New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 18, 1922, Page 11

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MINISTERS CHANGE RELIGIOUS BELIEFS Remarkable Diflerence Between New and Old Schools The old theologles are disappearing. The state convention of Baptists now in session in this city is a clear ex-| ample of a change in thinking among the ministers and church people. The most striking, the most outstand- | ing feature of the entire convention is| the wide diversity of opinions of the old school ministers and the young men just out of theological schools. Haggard Starts Things. The essay Monday afternoon by ST day, " hope everybody else will be as #00d s possible. 1 feel just the same as I did some years ago, I am ablg to eat three good meals a day and can read my Bible without glasses, 1 am not especlally interested in current afairs, own quiet way, trying to spread sun- shine wherever 1 went," Mr. Hunt {s the oldost graduate of ,| Brown University and the oldest Odd Fellow In the United States, When he reglstered at Brown as freshman in 1837 only thirty-eight were in his class. Today there are 1,700, Francis Walin was president {n 1337 @nd there were only five profes- sors. 1t cost $63 a year for tuition and other‘expenses. A student lived In style for $1.18 a week, ELECT OFFIGERS AT | Rev. F. B. Raggard, of Hartford, in Which the latter startled many in the| audience with bis modern views on‘ religlon, exploded almost like bombshell in the miniaterial ronf(-r- ence. Rev. Mr. Haggard frankly stat- | ed that the personal devil and a liter- al hell had been eliminated. A lively discussion followed the reading of his esray, The discussion in the meeting first PYTHIAN [iATHERlNfi * Next Convention Will Be Heldat New London in 1928 Thomas H. Troland of New London 1 have lived my life in my || N B BOST brought out the amazing difference of | ]‘;;‘: n“[':‘“‘““ grand chancellor at’ the opinions between the ministers. Those | P\vh?l::w‘:m?:“r?n 0; llhll' Knights who have been pre: f rea convention held at Vega appeared rt-leuctnrr:t 'l;‘h:;:g" 3; )lh:a‘hnfl on Arch street yesterday. Mr, early teaching. "I atill hold on to the | TT/&Nd succeeds Willlam Cowlishaw Hevil,” humorously remarked an aged | °f this city who has served in that minister from another section of the|Po8ition for the past year state. Able defense of the new theory | was made by others present. Ross Does Not Approve. Yesterday morning in his address of welcome, Rev. Willlam Ross, of the First Baptlst church, referred in- directly to the new thcory and ex- pressed his displeasure in the radicaU change. He intimated that so many things were being eliminated that there was little left in which to be- lleve. Younger Men With Haggard. ““We younger fellows didn't want to say much in meeting,” said a man| last evening, who said he was out of | theological school just two years, “‘be- | cause we didn't want to start a con- | troversy with the older ministers. | They believe the wety they were | taught. They take the Bible literally on faith. We believe the way we are | teught, and we are taught in schools today to do our own thinking and to think straight. We knew what Hag- sard would say.” Opinions Divided. Informal discussions on the sulm\ct\ have been going on in halls and cor- | ridors ever since, and the impression | gained is that the ministers who have graduated within recent yecars ‘LcanL, one theory, while those who hd\'e‘ have been preaching for years d(‘ropt‘ the old literal interpretation, which leaves the convention about evenly | divided in opinion. Taylor to Reply. The peculiar condition has attract- | ed so much attention among minis- ters throughout the city, that Rev. A B. Taylor, of the FPeople's church, has announced he will deliver a ser- mon Sunday evening in refutation of | the modern versions. Rev. John Hunt Can Still Read With- | out Glasses at 100. Springfleld, Ohio, Oct. 18.