Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 31, 1919, Page 5

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NOTICE Just A CARLOAD OF WHEAT FOR POULTRY Arrived Miss Hattie L. Jewett has returned to Norwich after a trip of ' several months, most of the time being spent in California. A. L. McLaughlin of Jewett City, formerly proprietor of thy Hoxie House, Mystic, has been makihg a vis- it to Mystic friends. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Gilletto and Miss Lucy Chapman of The Golden pur, were visitors in Norwich recent- Miss Chapman remained for treat- ment at Backus hospital. 6 Miss Marguerite Bugbee, accompan- ied by Miss Leora Fenn of Williman- tic, is 'spending the holiday and the week-end with her patents, Mr. and { Mrs. Raymond S. Bugbee, of Scmers, Attorney John ‘H. Cassidy of Wa- terbury, formerly of Norwich, who has been spending a few weeks at Mt. Clemens, Michigan, and elsewhere in the west, is expected to arrive home this week. Qe Sulletin, Nerwich, Saturday, May 31, 1919, R VARIOUS MATTERS ‘Light vehicle lamps at $.43 o'clock this ‘evening. Panama hats for women and child- ren, 97c and $1.97. 'The Pasnik Co.— ady. ‘The Andover singing class. is plan- ning to give a concert at the Andover town hall. ° As on Thursday, while the merctury was high Friday a breeze kept the humidity low. Peas in the garden of C. Q. Eldredge at Old Mystic were covered with blos- soms Thursday. & The ministers’ conference is to be held at the East Lyme Baptist church in Flanders, Monday. The town of Coventry schools will close June 13, except in cases where ther -is lost time to be made up. For the second year, the saloons of Norwich were closed on the holiday, in accordance with the state law. The schools of the town of Somers are to join in a field day Friday, June 13, on theé playgrounds in Somersville. Work . of blasting the Prentice ledge i at Poquonoc has begyn and several men with a steam drill are employed i there. HAD 23 MONTHS IN FIELD SIGNAL SERVICE Back from army service after 23 months under the colors, though not yet discharged, Fred (Jakey) Wood, a well known telephoné employe, and one time member of the Norwich Fire department spent Memgorial Day here on a furlough from Camp , Devens, where he is awaiting his discharge, which he expects in another week. Jakey wears the insignia of the 6th Past Post'Commander J. Herbert < George. PAY TRIBUTE T0 THE 1 T iesponse; Chaplain E. George Biddle. Memorial address, ; Rev. E. A. Legs. America, . Mr. Legg spoke as follows, with America’s Answer to the Historic ; Challenge as his subject: i ! A momentous year has passed cince ;last we met to nay our tribute > re- spect and love to those heroes who jgave up their ‘Kves upon southern i battlefields, who have passed away | since the great conflict ceased * and { who are’ ctill spared to us today. | There were many who withstood the | musketry and sabre of the conflict,- but none can long withstand the can- nonading: of the years. Swiftly now the ranks are being thinned and th' Grand Army of the Republic is rap-. idly vanishing away. It hence becomes an increasing priv ilege and duty each year to honor thoge who gave their blood as an atoning sacrifice for the sins of our | fathers. They permitted a nefarious P lb}l‘xsines? to bectomt; S0 ‘firmly roo:]ed lin‘ the national life that it may truly bej REV. E. A. LEGG, sald _concerning . it. Without = ths Memorial Day Speaker. shedding of blood there could by no Veterans of three wars in which the| possibility’ be a remission of sins and| i i ORRIN M. PRICE. Commander to interfere with their operation upon the. American continent. And that