New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1922, Page 3

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ISDAY, MARCH 21, 1922 g . Smokers Satisfied with prano, The program: “Love's in My Heart,” Woodman; “The Star,” Rog- ers; “Home Sweets«Home," Bishop; “Voi lo sopete from Cavalleria Rusti- cana," Mascagni; “DBlumen lll.llwl” and “EN El;" “Rachem," “Sweet and Low,” Bamabay, “Song of the Open,” La Fopge 0 p. m—Ernest Hare, basso; Billy Jones, tenor, prominent and popular recording artists; Iert Grant, popular song composer, at the piano, A pro- gram of up to the minute popular 5ONgS, WGY General Electric Station at Schen- | ectady 1 | | | The Nightingale Liszt solo—1I. RS THE CANDY MINT WITH THE HOLE Piano Dayton Glover, Flegy Massenet Soprano solo—Miss Gladys Reese Cello obligato—FH, M. Mott-Smith The Horn IMlegier | Baritone solo—J. pman, 1] Accompanist— yra \\'!\i\'l(;:;llw‘;;’ Soothes nerves III(S“CCOQME’ STR‘ING.[ IRED of being bundled up in Adagio Cello solo—TH. M. Mott-Smith 1 Hear a Thrush at Cadman | Soprano solo—Miss Reese | Tarantella Pleczonka | Piano solo—E. Dayton Glover \iies woclhnt i EomnE leggings and wrapping up throats? No need to continue. Spring’s here in our shop with heaps of wash clothes, lightweight undies and smart little top- coats, awaiting your choice. The Baby Shop Baritane Chapman AT Raphael’s Dept. Store Cello solo—Mr. Mott-Smith New Britain, Conn. i $1 00" $1.85 White Chinchilla, Cashmere, French Serge and Corduroy for Infants’ Coats, all washable . .. $1 25 Yard Y 98¢ Yerd 29 c Yard 33 c Yard 3 8 c Yard Eiderdown, double faced, yard wide, very desirable for Sweetens breath baby carriage robes ....... 33 c Yard Imported Japanese Crepe; a standard material for 3 8 c Yard children’s wear .... Yard 58¢ Y™ 5 8 c Yard Cotton Pongee, Indian Head, Linen, Madrafi Dotted S Lawn and Voile. A, White Poplin, mercerized, "R Middy Cloth, white, fine quality, yard wide yard wide ........ . . & " solo—Mr, Lingerie Crepe; special in p]aln and fig’m‘ed L& By the Waters of Minnetonka Lieurance Soprano solo—Miss Reese Valse Impromptu Piano solo—Mr, Glover NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TU The Little Sandman Brahms BOSTON STORE Staple wherever Sweets are Sold Uperaft Galatea Cloth, white; Poiret Twill, white, yard et lit wide, fine quality . BRDAHBURY, vow sty -~ 4 (Watch for the Alphabetical Ads.) RELIABLE MERCHANDISE Beach Cloth, yard wide, white and colors ... . Pique, heavy quality, yard wide ......... been provided by any other church, it is said. Aid Widows Also. Another method for:aiding widows is the joint life annuity, under the expanded annuity plan of the Con- gregational church. This joint annuity is payable to minister during hs life- time and to his widow in case of his prior death. The plan of which this annuity is| a feature permits a Congregational minister to become a member of an annuity fund by paying annual dues of six per cent of his salary. Should| Are Lively And Great Future Pre- a minister having a salary of $2,000 | PENSION PLAN FOR RETIRED PREACHER Protestant Churches Care Ior Aged Ministers Chicago, Ill,, March 21.—Justice to the ‘‘veterans” of the church rather Swiss, Organdy, Batiste, S == HAN 0’ WAR BREED Two Colts Of Famous Race Horse — McCALL PATTERNS — and speed that made him the super- horse of 1920. The colts hoth are bay fillles. The first was foaled by Masquerade on TFebruary 26 and the second by the imported mare Rathing Girl. PULLAR and NIVEN NEW VICTROLA Period Model Style 280 Beautiful in design Superb in' Tone SEE OUR WINDOW. C. L. PIERCE & CO. 246 Main Street | DUNCAN TELLS HOW TO LEARN CODE BY R, I, DUNCAN Director Radio Institute of America. Radie fans who want to get more out of the air than the broadcast programs must memorize the Inter- national Morse Code, This may be dong by visualizatien, But it is much easier to learn it by sound. A tapping of & pencil will do, The best way, hewever, is to rig up A little buzzer and Rear the reaj thing, Gét a high pitched buzzer, an or- dinary telegraph key and a common dry battery.. They can be purchased in any supply steve at a smalj cost, Mount the key on & table or desk, allowing plenty of roem for the fore- arm. Connect the battery and bus- zer according to the diagram, When your hand is set have yeur wrist clear and your thumb resting lightly against the knob of the key, The index and third fingers should COLD IN CHEST Do the right thing and be sure of speedy relief. Often chest colds and sore throat go over night if you use BEGY'’S MUSTARINE Better than a2 mustard plaster, does the work and does it faster—will not blister— 80c—60c—yellow box. - = Keep Bowels Open \ trestrly brewed cup of Celery King every :fitdmut mllonomwnt omuplwu, -banish dull pk.