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Grovan—Death of Mrs. Edward E. Dawley. Krame! Eugene Grovan of Plainfield was - appraisers of damages done by dogs. Sheffield Greene was appointed fire presented against the town for quar- People Move to New | of C. Third Degree—Baptist Mi R res HONed con. indtyidoaty Soe of Mrs. Charles A.| ters’ Meeting Monday—Former Resi- | infantile paralysis and smallpox. Th Birthday Surprise Gift for Eugene | Home :2-‘ Organizes With 38 Mem- | Twenty-thres Candidates Recsive K.| Bills to the amount of $198.55 were Hom Whi bills were ®om Lewls Wilcox of 99 ile on Montana | N ain street, who asks for the sum of sreeably surprised Saturday evening | The members,of the Home guard 4 $5 for four days' loss of work be- en friends and relatives presented | met Saturday., evening at ma diamond stickpin in honor of his | pharmacy to organize. the - Otis| ~District Deputy W. Costello of Wil- |cause of a smallpox quarantine, and Thirty-eight | ;imantic, assisted by Deputy Cronin of | Barl D. Finney, through his Attorney Among those present were |men have enlisted -to date. The fol- | New Haven: Judge Deputy L. Casey of {A-_T: Ledwidgé summitted a bill for 2is brother and the latter's wife, Mr.|iowing officers were elected: Captain, | Willimantic, J. Purrey of Willimantic |$13-30. Attorney Ledwidge also sub- a4 Mrs. John Grovan, of Norfolk,|Earle Maloney; first lieutenant, Albert | nd Joseph Robitaille of Moosup, con- | Mitted a Dbill for Fred S. Greene of a., Misses Alice and Antoinette Ber- | T. Van Cleve: second lieutenant, Har- | ferred the third degree of the Knights nier of Taftville, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry [a1q Porter; surgeon and instructor, J.|of Columbus on 23 candidates Sunday - - Gadbois and son Hector of Norwieh, | M. Klein, M. D.; chaplaifi, Rev. Sher- | afternoon in Milner hall, Almyville.| President Wilson d 0! After the election | Visitors from Hartford, Norwich, Wil- lections on the Victrola were en-|ihe meeting adjourned until Sunday |limantic, Putnam, Providence, Woon- Calls On Congress joyed and refreshments were served by | afternoon-in Grange hall, when a drill socket, Arctic Center, in line with the Mrs Eugene Grovan. was held for a half hour. Infant Baptized. pected that a number of eligibles from |of C. rooms, Main street, to Milner (Continued from Page One) Westchester and Comstock’s Bridge |hall, to a drum corps. The colors were Blanche Gaucher and Homer Gerard.|wood Roosevelt. Marie Clamence, the infant daugh- It is ex- |jocal members, marched from the K. i , i 5 will join/ as soon as the recruiting |carried by Mr. Deforge of Moosup. plished we should keep constantly in O T N rcn by e i 2 |oMcers canvass that section of the 4 - =3 mina the wisdom of interfering as lit- Kefte in St. John's church Sunday | lO®D- inoraamg after the 8 o'clock mass. The Palm Sunday Observance. tle as possible in our preparation and Bradford Cragin returned to New Palm Sunday, the beginning of the | in the equipment of our own military Yors were Ovila Bastien of River- | YOrk Saturday after a visit with his{end of the forty days of the penitential | forces with the duty—for it will be a OBITUARY. Samuel Gellert's cd E. Dawléy. few daye. a je Viola Dawley, wife of| Arthur M. Elgart has moved intolhome in Almyville after seven weeks 1 shall take the liberty of suggest- R. I, and Miss Loretta Bastien |2Unt, Miss Abby Willard. 1d. in New Homes. William. C. D-"e'gep_gge ‘has purchased | chureh Sunday. only from us or - by our assistance. Main street and will occupy it in a . .eason of Lent and the anniversary of | Very practical duty—of supplying the Thrist’s triumphal entry into Jerus: nations aiready at war with Germany lem, was observed in ~All Hallows | With the materials which they. obtain They are in the field and we should help them in every way to be effec- tive there. B Village Varieties. Jacob Youngs has returned to his Bdward Dawley, died at her home |Abraham Eigart's house on Linwood |stay in Boston. ing, through the severa] executive dec age Sunday morning af- | 2Venue ililess of four weeks. Mrs | Charles:Danlels has Edgar Dupius of Providence spent| partments of tho government for the moved from |the week end with his parents here.