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And Britain Herald.' ! PUBLISIING COMPANY, Proprietors w Now ab) (®unds excepted) at 415 erald Bullding, 67 Church St Yoar res Months Month faces a we hint of om Mail the P New at M o and the wi us with Watch medium In Cireulation and press ays open to advertisers of The Assoclated Bed Pross in exclu for ublication W it not ot paper and herein rean ely entith of all ne eredited AL or Verwis i hon also loeal s ny K The the Audit Bureau of Clreulntion « tional organization Fiishes newspap 1 adver- th & strictly honest analys lon. Our lation wtat upon this audit. This ins fon awn fraud newnpa jtlon fgures to both national ivertiners " a of ‘ holds t | the tiew elre wo 3 he peopl ize IATTONAL TRAINING jvernment its the two. The taken up wants or more It profession men ocational wants living ere disabled, more or less, training me trade, n hat nt in spite of the fact will them to | a Wh States ly great w n receiving aid from the But t has a. right to some sort | people weigh receive | the sm ing this training th and expenses while they | can “lie it. There are about 40 men pitain taking this training |d be more and there would if all the men 1 what it means. the reason tional training board will Red Cross in City is city November 16 to No- 9 dls of the drive to be con have more men know about pce were published in the Saturday. as he law understoc than ot of this a state official may eri ident-El granted that Lloyd oms which cents in this paper last bled ex-service disability may be great or ld go to the Red Cross one of the days set, and hat he can do en who went to war sulfer no ability oney counterbalanc hay be abl the d permar in the kn nce to learn moro re. n who was hurt, and s still n man, al- One « about th Nations If Pre the amount of o Lea will to forget failed tc nt injuries they hav that to live not wledge they a way way than | which comfortable a pre-war soclated from that hurt, ought to ¢ Senate d Cross chances are oms and find that’ the The i stral chance to | not whe now brought league, knowledgo htforward | there sh It sl B plan s a lot nll ex-sérvice men know is government wants to do for « they fve them have jobs they do not of t up. They can take ing wa th 1 the idea hin At of t e ng Just the any rate ld know committee ho om bor same. w intere T American Legion who has W ted 0y He Glover if is much of the Ady result Ihe t ting checks from the state re men the financial $10,000 n strait Ibuting the which to such here all that all patd men tod front od | as mon and th f little deatl New u that | that th fnd 1t learn out what he cn n f rATERNALISM & photograph b1 japhs low o) p ! how tnals oreo perf have bhoen But 1 with appar \ Alizatior And of aid | Ings now 1 of the | Jeadine th el it will the eatching floor and other “wanted” them It will surely be nal, the mangh No the by now- onstration was glven yester W naswed by sclentists and w YG, The n described thus n, In N it op- the has hospital transmission Is simply the rellef then tracing that b o mat- | jng; the of fire preparing a bas of the nee wphand ith e 1 connected to The over L stylus a| apparen transmitter latter But he curvent flowing the 1 the their accordan [ give with relative bas-relief At & end this current variation is ted into ot of any point of of body at any 1\ moment the | fair danger various gradations faint lp who have not done thing | 1o should f the discovery. 8 want to their will s into the At ther w t not perfection ne metimes men or incognito, but aid of harm remain bring identity vention do ten will do great good fdens the invention r, &re numberloss. esent we are limited The sovernment is very paters many ways. We cannot drink; panic by were no great o who su suggests, | gt ang in our aying Last lad fou may when to be th chance her oy ay. it eform ar e kere or looks as though science will NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1520. | METHODIST CHURCH on “JEST RUMINATIN (Roberg Russell.) to send a reproduction of our 11 over ourselves can the country travel. the psychic This’ discovery times 1l your we LOOSE nited holds that pla wan W Preside he rid take for im N¢ orts positic remark more en a n Senator “ight his every belioves that i1l boy k any belleves would like to trust Of course it takes some men langer hers tc