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Hires Household Extract contains the actual juices of roots, barks, herbs and berries. It makes rootbeer as pure as it is you det this package. It brings t yo. o de Hires Household Porteous & Mitchell| COMPANY STORE CLOSED TODAY in Observance of MEMORIAL DAY The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Closed All Day ~ Today Memorial Day THE EDWARD CHAPPELL COMPANY ration. states the de- sticg is thinking seri- oning its campaign cost of living. Judg- ained, the department 1 genuine inspira- Dealer. A Genuine Inspi ashing dispatch ment of he hi results o! eland Plain Food and the South. Senator Smith, of South Carelina, fears there will be a famine in the south because of the small production of food. If it should happen the south w not deserve much sympathy. There is no excuse for the south fail- Ing to produce an abundance of food. —Houston Post. New German Minister Of BARCe035 .72 W60, NEW.YORK, Otto Gessler is the new Minister of War in the German Cabinet, suc- ceeding Gustave Noske. Otto Gess- ler has been Mayor of Nuremberg and leader of the Bavarian and South German Radical Socialists. Kills Fleas on Pets orin Houses Keep pets free (rom fleas by blow. ing Biack lag into fur with Destroy fleas in ¥ sprinkl-_ honge. Non “ous; makes no dirt ; ensy to use; = Wlls quickly and wrely. Ask for Black g in the sealed glass at dru Flag, Baltimore, Md. Norwich, Monday, May 81, 1920. VARIOUS MATTERS h:.mu vehiele lamps at $.43 this even. There was good & of fla a isplay M'or gathering was geing on fro early meorning until dusk, during su:! Many of the local shew windows: ame specially dressed for the patriotic hal- After tonight the less artistic June bax will I:Ke the place of the dainty May Several Nerwieh Free Academy dstu- dents were at Storrs College for High school day, Saturday. ~ Some of the grocers and markeftmen will open their stores for a short{time| this (Menday) morning. During Sunday aftermoon the Otis fLi- brary reading room was in chargeyof Mrs. Irving L. Hamilton. been at Pauchaug Lake ' where he having a bungalow built. is. Dreams of You"—adv. Yesterday being Trinity Sunday,;there| M. Lee of this city. ‘was the eelebration of the hely=com- munion in the BEpiscopal churches. Ideal spring weather Saturday’ art- ing and outgoing crowds being large. The Plainfield Community Chautanu- qua opene the middle of June. in Moosup. Osear H. Walker, of Station 14 1-2, on to the New London police the ‘theft of his automobile. It is neted at Mystic that Mr.;and Mrs, Charles Comstoek of Gales Ferry have. Mrs. Harriet Avery. increase in salary. At the Norwich courthouse, ,Assistant Janitor Joseph J. Fields has ordered four handsome memorial wreaths te be hung on the henor rall board itoday. The speclal holiday sales held Sat- big attraction, Says, the Willimantic state field day,, June At Mystic, Henry Davis is master at the railroad station, 5. |bagzage Express. The recently appointed Methodist pastor at Attawaugan, Rev. Mr. Ozmun, has organized a company of Boy Scouts Ballouville, Sunday evening at Trinity ‘Methodist khurch. at the meeting of the. Epworth League at 6.30. Transformations and the leader, Ernest M. Newbury. The flower department of the{Woman’s Guild of the United church is\to keep in touch with all flowers from their gardens church decoration. for Green has been sold to Edward Lovell of Hackeneack, N. J., n retired busi- ness man, who has selected Canterbury for a permanent home. work by the students of the Art School and Academy Art Gallery on Friday evening, June 4. of the Norwich Free Lord's Point from George W. Woedman- man has spent several summers at the Point. A earrier pigeon found ders, bore a tag on each leg with the inscriptions J16764 and A. G. M. 2527 A J 1y, When Groton grange, P. of H., cele- brated its eleventh birthday Fraday, each member of the grange. deposited an envelope containing a cent fior each year of the grange's life and a.considerable amount was realized. The United States civil yservice com- mission announces for June\9 an exam- ination for lithographic pmess heiper, males, more than 16 years ,of age, for two vacancies in the coast #nd geodetic rurvey at $700 a year. Paul Ackerly, proprietor of the Ack- erly Mills in Vernon ,has bought the Prescott block in Rockville and will take possession immediately. He has also bought a two tenement house on St. Bernard's terrace there. The tinsmiths' strike has greatly