New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 20, 1917, Page 10

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JANUARY 20, 1017. Any Six ws. Super Six Noie Here the Vast Distinction How HUDSON Won A Six now reigns in Motordom—it holds all the worth-while records—it is the lar- est-selling front-rank car. . .. It stopped the trend to Eights and Twelves, hundred famous tests. sought for in the multi-cylinder type. But that doesn’t mean that the S; They still have the old limitations. ‘Without the Hudson Super-Six principal there is too much friction in the motor— too. much wear. 1 It is present in motors of any number of cylinders. Were it not for the Super-Six, Eights and Twelves would have displaced Sixes, as ; once seemed probable. : It was the Super-Six that saved the six. But lef no one convince you that a Six could have done without that great Hudson invention. Engineers all recognize certain limitations in motors of any number of cylinders. The Hudson invention overcomes those limitations. A Hudson Invention We applied this invention to a Six. We could just as well apply it to a multi-cylinder if that would make Hudsons better. It would add efficiency to any type, just as it does to the Six. 8 But the light, simple Six is the ideal type in the minds of engineers. It gives continu- ous power with minimum weight and mini- mum complications. Its limitations lay in vibration. motors—Eights designed to lessen that. type The V- and Twelves—were But that invention went far beyond them in ending that short- coming. So in a Six -every motoring situ- HUDSON MOTOR CAR COMPANY, DETROIT, MICHIGAN WILLIAMS AUTO CO. 287 ELM dded 80 pe‘r cent to six-cylinder efficiency—to power ix in general is the maximum motor type. It isn’t. ation was met. But it is only in a Hudson and in no other car. The test of a motor is its endurance. was super-endurance that won all the Super- Six records, and gave to the Hudson top New Cars on Exhibit The latest models shown at the New York Show are now on exhibit here. They have the new Hudson luxury and beauty, the plaited upholstery, the new artistic touches. They have the new Hudson gasoline saver, which helps you to pay for the car. Come now and see them. Thousands of buyers last spring were kept waiting for A few weeks may bring a like overdemand. Decide now and place. months for a Hudson. avoid that delay. STREET by doing what they cannot do, in a But it’s not any other Six, remember. The winner is the Super-Six, invented and patented by Hudson. It won because this feature a i 1 and especially endurance. It made added cylinders unnecessary by attaining what was It i i Notices South Congregational Church. " Dr. Hill returns to his pulpit to- fmorrow morning in order to give his annual report. His observations will e embodied in an address: “A Re- | view and Prospect.” The usual church | services will be held, boys division of the Sunday school at 9:30. Morn- g service at church kindergarten at 10:46; ; Men’s Sunday club; Chinese Assyrlan and the main Sunday schools at 12:10: Itallan school at 2:30; Italian service at 4:30. Assyrian service at 6:00 and Christian service league at 6:15. .. At the vesper service 4:30 Mr. Thompson will deliver the addres: ere Are You Going” and Mr. | Beebe will be in charge of the music. - his theology t: e Because of its unusual facilities for ® use of music in worship the uth church wishes to invite all who gare for good music and all who have no service at the hour in their own church to its afternoon worship at 4:30. Trinity Methodist Church. { What Do You Think of Billy Sun- day: ' Do you think he is sincere? Do u think he is in it for the money fi gots out of it? Do you believe in Do yqu like h lan- 7 Do, you think the ork ‘aré lasting? These others will form basis for thc Sunday evening addr 7:30 J. m.. by the minister, who has heard Mr. #unday on various, occasions, be- tore xed audiences. before —men alone. hefore college students, on the lecture platform. et The public is most cordially invited to hear what we belicve to be a fair and frank es- timate of Sunday's methods and work. On Sunday morning at 10:45 the germon