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lo cigaret the s as te has ameo delicious Lucky Because— Drive Awas -g‘ LJ 1 nro T" ain Street. That SACRED ST OR COI Influenza, Hariford, Ct. c e D WATH HERB OILS, M € y ritain h Lourie, lne proon rrErany BUY THE FINEST OF Woven Madras | e = Sh our entire irts : s ; ‘ ‘mfqufl iac) skull at thes of Hor Shirts $2.50 o prices tall-lat investigati him >ther, tv omen driving fas! ho Value $5.00 REVERE Over a Mile MODERN SSUMES Man Ride ASSUME: Call on Bicycle to Fire Department. hure . . ’Inlufl'longfan : , ompany v tne piace there waa b 1 R, om0 ur Fatl 93 Asylum S, ¥ “It Pays to Buy Mis Will Close All Day Mondays During July and Aug, Our Kind.* Store m, of —— rear b raduation gifts re dvt. tanley Women ld the regular 1 service at 2 ly afternoon in . W. Hinchlis oy, N. ¥ vhe P lon of hi lytechnlic t serves you ri dvt. Jnity Rebekah Il meet t} [New Drit h, will he jesday ni i 4 griend 1 ; [ Says U. S, ning r various rain reatly ared th done MEN C,.LE-‘R ATE |HEAD ! instity Mattabessett Trit Plan slon Tonight—Program and freshmen ts—u. His 1 Ogilby, in will ting and venport Co P > r ey ne 20 held g ¢ day the worved at t rht Miss Dor oot B. Jor Trix prece TENNIS Saturday 29 P Park bles on the side- reant hs any blame in the ¢ Sinnott, yh's church el H owned affecting Killed Park 1s ¥ound s struck by Charles J Wakefield court, A s Giu- rk C died ospital Saturday street, the along street, in- Magchesi came ick and knock Anderson Lyon the scene W. Grace with and the injured e New Britain 1 two hours lat- fracture of the and im- on of the acci- and Mo- Linquist the were and itnesses said he ter than seven dson rolls, o children PASTORATE. a former in this d the pastorate h at Rockville, May, who curate at St rer Sinnott has wurch at New- Father May to the pastorate ch at Norwich. AUTOS COL LIDE. ands driven city, was y a car aid to wumber 85,584, fiddletown, ye ze was suffered this Mary's church quested the con- masses to offer The present crops, there may be if it continues. AT TRINITY CRITICIZES HARVEY cate Address, Be Called Ldealistic. President Rem- urcate ser- , pro- ech of to Great that the to “‘save ity colleg cent future,’’ said the zainst reviled senti- **balancing irvey a editor he ealistic he hoped that suld *‘not be result ind with ding administra- Par peak- on the campus, a confederation ir, but that if it inest human ideal ENTRIES, ¢ British Tuarf « humpionship. ina oN Emi 1 M or gust B board ¢ m, and A pointed » \ m unexpired t m o Mansfield, has been r u o the the 1 priv Governor Everc n today th t herc Miss Associat- from United States, ia, South Africa first rouna wn tennis cham- 20 (By There were lizabeth ¥ Moila Bjurstedt and Miss Me- England likely playing nish of most as- ilege of —¢|GOPS MAKE HEROIG RESCUES AT FIRE \Firemen Also Win Praise Follow- ing Sunday Morning Blaze ting with their way through halls dense smoke at an early § ay morning blaze, Water Malona, Michael and Patrick McAvay al poliéemen, sons from upper building at filled Fiynn three lo carried 18 per- the Lafayette stories of 131 the tenement street to safety. The fire was discovered in a res- taurant conducted by Joseph Jacob on hie first floor of the building owned Joseph Dziczek. The origin is a mystery. Flames were discovered first hortly after 1 o'clock when an alarm trom box 332 at Orange and Grove treets, brought companies 1, 3 and { and the aerial truck to the scene. “he blaze was confined to the res- aurant in the basement but the fumes and smoke from burning wood per- meatcd the entire building and poured rom the Wwindows in a dense volume. Eighteen people occupying the up- per floors were carried to the ground by the three officers, who were first on the scene, and many others were relped down the fire escape. It was one of the most spectacular rescues seen in this city. Women in night clothes, frightened, trembling and on the verge of hysterics clung to the arms of the officers and begged them to save their children. Nine helpless infants, one in a cradle, and one aged w 2n, were among those rescued. The damage to the building, which is an old one and a frame structure is slight but it is generally conceded had it not been for the timely work of the police and the firemen in get- ting the fire under control quickly and getting the occupants of the building to safety that there would have been great loss of property and probably life. Mr. Jacob told Deputy Fire Chiet Eugené F. Barnes that he closed his restaurant at 9 o’clock Saturday night and everything seemed to be all right then. Chief Barnes has been tinable to ascertain the cause of the fire. A significant feature of the fire is the fact that until a few months ago, the building had no fire escape and one was ordered placed thereon by Chief Barnes. It was down this new fire escape which the three officers carried the panic stricken women and children tenants while the steps were almost obscured by thick clouds of smoke. One other exit, through the rear, might have been used with con- siderable risk, but on account of the dense smoke it is the opinion of Chief Barnes that the fire escape was the only thing which prevented those who were carried out from being oyercome by the fumes. FIRST MEETING OF NATIONAL TAX ASSO. New England Organization Will Meet at Bretton Woods, N. H., Begine ning on September 2. Bretton Woods, N. H.,, June 18.