de- layed the work of repairing the Norwich ¢ity hall, besides resulting in, $50 dam- Ages to the interior through rain leak- ing in when the roof was leftsabruptly, ufter the strike was called. The usual devotions in honbr of the Sacred Heart of Jesus held duwring June in the Catholic churches, begin Tuesday morning with the 7 o'clock parish mass in St Patriek's church, and ,will be held daily .also every F‘Tidly‘evenl.n: at 7.30. The visits of Prof. J. Herbert’George, now of Minneapolis, to the Norwich schools to aid in the memorial addresses has proved a great delight to the ‘pu- pils, who have indicated that the speak- er is quite as popular as during his | many years as music instructor in the schools. 7 Two little sons of Theodere Poulopou- lous, of 64 Washington street, Norwich, were poisoned last week by eating cheap chocolate candy. John aged 5, has developed pneumonia and Saturday was taken to Backus hespital, where his condition Sunday evening showed marked improvement. The state board of education an- nounces the appointment of Fred D. Wish, Jr.,, as exeeutive seeretary of the Connecticut State Teachers' association’s general committee in charge of the, cam- patgn for the improvement of educa- tional conditions in the state, with head- quarters in Hartford. Accoording to automobile statisties, rated by registration Connecticut is No. {21; registration increase for year, 16,. 343; the population per car in Conneo- | ticut is 12.75 and in the United States, | 14.14. California leads with 8.07 pep. | ulation per car. Iowa is seeond, with ‘i.m, and Mississippi is the lowest with A message received by Cashier Na- | than A, Gibbs, of the Thames National | Bank. announces the return to . New | York aoon of Colonsl and Mrs. Charles | Sherrill (George Baker Gibbs, for- {merly of Nerwich) who have been | Paris occupying their apariment, 5 Rue | Beaujon which Was clesed sinee before | the death of Mrs. E. N. Gibbs. Memorial Day Parade at 2.32, l The Memorial Day parade will start, as has already been anncunced, at 2.3% | this (Monday) afternoon from in frent | of_he Buckingham Memorial and will {piTveed to the Chelsea Parade for the exercises to be comducted at the sfand erected at the seldiers’ monument. The line of march will be over Main strect and up Washington street to the parade. /iting at his former home here. ed the rush of holiday travel, thes ineom-| Miss Beatrice The Tent | daughter of n . is to be erected on the school ¢grounds| Woods of Elmwood avenue, has been sec- ['hivoc/ and destruction. the Waterford trolley line, has:reported|foT thei urday by Norwich merchants ‘proved a]ers: the place of Harry Clarke, who|resigned | £727e: to enter the employ of u,e,‘Ra“"y of the funeral arrpngements. made up of boys from that village and|tha Brumme were united who would , pravide | prs Daniel V. The thirteenth annual exhibition of the| Bertha is to be held at the Converse|and china see for another season. Mrs. Winkel-|« in Luey of Brosklyn, N. Y. is vis- P oo i J. D. George B. Neibert of Seventh street ;nvhlflnhx«v!nkmruemflu ay. Mrs. William Carver of Norwich cailed an‘;flend- in Saybrook during the past w Reginald Pardy of Laurel Hill is spending the Day heliday in Bridgeport. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Beebe of Boro- dell plaece, New Lendon, were visiters in Norwich last week. Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Chamberlain of Norwich were recent week end guests at the Lord’s Point inn.” Miss Bessie Olaf of Yantie left Satur- day evening to pass a few days with relatives in New York. ” “Mr. and Mrs. E. LaRue Bliven Washington street are at their Pleasure | Beach eeottage for the heliday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Walsh and little daughter of Brooklyn, N. Y., are§ mpe guests over the holiday of Norwiech rel. atives. Mrs. Belle Worthington tral Village. | houps, of Nerwichil of fsocialism and bolshevism. 