New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 12, 1922, Page 16

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BOSTON THE CRADLE. OF FREE EDUGATION Convention Honors New England and Her Schools ‘ | Boston, July 12.—It is because Bos- ton has cherished education as the right of every child “that America i3 the land of free schools,'™ Mrs, Susan M. Dorsey, superintendent of schools | at Los Angeles, Cal, declared here in response to addresses hy the gov- | ernor of Massachusetts and the may- or of Boston in which they welcomed | the convention of the National Edu-| cation assoclation recently | Declaring that the delegates were returning to the land of their educa- tional birth, Mrs. Dorsey paid a trib- ute to the part played by the “down| east school ma'am’ and the grad-| uates of Harvard and other New Eng- | land colleges in the development of the west ‘With respectful, almost attitude, we approach confines because we recognize that New FEng land has been the ‘teacher of teacl ers' and that in coming here we are returning to the land of our educa- tional birth.”” Mrs. Dorsey said. “The Pilgrim Fathers, amid all their priva- | tions and dangers, conceived the mag- nificent {dea, not only of a universal, | but of a free education for the whole | people It is because Boston has cherished education as the right of every child with the same inflexible purpose with which she has cherished lberty as the right of every man that America is the land of free schools| and that the National Education as- gociation is meeting here | “What words can express the ifih?$ of this great nation to the army of New England's school teache who | have moved ever westward with the advancing people, imparting to suc- cessive generations the wisdom, cour- age and character of the ‘down east #choo! ma'am’ while the graduates of | Harvard and of the galaxy of small| New England colleges, institutions and | High schools have always been found | in the van of civilization doing a man's | work. Under their trained leadership railways have been buiit, mountains leveled, rivers, spanned, farms tilled, | deserts have been conquered, and the battles of freedom have been fought | while equallywell have they wrought in those tender ministries of the spirit to those who suffered either in body or mind. | “Who can measure the spiritual as| well as the educational debt of this| nation to the bards, the philosophers, | the seers, the divines, the educators, | the historians, the scientists who have given character and significance to| the life of this nation. May Boston | never falter in the sublime task to which her founders set themselves; | the service of God through the church | and the service of posterity through the public school.” | reverent vour PRINTING BBLEIN WESTERN PAPER Bs Popular as Serial Novel; Reports State Topeka, July 12.—Is printing the| Blble a good newspaper feature? Will | the average person read the Bible if| published in this way? After printing a weekly serial from the Bible for three months, Arthur J. Carruth, managing editor of The| Topeka State Journal, declares that| the publication of the Bible has prov- | ed to be the greatest success of any feature ever printed by The State | Journal. Moreover, it is being read by many subscribers as faithfully would the installments of a popula novel, Carruth states. “The publication of the Bible ser fally has had a marvelous effect,” | said Mr. Carruth. “It has shown that the subscribers are sincere in their| demand for reading matter of a re-| ligious character, and also has shown | to the public that the newspapers do | pot print only the sensational, that they do not attempt to appeal primar- | fly to the masses and that they do| not neglect the church.” | As an indication of the interest| taken in the publication of the Rible, | Mr. Carruth stated he has received| inquiries from every state in the na- | tion, many letters from ( da and a | number of communications from for- | elgn countries. A number of Kan-| sas newspapers have taken up the| publication of the Bible since The | Journal started it, Mr. Carruth stated He said out of about 60 ministers in Topeka, he has received communica- US SERVE YOU ELECTRICALLY LET " |parts of the steel cars that |eliminated, according to Pullman com- | tions from all and that in only two or three cases had they criticized the publication The publication undertaken by The State the suggestion of Dr, Charles M Sheldan, of Topeka, editor of The | Christian Herald and well known au thor Each installment includes about 8,000 words, The Weymouth text of the New Testament, a trans lation in everyday English, is used Already publication of the Book of Mark has been completed and the Book of Luke is well under way. PULLMANS PERFECT 1S COMPANY BOAST New Cars Tmpossible to Buckle, or Telescope § of the RBible was Journal at The American | Chicago, TIL, July 12- [ squeak” sleeping car no longer needs inspectors. They passed with the| wooden cars, the points of which sometimes became loosened by wear| The buffers are the only | produce | been | and friction by contact a noise that has not ¢ officials | The standard Pullman car is of | steel of some 70 tons weight, TIts im- mense backbone, or underframe, is in- destructible and incapable of buck- | ling or collapsing, according to the company's most recent clalm. Four I-beams, at either end of the car, are likened to a sapling that will give but not break, and are said to prevent ab- solutely the possibility of “telescop-| ing" of cars which existed in the days of wood construction The revolutionary change in sleep- ing car construction is less than fif-| teen years old. Tt was followed almost complete elimination of wood in a pullman car. Mahogany, circas-| sian walnut, maple and other fine-| grained woods are imitated, and it { said that passengers often take them | for wood and use their knuckles to convince themselves by sound when their eyes fail them The earliest pullmans were lighted | by candles. Then came oil lamps,| gas and finally electricity. Officials | say that as long as only the lamps were available there was no criticism from the public, and that an intensity of two foot candles at a reading level inventive records the principle of the | hydrautomat has been remotely ap- | proached, but never attained. The ORIGINAL TAKES CREDIT Malted Milk Says He Alone Opposed Sale of Liquor On U, S, Shipping Board Vessels, Asheville, N, C,, July 12.—Freder- lick 1. Thompson, member of the ship- | ping board and publisher of the Mo- bile Alabama Register speaking at the convention of the southérn news- paper publishers' assoclation saild that he alone of the eight members of the board took an open and positive stand in opposition to the selling of @~ Avoid Imitati itutes Avoldlmhhonslsublh llquor aboard vessels of the board ———————————————mme—= | when the matter was up for deter- H 1m|nn||nn. His statement was greeted YDRAUT with applause from members of thel assoclation, [IFT WATER ”PHILL Frederick W. Hume, executive sec- retary of the national publishers' as- soclation, declared in an address that American Invents Apparatns Which Flouts Natural Law Milk | ForlInfants &Invalids NO COOKING The “Food Drink” for All Ages, Quick Lunch at Home, Officé and | Fountains, Ask for HORLICK'S. matter virtually amounted to a cen- sorship upon the press. He outlined | features of the pending Kelley bill to reduce such rates present postal rates on second class PREACHES ON SKELETON O | Director of Budget Uses This As London, July 12—A water-lifting| Theme of Economy Sermon to Officers apparatus which seems to flout thei o natural law that water cannot run up- Washington, July 12.—A human hiil, and by which the tremendous skeleton was used as text for an energy of the rizsing tides may be tCONOMY sermon yesterday by Direc- harnessed for use by man, is an in-|tOF of the Budget Lord in his address vention of Thomas G. Allen, gradu-|before the third semi-annual business ate of Washington I'niversity, st meeting of the government which last Louis, and now a British évlh_\ect.|‘7"“"°r?' saw General Charles Dawes The “Hydrautomat”, as the apparatus Of Chicago, the first budget director, is called, iz the result of two years Wave aloft a brace of navy brooms of experiments. A working model | 28 he stamped the floor to emphasize has been viewed by scores of en. his demands for federal thrit. gineers, some of whom have been A shipment of hospital supplies bafled by the simplicity of the cycle| V38 made, Gen. Lord said which con- of operation. It has lifted water 20 tained one human skeleton as well as feet above the river level. }mundry bags, instrument tables and The hydrautomat is designed to other articles, but because of failure rafse water in any quantity from aito classify properly the shipment running stream to any desired hfllxhfl'he rate of the skeleton which was without the use of standard equip-‘”‘"e times first class rate, was ap- ment such as pumps, rams or wgypr,!P”’d to the entire lot. wheels. The apparatus harnesses two natural sources of energy, the weight| of a column of water and atmos pheric pressure. By means of a se- ries of tan one above the other, and a sluice-gate, which alternately brings .suction and pressure forces into play, 80 percent. of the energy of the pressure water used is ob- tained The height required is reached by carrying the series of tanks, alternating open and closed chambers, together with air conduct- ing pipes, to the desired height It is believed there is unlimited SUN PREDICTS VICTORY | Reported As Saying That He Will Es- tablish Good Govt. in China. London, July 12.—A Central News dispatch from Hong Kong today says the cruiser Wingfu, with Sun Yat Sen, deposed president of the south China government aboard, arrived off the British settlement there. During an interview the dispatch says, Sun expressed confidence that the future would bring victory and declared his present base was better was eatisfactory. A foot candle 1siscope for the hydrautomat on streams the intensity of light one foot dis-|where hydraulic power developments tance from a one-candle power lamp.|are not feasible because of the small Today from eeven to ten foot candles|amount of fall. One of the first ap- are insisted upon plications is expected to be on irri- than the former one because it short- ened communications with the city and enabled him to keep in touch with his expeditionary army. The dispatch quoted the Chinese In the year 1921 the value of arti- cles bought for pullman cars, accord- ing to figures of the company fust an- | rounced, amounted to $1,310,283 34 or | 4.11 cents for each passenger carried. | During the year 113,640 gallons of | liquid soap and 2,531,808 cakes of soap were used on the cars, officials| report. Other figures for the year in-| clude 1,035,025 towels; 2,587,536 boxes of matches and 64,755,000 drinking cups. Laundries washed 214,870,412 pieces | of pullman property during the year| at a cost of $2,882,120, according to| the officials. BURY THE HATCHET Started Swedes and Finns Have Friendly Relations After Years of Hatred And Strife. Stockholm, July 12.