chalienge was answered by the New | England conscience, by Garrison and Phillips, by Sumner and Lincoln, by two and- i Beef Liver, 2 Ibs. for 25¢. Stars and Stripes have been borne to our nation be purged-of the blackest three-quarter millions of The Central Store Telephone 1238 § Top RQunJ Pot Roast 42c. Bottom Round Pot Roast 38c. Legs Genuine Lamb 45¢. ~ Shoulders of -Genuine Lamb, boned and rolled 37c. ~ Soft Blade Roasts 35c. iFrontier Bacon by the piece 38c. Fresh Killed Chickens Fowl. Native Milk Fed Veal. Extra quality Roast Beef. Native Asparagus 20c. Native Spinach 40c. and sravenar triumph united on Friday in the an-!spot that ever stained its histor: young men who eagerly donned the nual observance of Memorial day, the| Although the echo of the last unddl blue, saying “These things shall not gray haired veterans of '61 to '65, who greatest war has barely died away andbe.” : Over :three hundred and sixty rode in automobiles in the parade, and our memories are freshened every day | thousand of those boys laid down their the stalwart young men in khaki just; with' new stories and Trevelations of lives in the sacred cause before the returned from service in France repre-: that titanic struggle, the heart of|War closed and are nearly all buriel senting the two extremes, while in be-| America i today turned to those!in our national cemeteries. Of those tween came the men who followed the;Stormy scenes now nearly sixty years|Wwho survived the great majority has flag in the Spanish war. With them'away. Those of you who were at the|Dow answered the last roll call. But marched the Connecticut State guard,!front can rehearse the story of war's!inm all the years of our conversation Ve t Butt: the Sons of Veterans, Citizens' corps,| activities and horrors. Those of you|and reading we have yet to hear of, ¥€IMONL Butter. Boy Scouts and Tierney cadets. There/ who were at homeé cannot:but remem- |One who regretted that he had a part bt were about 350 men in line. iber the anxious dread and suspensfinn LhaLTg‘x;eat conflict {_or huglalt\ iree- SR Veatherwise, except for the mid- throuz] e compensations that bhave JAME M YOUNG AND SON army corps with which he served in the St. Mihiel sector and on the Metz front in the 301st field signal bat- talion. Their work lay in keeping up A delegation from Warren lodge, A. F. & A. M, of Portiand, paid a visit to Brainerd lodge, No. 102 in New Lon- don, Wednesday evening. Native Lettuce 12c. Special Sale of Fancy Peas, 15¢ a can. WILL BE SOLD AT AN EXCEEDINGLY LOW PRICE. The sum of $344.22 was collected in the town of Lyme for the Salvation Army. The Boy Scouts collected over $33 on the Lyme-Saybrook bridge, Sunday. The 'annual spiritual retreats for the Catholic diocesan clergy will again be-held at Manresa Institute, Keyser Island, off South Norwalk, the last two weeks'in August. Bishop Nilan will confirm a class at St. Mary's church, Greeneville, this Heavy Sweet Tream. | that wore the long days dom. summer heat, the dav was the best for| when husband, con, brother o fathcr|Come to the patriot who answered the several years and large crowds were Were somewhere in the southland, asnd out to see the parade all along the line.! you knew not whether living or dead. Merchants of the city united as never| Each morning’s paper kindled a dread before to make it a general holiday and|in your heart as you seized ic; great challenge are sweet. H2 now | sees an undivided country, an unalloy- ed loyalty that kno neither s north Chas. Slosberg & Son ezch|nor south, a new patriotism. (Saturday) morning at 10 o'clock and practically every store was closed for: mail was opened with feverish