trust ticize ect fc and ‘s United ot the President-Elect he “dec esident gue of terribly mistaken lize would injure the fi struggling re prestige with u issue ther or but r bhe ould hand te ut by he ele: lection to well wt the has be in high plac AND ThE In Kurope thrée and a half millions | N ' unless Britain a great drive rtaken ler pe the wk M ttle e} ey wer ves as Liencd surged over a al e horribl the n need a of n the ittle simila unhe the most given ment which he should have known are gres 10 tel Step.y in 1 as well 1 eanno! us t do, significance of the faster There is as the trend what we can will impress slogan: TALK HIGH UP. grows bigg 1 who nt of mat his this office, n anc of man his man helr man his » lear Even 1 Sta Sens holds the important ter b sclection he intil 1 ma a less scriously: becomes wore public utterance in the fath a0 the people of the United in their n th itor accuples he man who r, if he is as the years pass. the United position position in seriously by the fails to real- how he de a mistake is of official that Representative a little more serious- a Unlted is are given hasen by the President he should As his father world” and er's word is tes President e sacredness a humble citizen a President, taking speaking in others will suffer National Bank has given five fall in the value of the French frane, and rea reasons ¥ o Pres- b w or a things such a way Provincial sons for the used to be worth about twenty ding’s celeb of the League of Elect Harding believes Natio and s in Harding's of th not rather “TY beli » declar ction ed th other franc ren ns is to whi coh e there whe le; ve t ing sho 1d which was not not at m natic has enough campaign that dead he is Even though he has this fact utterance to a he should senti- ances of countries regain their ch were as- the great conflict orts urged wi be or not should ther ague he the that hat ha re- wed a an issue referred to the leagus isunderstood | ms with the depreciated talk- CHILDREN DI, Ame th ople 1 pa st in " city na tldren death ler the he sons to be ever ed of of generosity care ie pla ught B8 to them rapidly to safety: t te against roto led things that abe rica o may \deq in a h yest inie nd w lay little eded i, i of sh th > let grown their ries hearts of all of ) thme er a8 ne blame Tair ffered enoug night, rteen was t here would burn it Gr The yut to starve helps the n is about ttle childre the have u to take nd suffering fler- own- erday in a omen escap- crushed and stairway had be 1 the ground for erir to care a8, the - their to die to indicata emphasize eed to the s of heart the these all are the ort children, o carry heir weaknes, them have prople in , their of ) despair— burn deep us. danger tha The people is said rown No child could start Yet is was the children | nd d ained safety, . | the little ones crushed dand bleeding, | in a poor tenement. a | years fed old while those was found than a tes | n leaving | Appealin’ little children— can’t you hear their cry o' woe from overseas where happiness for most them don’t grow? Their scrawny little bodies— 't you feel their anguished pain, to which no comfort e'er will come, un we help, again? Their poor, emaciated arms stretched out to us; they call: “Just help the ones that's . starved—you cannot help Their e washed suff’rin's tears, look, to the land where an’ sympathetic hearts learned to understand. At have the lame, the poor an' sick an’ Tet aid o home-folk Dbe- out of our abund- give a livin® share them starvin® ves won't perish over there. not like the father's may despise his that poor little baby image I face: the nation may se; yet meant these.” by tful t | gre home halt, blind; them, hind. But ance we can that millions we the we cannot our | our We may creed; we race—but hears lh‘ The people o’ be foul with war's dis: babies arc the ones He “—unto the least o Grant strength to those who work for them that all the world may know—appealin’ little children—can't you hear their ¢ woe? —_——— live. The o' crushed and bruised. scarce baby was unscratched. now.” said the four- “But, 1 I snatched Sal- and “I'mall right teen-year-old-hero gee, was scared in that place. (the baby) by the the neck got him A big fellow knocked the le stepped on me, but T pushed Salvatore underncath me and I lay on him hard He yelled but T told him to And began on