| consideration of your committee, the daughter of the late |Abraham FEilgart's residence to the| Raymond Rider will not work at the | measures for the accomplishment of ; tandist o0 Norwich avenue, | fTeywood sarage after next Saturday. | the several objects I have mentioned. s which he recently purchased. He expects to devote all of his atten- | I hope that it be vour pleasure s Te ‘;‘; ©)d, sFanner house | " Miss Auby Willard was in New Ha- | tion to his store. to deal with them as having been isk, blacksmith at Moosup. | Standish place years was a member of the | ven Saturday. The rear end of E. E. Dupius’ tour- | framed after very carefui thought b: b A Cehurch and Sunday| S- H. Kellogg and Arthur Chapman |ing car broke down Sunday morning | the braich of the zovernment upon " Later she moved to Providence | W&e at Hayward's lake Saturday. while it was being driven through a | which the responsibility of conducting 5 Georsimville, R. T She | —ester Beebe was a caller in North |rather muddy road in the Almyville | the war and safeguarding the nation Paptist church of Georgia- | Westchester Saturday. Rev. William H. Lakin. Funeral of Mrs. Kramer. * of his car, enabled the driver to get| Must Make Motives and Objects Clear ago last June she came| The funeral of Mrs. Sharles . |the machine to a garage. fleld. ~She gained many | Kramer. who died at her in Rhode Isfand end Connecti- { Chestnut 'Hill Friday morning, was |4 his home in Almyville for many a was liked by a'l who knew her | held Monday afternoon at a local un. | Weeks. is more comfortable. r kind ways. dertaking parlor, Rev. loved flowers and always had | Roosevelt officiating. Burial was in| Vil have their second practice on the me of the handsomest flower gardens | Linwood cemetery. She is survived by | CafPet grounds Wednesday afternoon. in the village where she made her |ner husband, one son and a daughter. | »Feilx Lefleur is building a garage on locaiity. Danlel Smith, with the aid | will most directly fall. William Kenyon, who has been ill i ve do these things, these Jet us be 24 ake very clear to all the world wha motives and our Sherwoed Plainfield High school baseball squad objects BYe thought has not been driven its habitual and normal course by the unhappy events of the last two months, and I do not home on home. William Curgenven is moving from | DA88elt street for Joseph ThereauX. | jpejjave that the thought of the nation urvived by her husband. Ed- |Lis residence on Broadway to the Mrs. | , Benjamin Dawson iverett Dawson | p.; pheen altered or clouded by them. rd E. Dawley. two daughters, Bdith | Maria Morgan house on South Main |20 Richard —Daggett nmotored to 5 V. and Helen M. and a son, George |street, which he recently purchased. [Providence Sunday in Everett Daw- nst Autocratic Power. H. six sisters, Mrs. Charles L. Har-| The Colchester Fire company held a | S01'S automobile. g tly the same things in rington of Manton, R. I, Mrs. Ellen | meeting Monday evening. of Warren, R. L, Mrs. Maud Infant Baptized. of Willimantic, Mrs. Mabel North Scituate, R. Miss Gladys Daggett returned to I had in mind when I Storrs college Monday to stay until < > on the 22na of Thursday. pary last: same that I had in Miss | Services were held -in the Episcopal | Harry Miller of Sterling spent Sat- T <sed the congress R. Fisk of ®rovidence and Mrs, | chapel Sunday morning at 9 o'clock, |urday at the home of his aunt, Miss | on the third of February and on the Davall of New Bedford, Mass.; | ReV- Sherwood Roosevelt officiating. | L. Miller. 26th of February. Our object now, as Wncles, William Weaver of | The eacrament of the Lord's supper ) Arthur Burke has given up his work | then, is to vindicate the principles of and Charles Fisk of Bograh- | Was observed, also the rite of baptism |in the American woolen, mills and ex- | peace and the justice in the life of Tolmes of Yantic. “ousin is Mrs. Jane Gill ot | Vas given the young daughter of Mr. |pects to farm this summer. He is go- | the world as against selfish and auto- foosup, and her aunt is Mrs. Rose |20d Mrs. Harry Davenport. ing to plant the entire field near his|cratic power and to set up amonsgst Kouse. the really free and, self-governed peo- . Miss Florence Douglas and Miss|ples of the avorld such a concert of Personals. < Plainly