3 was a visitor last week at the home off{ wiss intensely interesting, giving a wholly Dr. H. T. Thurber of, Stonington }has| her cousin, Dr. James L. Gardner, in Cen-{ naw conception of thistevil and tearing “What lack of harmzay, a lack of ‘harmony be- tween natiors, between capital and labor, in religion mnd between individuals and families,” #aid Peter W. Collins of Bos- ton, lectd ging under the auspices of the Knights T Columbus at the Community house 0a Sunday evenimg before an mu- dience jof several hundred. ‘“What the, world meeds: most is -a strict adherence ‘to the %An Commandments and less atten- tion /to the fads and “isms” that are springing up in the different parts of the wyre,” sa¥l ‘Mr. Collins in -advoeating a remedy for the prevalent -evils of the rworld todsy. ’ Mr. Collfins, who is regarded as one of the best; experts on .socialism in the wountry#and who was called before the legislafive assembly of New York duur- ing the time the five members were ex- from the assembly to testify to he knew of the Secialistic move- ment’ in America, spoke for nearly two covering from it its cloak of deception in in “regard,| Mr. and Mrs, John D. Lee of Stafford|to the working man and showing it in Ask your music dealer for Dreaming|are spending Memorial day at the home ¥ of Mr. Lee's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joh Miss Angenette Cottrell of Westerl ‘was one of the attendants Saturday al the fashionable wedding in Hartford of Lyman Dunham an James Barnett Slimmon. Miss Helen L. Woods, N. F. A, 1919, Mr. and Mrs. James T. retary to Principal’ Henry A. Tirrell dur- ing the, year and has been reappoinied, coming school year. Y i FUNERAL Mrs. Charles, C. Davis. Funeral services for Harriet Francis! 4 its true light. Mr. Opllins, who was introduced to his audience by M. I. -Coscoran, who presid- ed at the meeting owing to the sudden illness. of Mayor J. J. Desmond, said in rt : ®*Tris is a progressive mge In which we are living but it is an age of fads and “jsms™ gome -of which are harmiess and others which are otherwise. One of rthese *isms” is productive of strife and This is bolshe- vism for as it is known in Russia one class of socialism. I might discuss it in its umiversity phraseology, but being a working man 1 shall discuss it from a workingman's standpoint. Bolshevism is preaxched in two Wways, ome way is to cloak it in university language .and ‘the other way is the way the soap-box orator been guests of Mrs. Comstock’ sister,| Barnes, widow of Charles C. Davis, Was)yands it out, Sowing seeds of discord held on Saturday afternoon from the |y ouehout the land. Most of the town of PlainfieM's teach-| home of her son, G. Wayrren Davis of ers have signed contracts to return an-|COTning road. other year, when they will réceive an|Bfte™ sonville, - Fla., Franklin and Mansfield. There were many handsome floral trib- wtes. Rev. Arthur F. Purkiss, pastor of ‘the Central Baptist church conducted the service. The following sons were bear- Clarence E, Davis of Franklin, Jo- crowds taking advan-|seph A. Davis of Boulder, Colorado, ¥d. tage of the money-saving oppartunities.| win A. Davis of Des Moines, lowa, Dr.. The Eagle Fife and Drum Corps is| Asa B. Davis of New York city, Gilbent holding rehearsals, the Moosup JournallF. Davis of Jacksonville, Fla., amd in preparation for competing at| Chauncey C. Davis of Mansfield. Burial took place in the family, lot in Maplewood cemetery where Rey. Mr. taking| Purkiss read a committal sersfice at the Church and Allen werein jcharg WEDBING 4 Vergasen—Bramme. Whitney M. Vergason and 'Miss Ber- at the German Lutheran charch, Nor- wich, Saturday merning at 19 o'clock. Miss Jennie Erickson of Worcester and The topie whas Socia]| PAul Brumme were the mttendants. Miss Brumme is a natiwe of Worces- ter but has resided in Yantic for the past five years and has many friends there. Mr. Vergason is the sam of Mr. and ‘ergason of Ashwillett, for- use in| pmerly of Norwich Town, and has re- sided with his sister, Mirs. Arthur C. The Dr. Adams estate on Canterbury| Brown of Lafayette street. He is em- ployed by the Liberty Woolen pany. A breakfast for twenty ‘was served at the heme of the bride’s mother, Mrs. Brumme, following the church Com- Norwich | ceremony. Many gifts of cut glass, silver, linen as well as substantial checks from members of both families Mrs. Emily Winkelman of -Norwich | Were received. Mr. and Mrs. Vergason has rented one of the twin cottages at|2Fe to make their home in Yantic. OBITTA Charles Johmson. ’ Margaret Sallivan, wife of Charles dead| Johnson, died at her home at 28 Dunham about a mile this side of Hope Valley|Street on Sunday, foliowing an iliness of on the Westerly read by Ermest Saun-|long duratien. Mrs. Johnson was 2 wo- man of fine character and personality Boishevism ‘or ‘socialism stripped of its Incloded in the largel yniversity‘cloak means simply a denial of dance were relatives from Boulder.