—Finns and Swedes are no longer making faces at | each other across the Baltic. The cordial relations between the two countries, interrupted in the past by various incidents, political and oth-| erwise, are now being resumed. Both sides are gratified at the change, which is apparently a result of dip- lomatic efforts made at Genoa by Hjalmar Branting, the Swedish Pre-| mier. Postal rates already have heen re- | | duced; direct telephone connection as: well as‘radio will be used for tne mu- | tual exchange of pleasant words, and | recently a group of Swedish newspa- permen journeyed to Helsingfors, met | their Finnish colleagues, and buried | the hatchet. G. 0. P. CLUB MEETING. A meeting of the Swedish-American | Republican club will be held Friday evening at § o'clock at Svea hall on| Arch street Delegates to the state | convention to be held at Hartford in August will be elect TO BUY RAILROAD STOCK. Washington, July 12.—The New York Central railroad was authorized by an interstate commerce commis- sion order today to complete its con- trol of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chi- cago and St. Louis railroad by pur- chasing all of the outstanding pre- | ferred and common stock issues. leader as insisting upon the labor guilds fulfilling their promise to car- ry out a general strike. The workers at the electric station already have walked out. gation projects. In a broad sense, according to the inventor, the purpose of the hydrau- tomat -is to convert the contained energy of large quantities of water at a low head into that of a smaller quantity of water at a high head, or to compel a stream to hoist part ot itself up over the land for commer- TO BUILD NEW THEATER. Washington, July 12.—A new mo- tion picture theater will replace the ~ L/ Hartford fox &dompany ke New Telephone Number 3-1680 Hartford Store Close.d Wednesdays at Noon July 12 to Sept. 13. Thursday—Last Day of the MID-SUMMER SALE Your last are unusual. cial or agricultural purposes, The principle is fixed; the application is to be determined by local require- ments. World patent rights have been is- sued. It appears that in the world's GhheamanGie GINGER ALE Coffee for breakfast— Clicquot all the time Knickerbocker which collapsed with nearly 100 fatalities January 28 un- der a load of snow. Harry M. Cran- dall, head of the company which op- erated the Knickerbocker theater an- nounced today. Clicquot Club Ginger Ale is the friendliest, happiest beverage. There is no particular time of the day that it calls its own. You can drink it morning, noon, or night, letting your thirst dictate when. Clicquot never varies in taste or quality. Always it is pure as the spring water from which it is made. The ginger is the finest that Jamaica can send to us. Get Clicquot Club by the case for the home. If you prefer variety, you can get Clicquot Club Sar- saparilla, Birch Beer, and Root -a ‘," U 4 ceLeanares | GINGER ALE e e e | .@mu.m,m THE CLICQUOT CLUB CO Millis, Mass, U. 8 A ~THE— COWLES ELECTRIC CO. 392 STANLEY ST. TEL. 2229-4 Royal Cleaner CROWLEY BROS. I PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 755-12 Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs (T ———— FOX’S -:- Friday and Saturday uth Roland—Timber Queen Tom Mix—Big Stakes Evelyn Nesbit-Hidden Woman| No college athlete diaplays better form in putting the shot than Hilda Curt She took part in the recent women's athletic meet at Oakland, | Cai., held by the A. A. U. Steel is judged by its temper. So is man. | Miracle Tonic keeps you right, $1.00 a bottle. FOR SALE ONLY AT THE W. F. O’'CONNOR DRUG CO. 123 Harttord Avenue Uncle William’s FOR SALE Cottage of six rooms and sun parior. All improvements. Hot air fur- nace. One extra lot. 20 fruit trees, 50 grape vines. 2 car g e. Large poultry house. Price $5,500.00 if sold this week. P A TR ORISR VISIT OUR DINING ROOM WHEN IN HARTFORD Call At 24-30 STATE ST. Live and Boiled Lobsters Soft Shell Crabs Fresh Crab Meat Shrimps Steaming Clams Chowder Clams HONISS’S e e ] EVERYTHING IN FURNITU If you are about to furnish a home we can outfit it completely. We carry a full line of Furniture, Stoves and Floor Coverings at prices that will surely please. A. LIPMAN New and Second-Hand Furniture 34 Lafayette St. Tel. 1329-2 HOLD ER NEWT: SHES AREARIN H. J. FOIREN at greatly reduced prices, all merchandise is strictly first quality and the best of workmanship. There are large assortments and all offerings Take advantage of the specials offered for the last day of the Mid-Summer Sale. » THE OLD HOME TOWN B0OX OF STRAW HATS HE OFFERS THEM AT SACRI chance to supply your summer needs Valuable property on Court Street. 10-Room House, 97 Hart Street. 8-Family On Trinity Street. All Good Bargains and Terms. See ml;!(. MR;T I-LUMPHREY Do you want a two family house with a nice big lot with a lot of fruit trees, which will produci s much fruit as a tenement will bring in? Wi have a bargain. The owner wanted $5600 for thi: slace, on Kelsey street, but now for special rea sons for selling he makes it $5000 flat. Get a wig gle on if you want it. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6 Bank Bldg For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Advts a. BY STANLE) | U= U MENS CLOTHI UP-TO-DATE GOODS STORE KEEPER FOUNDA BOUGHT IN 1903 —HE NOW = FICE PRICES — = A MAIN STREET O ——

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