bas becomw of ‘your gatch? The one you used & have had a handsome gold case, “I know it did, but circumstances al ter cases.”—Fhiladeiphia’ Telegraph. th 950; Harwood 6,190; T. G. Washburn 6,015 Lamb §,640., - 3 Standing ard scores to date: mxgnu 29,305; Pierson 29,290; Sherman 38,- 790 ; * Lillibridge 28,560 ; -Church 28,5 Allen 27,955; Willls _27,390; R. B. Harwood 26,460 ; T. G. Washburn 26,360 Lamb 26,310; ifc- Naught 26,125. : Hymn, For the Beauty of the Earth. Message, The Testing of Democracy, . Rev. Charles H. Rioketts. Hymn, O Beautiful for Spacious Skies, Benediction, Rev. E. E. Jackson. The 5 o'clock hour has been chosen as the most convenient on Thanksgiv- ing Day. A very cordial invitation 1s extended to all the people of Norwich fo join -in this’ community gathering for worship in acknowledgment of the good- ess of God. GRANTS DIVORCE ON e s WALTERE AUWOOD'S rz?nm\' Walter Auwood of Montauk aveni: New London, was granted his @ivorce from Mary A. Auwood of Parker street on the grounds of adultery In a decls- ion handed .down Wednesday by Judge Newell Jennings -in the. superior - court. The case was tried before Judge Jen- nings last week and was contested by Mrs. Auwood. Sanatorium Hollday Fund Contributors. . Additional_contributors to the Norwich Sanatorfum holiday fund are as follows: William ‘B. Young, Mrs. Willam B. Loung, Miss Fdith E. Young, Oliver L. Johnson, Mrs. Oliver L. Johpson, “Mrs. iarles L. Richards, Miss Mary E. Rich- ards, Charles D. White, Mrs. Charles D. White, Mrs. Adam- Reid, Miss Nellie Scenlon, Charles H. Osgood, Mrs. Chas. H. Osgood. : - Denles Motions, Overrales Demurrer. - Judge Newell Jennings of the superior court has denfed a motion to expunge and a more specific statement in the sult| of Charles R. Butts of Norwich, et al, vs. John /T, King of Bridgeport, et al. He has also overrulled the demurrer in the same case. Love is the real thing until the. new ness begins to wear off. - Thank You! Today is Thanksgiving.Day-and to all our friends - —old and new—our message is one of thank- fulness for their .continuied friendship and patronage. ' : Fifst” College” man—I want ¢ to our dance fonight, $5s; it formal; 1 “cloth or shall’ I wear It takes 100 livers to yield-bne galio: of cod - liver ofl. : Tacoma !5 to" have a separate coun for the trial of women. offeriders, Venezuela is ‘onie of the few countrie: of the world where there are Bo Iado unions. . The * yearly output: of common bfict in the United States amounts to mor than $80,000.000. - 9 Chicago has the latgest eystem of un derground freight’ raflways of any eity In the world . The ‘waterfront of Greater New Yori contains €70 plers for berthing th: great ocean ships. Provincetown and Nattucket, Mass have clung ¢o the Pilgrim.fathers’ plar of having = town crier. Fumes from chemical plants havt Deen ome source-of many damage sults = The best way. we can express our appreciation is by never ceasing our determination to offer only the best quality merchandise at the lowest pos- sible prices. 7 We know-of no better way fo say — thank you !" The Plaut-Cadden Co.