| God -and ‘nothing can exist that preaches ‘ol, Des Moines Ia., New York., Jack-| such @ dootrine. Those that preach so- cialism say it is a philosophy of the workingman, for the workingman and by the, workingman. But it did mot come from the workingman for working people #re believers in ‘God. Christ was a work- r and his apostles were all of the work- ing class, which proves that any dootrine that does mot Tecognize God @s the Gre- ator is not a doctrine of the working ople. D@l‘? it did net come from the working- men where did it originate. Carl Marx was the ‘founder and Carl Marx was no working man. Bolshevism is simply a 20th century nickname for socialism. Bolshevism is socialism in action. In 1847 it was spoken of as communism which is synomomous of socialism. Marx wrote Capital which has been accepted as the Bible of socialism. It is.a doc- trine of the denial of God. Do you think that such a doctrine would make the world better? No. Frederick Engle, ms- sociated with Marx, declared for the abolishment of family and others follow- ing the lead of these two have wWritten along the same lines. Some say that people even higher and better than Christ walk the streets of our cities today. This is not the kind of doctrine Aor the working man who believes in ‘the creator. If it was for the good the working man would it not come, from the people themselves? Not a person who has yet stood out as prominemt in socialism has been a work- ing mana Im mo country in the worla are those -who preach and write social- ism workingmen. Ferri wrote abomt “Economic Deter- minism.” We have heard of it but what is;it? 1t is simply cloaking socialism ia terms that are intended to appeal 1 fhe workers. Economics is a subject that all working men are interested in and if socialism be cloaked in What interests the workingman it 'is hoped that it wil gain momentum through this. Thi sdoc- trine says that labor glone is the source of wealth and culture. ,But this is not so for we have ingemuity and education and other fundamentals that go to make up this quality. Class struggle is what it advocates, meaning that an em- plove must hate the man who employs and during her life asia resident of thej him rather than work with rim for mu- city she has made mamy firm friends. She was born in Lewell, Mass, 41 years ago, the daughteriof Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Sullivan, coming to Norwich several years ago. She is survived by her husband and one daughter, Violet. There are other relatiwes in Massachu- setts and other places. Victor Grant{ Baker. Victor Grant Baker wf New ' London, formerly of this city, died in,Lawrence Memorial Associated “hospital Sunday, following an illness of short duration. Mr. Baker was 27 yearsjof age,and was the son of Moses A. and.Annie S., Grant Baker. For many years he had made his home in this city where he ¢is well known. Tenth Laying Centest Anmounced. The agricultural coliege at Starrs has announced the tenth annual intermation- 2l egg laying contest to begin, Nov. 1 next. Before the announcememt Wwas made, however, the management of the contest had .already received amplications for 20 per cent. of the availible pens from breeders in Connecticut, Rhode Is- land, Massachusetts, Vermant, New York New Jersey, Pemnsylvania, Ohio 1llinois, Michigan and British: Columbia Ryges and regulations that will govern the tenth annual competition. are mnow nearly ready for distribution. Mean- while it may be added that ithe college intends to follow its usual \custom of considering the old contestamts prefer red applicants until the first ©f August - — WILLIMANTIC GAINS 1,100 BY FIGURES OF CENSUS ‘Willimantic's popukation is 12,330, an increase of 1,100 or A8 per cent over the census of 1910. The:census figures were announced Saturday by the census bur- eau at Washington. INCIDENTS IN SOCIETY Miss Nancy Pond is the guest of the Misses Trumbull. Mrs. Charles B. Peck of New York is vieiting her cousin, Mrs. Elizabeth R. Norton. tual benefit. There are two Wways in which this class hatred is instilled. First by the soap-box orator who preaches class hatred and second by the employer who grinds down his employes in a fren- zied effort to gain the gold. One has no God and the other sets up gold as his god. One is a slave of yellow material- ism and the other of red materialism. We have all heard of the dictatorship pf the proletariat. This is another doc- trine of socialism cloaked in university phraseology. It sounds nice until the true light i sthrown