will be, “What Will Compen- sate the Loss of the World War?"” The two Sunday school sessions meet s usual ,at 9:45 and 12:16. The ghildren’s sermon is in ‘connection iith’ the morning preaching service. young speople’s meeting and so- guage and results of h ions and 8 is grom G to 7:30. All are cor- |linist will play and Harry Schiedler | Young People’ meeting at 7 p. m.; y come to all, -usual hour. dially invited to all of these ser- vices. St. Mark’s Church. Holy Communion, 7:30 a. m., with corporate communion of the Daugh- ters of the King; later morning serv- ice, 10:45 a. m., with sermon by the rector on ‘““The Miracles of Christ;” Sunday school, 12:15 p. m.; Even- song, 4:30 p. m., with sermon by the curate on “Praver.” The Girl Scouts will meet on Mon- day at 5:30 p. m., instead of the The Boy Scouts will meet on Tuesday at 7:30 p. m. The troop is steadily growing in numbers and interest. The Girls' Friendly society glve a pageant In the chapel Wednesday evening, at 8 o'clock. members of the parish, and parents will on i and friends of members are invited i i and urged to be present. be no admission charge. There will Swedish Elim Baptist Church. Rev. J. E. Kingberg, pastor. Sun- day school with classes for young and old at 10 o’clock. Morning service at 11. “Topic, “Deliliah’s Revival Ser- mon.” Young People's meeting at 5 | o'clock in“the afternoon and evening e at Unfruitful 7,. with sermon on *“The Works of Darkness.” First Church of Christ, Scientist. Chapel, corner of West Main street and Park Place. Sunday morning subject, “Life.””; Sun- 3 9 a. i Wednesday evening service 6:00 o’clock. A read- ing room is open to the public from until 5 every afternoon except Sun- day at the same address. Universalist Church. Services, Sunday evening 7:30 o'clock, subject “The Devil.” Dr. Dil- lingham wlll preache. Everybody welcome. Evening Services. An especially attractive musical program will be rendered Sunday night as the service of the Universa- list church. Odd Fellows hall, Hung- erford Court. Charles Marshall, vio- All corpetist and an orchestra of violins will assist the organ in accompany- ing. The congregational singing. There will also be vocal solds. F. E. Hallett will preside at the organ. e First Congregational Church. The schedule of services at the First church tomorrow are as follows: Sun- day school, 9:45 o'clock; morning worship, 10:45 o’clock; adults depart- {ment of the Sunday school, 12:10 j oclock; Armenian service at 3 o’clock; Young People’'s society services at 6 o’clock, topic, “The Life of Willlam Booth, founder of the Salvation Army”. Andrcew Robb, leader. Pentecostal Meeting. Meeting at the home of Mr. Whaples, 685 Arch street on Sunday afternoon and evening at 3:45 and 7:15. Expect Miss Larson to be with us at the meeting on Wednesday at 7:45 p. m. All welcome. ¥nglish Lutheran Church. Hungerford Court, Frederick C. Wunder, pastor. Morning worship, 10:45. Preaching by the pastor. Sun- day school at 12 o’clock. Catechetical instruction, Tuesday at 7 p. m. Lu- ther league Thursday at 8 p. m., in the | rooms of the Hardware City Commer- cial school, 163 Main street. First Baptist Church. Morning worship at 10:45. Subject of sermon by the minister, Dr. Earle B. Cross, “Thyatira, Out of Weakness Made Strong.” At 12:15 p. m. Sun- day school meets with classes graded for all ages. Y. P. S. C. E. meeting at 6:00 p. m. Subject “Seeing the Good in Others.” Leader, Miss Inez { Boehm. At the evening congregation ;at 7:30 o'clock, a special feature will be the rendering of twog violin ’cello solos by W. H. Miller of Hartford. Sermon by the pastor on the theme, “What of the ‘Leak’?” The same kind of welcome to all kinds of folks. Stanley Memorial Church. | Rev. J. E. Rees, pastor. Morning worship at 10:45 with sermon on “The Mind of Christ.” Sunday school at 12. subject, “Joseph.” Cordial invitation is extended to all at these services. Second Advent Church. Church street, near Stanley street. Elder E. F. White, pastor. Preaching services Sunday, 10:45 a. m., and 7:15 p. m. -Subject for the morning ser- vice, “The Woman Clothed With the Sun or the Story of Ephisu, Smyria and