New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 14, 1923, Page 5

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be belter be 10 the Pilgrim ms [ said the Pligrim mothers not only endured all that the fathers endured but in addition, endured the Pilgrim fathers Rov, 4 L Davs Brings Turs 0 |, ', 058 3 |3 fréet men and my wmind goes haek Ita the great teacher in Ching, Confu ho lived L bet, Eyes of Men and Women |covs, ¥, e, Foe vears' etore three years of age. His father was 7 {¥ears old and his mother but 17, whe Auditors were moved o tears which |ane mare 010 people at the annual “Ladies’ "TINEING up the littie boy in lusury. she moved to a lithe vill and Pay" of Everyman's Bible el ¥€8 | hrought him up in poverty. She taught terday morning when Rev, John Lo him to eultivate the earth, to plant Davis delivered a touching Mother's (seeds and live close to the heart of Day sermon. A hymn, written by |nature. She also taught him to play himself, was sung by Leonard C, Voke, an instrument similar to a guitar. He A large number of women were always played some sweet musie be- present. Rev, Mr. Davis sald in part: [fore he spoke to the people. When “We have many great days in our he was but a YOUNg man he was left ealendar whieh we celebrate, We have lan orphan. Every time bhefore he nkegiving which Is largely an Am- went on & long journey through Chins erican day, a New England day cele- |to speali, he would go out te the grave brated all over our nation, at which of his mother. When he eame back time we give thanks to God for all|frem a long journey he never would }is blessings, We have Christmas, a |see & person, never speak 1o a person time of rejoicing and gladness be- | nor addre an audience until he went ©£ause of the birth of our Raviour, We | to where mother was burl have Easter, the Fourth of July, at|the anniversary of his mother's death which time we rejolee and are glad |he would see no people, speak to no because of God's hlessings of freedom (one but would fast all day, spend the and liberty, Labor Day the toflers | day near the grave of his mother and of the world on whieh all work s set |we of America call that ancestor wor- aslde, We have had recently added, (ship but it was only the great love another great day and that is Mother's |that wonderful scholar had for his day, In 1810 Mother's day was fi mother who had stamped upon his celebrated in Philadelphia. A few soul the great love she had for him, years hefore that Miss Jarvis, a resi- “We come also to the mother of dent of Philadelphin, on the second our great Jesus Christ. She was a Sunday In May, going out to place 'sweet and holy woman and was the flowers on the grave of her mother, [one of all the women of those days, reallzed it would be a splendid thing (At to he the mother of Christ., She 17 all the people would turn aside and |was fiaally a follower of her Son's think of the influence of mothers, the |teaching. Joys and sorrows and of the ambition | * of mothers and cause flowers to be | Christenson. When one of his teach- placed upon their graves. 8o Miss | ers tricd to make him a heathen, he Jarvis went to those In authority in!tailed to do it. The teacher said, Philadelphia and pleaded her cause. | ‘My, what mokhers these -Christian Coming as this day does In spring | children have.' time, she thought it would be appro- “We come to Monica, the mother priate to have Mother's day. It "ull;or St. Augustine. She prayed for him celebrated first in Philadelphia In 1910 until he was finally converted to God. and now is observed in other nations | “Then we come to Susanne Wesley, as well as ours, ! mother of John Wesley, When Mrs, | “We may forget the 4th of July,| pavis and 1 were visiting in England NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, religion . The pa o8t my mothe for a'asked: “Was not that the pre soe her day of your life, &p hang your faith where she hung The governor thought & minute hers, on the cross of Ohrist” 1. Hhe was g very beauti- flowed freely from the eves of both |l and highly eultured woman. When men and wemen fn & gathering of the father died, instead of the mother back in the time menancingly against her. Mother's Day his own home." