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Breakfast tastes alot better, is easier to prepare, and makes more smiles when you serve PosT TOASTIES “These superior corn flakes have a flavor; substance and satisfaction far beyond the usual. In o ing from the specify Post Toasties- That will insure receiving the best corn flakes made. Made by Postum Cereal Co,Inc., Battle Creek,Mich. & Owing to a good size contract entered with the Ajax Rubber Co., we are in a position to sell the fol- lowing size tires at last year's prices. This special price Sale will last until Tuesday night only. Last Year This Year Price Price $30.50 $33.30 $33.75 $40.55 $32.90 $39.50 6—30x3"; Q.D. $19.65 $24.00 10—30x3 Q.D. $15.50 $19.75 These tires are all fresh Road Kings (Non Skid) all fresh and first with a 6,000 mile guarantee. Take advantage of our offer. We positively could not sell them at above prices unless they were bought at last year’s prices. City Service Station A. M. Paonessa, Prop. Cor. Hartford Ave. and Stanley St. 30—31x4 10—34x4 S.S. 10—33x4 S.S, Q.D. Crisp, flavory sweets— nice and nibbly! Rulh of Awerivd Flarnrs, sl A7 Peppormiet, A8 Chucniain, AU W iergrees and AR Commamet The Beverage Above the Average At meal time, lesome, re- It's dif- You will Buy a case of yonr dealer today " Distributors for New Haven . ’W 4 4 lflf%l(]f’m ‘ \ ‘ H CThe Anzac' €o.ndm, DR, HADLEY TALKS T0 YALE SENIORS Urges Ideals in Work in Bac- calaureate Address New Haven, June 21.—President Arthur T. Hadley of Yale, who is to retire next year, delivered the bac- calaureate address to the graduating class of the university yesterday. President Hadley appealed to the graduating class to seek more than success, but to aim at the embodiment of ideals for which other men ought to strive. “Men said, “did like Choate or Osler,” he more than practice law or medicine. They gave the fellow members of their professions stan- dards of success to pursue, and in so doing influenced the kind of god they worshipped. The man who follows the example of Choate or Osler does more than render professional serv- ice to his fellows. He does homage to the right kind of professional standards.” Tke same thing was true of public life, Dr. Hadley continued. “Leaders like Lincoln or Davis, Grant or Lee did more than plan a war,” he said. “They furnished to the citizens the embodiment of ideals for which to fight and images of God which they more or less unconsciously worship- ped.” The greatest service of this kind wsa self sacrifice which could appeal to the world as a whole. In the case of the great teachers of the world, he said, “it is the life that makes the teaching.” Dr. Hadley said in part: “If we look back on our early childhood we shall see that the les- sons which give religion any real meaning were taught in our homes; taught by our fathers and mothers, our brothers and sisters, at a time when they were not conscious that they were doing any religious teach- ing at all. Our fathers were stronger and wiser than we, guiding us in an unknown world and protecting us, if need be, in a hostile one. Our mothers gave us love and self-sacri- fice in boundless measure, comfort- ing us when we were lonely and for- getting their own heavy burdens in ovder to lighten the weight of ours. It is experiences like these which make us understand what is meant by the fatherhood of God or the sac- rifice of Jesus Christ. The Sunday school and the church .simply give DENISON GARAGE 430 MAIN STREET. Ldvery Cars for Hire, pay and Night. Storage. Supplies and Repairing PIONEER GARAGE CO., INC. We overhaul and repair anything in the auto motive field. Generators, starters, welding, etc. STORAGE WELDING SUPPLIES, 193 Main St. Rear Fair Dpt. Store. TEL. 887-12. MANROSS AUTO CO. Storage and Accessories, Repair Work a Specialty. Phone 2227 139 Arch St OVERLAND AGENCY Fuel Saving RANGES YOU WILL FIND here just the style Range you want. STEWART Ranges are very casy on Fucl and they cook and bake perfectly. They have been leaders since 1832, w recommend and fully guarantee them. BUY ONE NOw. Formerly Sold By F. W. Loomis & Co. Plumbing, Steam Heating, Sheet Metal Work. CLAUDE J. LEROUX A | o and size - ! | \ names to conceptions that were al- ready familiar. The God we brought with us from home is little more than an enlarged figure of father or mother projected against the back- ground of the ages. 1 know not which most to pity, the boy who, having had no father or mother or friend that could take their place in child- hood, has been forced to construct his own God from the bare phrases of the written word, or the boy whose parents have had some essential ele- ment left out of their nature so that their sternness has given him an un- pitying God or their weakness a apricious one. “Nor does this process end with childhood. The grown man seeks companionship and leadership just as surely as the boy seeks the society of his brothers or the guidance of his father. Companions and leaders shape our ideals of God in later life, just as the members of our family did in early life. Amid all the pleas- ure and profit of these friendships, the most important thing that we get out of them is a new revelation of God; a background for our religious ideals, wider at any rate, if not truer, than that which was given us in our homes. To be like our friends is our ideal of good: to do what they do, our ideal of success. Infinitely important, for good or for evil, is the reaction of these ideals upon our idea of God. Every great movement of popular feeling, in college, in the nation, or in the world's history, is fundamentally a religious movement —the finding of a new object of wor- ship. Every leader in such a move- ment, here or hereafter, is a prophet —true or false, according as he leads his followers to worship something better or worse than they did before. “There will not be many of us to whom is given the power of the prophet to reach men of all nations and of all ages; but to each man who will live his life unselfishly it is given to do something of the same kind of works and add something to the world’s knowledge of God. In the family and in business, in the nation and in the world, three points stand out clear for every one of us;.first, that people get their religion, not from the constituted teachers of re- liglous doctrine, but from the men they know and the men they admire; second, that the choice of men to know and admire determines what kind of God each of us will have and in what spirit each of us will do his work; and third, that whatever power of leadership a man possesses is in its essence a power of shaping other men’s religion and giving them ideals of the divine purpose. As a man does this work well or ill, falsely or truly, for his own apparent benefit or for the lasting benefit of mankind, so shall that work be judged in the final account. “Gentlemen of the graduating class: The great thing that a man accomplishes in his life, the thing which is probablly more important in the long run than all the rest of his life put together, is this revelation of God which he gives to his fellow- men. In one sense the experience of Jesus Christ stands out apart from the rest of humanity. In another but perhaps equally important sense, it is typical of what every man can do and @igould do according to the measure of his ability. So to live and so to think that ihose about us will have more courage and self-sacrifice,-|- and larger and truer vision of what is required of man—these things are more important than all the scien- tific principles we can discover or all the material results we can achieve.” MORE FOLKS IN THIS CHICAG" WARD THAN IN ALL WYOMING. Chicago, June 21.—Chicago chal- lenges New York to show & ward like its 27th. The census gives this ward 150,244, It is on the northwest side and has 20.02 square miles. That s the answer. The area is larger than many European cities and the popi- lation greater than Nevada or Wy- oming. MULISH EVEN IN DEATH. . Chicago, June 21.—Scientists have said that one of the rarest objects in pature's processes is 2 dead mule. One can now be seen in Waukegan. He was the subject of $5,000 worth of litigation for six years. The princi- pals were James Doyle and John Morris. Morris was soaked in juds- ment $1,000 and costs, the money and mule to go to Doyle. Just as judsg- ment was entered the mule fell dead. A. PINKUS EYESIGHT &, Typewriters Rented at Reasonable Rates GENERAL TYPEWRITER EXCMANGE, Inc 119 Pearl Street Hartford, Conn. PLEASURE CARS M. IRVING JESTER 3 ARCH SINEET A. H. HARRIS Motor Trucking 166 Main St. Phone 1849 ‘WOODS ADDRESSES TRINTTY. Urges Fellowship o; Educated to Im- pProve Conditions. { Hartford, June 21.—Colonel Ar-‘ thur Woods, former police commis- sioner of New York, was the speaker at the commencement week chapel service at Trinity college yesterday. He said that labor difficu’ties and other troubles of the present day could be solved by co-operation and human fellowship on the part of the educated men of the country. He eulogized the part taken in the war by the foreign-born residents and said he believed immigrants should be al- lowed to come into the United Siates with little restriction. LOSES BET ON LIFE. Russell Wanted to Wager That He Would Be Dead Yesterday. Louis Russell of 120 Commercial street, is at the New Britain General hospital, where he was taken yester- day in the police ambulance follow- ing his threats Saturday night to end his life by suicide. A Russell has been despondent of late, and on Saturday he is reported to have offered to wager that he would be dead within an hour. A Quantity of paris green was found on Russell’s person. & — Glastonbury Man | Tells His Story | To The Public' Mr. Oliver Fournier of 164 Nanbua Avenue, Glastonbury, Says He Did Not Believe He Could Be Helped But Was Surprised. The testimonials praising the great | = goodness for the Herbal Tonic CINOT are pouring in at a prodigious rate and the CINOT Man is being congrat- ulated by scores of people every day and CINOT is a success and why? merit and merit only. Mr. Fournier says: “For two years I have uun‘eredl with kidney trouble and tried every | means to get results but kept get- ting worse and a friend of mine ad- vised me to try CINOT and I did | more to please him than anything | else and let me tell you that CINOT did the work from the first bottle I began to improve and can now say I am well and on six botties of CINOT and it is marvelous how rea- sonably it costs to regain one's health.” CINOT 1S BEING DEMONSTRAT- ED IN NEW BRITAIN BY AN EX- PERT AT THE MILLER-HANSON DRUG STORE, 32 CHURCH ST. It is also for sale in Plainville by G. R. Byington; in Forestville by Kent's Pharmacy; in Southington by Chaf- fee's Drug Store; in Plantsville by Geo. R. Steele; in Bristol by The Madden Drug Store; in Glastonbury by C. R. Densmore and can be ob- tained at all first class druggists. Comfort Your Skin With Cuticura Soap and Fragrant Talcum Soap, Ointment, Taicum, %c. Clothes of Character Clothes that are neat and trim of appearance with correct hang and fit, mean advancement to a man, whether in society or business. Our suits are care- fully chosen and represent the very best styles. When Vacation Money Is Ne At this particular time of the year, it little difficult to pay cash. That need in your way. We offer you most Hbes We guarantee you SATISFACTION, both goods we' sell and the way we sell FOR AMERICAN Suits o.f, Quallty.nr:’d Se| 'sna| '’ and style fiturfi{‘omrp . y L1 A working garment which looks hours, and costs no more o SOLD BY Kaplan Clothes Shop, New Britain, Conn. VOILE FROCKS SPECIAL, $8.75. Regular price $10.98. ¥ The Bathing Is Straight Aheac Maybe it's a bit too early for to go in swimming. But it won’ long before you take the Chances are you won’t think m about it before hand. You'll cq home some warm day and jul.t if you have your swimming suit re Better look up your old one see if it’s in good shape. * Our one-piece suits have large arm-holes and short Plenty of two-piece suits with belts. Blue flannel trunks whitc wool jerseys are most. pop now. $6.00, $7.50, $8.00 and $0.00.