— Tax problems as they affect the in- dividual as well as the community will be discussed in all their phases by members of the Nationai Tax as- sociaticn at their annual convention here beginning September 12. It will be the first time that the organization has met in New England. “ The form of the rederal revenue act probably will be known before the convention date and its discussion is expected to result in the attendance of many experts specializing on fed- eral subsidies, forestry. taxes and rail- road and public utility taxation are other special topfcs to be discussed. The association is composed of tax officluls of the various states, the United States possessions and the Canadian provinces as well as numer- ous municipal taxing officials, tax ex- perts and attorneys, economists and individual and corporate taxpayers. Zenas W. Bliss, chairman of the Rhode Island tax commission, is president of the organization. T TALKS. Coolidge Takes Part in Centennial Exercises at Amherst. Amherst, Mass., June 20.—Spirit- ual values are the only reliance of the world in trying to meet present prob- lems, Vice-President Calvin C. Cool- idge said in an address at the open- ing exercises of the centennial cele- bration of Amherst college today. “The work of the world wift not be done,” he said, “‘unless it is done from a motive of righteousness.” VICE-PRESID! STRIKE IS SETTLED. e Vera Cruz, June 20.—Marne work- ers who have been on strike here have reached an agreement with the Mexi- can Navigation Co. to resume work under the old contract for three raonths. Before the expiration of this time, it is expected that a new wage scale will be perfected. —_— PRESIDENT RETURNS. Washington, June 20.—President Harding returned to Washington early oday from a week-end cruise down the Potomac river on the presidential vacht Mayflower. Tent Awning for sale and to rent. Eddy and Decorating Co.—Advt. Eyeglass Satisfaction Is the ruling principle here. First a thoroush and accurate exas~~ation, then a comfortable frame or mounting, LIFEISJUSTLIKE AN ENDURANCE RAGE S0 Declares President Hadley in Baccalaureate Address New Haven, dunc 20.—“Life is a series of contests,” President Arthur T. Hadley of Yale told the graduating class in his baccalaureate addre: struggle in which a man proves his worth, not by attain- 'ing a certain fixed standard, but by putting in the last ounce he has in him.” With that as nis theme Presi- dent Hadley described the fallacies of those who approach life from the viewpeint of the pacifist, and of those also who are uncompromisingly mili- tan Sither view of life,” he said, “has much to justify it; either works badly when carried to an extreme. Where people have become so peaceful that they refused to fight on principle, re- ligion and philosophy have lost touch with life. Peace has been purchased at the cost of progress; morality has suffeered for lack of men who could fight in behalf of the oppressed. But in going to thé other éxtreme of lov- ing a fight for its own sake and mak- ing success the primary test of fitness, militant philosophers have lost touch with real life just as completely as did the pacifist philosophers, =2nd have failed just as decisively. For po- litical or commercial successes which win the admiration of one age meet little but contempt in the next. Mili- tant Germany seemed but a few years ago unconquerable; where do its leaders stand today, evén in the esti- mation of their own peoplé? “Neither pacifist nor militant is right, because neither takes the trouble to look at the indirect and lasting effects of conflict. A contest is ngt good or bad in itself; it is good or Bad according to the spirit in whidh it is conducted and the kind of leaders which it brings to the front. If conducted for a selfish end and by unscrupulous methods, fit breeds selfish 'leaders and narrow minded followers. If condticted for an unselfish end and by honorable methods, it trains leaders who can serve the people and followers who have better ideals than those of per- sonal aggrandizement. “When the Persians heard that the prizes in the Olympic games were not money but crowns of laurel on of them