to hurt vatore seat in out of me down and as I could shut up then people and 1 remember anything else stepping me begzan and I don’t that happened until ma kissed me and ‘Bella Mio.”" interpretation said N is needed for foreign language. of fourteen years had pro- these words in a The lad tected with his body that of his little He had been torn and crush- cruel men The mother him. Few Nor is there any brother. had of trampled the baby cannot the 1l man now over had pic- ed him kissed as see ture n would as rd for whigpered words of his “Bella Mio.” living who not his rewa long to hear, such actian, the mother: WHITNEY ARRESTED, DENIES ANY MURDER New Hampshire Ma Aecnsed By Own Son, Caught in Boston on Bad.Check Charge. Boston, Nov. 15.—Willlam B. ney, for the body of whose secon wife the authorities have been searching on his farm at Lang N. H., was brought here early today by Sherifi Charles Hewitt of Rich- mond, Me. Whitney arrested at Richmond last night on a charge of forging a check of the town of Lang- Whitney disappeared from Lang- 30 went to Richmond farm ut five miles center of the town. On | Tuesday last under the name of William B. Clark he married Mrs. | Agnes Clark a widow of Charlestown, H. His wife and her 13 year old | ®on Gordon Clark were with him when | he it here today. Whitney CXpro willingness to return to | laanzdon denied that he had | killed his formey wife, insisting that ’|| the time of her disappearance | four ago she had started for relatives for soliq citizenship | |r‘;|u;rrn| Whitney ‘dun ing his eight years r . ¢ at langdon. After he jer “town John Whitney, his 15 venr =on by his first marriage. is alle have eaid that he saw his strike down his step-mother home ind later bury hep Search by the au. find the bogy. Whit- was don don on October and bought from the a a was br a but vears the_west to visit - A reputation ! had been hy | lence the old ed father in { their our ycars ago well body in a | thorities 1 led to GRAFT IN HA Hartford, Nov. 15.—A squ ‘l“'lll' have, it is said | wholesale batch of evidenco | ing the illegal sale east side of the city, time federal officers, tion of U. S. District Attorney \E. Smith are investigating the made by Mrs Julia Czarnotte, Adolph arnotte of 186 stre tha U Revenuo ! Michael J. Dwy ccepted $200 grarft | from her husband for protéction for the sale of whiskey. 25 YEARS ACO l)-“nm The Herald of That Date). "ORD, men concern. of liquor in the and at the same under the dir L. charge wife of (o Sheldon i i Dr. Bunpell was elected secretary ‘ of the County Health bureau. { A. J. Sloper is in New York on a | business trip. 1 A serious fire broke out at Rentsch- lors Scheutzen park yesterday after- noon. The High school det held. a debating contest noon. Fred Latham and George Lynch appeared at an entertainment at Forestville last ekening. | The Humason and Beckley blacken- | ing kiln was practically destroyed by fire last night, The damage amounted | to about $100. i tan Do ting classes 1 this after- | h glas will be fo Agent ' | OFFICIALS' REPORTS | Work Along Educational, Mis- sionary and Benevolent Lines 15.—A “‘re- was offered to the Council of the Board of Benevolence of the Methodist Episcopal church at the latter’s meeting here today by the Rev. Clarence True Wilson, cor- responding secretary of the church's Board of Temperante and Morals. The first article had to do with Am- ericanization which it defined - as that achievement of national unity as an equipment for world service which the nation found it needed at the outbreak of the war and which need was just as imperative before we found it out.” The article advocated English as the exclusive basis for American edu- wation in the grade schools and as the medium of communication through every American published newspaper. “We must eliminate little foreign language groups segre gated from the rest of our people, said the creed. D¥scussing next “The Divine Right of Democracy,” the creed reiterated “the soverign right of the people” to eléct their own verning officers and advocated continuance of the direct primary system and extension of the initiativ referendum and re- call. Reverence for prohibi ing, prize fighting and a national censorship of moving pictures werc further articles in the creed. Another article said: *“I be- iieve in an educational and