%';w'im%nwmmmm tamty. CELLERY KING The Fair Dept Store, Crowell’s Drug Store be on top and the other twe fingers should be eurved back into the hand. ‘Wrist Does Work, The wrist should de the sending— the thumb and fingers acting merely as a guide for the wrist, The spring in the key should be screwed down just enough to force the key up after each wrist action, BUZZER./& BATIERY il 5 PRACTICE SET FOR BRGINNER, Having noted these preliminaries, the beginner is ready to start. A Adash is heid approximately three times as iong as a lot, A dot is held just jong enugh to get a short, snappy sound from the buz- | zer, Take the first letter—dot, dash, Repeat several times, Listen intent- ly. Note the difference between the dot and dash, Watch your ' position, Don’t pe in a hurry, You will memorize the code soon enough. Make each character concise in it- self. Don’t leave any space between the dot and the dash of the first let- ter. Learn Slowly, When you have learned the "A" of your wireless ABC, take the next letter, It is much harder, Stop after each effort, Don’t take more than four letters a day. Be sure you know those be- fore you go on to the next group, When you feel that you have mas- tered the alphabet, learn the code for the period, comma., question mark and error, No need to bother about pther characters. Dow’t expect to start plucking mes- sages out of the air immediately, It will take a littie time before you will be sure of yeurseif, But pnece you get started, you will realize that there is lots more in th® air— Than the voices and concerts sent broadcast, » Opposite the Monument i VOICES IN THE AIR ] KDKA (Westinghouse station at Fast Pltts- burgh, Pa.) | Tuesday, March 21, 8 p, m.—"Our Native Birds," by T, | Walter Weisman, Bird Man of the Pittsburgh Chronicle Telegraph. | troduced pension plans under which | | the weak.” than charity to disabled or aged min- isters has become the keynote of min- isterial relief in many Protestant churches. The denominations gener- ally have increased the amounts dis- tributed, and many have made radi cal changes in théir method of distr bution. Retirement pensions have frequently been provided in addition to the original provision for relief in cases of pressing need. The need of assuring prospective ministers of pro- vision for old age or disability, in or- der to gain new recruits for the pul- pit despite low salaries is said to have been one of the motives which led to the introduction of pension sys- tems. These facts are brought out in |, statements from the various denomin- ations compiled by the Veteran Preacher, a publication of the board of conference claimants of the Meth- | odist Episcopal church. Newer Plans Made. | Help to self-help is stressed in these | statements, as a principle underlying the newer pension plans. Most of the plans involve some element of in- |1 surance, and ministers qualify for the benefits by paying annual dues. Pro- vision is usually retained for emer- gency relief as well, or for aid to ministers for whom the general pen- sion plans arrived too late. Denominations and religious organ; izations which have developed or in- ministers pay dues include, in alpha- | betical order, Baptists (Northern and Southern), the Church of Christ, Con- gregationalists, Methodists of Canada, Presbyterians, the Reformed Church of America, Southern Methodists, United Brethren, United Lutherans, United Presbyterians and the Y. M. C. A. Tn some cases a clergyman's dues are paid or shared by his con- gregation. The part contributed to the fund by clergymen’s or officers’ dues varies; under the plan of the Y. M. C. A. yearly payments based/ on ‘a percentage of salaries are made to a common fund, to which the asso- clation pays half and the employed officer half. Various Pension Methods. The Methodists (northern).provide a pension based on years of service from funds contributed by the entire church on the principle that the “strong should bear the burdens of | The Southern Methodists have a general superannuate Endow- ment fund for which there is a one per cent assessment on pastors' sal- ‘Weekly Taik on Dress, 8:30 p, m,—Varied program of vo- | cal and instrumental solos and duets, Arthur Owen, soprano and planist; Mrs, Edwin West, contralto; John Mr-i Kay, vtolinist, WBZ (Westinghouss station at Springfield, Mass,) 7186 p, m.