said: ‘AlRainst what manner of men, O king, hast thou brought us to fight, who cofitend not for money but for honor?" This is the touch- stone that determines whether the race is good or bad; this the Greek spirit which, broadened in its scope to include wider ideals of honor and service than the old @reeks had dreamed, underlies and gives vital- ity to the teaching of Jesus and of Paul. Not to withdraw from con- tests, but to contend on the field of public service; not to stifie ambition, but to make success in meeting others’ needs the goal of ambition and the test of fitness for leadership| —this is the Christian teaching. “It is to a contest of this kind that every one of us is summoned by the precepts of his creed and by the example of his Master. “ ‘Like every endurance race, it re- quires training.’ ‘Laying aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us'—this is no idle meta- phor. It is the rule to which each one of us must submit if he hopes to en- dure to the end and claim the prize Many a man who wished to do much for others has found his efforts brougt to nought by sofe sin that he had not been able to lay aside; some instinct of selfishness that found him out at the wrong moment and turned ‘f confidence of those about him into a distrust that made his efforts fruit- less; soe love of ease or dread of pain which kept him_away from the criti- cal spot where the contest was to be decided; someé blindness to a part of the truth, which neither he nor his fellows much noted in early years but which in the day of trial cfouded his vision when clear sight was most needed. The man who enters this great race has need to train eye and nerve and heart from the very begin- ning if he would not imperil the hard earned fruit of years of toil.” ARGUE BEFORE LEAGUE. Sweden and Finland Discuss Island Question. Geneva, June 20.—Sweden and Fin- land debated questiohs rélative to the future status of the Aland Islands be- Aland fore the council of the league of nations | here today. This was the first open session of the council. During the week, the Polish-Lithuan- ian dispute, the report of the commis- sion appointed to pass on proposed amendments to the covenant of the league, and conflicting claims to terri- tory along the frontier of Albania will be considered by the council. DISCUSS BRITISH POLICIES. Lloyd George Takes Part in Considera- tion of Overseas Plan. London, June 20.—Premier Lloyd George sat down at the council table here today with the premiers of the British overseas dominions and began consideration of policies which will be carried out by the empire. The first work to be done, according to the announced program will be to decide upon the procedure to be followed during the meetings and the extent to which the deliberations of the cohfer- ence would be made public. P e BOSTON’S STONEWALL DEFENSE. Boston, June 20—The infield combina- tion, Scott-Mclnnis by which batsmen opposed to the Red Sox are retired oftener than in any other way has fielded without a flaw in 18 consecutive games. The first baseman has com- mitted only one error this season, that being made on May 30. Scott at short- Cbnqflek:.hfly List . NOW ON SALE ‘. Aoy {Pucker Up and Whistle (Till the Clouds Roll B 85¢ | Nestle in Your Daddy’s Arms Frank Broken Moon Nora Beyes A'e:’s?"{ln a Little Front Parlor (On an Old BsekNSh'-t) A-3407{ Oh, Sweet Amelia 85¢c ortense A-3408 { weet Love Ve 85¢c (She Wnlk- inHer Husband’sSleep Van and Sehench Don’t You Remember the Time? A-3408 § Grant Stephens fl‘ld Hmmrd Hafl e {De‘r Little Street Back Home ace Records , ll{;ogax&a‘l(\émoBl:ithm) Ew \ S Little Bird. F\ -trot. { lome o °é Mon Homme (My Man) Yerkes Jaioflm OrMc‘ Art Hickman's Orchesira Medl Fox—troc. il ré Hickman’s Orchestra I'm Coming Back to Yaw—-Ma*'b&. Fox-trot. Whhln Medley F t o 5 ~trot. & e T orkes Jasarimbda Orehasira Good-Bye. Medley Fux-tmt. A-Mol[ I umbia Sazophone Sextetts. L 402 Hokum. Fox-trot. Cherry Cherokee. 3 m Dreaming. Medley e 8 Wyoming. Medley Wnln. A-6188 4 Metropolitan Dancs Playérs $1.28 | Where the Lazy M pxmm ‘Medley Walts. Hdnpvltm Danos-Players F - - - * L] {Impnuionl of Naples. Pm 2. ‘Waltz. 'uova Orchesira d( Napol§ Italian Fox-Trot. La Nm Orchesira di Napold E-7115 85s Concert Selections: A-3399 | Humming. Violin Solé. ldi'flvm 5230°{ Bumming,, Tiolin S0 Eddy Brown -3396{ Oh, P: ise M Barbara Maurel Asl.ot'b I Lov:o{fnolfxe'rr:ly Barbara Maurel « A-6184 {The Heart Bow’d Down (from “The Bohemian Girl") $1.50 Oh, Dry Those Tears Louis Graveure 78355 { Thy Beaming Eyes Hulda Lashanska ™ $1.00 A-3395{ Bendemeer’s Stream Oscar Beagle $1.00 | Flow Gently, Sweet Afton Oscar Beagle - - - L] A-3398§ Rock of A L] - C; Van Gordon $1.00 1Shall We ather at the River? 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