Not. Bertha Freeman.of Sterling Hill were | purpose and of actio nas will hence- Mrs. Charles Headen spent Monday [ New York judge rules wives may | Moosup visitors Monday. forth insure the observance of those Norwich friends. anislas Charron and son Ovilas were Norwich callers Monday. iss Florence May Taber is spend- £ a week at the home of Mrs. Bertha Smith in Central Village. a fair portion Explanation Uncenvincing. Fven a Von Hindenburg may fihd it hard to make the German people be- lieve that the withdrawal in France really a move toward victory. — leston News and Courier. Boston Herald. frisk their sleeping husband’s trous- ers, if the huxbzr;dht':il:"tgml;rnw:\;: was observed In the Baptist church | Not the Will of the German People. And they say this is man's world. — Milwaukee Sentinel. The ordinance of the Lord’s supper | principles. Sunday morning. pie = 5 5 A 3 ‘Neutrality is no longer feasible or Ministers’ Meeting. desirable where the peace of the world New London and Norwich Baptist | is involved and the freedom of its peo- ministers' meeting was held at the|ples, and the menace to that peace A Different Reception. Baptist church here Monday. The la- | and freedom lies in the existence of It is not wholly certain that Count |dies of the church provided dinner at |autocratic governments backed by or- von Bernstorff will get as much kind |noon. There was a good attendance.|=anized force which is controlled consideration in Berlin as he has re- ceived at Washington and Halifax.— Married in Montana. Wholly by their will, not by the will of their people. We have seem the A friend of Miss Elise Tavernier, |jast of neutrality in such circum- formerly of this place, received a letter | btancos. from her recently stating that she| & einni: Litohfield—The following men have |finds California an ideal blace. Miss|in wrich it i ot nning of an age Would Settle the War. been appointed recruiting officers for | Tavernier left Moosup last summer to | same standards of conduct and of re- The real sensation wil come when | the Home Guard of Litchfield: George |visit relatives in Great Falls, Mont. |sponsibility for wrong done shall be Sayville wireless reports the collapse »f the Kaiser's ego.—Toledo Blade. Hubbard. . always wished a cigarette would do. Thursday you’ll facts about - get the Chesterfield and Hobart Guion and Judge John T.|She remained there until she recently | observed among nations and their married Jack Young of that place. The | governments that are observed among couple are now in California. the individual citizens of civilized Miss Orra Denison spent the week | states. oty o) No Quarrel With German People. ““We have no quarrel with the Ger- The McAll Association Does Good | man peopie e We have no feeling to- Work in France. wards them,: but one of sympathy and friendship. It was not upon their im- pul.se‘ th&:h:.heir goveIx;nmeut .iwil:: E 1 entering s war. ‘Was no vl weak foethe Treneh paotia 15 | thelr previous knowledge or approval % evangelistic and social service. Days of Dynasties Gone. The new situations caused by the| “It was a war determined upon as war have been met by relisf enter- | wars used to be determined "upon in prises of many kinds, chief among|the old, unhappy days when peobles owhich are elght workrooms in Paris| were nowhere consulted by thelr rul- for women and girls; soup-Kitchens at |ers and wars were provoked and Nantes, Rouen and Desvres; organ-|waged in the interest of dynasties or ized work for women in Marseilles and | of little groups of ambitious men Who other cities. In different stations the| were accustomed to use their fellow Mission’s halls have been turned now | men as payns and tools. lnt% y ‘hospital gl &nto.b !oldiem; No Intrigue in Self Governed Nations. reading-rooms, and e sence ol = the men, Eroups of women have or- | .ot ooyerned mnations do not il bring ganized civic associations for the | ineih, nelghbor states closing of saloons and the betterment (25, ("% omnc critical poseire of affeirs of social conditions in general. The| which, will give them an opportunity Mission's agents are serving as chap- |y strike :.E(’i ‘make conquest. Such lains at the front, designs can be successfully worked and navy, and the Parls i only under cover and where no