upen it. Then a despotism more vile, vicious and mur- derous than the czar in his palmiest days is revealed. There are many evils in the world to- day but I care not what evil it is they all come from breaking the Ten Com- mandments. Bolshevism breaks them all. It breaks the First Commandment by AUWO RUNS INTO POLE, TWO MEN BADLY HURT James McGrath, who runs a barber shop at 65 Franklin street, had his right leg broken in two places, and John A. Johnson of 4 West Main street received a long, deep cut in his left thigh and other injuries when- the automobile in which they were riding ran into a tele- graph pole en upper Washington street about 1 o'clock Sunday morning. John Hoogstrom of 141 Franklin street, an automobile mechanic, whe was driving the machine was not injured nor was Martin Keough who was riding in the back seat with McGrath. Johnson was in the front seat next to the driver. The machine, a 1813 Cadillac, belongel to a man named Sadinsky who lives on the West Side and was at a Bath street garage to have some repairs made so that Mr. Sadinsky might use it on Sun- day. He did not learn of the accident until Sunday when he came to get his car to take a ride. When he saw the wrecked car with a V shaped dent driv- en deeply into the radiator where it had hit the pole, he made a search for Hoog- strom but had not been able to find him up to night time and it is supposed Edward Martin of New York is a holi-{he has left the city. The police were day guest of Dr. and Mrs. John S.|looking for him but could not find him. Blackmar. he party was on the way to Norwich T John Champlin Noyes, of Laurel Hilll mown to take Mr. Keough home and the was an usher at the Smith-Doty wed- ding in Providence Thursday. Mrs. M. C. Higgins of Broadway is the guest over Memorial Day of her aunt, Mrs. E. P. Lyman of Somerville, Mass. Miss Helen R. Buckingham of New York is spending the holidays with her sister, Miss Maud Carew Buckingham, of McKinley avenue. others were invited to ride along. As they reached a point on Washington street just south of the Mohegan park entrance the machine suddenly shot across the street to the left and brought up against the pole with a crash that wakened people in the neighborhood. Hoogstrom told Sergeant John H. Kane who went there from police headquarters ;as soon as the -accident was reported Mrs. A. George Griffin, who spent the:that the steering had gievn way and rend- winter in Miami, Florida, with her fa- ther, Dr. Edward P. Brewer, has open- ed her home at Best View, Waterford. Dr. Brewer will return heme some time in June. Mrs. Traver Briscoe gave a tea Wed- nesday afternoon at which Mrs. Oliver L. Johnson and Mrs. John Dixon Hall who poured, were asisted in serving by Mrs. Eben learned, Mrs, J. Dana Coit, Mrs. Joseph C. Worth, Jr. and ‘Miss Winifred Welles, Mr. and Mi Albert Hunt Chase have sent out invitations for the marriage re- ception of their danghter Elizabeth and On the return to the Bucking.|Denald Hart Hemingway of New Haven ham Memorial, the line will move down|Saturday evening, June 19, at 7 o'clock, Broadway. isfactory -love-letter, things of | of Mr. tended at the Norwich Golf club. The wedding ered the car unmanageable. Mr. McGrath who has one woeden leg was lifted out of the machine and laid en the bank while the machire was gotten away from the pole. Other automobiles brought the men back to the city, whers Mr. Johnson went home and was at- tended by Dr. C. C. Gildersieave, while Mr. Keough acompanied Mr. McGrath to the latter’s boarding place on Franxlin street, but when it was found McGrath ‘was badly hurt officer joseph Farrell had the two men go to police headquarters from where Sergeant A.' C. Matthews ar- ranged for Mr. McGrath to go to the Backus hospital. The ploe that the machine ran into had a wide splinter taken out of it for ceremony is set for 6 o'clock at the home | several feet and was splintered into two £ rel,ltvq. Mrs. Chase and will be at-|sections about eight feet up from the ground, the tutes have any west. L W. ital and vited dent. Burke. went He them placed quets, PROV cider the truck, ‘thyself.” obstacle Fourth, pocket. hospital A big van, is brought up. treason. they It W. was between nations, labor, any The to Waterbury. body and they ‘still live. is the The platform has in it less than five per cent. that has anything to do in a political line. before the New York legislative tigation committee brought out that were the reasons for expelling