yet re-| “Af Appomattox— at St. Andrew's church, Colchester, the whole day. luctant fingers, lest it bring the news| The Blue and the Gray came to- - 3 COVE STREET this afternoon at 4. Chief Marshal Charles A. Hagberg|you feared might come some day. Alll gether one day A nice lot of fish at Church Bros. got the parade started promptly - on:ihonor upon.this Memorial day to the; And this is how it came true today. Mackeral, very fancy. Steam time at 2.32 from the Buckingham ){e-:heroines and old -fathers who nad to The boys in blue were gray with « clams tonight. Long Island clams. | morial over the assigned line of marchistay at home while they gave to their dust 3 Best salt pork 32¢ a pound—adv. to the Chelsea Parade, where the me-|country. that which was deare: than And the boys in gray were blue. morial exercises were conducted by! Sedgwick post, No. 1, Grand Army of the Republic, having been preceded by their own lives. There arz nnknown At Meriden' Friday H. Wales Lines thousands whose names are never 1 completed his- fifty-fifth year in bus- Wauregan. Block FANCY BEADS i s = heard upen this day, there were acts Gray are together s iness. His firm built the coaling tower a brief ritual service conducted byjof heroism and deeds of t ry again Norwich, Conn. at Aliyns Point, Cxn., for the N. Y., Major Griswold command, No. 6. Unit-|the front and at home wh: v But not in-the selfsame way. |N.H & H.R R ed ‘Spanish War Veterans. This was|never be recorded in the annals of b The boys in gray are now “true held around the flagpole on the Chelsea| Parade nad was conducted by Com-| mander C. N. Burdick, Chaplain George The mixing machine at Poquonoc employed in spreading cement for the new state road is working very slow- blue” And the boys in blue are gray.” tory, but, because of them resulis I been accomplished which will be nore lasting .in the life of our nation than - S 3 - We have a large variety || 25 far as the store of A. C. Week Along the line of march the newlyc|known brave are dedicated such me-|under way we, as an American peo- Tgu !l;‘. “'.hl‘).rauiomobiie trucks re- REE oD f‘orme‘d ROEC!'!_ 0. Il’}etin: !’lfiS%Dfohfiimorials as this that decorate every [ple gclt tol dreaming. Weh greagned . . cently brought from the war zone in v American Lesion, Lieut. Earle C. Her-|town and village green throughout the { that the last great war ha een & : of nice Bzads suitable for France, arrived at Saybrook this week| s Seie rick commander, divided interest andinorth. In memory of the brave acts,|fought. It was freely predicted by to be used at the Saybrook Proving co‘mmurgcauonsdby sln_ngmg wire l_)e—::tpplflufie with the_veterans, to whumlthe sacrifices, the sufferings, the de- |sStatesmen, ts and preachers everyone, any color. Grounds. They are fully camoufiaged,! tWeen the second ad third lines, which{ Memorial day particularly has belong- that never shaken by the shocks of war; that war had beccme too deadly, that hos- tile armies would annihilate each oth- er while they were yet miles apart. vout examples of patriotism seen and| unseen- are these stories erected. | But let us remember that in alarger | and | sense these memorials, even this Me- I morial Day, are the index of Ameri-: gain would this world be kept them in an area between the heavy artillery in the third line and the| replacement troops in the second line with shells flying over their heads many hours of the day and night, and Band Concert at Mohegan Park, Sunday afternoon, June lst—adv. The spring meeting of the County Woman's Christian Temperance union, ~d up to now. The American Legion! had over 100 in line, marching in their| khaki suits, but without arms, presenting a fine apnearance. Commander Orri Envelope Chemise $1.00 The Pla;vaadden Co. will be held in th C i 5 . in M. Price’s address‘ ca’s response to a far flung challenge.