one now undertaken - to provide has the right to ask questions. many war orphans as possible. - 5 Ing and food are sent to the soldiers| Cunningly Contrived Deceptions. and prisoners and testaments, pam-| “Cunningly contrived plans of de- phlets and books to the French pris- | ception or aggression, carried, it may oners in Germany. be, from generation to generation, can The director-in-chief writes, that he | be Worked out and kept from the light recently sent to over eighty Protest- | only within the privacy of courts or ant chaplains of the Army hoxes con- | behind the carefully guarded confi- taining such articles as knives, elec. | dences of a narrow and privileged tric lamps, pipes, clothing, preserves, | ¢lass. They are happily impossible soap, towels, ete, for distribution to|Where public opinion commands an the soldiers to whom they were min- | Msists upon full information concern- istering, bidding them inform each|1}s 2ll the nations’ affairs. soldier that these little gifts were an League of Nations for Peace. expression of the sympathy of their| “i steadfast concert for peace can American friends. . |never be maintained except by a part. e i nership of democratic nations. No The total value of the radium |autocratic government could be trusted tested at the United States Bureau of [to keep faith within it or observe its Standards, in Washington, exceeds|covenants. It must be a league of $1.000,000. honor, a partnership of opinion. In- aches were frequent. I used t at Utley & Jones’ Drug Store, and was cured. I haven't felt any need of a state | iddney medicine since.” | Price 50c, at all dealers. Don’t sim- ply esk for a kidney remedy — get Doan’s Kidney Pills — the same that cured Mrs. Spaulding. Foster-Milburn e e Hotel Oxford —_— | Copley S B Ma istie ling nothing for ourseives but | ! y shall wish to share Deo- | onriatian Botenss Chiran, How Opsrs ience urcl Siouise ana'Dat ton wibtes b5 shopBise and business section. cars &R R satlon all Svery part of the olty am Sinefe rooms $1.00 and s . No War With Austro-Hungary. "xgghm. rooms $3.00 and up; with bath stree! “I have szid nothing of the govern- | - lowing buflding ments allied with the imperial Sovern- PHILIP P. PRETTO appointed: Dr. Edwin Witford. Al-|ment of Germany because they have bert N. Crandall and Lewis S. McNefl. not made war upon us or challenged \The Fifth company G, A C. 8. 1. Hh ‘1Aun ur righ: and our hosor. | PLUMBING AND GAS PITTING . ey Wi Jered - | has, deed, day afternoon at 2 o'clock on it e A S T CALL UP 734 ————————— With or Without Gas Attach- ore Dot been possible for |§ ments but Always EFFICIENT. of the regular army will to | nowski, the ambassador recently ac- | nd ECONOMICAL— Westerly and swear them into the reg- | credited to this government by the ular service. The Fifth company |imperia] and royal government of Aus- MODEL RANGFS lacks 20 men of having its ranks filled | tria-Hungary; but that government as expected by the state authorities.|has not actually engaged in warfare against citizens of the United States ||| We furnish Repaire for all makes on the seas and T take the lfberty, for of Ranges trigue would eat its vitals away; the | the present at 1east, of DOSLPONINE B | [ m————————— plottings of inner circles who could | discussion of our relationd with the blan what they would and render ac- | authorities at Vienna. Wo. enter this || | J thley & Co count to no one would be a corruption | War only where we are clearly forced % @, - seated at its very heart. Only free|into it because there are mno other 12 FERRY STREET peoples can hoid their purpose and | m of defending our rights. their honor steady to a common end i any narrow interest of their own. conduct ourselves as belligerents in a be: Hope for Future Peace. high spirit of right and fairness be- Robert J. Cochrane “Does not every American feel that | cAuse We act d:fl:hg:: M Sotsin GAS FITTING, assurance has been added to our ho) war ple or with the £CF"ihe Tutire peace Of the world by | desire to bring any injury or disad: | PLUMBING, STEAM FITTING the wonderful and heart-rending things | Yantage upon them, but only in armea | Washington Sq., ington Building that have, been, happening within the | OPPosition to an irresponsible gov- Norwich, Conn, iast few