—“T am | Just trusting in the Lord and \v-u(ing{ for the summons,” said the Rev. John | Hunt, who was 100 years old yester- | —_———— ’ l AQUES worpiz, | CAPSULES Quick Relief for Indigestion, | ) | | Dyspepsia and Constipation | ~60 cents st Druggists below or from Jaques Capsule Co,, Inc., Plattsburg, N.Y, On safe at The Dickinson Drug Co Britain, Conn., or G0 cents by mnil post- ;-m from Jaques Capsule Co., Plattsburg, New STYLE | and ~ INDIVIDUALITY are the two features re-| |quired in a hand-tailored{| garment to give a man afl| SMART ’ and DISTINCTIVE ||| appearance —0— Remember that you are lalways judged by your appearance. For the Smart Dressers ELM and MZ\‘IN STS. | Grand Chancellor L. | was elected as inner guard. | the outer guard while ! the grand keeper of records | Siste | in Heaven. | service men still in hospitals Charles GriffitR of New Haven was I named ag vice grand chancellor; T M. Parsons of Seymour, grand prel- ate; George Wright of Hartford, grand keeper of records and seals; W. N. Potter of Willimantie, grand master of the exchequer; W. 8. Mor- gan of Middletown, grand master of arms; A. F. Mitchell of Hartford, grand inner guard; Charles Andrews | of Hartford, grand outer guard grand trustee, Orrin B. Caldwell of New Haven, Cowlishaw Gets Jewel. Following the election the officers of the lodge were ingtalled by Past Irving Jacobs of Previous to the instal- lation, however, retiring Grand Chan- cellor 'Willlam Cowlishaw of New | Britain was presented with a past grand chancellor's jewel. Pythian Sisters Elect. At the final session of the Pythian Sisters convention held in Judd's hall on Maln street yesterday afternoon Mrs. Elizabeth Fairman of Thomp- sonville was named as grand chief ranger, Mrs. Samuel Schneider of Hartford was elected grand senior and Mrs. H. Gates of Willimantic was named as grand juror. Mrs. M. Curdts of Meriden wag elected as grand manager while Mrs. Amanda Chamberlain of West Haven Mrs. L. was named &8 Miss Helen as elected and cor- Snow of New ‘Haven. | Badts of Wallingford Maeberry of Seymour w. ] respondence. Mys. Clar | West Haven was named the grand ! record of finance and Mrs. Clara Whittaker of Stamford is the past grand chief ranger. The 22nd annual convention of the Pythian Risters was one of the larg- | est ever )‘(‘)d since the founding of this organization, Delegates repre- | sented the several lodges in Connecti- cut and ma reported a prosperous year for their society. New London Next Year, next convention for both the of Pythias and the Pythian will be held in New London sometime during the third week im October of 1923. PLAN RADIO LINES 10 SPIRIT WORLD The Knigh Medinms Say Heavenly Love Has 10 Marriage Chicago, Oct. 18.—Two of the most suc sful spiritualistic mediums, John Slater and Mrs. Maggie Waite, yesterday removed a few veils con- cealing the hercafter and toll laymen at the 13th convention of the spirit- ualists of conditions in the invisible world. “There is great hope for spiritual- ists,” said Mr. Slater, “In the recent astouning development of the radio, the thing we are doing now by means of the radio is what the spirits on the | other side have been doing fo | time. broadcasting of us didn’t They have been us for ages, but most know how to tune in. “My son is now working on the spirit radio. T believe in a short time we will be receiving direct messages from heaven. We may even be able to hear concerts from the beyond. The spirits, however, are very superior peonle They simply won't talk to ordinary folks.” Mr. Slater has held seances with many such noted spiritualists as Sir Conan Doyle, Sir Oliver Lodge, Lord | Balfour and Eilla Wheeler Wilcox. Mr. Slater learned that certain characters of history are in very ha Among these are Ca: and Alexander, to say nothing of Ti- | berius and Caligula. Mrs. Waite contributed some details to every day life in the beyond, gleaned, she said, from her experi- ences as medium In direct conversa- tion. Spirit hands, elusive as they are, may be imprisoned in plaster casts long enough to leave an unmistakable imprint—~an imprint so detailed and perfect as to show the lines of the palm and the creases of the knuckles. Descriptions of such tests will be given the spiritualist convention by Mrs. M. E. Cadwallader, who saw such casts during her recent visit :01 Europe. “I saw the casts,” they are wonderful. When the me- dlum goes into a trance a small trough of melted parafine is pgepared. The ecotoplasm appears and, through the influence of the medium the hand is induced to enter the parafine, leav- ing an impression which is afterward cast in plaster.” she said, “and i " l | - ! ‘\4 | Large Double Bed | Size Comfortable. . ... $2. 69 1,000 Cotton Sheet Blank- 89 C ets, large size. .. Bates Dxess Gingham, pretty pat- terns, 32 inch wide ™. ..‘..‘..yardlgc els, double thread full bleached .. a good glade of damask . 5 Big Heavy Turkish Tow- Bed Sheets, size 81x90, Hemstitched Table Cloths, made of Wool Serge, 36 in. wlde. . 256 | black, brown and navy. U. S. Army Wool Hose; natural color. Army Sale, pr.zsc +59c colors ... Homer’s Allied \am, w all wool; all the wanted U. S. Army Wool Shirts and Draw- ers, made by the best makers in the éranted hank 98¢/ Plaid Blankets, part wool, 3 inch | Silk Binding . wir $4 98'blue che ek Foahir | Apron Gingham, fast color | "Men's Heavy Cotton Union Sm’ts, | cut full size and warranted all first | Special Army RSO ey B ke R T Sale ........ U. S. Army Sheepskin Lined Coats with fur collar, $8 ,98 Army Sale each $1.48 | quality. 9c .. gard U. S. Army Leather Jerkins. Army Sale. . Men’s Boston Pad Garters, fine $3.69 " Unbleached Sheetmg, 2 1-2 yds. wide, good val, yd. 39C i | s given up putting into the island ports for repair and supplies. Days and days pass at Ponta Delgada and Fayal and no ship shows up. And. things ashore are going from bad to worse, The ships do not come principally because the local authorities have suc- cumbed to the temptation of profitéer- ing. Meat has been, and is sold to- day, residents at one escudo a Kkil- ogram. But the Town hall authori-| ties have & monoply in the sale of this commodity, and they have fixed | the price to foreign ships at twenty | escudos a kilogram. American and other captains have been instructed by the owners not to replenish at the Azores unless compelled to do so, and furthermore, these vessels now carry| larger supplies of preserved meats. Hence they give the Azores a wide: berth. The cost of living in the isiands has| advanced greatly. The regulation | against the export of cattle hasj brought cattle breeders to poverty,| and many farm tenants have been| compeliled to relinquish their holdings to the owners. GRAFTS VINE ROOTS Growers of German Grape Yards Find | | ROSE DECLINES TO DISCHARGE CLERK Mrs. Olescevicz Has Not As Yet Gone Out of Business, She Admits— Cotter’s Case Continued. The continued case of Rose Olesce- charged with seiling liquor in ier store on Lafayette street, was ad- journed this morning to November 13. The matter had been laid over rom August 14, after Rose's clerk ‘ad paid a fine on liquor charges. Judge Klett suggested at that time that she go out of business or dis- charge the clerk. This morning she admitted that she had done neither. Joseph Zuk was brought in yester- lay afternoon by Patrolman Joseph Kennedy for driving without an oper- itor's license, Judgment was sus- pended. A continuance until tomorrow morning was ordered in the case of ‘“dward Cotter, charged with a tech- nical breach of the peace. The young man, who has been a principal in some of the most sensational cases af the past few years, will be exam- ined. Yesterday he and Miss Nellie Sowa were picked ‘up. A revolver was found, each having parts ot the gun.| That American Stock is Preventive I RZORE ISLES BARREN Not Brilliant As Ships of Lice and Use Them. 18, —German grapes | are now being grown here on vines with American roots. In waging war| on the phyllosera, a tiny louse which | feeds on the roots of grapevines, the state school for vineyard construction at Neustadt has hit upon a grafting plan which promises to save Ger- many's wine industry millions of | marks. | It was found that had no appetite for roots. Importation of entire can vines was not regarded feasible, wine experts declaring drinks made | from the American fruit would find no market among (dermans, but cox- periments proved that the lice-proof roots could be successfully grafted on the German vines. The old method to rid them of the will now be supplanted, it is expect- | ed, by a general rebuilding of vine- yards, using newly-developed Ger- man-American plants. Considerable | work already has been done along this ling. Bavaria, Oct futlook Ther Fail to Port I'or Repairs and Ine habitants Are Gloomy. Lisbon, Oct. 18.