moral suasion campaign against the per- sonal use of the doped cigarettes which tobacco trust foisted upon the country in war times.” Bible teaching in the public schools was advocated and also Sabbath ob- servance “as it stood before the Ger- man-American alliance trampled it in the mire of our American cities, to establish on its ruins their continental Sunday, adapted to a beer garden Boston, Mass. Nov. former’s creed” extension of aga ambl- and prostitution, law ion, crusades German crash.” imperialism that went to Home Mission Work Expansion of the home mission work cf the Methodist Episcopal church in industrial centers, universi ties and colleg Ameng negroes in the north and at army and marine i was described to the secreiaries’ Council of Boardes of Benevolence by the Rev. David H. Forsyth, corre- sponding secretary of the church’c Board of Home Missions and Church Extension. “Checks in the fi time: sent out for maintenance st quarter of 1920 were three large as the first quarter in 1919,” said the report. In cities 596 pastors are being aid- ed to the amount of $205,351 and 597 special workers have been employed at a cost of $697,418, according to the re- port. In rural fields preachers are receiving aid at a cost of $659,859 and 1054 churches, parsonages houses are under construction, tha home missions board contributing about $1,250,000 to these projects. In addition, the report pointed out, the department of church extension is looking after $500,000 worth of loans on churches and parsonages. Tho permanent fund of the board, the report said, had been increased by more than three quarters of a million as civilization and bolstering the type of | nd parish ! !dollars in the quadrennium and now i contains $2,814,000. ! | Educational Work. Reporting on the work of the board of education of the Methodist Epis- copal church, Abram W. Harris, for- mer president of Northwestern uni- ersity and corresponding secretary of the board, told the church council that 180 educational institutions are sponsored by the board. Of this ! number 43 are colleges or universi- | ties, 32 are professional and graduate | schools, 36 are secondary schools for whites and 19 are schools for ncgroes. He said the property of the schools is valued at more than $39,000,000 and that their productive endowment is in excess of $34,374,000. Students total about 51,200 and the alumni number 119,834, “Tire board has two main interests,” said the report. “‘One is to help stu- dents attend collcges or secondary schools and the other to provide for or help to maintain these institutions. The student loan fund, derived from Sunday school offerings on Children’s day, has assisted more than 27,00 Methodist boys and girls to ge¢t an | education. Dr. Harris said the board has re- lations with 15 schools for white people in the southern highlands and that because of funds raised by the church’'s centenary movement new buildings are being erected at John H. Snead seminar Boaz, Ala., Mur- phy college, Sevierville, Tenn., and | Baxter seminary, Baxter, Tenn. Salaries Too Low. Low salaries for ministers of the gospel have reduced their number to an inefficient minimum, according to a report submitteed to the Council of the Benevolence of “the Methodist Episcopal church. The re- port came from Dr. Joseph B. Hing- eley, chairman of the board of con- ferencee claimants th organization which has had charge of raising the | pension funds of the church. Inadequate salaries and the result- | ant hardships have caused among | ministers physical disability and men- tal poverty, forced clergymen to take up “side lines” in order to make a livelihood ‘or else driven competent men from the profession and have kept from the work “the best equip- ped and most intelligent youth,” ac- cording to the report. Discussing the dearth of ministers the report said: “In one denomination 3,388 congre- | gzations did not have regular pastoral care. In another there were 994 fewer ministers than in 1914. A de- nomination having 963 congregations had only 627. settled pastors, and an- other reports an average net gain of 25,680 members but of only 34 min- ers"” The Boards of i report gave a comparative list of average salaries paid by various denominations but said the fizures were misleading because the “larger | salaries make the average m: mum