|We settied down to a self-complacent gtk he Congregational| liable at any time to plump = down|opened the exercises on Chelsea Pa-!It is the challenge of injustice to jus- |Security that seemed never to be dis- church in Pawcatuck Wednesday, June| among them. rade. He spoke as follows: tice: the chalienge that oppression|turbed. But in ’'9§.another.challenge o . o 168 4 With sessions at 10 a. m. and 1.30 pi:| Jakey's narrowest escape came one| To His Honor J. J. Desmond, mayor-throws to freedom, the challenge that|came to 1 t the manhood of the 1es te Skirts 135 tc 143 MAIN STREET day when on a pole where bursting|of the city of Norwich. members of the tyranny hurls at liberty the challenge could not ignore. It was the Established 1872 On mail being sent to men known| Shrapnel hit the cross arm near him.|court of common council. selectmen|of the spirit of monarchy to the grow- |challenge of tyranny exercised by $1 00 T to be abroad the postal authorities| NO man ever slid down a pole faster,|and Postmaster John P. Murphy: As ‘ing epirit of over helpless dependencies. o have requested that the envelopes and|he says. They went into the St. Mi-|commander of Sedgwick 5 1 | | Within th llenged our sense of right into - Wrappers of packages be marked,|biel seclor on September 27 and were|behalf of my comrades, I again wel-| ’ SrscE, d there féllowed over four| : — - “please forward; addressee still in|on the Metz front all ready to go in-| come to this ourpublic : ; definite | months war with Spain. Long enough oy . aih v s or 16 e |0 the next drive that whs to have|also you the oflicers and members of ana of world reforms [t test the metal and valor of the 1es’ usiin Nig t B NG ¥ OUR HATS Federal Employment Director Da. | CFumpled up the military power of{our new m company and Span-| When | American soldier and sailor and prove 5 vid Eider, of Hartford. has announc.| CSTMany, when the' armistice was|ish War Veterans, who have done es-} *E50 - undiminished virility. TO BE CLEANED AND BLOCKED | ecd his appointment of Lieutenant Rol.| Signed: oxE Quty(foF s manyifiies; Bloc the: Guarrel it by nse ot iaconrity doml. ODes J1. 1 ¢ . - | Sons of Veterans and our honored Cit-jguarrel with Frun g o Iy, our -national life ) ESEI:IENGCI;IRLTJTRZE LV e e O T LA YIN BUSHES FOR ! , and T would-also mention AIerichn eolopler withooh (helx con”|and our individual.opinions..WWe kept . labor urgently needed in Connecticut e e Somt, On B Purke put It Jn Parlia-lon dreaming even for months after 33 BROADWAY. > 5 3 : THREE DAYS AND NIGHTS|all who this day 2 e = o Europe was. weltering in blood and ungaiow ron. £t cstald Very thoughttully, Miss Cash, the li-| Haying lain in the bushes oft thel|Us to pay honor to ou into pack-horses, it was a challenge! g ering the horrors of the most cruel P S WHITESTONE CIGARS brarian, kept the Otis library open|end of Forest street for {hrce and | Their memorable deeds | serve not|hrown across® the sea to a UDerty-f,;q relentless war that ever blasted Are $48.00 F:r Thousand during Friday afternoon, as 'a con-|night, with nothing to eat or deink in|only to make an citizenship injloving and - self-reflecting people. | {iic hanpiness of homes and the peace| l 19 J. F. CONANT 11 Franklin 8t | Yenlence to visitors and the townspeo- | that time, according to the story he|ihese days more reputable but also to whitsh chmliongsw Seonswered by @iof nations. The: fiendish - ingenuit | . i G e who'cared to view the