—Living conditions in the Azore Islands are very bad, and the outlook for the Islanders is most gloomy, according to Jose Rebello de Pettencourt, a journalist of the is- lands who has.recently come to Lis- bon. The that foreign vine-louse American Ameri- the the trouble is virtuatly chief cause of the ships have lice-infected parts Moore Bros. Sanitary] Fish Market IS THE PLACE TO SELECT YOUR FRESH FISH | 8,000 lbs. HADDOCK has just arrived right from the wa-| ter to our market in our own truck. Elegant Shore Haddock 8c Genuine Blue Fish . Boston Blue, whole fish 10c .Fancy Swordfish Saybrook Flounders .. 12¢ Penobscot Salmon . ... Blue Fish Steak ...... 15¢ Fancy Eastern Halibut Snapper Blue Fish . ... 15¢ Large Fresh Mackerel Medium Mackerel 15¢ Long Island Sea Trout 20c Rockport Cod ....... 18¢c Saybrook Black Fish.. 25¢ Scrod Steak v 1 8e Splendid Weak Fish. .. 20c Large Flukes ........ 12¢ Flounder Steak 30c Lake Champlain Smelts, 35¢; Live and Boiled Shrimp, 35¢; Long Island Medium Scallops, 40c pt.; Large Scallops, 50c pt.; Open Long Clams, 25c¢ pt.; Finnan Haddie, 18¢; Norway Salt Herring, 10c each, 3 for 25c; Large Salt Mack- . 32¢ . 32¢ 30¢ 3¢ 25¢ 28,000 ex- in the There are approximately United States. erel, 20¢ Ib.; Steaming Clams, 18c¢ qt., or 2 qts. 35¢; Round Clams, 25¢, 2 qts. 45¢. We Are Open Till 9 O’clock Thursday Evening MOORE’S FISH MARKE 89 CHURCH ST, Next To Hotel Delaney Men’s Heavy Cotton Hose with white soles. Special, pr. of pruning vines make. Army Clsale......... 23 TURKISH PARLEY British and Italian Ministerial Crisis are Interwoven With Near East Differences. London, Oct. 18.—(By Assoclated Press.)—Allied closely to the minis- terial crisis herc and that impending In Italy is the question of the general Near Eastern peace conference which it is feared must be postponed until U. S. Army Wool Shirts; standard .. each $2.98 B e e ) g;fci:;eh' At sl S PRIT 250 $1.95 U. S. Army Trousers, standard quality . . pair limits—in the proposed Near Eastern sPtllflmen! B Clty ltems Radio sets and supplies at Morlnl —-advt. The Elks will hold a regular meet- ing tomorrow night in their home on Washington street. An entertainment will be given after the business ses- sion. Two boxing houts will be a fea- ture of the program. Tabs' fair opens Fri. Oct, 20,.—advt the sttuation in' London and Rome are settled. Remarking upon this contingency, the' diplomatic expert of the Daily “The disadvantage of postpone- ment might, however, be compensat- ed in some measure if a postponement which will carry the conference well beyond the coming American elec- tions should enable the Washington administration to ascertain the real strangth of public feeling in the Unit- ed States concerning American par- ticipation—at least within certain | Telegraph Writes: J’ WALK-OVER Important News For the Women of The Princess Pat you get a shoe 50 charmi and s0 obviously well it narrow-heel, shoe worn by more women other model in the world. Brown or Black Kid or Calfskin The Relief beautiful styling you hlvc 3\ slnghm: di foot shape, is to try this shoe. Brown or Black Calfskin or Kid Today a well-known Walk-Over model for women. People will ask you where shaped he secret is in the straight inside ine and the broad-tread combination fitting, It's the shoe for every=dlay wear or walking—the natural, eesy-fitting any The Relief is a combination narrow- heel and wide-tread shoe. It is made especially for feet that have an enlarge- ment of the joint in the great toe. You wouldn’t believe there could be such comfort and at t[l{ul:l same time such WA it in your New Britain At the Walk-Over store all this week you will see a presentation of two famous Walk-Over shoes. One of them will make your feet better looking and more comfort- able than they have ever been before. The demonstration of these two shoes is taking place in every city all over the country this week. Walk-Over is showing women how they can have comfortable shoes with- out sacrificing good looks and style. Princess Pat- Relief Week This is the great Walk-Over plant in Campello, Beockton, Mass., where Walk-Over style designers originated thase two models and did a thing that has often been attempted but never really accomplished before—made women’s shoes of ect style and good looks that are really comfort shoes. ry a pair this weei David Manning’s atk-Qver SHOE STORE 211 Main St. AGENTS FOR PHOENIX HOSIERY

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