amount for most of them,” According to these figures the Protes- tant Episcopal church pays an aver- agee of $1,243 the Presbyterian (North), $1,177; the United Presby- terian $1,096; the Dutch Reformed church $1,170; the Methodist Episco- pal (North), $1,176; the Congrega- tional $1.042, and the Baptist (North- ern) $950. “The best young men arc not de- terred from coming into the ministry from fear of sacrifice during their ac- tive years,” said the report, “but they | are unwilling to face poverty at the a | end of their career.” The report/said that the income tax returns listed clergymen, having an income of $3,000 a year and that while New Jersey ranks first among the states in the average salaries paid clergy- men, the figure there is $1,270 a year, which is less than the $25 a week which stenographers ave federal nly 1671 as By Uncle Sam feels a keen Mexico's oil-wellfar Utopia will be nearer when tongues organize and strike for shorter hours. interest in Too many men think they are think- ing when they are merely loafing and wishing. of tl audience is 1% director Act movie with The task to grip the Obscene 1. t When money talks there number of men in the “Vox Dei.” . crowd to shout S The greater part af the world perspiring is done by people who I 75 is the greatest of all ary weapons, but in politics it is cffective than a perfect 36. mili 1es: The honeymoon is over when he begins to inquire whether Lloyd's will insure silence. Doubtless an outraged stomach got its ideas concerning nutriment. Selecting ambassadors will bt an easier matter this time. There are more millionaires to choose fram. Ludendorff is now a but ere private e English FACTS AND FANCIES ROBERT QUILLEN are always ! wonders at times were the fool brain | It is a fortunate thing for campaign managers that the world outgrew the habit of stoning false prophets. If Lenine would reduce all of fellaws fo a common level of poverty. why desn’t he adopt our income tax plan? Palmer says he has convicted 181 profite Fine work. At that rate he can finish ask in 3,794 y The world is rapidly nearing the point wheref a great moral principle can't get a hearing without promising a profit. One is no longer preveked when told that the line is busy. It does hi heart good to find something in this country that is busy. In Ireland they are searching | houses for concealed arms. Over here one may search the street in vain for concealed legs. “Profit In Skinning Skunks de- clares a headline. The trouble is that the profit in a skin game usually goes to the skunks. There is no prospect in getting coal in unlimited quantities unless the bootieggers can be persuaded to handle it on the side, We are informed that Obregon is | the Mexican form of O'Brien. Can it DIES IN ACGIDENT ON 215T BIRTHDAY Gordon Sw;n of New Haven Killed in Turnpike Wreck Gordon Swift, aged 21 years, is dead, and Miss Gertrude Le Grand, of 227 Washington avenue, West Haven. at the New Britain General hospital with a pressure of the skull, as the ve. sult af an automobile smashup whict occurred Saturday night on the tarn- pike near the Berlin Brick Co.’s plant not far from where the Middletown branch crosses the turnpike. The scene of the accident is the one where so many other accidents have occurred and a year or two ago two car overturned. Swift, who w P. Swift, proprietor of the Momauguin people | were burned to death there when their | s the son of Theodore | BATTLE T0 A TIE | Empires and Crimsons Finish on Even Football Exhibition—Both No?rlg' Score. | Terms After a Brilliant The Crimsons of Hartford and the Empires of this city, staged a football thriller yesterday afternoon at the | Newingion Road field, the battle re- | sulting in a scoreless tie. Several times | during the fray, it looked as though the Empires mizht score, but on eacha occasion, the visitor defense strengthened, and they managed to turn back the onslaughts of the locals | In the closing minutes of play, the Crimsons threatened to score, having rushed the pigskin to the 10-yard line. Captain Johnson, Anderson, Dunigan and Beckett excelled Tfor the Empires. O'Brien, Deegan and Hohns, were the best performers for the Crimsons. The Empires will meet at 7 o'clock tomor& row evening for practice. Tho lineup: Eimpires. Stolil, Bober Crimsons. Sutton, Berry Inn at Cosey Beach. was at