parade from| ; S Sl S ad perpetuate through lal| Declaration o ndependence and | .4 te fur; ities | Charles E. Peck, of Old Lyme, re-|night, brought to the police station | thority of the United States ot Amer-| Saratoga and “f‘“km;'“' This Was| res and awoke us to the world's ine- Children’s Cre e ceived news Wednesday of the sudden|and later taken in the patrol wagon to| ica- At this time T wish to pay tribute, 156 "CEIINE G1 MOCern Jemocracy | vitaple testing if the challenge of P death” of his brother, Orrin M. Peck,|the Backus hospital after Dr. Payl|to our world war veterans who haveid CUrlosity at frst sneered at. theni,piiy) egotism, tyranny and crime 57."4. dry goods merchant, of Mem- |Gadle had advised that the man need- | joined us today to pay tribute to ouri'9€raiec, ot last respected and now) ..s yot answered. The call cams Rom €rs $1 39 Phis, Tend.” He was a former Lyme|ed hospital care for a few days. noble dead; and now that the woridj [eared—feared, not as the power of|; .. "1oce ordained to die in the ol o n the s : : ek Somadit WS, | War has ended you have followed the|Some princely despot has' been feared, | ro" sevoic. Canadim, wh g the son of Elizur and unice| The man was nearly in a state of| tiad anchy i words of that heroic Canadian who s collapse when found and hiad. fo ba|¢xample of our forefathers and wic-| QoL 2% 3 tonafehy of this sfze @ hun' | yrote the words of In Flanders'| DlZes 1 to 6 years—Actual g rough joe ‘station & = | tory has again come vo the American| TS ared, but| g e oty s\welcome home tnl‘gzfigj“‘“_;(jmf‘“e police station in the|10ry has aBad Co0 * st wishes to because it is the highest and finest ex L e value $2.00 grat war this (Saturday) svenoms ¢! "SVilliam J. Lamphere of 95 Forest|express our highest admiration for|pression of a new world spirit, a spirit|, hunqrea million hearts: et ol 7 vening are| .. B e : & o every soldier, lor or marine enlist- rnizes ne royalty of fo hearine completion. There will be T riday ang When aine Dushes ear-ling under the Stars and Stripes to,mthe_r_thf'lh »uat of counts and barons.| pot ve 1n’peace lip n Sweaters o O i S I 9dd Fellows' e X GiHE Al N X | cerve and fight for his country either;2 Spirit that is toppling thrones and S e 5 = The annual City Election HATL to which over 40 accepted in- ro‘g‘ | HereiaCiaen e wEni S fione | in the Civil war or in the Spanish war & rapine K, and making. king- fehtnat b - s. | peticeliinow, b ot corld war. We ate all|ship the least desirablé occupation in| e e, taken up! N will be held on Monday next,| wiiinery oy ) e Taietl oo Dt B et AT s Jow standing to-| 2l the world. a Tine falth Wit at $2.19 June second fashions i trin..cd hats Ladies| by Copt.D. 1. Twermes to investisats | ether as one man, that zovernment of| = Again, when the British naval pol- | \1q" (ot S SRS (0 Y000 LG 3 Sordlally dnvited. 44 Droadway. Ma-|with Oficer P. Murphy and the pa- | the neople and for the people shall not| iy Airected the kidnapping — of| ywpere once his own life blood ran red! Actual value $3.00 Pols Open B A M. 2o g B B 25 o et T " A new school house is to be built at| Young back to headquarte express our deepest & i 2 ; s anders’ field people who believed in fair play and a Grant's Hill, Tolland, to replace the| AS coon as the ¢1d man was brought| Woman's Relief corps, the Sons of| Th jals . hy of 3 R , 2 5 el he cl ght | 1 Lt SR 5 B snnre Wea) Bl San : 1 ese specials are 'wort hps been started clearing away the ome who had applied for lodgings|and aff awxTIERR (Or S0 S 10y | plomatic correspondence but. was qe. | Sh¢ forch ve threw fo us we caugnt! | EVEry one’s attention, a chance HY ruins. e contract for building 1he there last Monday night iving {5 [IORCEALIDN 3 LS e isrs i s =3 i ion hands will hold it higk present condition of our|Tins The contract for | e e R Ty e SIInE, e | i aver way. And now, comrades| livered by Captain lsaaq Tull of the e kil aever “die: | to save money and also to get 3 ) vey, home as W tic and saying that{ friends, the duty of today is of!Coustitution and Commodore Perry on|and Free 1 = e dis: streets, SratFailof Rediviile. 