—Uncle Wigslly Bedtime Btory, 3146 p, m,—Market reports, 8 p. m~=—Robertson's poclety or- chestra will play the latest hits of the day, This Is thelr pecond appear- ance at Statlon WBZ, Wiz ptation at Newark, N, J) 7 p. m—'"Man-in-the-Moon,"” stories for children, (¢) Xewark SBunday Call, 7:45 p, m,—'""American Speech,” hy Miss Dagmar Perkins, A, B, Bryn Mawr Collegej special lecture of How- ard University and Universite Nor- male de Paris; President, Association of Improvement of. American Speech, ete. 8 p. m.—Recita] by Ruth Fried, so- INGROWN TOE NAIL “TURNS OUT ITSELF A noted authority says that a few drops of "Outgro” upon the skin sur- rounding the ingrowing nail reduces and weather (Westinghouse inflammation and pain and so tough- | ens the tender, sensitive skin under- neath the toe nail, that it can pot penetrate the flesh, and the nail turns naturally outward aimest over night.| “Outgre” is a harmiess antiseptic| manufattured for chiropodists. How- | ever, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing direc- aries, The Augusta Lutherans, the Southern Presbyterlans and IZvangeli- cal Lutheran Synod of Missourl, Ohio | and other atates, administer rollor\ as benevolence and on a basls of( need, Both pension and rellef plans gen- erally provide for widows and minor orphans of ministers ns well as for| ministers themselves, and the trustees of the Protestant Eplscopal church authorize an immediate grant of $1,- 000 to a clergyman’'s widow at the time of the death of her husband, in | additien te a pension which is paid to widows or their minor children un- | der a separate provision, There lsi no instance of a similar grant having 2 u'vt‘iescflk. spores of fungl, end the eggs and larves of insects on your trees before the leaves coxneF?lxl? and {nsure better fruit More effectively than Lime Sulfur asa’ dermant spray, No more expensive; [Easy and nice to mix and apply, Will be Come in before bu; tions. take out a membership at the age of thirty, was annuity of about $1,030. general to aged ministers is the report of the distributive income claimants was $2 as much as in 1908, manent fund of $10,000,000 is sought. Similar progress reported by varfous denominations. the ty accumulation ive would he an when s provide Further indication of an apparently awakening of responsibility \\) i (thar bol are fam for 50,000, conference four times and that a per- | and aspiration is min hub: 925 is the Want Ad Phone. Lexington, lands, the bpluegrass farm Elizabeth woman, eyes of horsemen are turned to deter- transmit to his progeny dicted For Them. | March 21.—Out at May- | of Miss Daingerfield, noted two long-legged bay colts, ch will be watched perhaps closer n any pair foaled this spring, gam- in the Kentucky sunshine. They the first children of the world ous Man O' War and on them the horse- | e whether or not the son of Mar ah-Fair Play has the ability to the stamina Both of the haby horses are very lively, according to Miss Daingerfield who has charge of Samuel D. Riddle's famous stallion and of the mares to whom he was bred. 1t all goes well, there will be fif- teen or twenty colts by the 1amon.! stallion at Haylands within the next sixty days. — e You Need Not Have a Cold if you will take Laxative BROMO QUININE Tablets when you fee! the tirst symptoms of a Cold coming on. If It's a Matter of Price— Take Advantage and Come to the Orlgmal DRESS GOODS SHOP 400—MAIN STREET—400 Ann —4th— 1ver Sale Tomorrow Morning Entire Stock at Lowest Prices Beginning Remarkable Values. 29 inch CHAMBRAY IOC Yd. 36 inch CRETONNE 160 Yd. 36 inch Limit 10 yds. To A 36 inch UNBLEACHED SHEETING loc Yd. Customer 4;) mch INDIAN HEAD Linen Finish ary 36 inch BEST QUALITY PERCALE 13C Yd. 36 inch IMPORTED GINGHAMS Checks and Plaids 350 Yd. 29¢ % RAJAH SILK in all wanted shades 47c ¥4 60 inch Changeable Taffeta 36 inch SILK $1.29 ¥ WOOL TWEEDS 36 inch 40 mch SILK CANTON CREPE $1.00 Yd BLACK SATIN AND TAFFETA 42x36 . PILLOW CASES 16(‘. Ea. SILK SHIRTING $1.19 Y4 32 inch ., CHECKED GINGHAM 15C Yd. 36 inch Part Wool PRUNELLA SKIRTING

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