the wheel | when oured o'cloc the unfortunate accident oc Saturday night about 6:30 With him was Miss Hope Alling, of 310 Orange street, New Haven, Miss Florence Le Grand, a sister of the girl who is at the hos- pital, and Frank Toole, of 310 Orange street, The party was enroute to Hart- ford, where a dinner party was scheduled in honor of Swift's’ birth- day. With the exception of Swift, all gave fictious names on entrance to the hospital. Word of the accident was sent (o the New Britain police, and the am- bulance was rushed ta the scene. The injured were hastened to the hospital, where it was seen that Swift, who had sustained a fractured skull had but little chance of recovery, Mrs. Swift, mother of the injured man, was notified at the Biltmore Hotel, | New York, son, and of the condition of her she came to this city. She was at ¥ de when the énd came # o'clock yesterday morning. wding to what could be learned of the affair, Swift and Miss Alling were occupyi the front seat of the machine. With the car, speeding along at a rapid clip, Swift, it is said, turnad his head to speak to one of the accu- pants in the rear, ¥eat, and almost in- an lv there was a crash as the car hot off the road at the curve. The right front wheel was ripped off, and the machine was reduced to a pile of debris. Swift and Gertrude Le Grand were pinned under the wreckage. Swift was 21 years old Saturday. and was on his way to celebrate the event when the accident accurred. A short time before leaving his home at New Haven, he talked to his mother over the telephone at the Biltmore Hotel, at New York, and it was at her suggestion that the dinner was ar- ranged, it is said. Miss Florence Le Grand, Miss Alling and Miss Toole, who escaped with cnly superficial bruises, left the hos- pital last night. According to Df. R. M. Griswold, the medical examiner in Berlin, whe investigated the affair there have been eleven fatalities at the crossing with a few years. CITY ITEMS Removal Besse-Leland’s —advt. Over 2,000 Lester pianos in this vi- cinity sold by C. L. Pierce—advt. Traut & Hine dance, Bardeck's, Tues. eve. Morton Downey of Walling- ford will sing the waltze: : sale at Recore Puppel, Nyborg Carlson, Dolb L Right Guard Onorato, Seiples Right Tackle Anderson Right End Mooney, Nyborg .. DeRohan, Holme: Quarterback Johnson, Lemons Right Halfback Dunigan, Nimoro .. Burns, Ryar Left Halfback N . O'Brier = Deegar, Stefnick sen Fullbac CARP PRAISES DEMPSEY . French Heavyweight Tells Countrys men Jack Is Considered a “Super- fighter” Herc in Les Etats Unis. Paris, Nov. 15.—Georges Carpen- tier, the heavyweight champion of Europe, returned from America rich- er by 1,000,000 franes and with great respect for the fighting ability of Jack Dempsey, world's titleholder. Carpentier, who was never boast- ful, even before leaving France, wher he had not vet seen Dempsey, said on his return that Dempsey was con- siderad in America to be a ‘‘Buper- fighter,” but that he would meét him with &s much confidence as he dic the British fighters, Wells and Beckett whom he knocked . out. g BUCKEYES TO DRILL LATE. Practice at Night Will Be Prow-n for Ohio State This Week. ' Columbus, Ohio, Nov. 15.—Ohk State University’s football eleven, the only undefeated team in the ‘Waesterr conference, will begin its final week's practice tomorrow for its final game of the season against Illinois at Ur. bana next Saturday. Coach Wilce and hig players ar€ confident of defeating Illinois a_nc' thereby winning undisputed right ot the championship. In onrder tc speed up practise. Coach Wilce wil! hold night practice daily until the ' team leaves for Urbana Thursdas evening: Powerful searchlights have been place around Ohio Field, per- mitting the players to practice late at night. K LT Only The Hoover Lifts the rug and flutters it over 1,000 times a minute on an air cushion Why do we advertise The HOOVER Our advertisitg is only to remind you. The selling of a Hoover to you is best done by Hoover u friends. From them you wil sers who are your 1 hear, in more con- vincing language than we could summon, why The Hoover is to be preferred. Jhe HOOVER It BEATS . ... as it Deferred pay- ments make the possession of a Hoover a very easy matter. 75-79 Sweeps as it Cleans THE SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC CO. Church St., Tel. 2240