Perganos.” Evening, “The Word of His Grace.” | Young People’s evenings service at 6:30. Praver and social service on Thursday night at 8 o’clock. All are cordially invited to these services. People’s Church, Sunday, 10 o'clock, prayer service; 10:45, Rev. Willlam Franklin, for- merly a missionary in India will preach; 12:15, Sunday school 5:45, Young People’s meeting; 7 o'clock, evening service conducted by Rev. ‘Willlam Franklin. Monday, 3 o’clock, devotional ser- vice, Rev. William Franklin and Rev. H. M. Shuman will be present; 7:45 consecration service. Tuesday, 4 o'clock, Children’s meet- ing. Thursday, 7:45, prayer meeting. On Wednesday evening there will he a cottage prayer meeting at the home of Mrs. Remington, 22 Bigelow street. Salvation Army. Holiness meeting, 11 a. m, Sunday school, 2:30 p. m. Praise meeting, 4:00 p. m. Soldiers' meeting, 7 p. m. Salvation meeting, 8 p, m. Lieut. Larson from Providence (The Salvation Army Caruso) will take part in all Sunday meetings. A special meeting will .be held Monday night lead by Ensign Palmer from Springfield, the three officers from Hartford and Lieut. Larson. Emmanuel Gospel Church. Booth’s hall. M. S. Anderson, pas- tor. The pastor will preach at 10:45 & m. and 7 p. m. The morning sub- ject will be “Supreme Business of the Christian church.” Evening subject, “What One ILoses Who Is Not a Christian” 12:16 p. m. Bible school; 6 p. m. young people’s meeting Tues- day 4 p. m. children’s meeting; 7:30 . m. Bible study: Thursday, 7:30 p. m. prayer meeting. A cordial wel- THREE ‘NEW HAVEN' | LAWYERS ACCUSED {Alleged to Have Conspired to Dishar Attorney 0'Neill New York, Jan. 20.—Charges re- sembling those made by Benjamin Oppenheim, who proved that his dis- barment of eleven years was pro- cured by perjured testimony, were made yesterday i affidavits submit- ted to the First Department of the Appellate Division on a motion of dis- | miss charges of unprofessional con- duct brought against Thomas J. O'Neill, a lawyer of 309 Broadway, on a complaint of lawyers for the New Haven Railroad. Charles J. Fox, an employe of the New Haven, who was the principal witness against O'Neill, asserted in the new affidavits that his testimony had been false, and that he had been influenced to give it by Charles M. Sheafe, Jr., John M. Gibbons, and | Joseph Sweeney of the legal depart- ment of the rallroad. The charges of Fox were denied emphatically last night by Mr. Sheafe, who pointed out that Fox had told his story against )'Nelll without variation on many ogccasions. Mr. Sheafe added that Fox had admitted that he had not *old the truth when he had made the recantation of his story against 'Netll. Charges of unprofessional conduct acainst O'Neill were that he had agreed to pay to Fox, who, as a brakeman, had been injured in the Fairfleld wreck several years ago, the sum of $10 a week while he was awaiting the trial of his damage suit against the New Haven and that he had induced him to state falsely that his residence was in Westchester County in order that the trial should occur before a referee and passed on to a Appellate Court for its deciston. The afidavit of Fox was made on Jan, 8. Mr. O'Neill said last night that on that date he was trying a case in White Plains when Fox came to the courtroom and told him his conscience and told him his con- science hurt him and that he wished to recant his charge. The lawyer said ‘he hurried Fox before Supreme Court Justice Platt in White Plains, who took the affidavit. Mother Urges Truth. In it Fox charges that the three lawyers named had threatened him with prosecution if he failed to make the charges against O'Neill. He add- ! ed that ““Charles ‘M. Sheafe is the man who kept telllng me to put my rharges up to Mr. O'Nelll and to r+ick to them.” Fox said that his roason for making the recantation was that his conscience hurt him and that his mother continually wurged *him to do it. Another affidavit submitted by ex- Senator Edgar W. Brackett, who rep- resented O'Neill, in support of the motion to dismiss the charges of un- professional conduct, was from Mrs. Jane Fox, 72 years old, the mother. She corroborated thé statements