11+, [ g e e L o e O e ressive alemificance. . Today 1s the|Lake Erie, an - answer vehement| »¢'¢ learned . the lesson that 3 seasonable merchandise. ' 1163 pleces of ladies stocki i¢le found that he has some heart andjg ii0.7 of our dead. We unite to!enough to convince the world that the| Lo del g ' If you approve of the 1526 palrs of men's socks were Kidney trouble ‘and also a bad rup- |05\ the memory of our brave and|young republic in that year of 1siz [N Flanders' fields! . . bty n the last week by the Pasnik C ure. Young told the officers that he : iR 2 ves! had ¢ Eoeaitling clothes intrusion of politics into “the|s stores, Norwich, Danieiuon snd 4.1 2 several times tried to get water, Peloved,to enrich Ad Shneble Ut Tiee) 150 SANL S SLIS SYELIINE ClOel ) wour mitttons ot Ameriex's fincst, Poli d Fire D | limantic.—ady. N i obuhes Duipecsanny rth that are immortal. This s the respect of the world for the rights | YoURE manhood ‘were mustered =110 Fancy Fresh Mackerel, Porgies, Steak olice and Fire Departments, opFhe Connccticut State Association bt they alwave got seared A the natlonal day of memorial. the time of small astions. Tt was a Tesson, |20 S P ihey.ars the sandsnos |Cod, Baston' Blus, Haddock, Carp i g osed-to Woman Suffrage has : 5 [ et e A Sy <. | when in mind and thought our glorious v 0 was soon forgotten to! s S e . - > » If you have no objection to] nouncea that. the an rofea iy, iy ¥ There were no signs of intox-{ ISP 1 TGS $09,0 again, ATl over|the great sorrow of there modern | ot ST, BERTAICD Bf whom Ecls, Round and Long Clams, Lob- o : Connecticut have this fact to I FL 15 Lalte S heker T Q “lour broad land people with reverent!days. i |22 neet o4 pLgag ZEEt 4 E: i . only state to defeat suffrage in its re-. him up | = 2> % sleep our country’s dead. On this Me-| century came directly to you men of | Soric MNTELIBERCE, L6 2 T OTHE proprations, cent; session, ge in its r ‘::lor;i.(‘:pql’;i\;gre he was taken from the morial day let us not forget that many| the Grand ’Arm}_ Wheh iheieouth Els!crmm tion zna‘z;rw\\xfluh;.!l “T"v‘f ths rc!r!l.JRC!-i 55_ 3 ,7[;1377_ = . A. W. Bucl 5 g4 e HERS !eyes are clouded with teare. that livesqern part of this Ited the| se a o Then Pote for a continu.| A W Buchanan, ot Mansfield, azent ate desolate because of the father or|doctrine of state ve e e ot sl USED TIRES ance of the present administra-| 2t Xcw London this Brom. will be| RUMOR OF SALE OF brother or husband or jover who dld| (hat of national e i iRk it arin e Caon ik 3 t 1e back. Let us mingle a ten-|to divide ¢ neduaLty 9L 2 - g P. m, to examine applicants for em- CRESCENT FIRE ARMS €O, ot come 8 e s 5 an OUR SPECIALTY y IOTTaent: aartif 2! s 4 2 der sympathv for the living who r that should gt R 5 1ALTY tion. lSa\') l‘)\svrn;:g'“*l that w: (-)f e o"\" [hirx(vre bc:“ F_r: &Ar!r;m' }c; b for the loved ones they have 1 ti seized the 'gage n:l{fiv}rvc LW Ve you mone; St Vul Fo ki as that was Mem- | notices have been poste at the mat|yg recall to memory the m thrown down and s: SISE v you y. Steam Vul- BU I P jchine work would be stopped’ untf| e of danger made their i {be.’ But why should a nati who went £:0m | canizing and Tubs Repairi The June term of the Tolland coun- | [Urther notice and would be started|parricade between our country andithrown into deadly civil strife S S ty superior court opened at Rockville| 282in under new management. —This|their foes. such a elaim? Has not a man Savronth 2 IF YOU DESIRE A CLEAN, | Thursday morning with Judge Garg-|Means that no new work will De| Let us recall thelr tofls on the lons,|right to leave the company he has|Po% I el work guarantecd. ?|.iner Greene of Norwich on the bencn,; St2rted and that only the assembling)weary marches, their intense suffer-|been keeping if he finds it to his ad- | cioe i S = ECONOMIC AND The jury list was drawn for the trial| '™ Will e in operation, on Work | ings in the hospitals, their fearful sac- | vantage to do so? Has not a state the | maie, 1€ Fany Do coeor o and . 5 X 5 AL EFFI- | of several criminal and civil cases next| MO under way. ] rifices in the prison pens, their sublime! right to seceed if it finds its internal | (20 their sacrifice may:mot ivave he=n slivy s ane ShO c N week and other cases were assigned. Ni;t“a‘sa; %0 een fumored that the| heroism in the days of battle and|policies at variance with those of its) ™ e P Norwich G. A. R. men les rith R O o & ridgeport | finally as we are gathered at this mon- ! neighbors? But this was not the fun-|_ -And nox ¥ | # IENT ADMINISTRATION sorrow Fridey of ihe omacaried With|parties but the truth of this rumor | umens s pefore an altar may.. we|damental question. involved in the |lenge the a ; i 114 FRANKLIN STREET OF THE AFFAIRS den, Thursday of Albert A. May, 15, olld B0t be vercyied as Vice-Presi- | pledge our manhood that so help us|challenge. This. doctrine of state| Il nof n pne arms. | . NEAR WILLOW FF OF YOUR | department commander of the rary|dent Georze W. Carroll said he had | God, the memory of our country’s dead | sovereignty was bolstered up by be- |1i is the challe a Deing S e e Army of.the Republic in 1905, death re. | 0PiNg to say afld the other officers|shal] strengthen and encourage in us|lief in a tragically mistaken economic|r® 2 world that is impoverished, bk BEER CryY sulting from an illness which followed | CL oi¢ company could not be reached |a deeper and more abiding patriotism.| system, a system that made the pros- | S wing and pessimistic.. It is the influenza. on Friday evening. The program continued as follows:|perity of the south dependent upo:,]< llenge of the submerged, the ex- X forced and unequited labor. But|Ppleited, the cruelly treated. As a na- E d ’e A conference of Farm Bureau e, o) i o & < s e 3 v . coun- Rev. E. George Biddle. more fundamental than this was the|lion we have v A into a new place. ) L L™ ty agents, extension specialists and|HELD HOUE PARTY AT i i 3 8 el o S G5 ¢ I . Selection, Hear My Prayer. social conception .that part of the hu-| ‘e can no-la by on the| vote Repubhcan gountry club leaders of the state will ARMY AND NAVY CLUB. Band. man race was fit only to be the slaves Other cide ng hamds are; HA‘Y% s : ’tumleEx z”t e Connecticut Agricul-| A delightfur house p arty for Me-|Star Spangled Banner, of another part. A conception and i B VAN ) o g et i m{m xrruant Station in New Ha-|morial Day was held Friday e vening Hugh Kinder. policy that is thus morally wrong can- lut'ln u:&lng at 2 p. m, June 2 and, ' the Avp - ar vv_club on Broad- | Reading of Memorial day orders, not be made economieally right. The AND - Repu . City Ti cket g noon on June 4. way with Mrs. John B, Oat and Mrs. A. O. Fairbanks. challenge then was not that of indi- T ¥ = blican Miss Mary E. Yager, who has re- . awuiphy us ¢ haperones. The | Reading of obituary records, vidual