the assemblymen of socialistic principles. irPst, every socialist that is ‘elected to any public office has to have a signed resignation filled out before he takes office so that at any time he may be recalled by the vote of a few from an office to which he was elected by the peonle. Second, the .assembly Third, TELS WAIT'S WROAG WITH THE WORD is Wr#ing with the world? It is|preaching that there ‘mandment says “Love thy meighbor -as ‘How jcan this ‘be dome if class hatred is preached? Third, the Bible says “Thou shalt mot steal” ‘But Bol- shevism says that -all ‘property must ‘be taken and thrown into a grab-bag and clutching red hand of -bolshevism -grabs in and drags out that which does not rightfully belong to it. goes down through all Ten Command- ments. The only remedy is a'strict ad- ‘herence to the Commandments that were “handed down “thousands of years ago. These Commandments have lived long. beéfore ‘socialism was ever thought df, 1 say to bolshevism, socialism and to the I. W. W. and ‘to all -other kindred “isms” ‘that the Ten Com- mandments will still be doing ‘busimess at the same old stand when the grass ‘grows over the graves of bolshevism -and socialism. ‘| There is a large number who have w mistaken impression of socialism. First they ‘think that socialism .ans an im- Provement to social life, a social Teform. This is not so, for there is no common round on which socialism and ‘social re- form can stand. Socialisn is of the- de- ‘structive type and Teform is for the ‘bet- terment of the ‘world. Second mistaken that it is a political doctrine. a political doctrine aithough the social- ists try to introduce a platform into its teaching. This is merely another way to try and deceive the people. a plan for life. four every socialist who goes to must pledge himself to vote against any military measure that This practically consti- they must try in every way to oppose war and put every in the way lahor. is survived into on VETERANS' Sedgwick Women's Relief Corps mem- bers tied up 820 bouquets Sunday night at the Buckingham Memorial which (Monday) morning will be taken out by the details from the Sons of appointed to decorate the graves of the Grand Army men in the cemeteries that Sedgwick post looks after. Mrs. Lillian J. Johnson, the conference committee of the corps, was at the Buckingham Memorial several hours Sunday members of the committee and other wo- men of the corps receiving the flowers that were brought IDENCE and was bound signee, the latter proprietors of barrooms. READER AND MUSICIANS GIVE ENTERTAINING PROGRAM Miss Grace Sage, the popular reader, delighted a large audience Saturday eve- ning at the Community House with her presentation of The Country Cousin. The entertainment was given under the aus- pices of the Campfi Congregational opened with a selection by an orchestra comprising four Academy students. Miss Sage’s reading was given in three acts. Mrs. Walter M. Buckingham entertai; ed with a vocal selection, Song and her encore number was In a Rose Garden. Dr. H. B. Campbell to Attend. ch It dumbfounded at the conditions they found. They immediately set to work and mow the result is laws that take care of the working people. capital and ‘capital should be harmony between the two. ‘What the world needs most is harmony harmony between cap- in religion and between individuals and families. be service to God, service to country, ser- vice to neighbor and service to Self. vice means sacrifice and contentment. Following the lecture Mr. in the audience to ask him questions and two or three put questions to him which he satisfactorily answered. EXPLOSION INJURIES FATAL TO MICHA Michael E. Dodd, of Waterbury, for- meriy of this city, was fatally in a premature explosion of dynamite on Saturday morning and died at St. Mary's in Waterbury Saturday night. Mr. Dodd was a foreman for the con- tracting firm of G. H. of Waterbury and was comstruction work between Waterbury and Thomaston at the time of the acci- was brought city on Sunday by Undertakers Shea & Mr. Dodd was the son of Thomas and Katherine Doyle Dodd asd had spent the greater part of his life in this city, hav- ing made his home ‘at 202 Boswell ave- nue up to a short time ago when he He was 46 years of age antl had been employed as a ma- son by local contractors for many years. by Mrs. Nellie J. Riley, also of Norwich. TIED 820 BOUUQETS TO DECORATE in the bouquets the graves. flowers most plentiful t there were quantities of dogwood