of her son and told of his struggle with his conscience. N Mr. O'Neill said last night that | Charles M. Sheafe had testified on | cross-examination during the hearing | of the charges that the New Haven | and the New York Central had agreed to divide the expenses. of prosecuting him. The lawyer said that he had made affidavit that he had collected in sixteen months more than $215,000 in | damages from the Tew Haven. He said that witnesses on his side in damage suits against railroads had been in- dicted in Yonkers, in Connecticut, in Schenectady and the Bronx, but that none had been successfully prose- cuted. Fox Considercd Not Reliable. Mr, Sheafe said over the telephone from his home in Rye last night that the recanting affidavit of Fox was but “the weak effort of a witness to get Thomas J. O'Neill out of a hole bhe- cause Fox at heart felt friendly to- ward O'Neill.” “In his opinion in the disbarment proceedings against O'Neill,” said Mr. Sheafe, “Referee Friedman said that Fox was not worthy of belief—in snort he said Fox was a llar, but that his testimony was backed up by so much documentary evidence that he was forced to believe the documents them- selves and to send his findings to the appellate division, which passes on disbarment proceedings, on the basis of that documentary evidence. “The testimony which Fox tried to recant,” he continued, ‘‘was given by him in three separate proceedings of record extending over a period of more than four years. Since Mr. Fox made his afidavit he has told me that he was sorry he did it—that he ‘was just trying to help O’'Neill out of a hole.’ Within a period of two weeks before he made it he told four per- sons—Kenneth M. Spence of 60 Wall street, counsel for the Bar association; myself, and two employes of the New Haven railroad—that he had been of- fered $5,000 to make such an,afidavit. “Fox was injured in the Fairfleld wreck. For the New Haven I settled the case with O'Neill for Fox, his cli- ent. O’'Neill tried to get half the amount of the settlement instead of one-third. I went into court for Fox and forced O'Neill to give back that — e Bright Eyes indicate buoyant health. When the eyes are dull, liver and bow- els need regulating. Quicktl?; restore healthy conditions wi a dose or two—in time— of BEECHAM’S PILLS ime in the W e s Toe the Established 1886 GlobeClothingHouse EXCEPTIONAL INDUCEMENT IN 31st. ANNUAL SALE WHICH INCLUDES HART, SCHAFFNER & MARX (LOTHING There is no mistake in buying SHIRTS at Our January Prices money to him. Judge Learned Hand, who heard the case, said that it was our duty to bring disbarment proceed- ings against O’Neill and that, if we didn’t he himself would complain against him. “We then went before the grievance committee of the Bar association and Fox gave the same testimony he gave before Judge Hand. The committee in turn became prosecutor in going be- fore the appellate division with dis- barment proceedings. When Mr. Friedman was appointed referee to take the testimony in that proceeding Fox, for a third time, gave the same testimony. “I do not know what we shall do about it. I feel that Fox is just a weakling, vet it seems that he ought to be prosecuted for perjury.” CALDER FOR FUSION U. S. Senator-clect Tells Audience He Favors Retention of Administra- tion in Office, New York, Jan, 20.—William M. Calder, United States senator-elect, told several hundred republicans last night at a dinner given in his honor at the Republican club that the re- publican party could not do better than support the present fusion city administration again this fall. He not | only advised that this be done, l)ut; P L 00t 001 et | WHY HAIR F ) IR FALLS 00T ] Dandruff causes a feverish irritation of the scalp, the hair roots shrink, loosen and then the hair comes out fast. To stop falling hair at once'and rid the scalp of every particle of dan- druff, get a 25-cent bottle of Dander- ine at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub well into the scalp, After a few applications all dandruff disappears and the hair stops com- ing out. CHILD’S TONGUE BECOMES COATED IF CONSTIPATED If cross, billous, sick, feverish, or © + full