NORWICH 



leges, and walls wfr<> )>nilt ivrnund 

 tin- city. In tho Hlli rriitiiiy .1 

 staple lor wool wan fixed here, and 

 Hi-miiii/H Hctll.-.l lit-ir at.oiit tin' 

 ame tim.- M.i.l.- :i ., unity of itself 

 in I l<"j. tin- i-ity IM-.MIIII-. owing to 

 the wool and worsted indust i . 

 of the richest in the country. It has 

 been separately represent. <l m I'M 

 liamont linot 1296. l'<.p. (I'.'-'h 

 120,6,53. See Norwicn, A. Jessopp, 

 L884; l:> .rds o! the City of Nor- 

 w irh, \V. Hinl~M in. I .1 C i 

 1904-10; Norwich Cathedral, C. 

 H. H gin-niit-ll. 1898; The Story 

 of Norwich, K. Henderson, 1911. 



Norwich. City of Connecticut, 

 U.S.A., and co. seat of New Lon- 

 don co. It stands on the Thames 

 river, at the head of navigation, 

 49 m. S.E. of Hartford, and is 

 served by the New York. New 



S7S5 



Our Lady, with 

 o r |i h a n a g r>, 



f.MIM.I.-l 111 IMS 



The Royal Normal 



' '<.!!. _ and Aead- 

 >-in\ f Mi, 

 Mi<- Itlind was 

 established at 

 Upper Noi-woo-l in 

 1*71. In the 17th 

 ri-nlury Norwood 



\\ .1- < Q/\ (., i i.\- .in 



oak wood : a npa. 



NOSE 



Norwich, England. 1. Norwich and Norfolk Hospital. 



2. Cattle market looking toward the Castle. 



3. Church ol S. Giles 



mat 



Haven and Hartford and the 

 Central Vermont rlys., and by 

 steamers plying to New York and 

 other ports. Norwich was settled 

 in 1659, and received a city 

 charter in 1784. Pop. 29,700. 



Norwich, EARL OF. English 

 title borne by the families of Denny 

 and Goring, but now extinct. Sir 

 Anthony Denny, one of the guar- 

 dians of Edward VI, had a grand- 

 son, Sir Edward, who in 1626 was 

 made earl of Norwich. Dying 

 without sons in 1637, his title be- 

 came extinct, but was given in 

 1644 to his nephew, George, Lord 

 Goring, only to become extinct 

 again when his son, the 2nd earl, 

 died in 1671. See Goring, Lord. 



Norwood. District of S.E. Lon- 

 don. It forms the S. part of the 

 bor. of Lambeth, is hilly, lies be- 

 tween Streatham \\ . Sydenham 

 E., and Croydon S., and is chiefly 

 residential. At West Norwood is 

 the S. Metropolitan cemetery of 

 about 40 acres, founded in 1846. 

 To the W. of it is the Jews' Hos- 

 pital, built 1863; it was founded 

 at Mile End in 1806. Near to Nor- 

 wood Park is the R.C. convent of 



called Hculah Spa, 

 was opened here 

 on a large scale 

 ,n Ivil, but had 

 a brief existence. 

 A village of Mul 

 illcscx, lying VV. 

 of Osterley Park, 

 is also called Nor- 

 wood ; it has an 

 old church, re- 

 stored in 1864. 

 Norwood Green 

 covers about 10 

 acres. See Gipsy Hill. 



Norwood. City of Ohio, U.S.A., 

 in Hamilton co. A N.E. residential 

 suburb of 'Cincinnati, it is served 

 by the Cincinnati, Lebanon and 

 Northern, and the Baltimore and 

 Ohio S.W. rlys. Manufactures in- 

 clude playing cards, bookcases, 

 pianos, machinery, and furniture. 

 Norwood was settled in 1789, in- 

 corporated in 1888, and chartered 

 as a city in 1902. Pop. 25,000. 



Nosari. Dist. and town of 

 India, in Baroda. The dist. ia 

 crossed by the Tapti river. Fruits, 

 sugar, grain, and cotton are pr,o- 

 duced. The town, which stands on 

 the left bank of the Purna, 149 m. 

 N. of Bombay, can be reached by 

 small ships. It has a large colony 

 of Parsees. Area, 1,914 sq. m. 

 Pop., dist., 335,000 ; town. 18,000. 

 Nose. Organ of the sense of 

 .-nii'll. also used in respiration. In 

 human beings it forms a pro- 

 minence, variable in size, situated 

 in the middle line of the face. It 

 ends below in the nostrils, which 

 mark the entrance to the two nasal 

 cavities between the base of the 

 skull and the roof of the mouth. 



The roof, sides, 

 and floor of the 

 cavities are formed 

 of certain bones of 

 the skull. The 

 roof is composed 

 of a bone per- 

 forated like a sieve 

 to afford passage 

 to the nerve of 

 smell. The sides 

 are each covered 

 by three highly vascular bodies (the 

 turbinals) which moisten and warm 

 the air passing through. When 

 swollen, these bodies give rise to a 

 stuffiness of the nose experienced 

 by everyone suffering from a cold 

 in the head. Several cavities are 

 present in the bones adjoining the 

 sides of the nose, and open into it 

 by small holes. The floor runs 

 straight back from the nostrils 

 to the nasopharynx, parallel with 

 the roof of the mouth. The two 

 cavities are separated from one 

 another by the septum, which is 

 principally composed of cartilage. 

 The point of the nose is composed 

 of cartilage covered by skin ex- 

 ternally, and jointed to the bony 

 framework of the rest of the nose, 

 giving softness and mobility to the 

 point. The nerve of smell breaks 

 up into many branches, which end 

 in the upper parts of the septum 

 and sides of the nose. This region 

 is therefore termed the olfactory 

 region, or the part of the nose used 



frontal si** 



Hiatus >. Ji$ 



Sfilunaru fl^L 

 Q>en<>y oT^ 



',';.., 

 ^WJ/ 



ItK^ctmtfor 



Note. Sectional diagram showing 



lateral wall and principal part* oi 



the orcan 