and other white blossoms which which largely relied on for Memorial Day bou- were missing this year because of the backward season. POLICE SUSPECT CIDER VAN FROM NORWICH from Norwich to New Bedford, was held up in Providence about 9 o'clock Friday night and detain- ed for mearly three hours. allowed to pass on. contents of 14 barrels of what at first was suspected to be whiskey, Prohibition Agent Cahill declared the driver carried “within _the law.” After apologies had been offered all the way ‘round, the big van drove on. The Providence police have in their possession the name of the operator of the consignor and the con- two being termed as A h. that must pledge allegiance to the doctrines of Lenine. How can anyone say that theirs is a po- litical doctrine for politics means the bet- terment of the zovernment. The third mistaken idea is that soctal- ijsm and labor are the same. not for labor believes ‘that capital should | its proper place and should be reasonable with tween capital and labor means content- ment. The socialist tries to break up such condition. to bregk up the unions in the east and was for this purpose that the organized. never laid a brick in any construction or ever put a cent into the workingman's Socialism wants to give poison to society to cure it of the lahor difficulties could be settled around the conference table. member of a committee that investigated conditions in Illinois and the manufact- urers that were on the committee were of ite evils. needs labor. o Girls of the United AMERICAN LEGION POST ‘With fair weather (Monday) there -should be a large num- ber ‘of -ex-service men in ‘the Day 'parade this afternoon. And 'so it impression This is ‘ot Socialism is ‘When 1 testified inves- points were Post. they can. Aand Trotsky. ter, They are! Bo; Harmony be- has even tried Socialism ot [earm, I was a ciety, Laber needs There There should Ser- Collins in- been . E| DODD injured f cen “rozier Company t work on road 1o this other three brothers,| Aft Thomas J. and and one sister, GRAVES this Veterans chairman of for evening with Rev. and faShioning | their horeymoon trip, which will include N:@_ wfi‘m m»' Philadelphia, Washington. Atlanta and s eanon bug | Mobile. They will reside ‘at 4102 st could be are ordinarily the Then it was fter testing the The program The Poppy wich. Dr. Hugh B. Campbell of Norwich will be present today (Monday) when Dr. William M. Stockwell, superintendent of the state tuberculosis hospital, is to be principal spesker at a -meeting of the tu- berculosis commission in the Newington sanatorfum which superintendents of several al b ,‘u"l‘: e el S ST The ber ©f the Bulletin. o'clock by The ex-serviee men 'will pargde amiform anl the ‘company will corpmand of Lieut. E. H. Herrick who saw service overseas with the F6th. Sec- im eommand will be Lieut. Webster 'D. Copp. Lieut. iHerrick has requested » ERNEST BARTOLUCOCI (American lsegion Color Bearer) Mr. y Mrs. devised. way. er the W. Hourly Schedule to W For the accommodation of seekers who will take advantage of Me- morial Day to make the seashore the Shore company will operate an hourly sched- ule between Norwich and Wateh Hill to- day. The first car is to leave this city at 7.30. From Westerly to Pleasant View and Atlantic Beach an hourly sched- ule will also be maintained. car on this line will leave Westerly at 1145 p'clock. The scheduies maintained throughout that the ex-service men Teport to him at 2:15 sharp in front of Buckingham Memorial. ‘While dniforms will be the order of the day, any ex-service man who is un- able to appear in uniform is asked to parade in ctvilian -clothes. handsome Fletcher Post, A. L., wich Lodge of Eiks will be carried by Ernest Bartolueci, color bearer of Bartolueci Nag DECORATED GRAVES OF %1 REVOLUTIONARY SOLDIERS Memorial services for the ary soldiers buried at the Norwich Town cemetery were held at the cemetery Sat- day afterncon by Faith Trumbull chap- D. A. R, Mrs. Elisha E. Rogers, Tegent. Pevo) Scouts, members of troops 1 and 25, acted as guard of honor. stood with open ranks ‘at of the cemtery as the members of the chapter passed to the tomb of Governor Huntimgton and to the French Soldiers’ wgraves. ‘American flag carried by Smith, the state flag by Stanley Vaughn and the French flag by a Troop 1 scout. The Marseillaise was sung by J. O. Tel- lier, tenor soloist of Taftville. The programme, Rogers, America, first stanza by last stanza by all; Samuel H. Howe, of the