weeks in Russia? ernment which has thrown aside all Agent for N. B. O. Sheet Packing. “Russia was Known by those who | considerations of humanity and of knew it best to have been always in | Fight and is running amuck. fact democratic at heart, in all the ‘e are, let me say again, the sin- Phone 581 vital habit of her thought, in all the | ¢fTe friends 051:331.;?':';“;“2:?.”1&"{2 — intimate relationships of her people n that spoke her national instinct, their aa“'y “f'“'fi“"l":‘d P“rm‘m‘{:":‘e rela- MODERN PLUMBING habitual attitude towards life. PN oL RITUA L aevansage. beewesh T ¥ —however hard it may be for them,|. wusRy s & Autocracy Not of Russian Origin. | for the time being, to believe that this [ 'S as essential In modern house as “The autocracy that crowned the | IS Spoken.from our hearts. electricty is to lighting. We guaran- eumrhit of her.political structure, 1ong | Friendship for German Men and |tee the very best PLUMBING WORK us it had stood and terrible as was the Wi by expert workmen at the fajrest reality of its power, was not in fact| o i Russifan in origin, in character or pur- 'We have borne with their present|P : pose:’ and now it has been shaken and | Eovernment through —all these bitter| Ask us for plans and prices. Pres reat, ‘semerons. Hussian people | months because of that friendship— sl g have been —added in all thelr majve | exercising a patience and forbearance majesty and might fo the forces that | Which would otherwise have been im- J F TOM PKINS are fighting for freedom in the world, | Possible. We shall, happily, still have | J, ¥ for justice and for peace. Fere is & |an opportunity to prove that friend- ship in our daily attitude and actions > . o p""_“" Tor- o Telmne of houbn,, towards the millions of men and wo- 67 West Main Street Intrigues of Prus: - n Autocracy. men of German birth and native sym- ‘One of the things that has served | Pathy who live amongst us and share to convince us that the Prussain au- | our life, and we shall be proud to prove | tocracy was not and could never be|it towards all who are in fact loyal o e cur friend is that from the very outset | to thelr nelghbors :;‘fl!::'_'hg.hs;;";‘; , of the present war it has filled our 2 1 I b imsuspelting communities. and. even | most of them. as true and ovai| Healing and Plumbing our offices of government with spies :fl"::fl:{! “’:& ggy‘h:x}’ :‘figg{‘:‘:’:: k’,‘l?‘;; and set criminal intrigues everywhere | 813 - i Afoot “against our natlonal unity of | Wil e prompt to stand with us in 92 Franklin Street council, our peace within and with- ::;k“"f;“g E e e v Sl ey emnd out our industries and our commerce. ' 7t there should. be! dislovalty: 46 Ino" GASTIHGS . i :n d Here Before the War. will be’ dealt with v’volth a“flr‘m fffind ‘ot ndeed, it is now evident that its|stern repression: but, t lifts its spies were here even before the war | head at all, it will lift it only here FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY began; and it is unhappily not a mat- | and there and without countenance o o eomdectuee bt 2, et el By | zoene from ¢ tewiens and matienent THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY €O. e which have more than once come per- | Civilization Hangs in Balance. P flously near to disturbing the peace| “It is a distressing and oppressive Ne il _— and disiocating the industries of the | quty, gentlemen of the congress, which country have been carried on at the |I have performed in thus addressing inst gation, with the support and even | you. There are, it may be, mafy under the pereonal direction of official | months of flery trial and sacrifice agents of the imperial government ac- | ahead of us. It is a fearful thing to ara " a es aura" credited to the government of the|lead this great peaceful people into United States. war, into the most terrible and disast- “Even in checking these things and |rous of all wars, civilization itself nd irying to extirpate them . we have |seeming to be in the balance. But the a sought to put the most generous in- | right is more precious than peace, and terpretation possible upon , them be- | we shall fight for the things which we UICK LUNCH (‘AI:I? we kn:wmslhgt their source lay, ;.lr‘-ddy carried tn&l{:l’tflo%l; hleltr‘:!r— not in any hostile feeling or purpose | for democracy, for the right of those g of the German people u.