of cold, take no * chances. «California Syrup of Figs” can’t harm tender stomach, liver, bowels. Children love this ‘“fruit laxative,” and nothing else cleanses the tender stomach, liver and bowels so nicely. A child simply will not stop playing to empty the bowels, and the result is, they become tightly clogged with waste, liver gets sluggish, stomach sours, then your little one becomes cross, half-sick, feverish, don’t eat, sleep or act naturally, breath is bad, system full of cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! See if tongue is coated, then give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the constipated waste, sour bile and ' undigested food passes out of the sys- | tem, and you have a well, playful | child again. | Millions of mothers give ““Caiifornia Syrup of Figs” because it is perfectis harmless; children love it, and it¢ never fails to act on the stomach, liver and bowels. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot- tle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which has full directions for bablies, children of all ages and for grown- ups plainly printed on the bottle. Be. watre of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company.” Refuse any other other kind with contempt. said that he had no doubt that the'l republicans would do it. The sugges tion, the first that has come from tha' local republican organization concerns= ing its possible position regarding the municipal election this year, wa# cheered. Mr. Calder reminded his aus dlence that he had carried New York . city last November by a majority aps proximating 80,000, running on & straight party ticket, and addes “‘Some few republicans in the cif believe that because of this fact wi should this vear place before th people city and borough tickeets com< posed entirely of member= of ouri party. I am not so sure, however,; . that we should do this.” 3 DR. SPAHN PROVES ¢ PEACE LETTER TRIE Says Chancellor Told Leadefsfiél Kaiser's Proposed Profler ;& *i _ 4 Berlin, Jan. 20, by wireless to Says ville—Dr. Peter Spahn, leader of th Catholic center party, informs t Overseas News agency that so: time before Chancellor Von Bet mann-Hollweg's speech in thé Reicha stag on Dec. 12 in which he made announcement of the peace proppsald of the Central#powers, the chancellgs summoned the parltamentary leades and informed them of the empe'yorg decislon. ‘; Dr. Spahn makes this statement he said, because there is some question in England whether the emperor in - reality decided on a peace move a8 long ago as Oct. 31, the date of ‘his recently published letter to the chancellor announcing his decision ¥ take the initiative. It is insisted, says, that either the letter Is spurio or else the date was falsified. proye the contrary, he points out th the ' chancellor in his speech ui almost the same words as did t emperor in his letter and savs fug ther that the chancellor in his terview with the Reichstag leaderS told them of the emperor’s letter. Favors Wide U-Boat Campaign. | Berlin, via London, Jan. 20, 7% a. m.—Count Westarp, leader of i conservative party in the Reichsta in a speech at Madgeburg declared himself in fayor of the fullest use of submarines. “Our utmost strength must "i" be thrown into the scales. There is no weapon of warfai which we dare to withhold. We have too few weapons in hand agaipst ¥ngland, who possesses at this ment our colonies, has swept n% our comimercial marine and put blockade into effect. If we want AH make further progress against En land we must strike her commerc fleet. We have already dealt Eng~ land mighty blows in cruiser warfare and it is technically possible to a ment our achievements but the cl thing is commercial warfare. ' “It is a good sign that nobody f it necessary to try and interfere the plans and decisions of the m tary authorities but that everybol has full confidence.” RUTGERS FOLLOWS SUIT. New Brunswick, N. J., Jan. 30— Rutgers college students, follow lead of Princeton sophomores in tempting to abolish the club aysi have started a movement to do with the glass societys of the colls

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