Connecticut So- S. A. R.; The American's Creed; [Some Suggestions, Charles E. Chandler, president of the Israel Putnam branch of the American Revolutionary ; Toll call of the soldiers of the American Revolu- tion buried in this cemetery, Mrs. Chan- ning Huntington, with floral response by the children of the Daughters and Sons; salute to the flag; Star Spangled Banmer. At the boulder—Flowers scattered by the children in memrory of the twenty French soldiers; Marseilles ; bemediction. In his address, president of of Putnam, said in part: Ve are here today to express eur ap- | Preciation of those who risked their lives in order fthat and we might live under the best form of govermment that has The into the burial Miss which Their work was not finished with the end of the war of the Revolution. They had still to struggle with serious prob- lems for years after peace came. ‘We have now still greater problems to solve. There i8 no way better show their work than to follow their example by using our strength, our materials, our resources of every kind in producing the necessariés of life. Liet us endeavor to follow the sxample ©f those whom we are here to homor. I we will preserve the same propor- tion between our expenditures for neces- sities and luxuries that @id the people of this republic after Revolution we will the cost of living and reduce envy and unrest than can be accomplished in any our the do more tc exercises the NEWLYWEDS TELL WHERE WEDDING TOOK PLACE Leon O. Wilken of New Orleans and Miss Geraldine D. Holder of Montville. whose wedding was reporetd by friends here to have taken place at the home of an uncle in New Jersey by the mame of Eradford, were married at Doylestown, Pa.. according te a letter sént to The The wedding took place on May 22 at the home of Robert Savin and was E. Steckle. The newly married counle are now on Mr. and Claude avenue, New Orleans. MOHEGAN PARK CONCERT GIVEN BY TUBBS' BAND The first of four concerts at Mohegan park was given Sunday afternoon at Tubbs' Military leadership of band to with ateh M Line Memorial Sunday Guests. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Labounty, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Myers and son Bdward of Stonington, Miss Ella Darling, Nathan| Darling and Henry Darling of Salem,' Mr. and Mrs. James Coughlin and son | Karl of Worcester. Mass, were guests| Sunday of Mrs. Coughlin's sister, Mrs. | Lester Smith, of 593 Main street, Nor- in a concert at LUSITANIA SURVIVORS IN PLEASING CONCERT PROGRAM Three of the Royal Gwent Welsh sing- ers who were survivors of the wreck of the Lusitania when she became the first vietim to German ruMaessness by sub- marine warfare appeared Saturday night the Central Baptist ARt ~for presented last week by Nor- was a top ser- geant and saw active service with the 56th in France, and is a prominent mem- American Legion. the ‘eust gate e ground | was announc- was as follows: the children, invocation, Rev. Charles E. Chandler, the JIsrael Putna mbranch in which we appreciation War of the procession marched out of the cemetery through the west gate, the scowts lining wp at at- tention. There ate 63 soldiers of the revolu- tionary war buried at the Norwich Town cemetery. performed John M. Swahn and was enjoyed by a good sized crowd that applauded the fine work of the players. It was remarked that the band has at- tained to some of the best work for a number of years and its future concerts will be looked forward interest. Two wecks from Sunday band will play at the Elks’ Flag day ex- ercises on the lawn at the Elks’ home. pleasure their first trip to E The first WAl the evening. SRS today- TOLD IN “BAYER ' “Bayer Tablets of As) uine must be marked w “Bayer Cross. T ablets of T direc s, Headache, T Neuralgia, Lumbaz Neuritis, Joint T ally. Handy tin boxes of cost but a few cents sell larger “T ture of Mono licacid. yard W applauded and bout society fr The ent baritone, | Gene to VETERANS ATTEN AT CENTRAL the triot seats ranks were bers who we about lution- an equal corps and a scouts | T liberty ome the pri but Ch adored The Eloise Bulletin’s Pa Dr. of serge, iot. It is gingham drill and reduce Mrs. | by under special the Slectric be Capitol of debat Senate or CASTC For Infants and InUse ForCver church under _the -auspipes of she Vine-§ % “BAYER" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN - ‘GET ‘RELIEF WITHOUT FEAR AS PACKAGE" in” to be gen- @ the safety N | Al A ars Children 20 Va. <JI e