liberty to collective unity, not| FERT*LSZER * signed as superintendent of the Law-|cver as enjoyably spent with Rev, E. George Biddle. that of ‘state’s right to national sov- | b A £dales FOR ALDERMEN rence and Memorial Asociated music and games, Miss Rose Speck |Lincoln's Gettysburg address, ereignty. It was the challenge - jwould not 'be tr J. hospital, pec] 2 CHARLES F. WELLS New London, was tendered a farewell|and Miss Elizabeth Lane-adding much " George A. Keppler. justice, the challenge of oppression, | liberty purchased by the blood of ou A R B CLAUDIUS V. PENDLETON party Tuesday. Miss Kathryn 4|t the evening's pleasure with musical | Decorating of monument, 5 5% | ANNING YANTIC, CONN. the challenge of slavery to you to dare (Continued on Page Seven.) Prindiville, former superintendent, who returned in April from overseas will| succeed Miss Yager. | and vocal selections. candy were served. R e and Miss served punch. Ice cream and Mrs. Framk I Amy Burlingame FOR COUNCILMEN EDWARD CROOKS Vote On Water Works Superintehdent Wil Befi"l‘"a.ken sl e Phone 860-2 MARTIN ROZYCKI f — | ROZOLVO C. PERRY Johnv;/,“R:::;::f i;"’ '_w'“' i INCIDENTS IN SOCIETY | At the election next Monday the c']‘lring in , the following . form:| Those who favor the continuance of cLABER T i SRR B foreae o ne s conng e LSO Y| coters of the city -will have an oppor. nall act be ‘approved repealing the|the law of 1917 .and the continuance| +|venordale to resume the . position he formerly held as.agent for the Gros- decide whether the act con- e ; TEE w of May 16, 1917, under which a|in office, of the superintendent as| 3 3 i L, .. | superintendent of water works was|long as efficient should vote No. ! * cerning the superintendent of the Wa-|appointed?” | The question appears at the top of | FOR TAX COLLECTTOR York is the gu el s . Smith, of Washington street THOMAS A. ROBINSON venordale Co. mills, was agent of the % 3 e hall be repealed or be re-| Thi h v al of ths| cotir a5, shoge 2 - 32 o MRS 2 | e repealed or be re-| ose who favor the repeal of ths|the voting machines as shown below. Falls Co. mill here from 1302 to 1903, AMiss Dovothy A. Jones hus |Taw of 1917 meaning the return to the | To vote Ves, tum up the button under| T!RE REPAJRING AND TUBES: FOR CITY TREASURER o xsm: to take a position at Millville, P"““;,-‘ T « Yes and No vote taken|old method of appointing u superin- | “Yes.” To vote No, turn up the but- | All Work' Guaranteed STEPHEN H. REEVES N U"(‘:O AX:"'Q v ‘on the voting machines, ihe qucs.tmnxlendent every .year should vote Yes | ton under “No. g HENRY DUPREY 2 ; M enry L. Ben passing| 2 3¢ FOR CITY CLERK New London Man Appointed. several weeks in Brouk - Yantic P. 0. Box 153 ® 10 | IDR. R. J. COLLINS WILLIAM H. FRISBIE FOR CITY SHERIFF GEORGE W. ROUSE Lieut. Rollin H. Barrett of New. Lendon was appointed ‘Thursday by David Elder, federal director of the Employment service in Connecticut: to her daughter, Mrs. Charles c. MecGreg- ory. Former Mayor 'Al i wil’nt 1 2 3 4 SHALL ACT :BE APPROVED RE- 5§ 6 |78 n L. Brown and QUESTIONS\ Mrs. Brown loft en r‘day morning . ; ) : : be recruiting officer in New York for | for 4 motor tri ¢ Molionk. They o a .- CHARLES H. RAYNES farm: labor. Lieut. Earrett will open |were accompii * ik Luu}uez! 1917 'UNDER: WHICH. /A" SUPER- '. YES| KO ' \ FOR WATER COMMISSIONER |2n Office at:No. 22 Fast 22nd str srown. Mrs. Carl W. Brown and litile| INTENDENT OF WATER WORKS ATTIEE 8- COMBHBCR in_conjjunction with a special agri- | luughier, Virginia, who are to remain | ' culture azent. SRS WAS APPOINTED? | ' 148 Main Street, Norwich, Conn

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