-snu = (who | who u‘uhm{‘z Lo authority 'to h‘:ver a| JOHN D. METROPOLIS, Proprietor we no doubt, as orant of them as | voice in their own govermments, for wa:o:x:elvu mel)‘nbut only in the g‘e rtxxhu and imm-u‘e- F 'xml'" nas OPEN FROM 5 A. M. TO 1 A. M. sel esigns of a government that | tions, for a universal dominion of or'ae Qid what it pleased and. told its people | right by such a concert of free peoples Central Building nothing. But they have played their |as shall bring peace and safety to all N ich. C. part in serving to convince us at last | nations and make the world itself.at Btoadway, lorwich, Conn. that that government entertains no | last free. To such a task we can ded- real friendship for us and means to |icate our lives and our fortunes, ev- act against our peace and security at | ervthing that we are and everything its convenience. That it means to stir | that we have, with the pride of those up enemies against us at our very|Who know that the day has come doors, the intercepted note to the Ger- | When America is privileged to spend man ‘minister at Mexico City ie elo- | her blood and her might for the prin- R TR g e chuteney | B2 B s, T B ADJUSTMENTS - ness ant e h she o o Accepting this challenge of | treasured. God helping her, she can in such a government, following such | 40 1o other. X methods, we can never have a friend; and that in the presence of its organ- The old idea that the cause of iliness is ‘outside the afflicted still prevails in wost schools of healing; consequently the remedy consists in finding some- ized power, always lying In_wait to thing which by being tatroduced into accompiis’ we know not what purs tne'Body’ of the sufferer will drive out pose, there can be no assured securit: Wi T 3 for the democratic governments of fi.l OMEN! 1 vs MAGIC! The Scfence of Chiropractic has dem- onstrated that the causes of diseasears 2 blaxated it te ore arg 02 to Liberty. CORNS SHRIVEL AND j|cisplaces, and, mublassicd, Sigmenis e are now about to accept gage be cor- that the condition can of battle with this natural foe to lib- |. LIFT OUT—NO PAIN! ||rected to the extent that the patient erty and shall, if necessary, spend the will recover from whatever ailment at- whols force of. the nation to check and flicts him. nullify its pretensions and its power. - We 272, Bt now that ‘ws ‘scethe | Tor a few cents you can get 2 amati| J, P TIMIMERMAN, D. C.: facts with no velil of false pretense |bottle of the magic drug freezone re- it ’ :nb:;t thm;- :g ?{:t thfi; fnrdt!;e nlg cently discovered by a Cincinnati man, Doctor of Chiropractic. peac ‘wor] an lor the Rooms 220-221 Thayer Bldg., Nor< liberation of its peoples, the German st Ak At T ey | gich Gt Tuceday, Thursday: Satar- peoples included; for the rights of - froanone. . Apgly - & tow.|ShY- 3 10 6.p. m: nations great and small and the priv- dro w:d h- ilege of men everywhere to choose s ps upon .a ‘e'r,nxtzj their way of life and obedience. ing corn an Instantly, “The world must be made safe for yes immediately, all sore e & A ® democracy. fts peace must be planted % Heaw” dimigipeass-and short- upon the trusted foundations of polit- 1y you will find the corn ical liberty. so We Desire No Conquest. ot rama Tl it Tailors . "We have no selfish ends to serve. i Franklin Square, 237 Main We desire no conquest, no dominion. | 3 It She it ’ We seek no indemnities for ourselv AR B e JaPp g b SIS il §]freezone or afterwards. it no material compensation for the sac- ~ - rifices we shall freely make. We doesn’t even irritate the 7 hut one of the champions-of the HEbiS| . rara sorn ol eng Sin. o be. | DR R. J. COLILINS of mankind. We ehall be satisfied when |, e, SOk COPE DE = SOETSS. Do~ those rights have been as secure as the | t7een tHe toes, also hardened calluses ’ faith and the freedom of the nations |°7 Pottom of feet just seem to shrivel can make them. nations | up and fall off withou' hurting a par- . It is almost jcal. It i Fight Without Selfish Objects. flwnfld T rm::“'u.-er says 2148 Main Street, Nerwich, Conn. “Just because we fight without ran- {well known druggist here and the Phone 1173 cor and without selfish objects, seek- | genuine has a yellow label. TuThS ‘world.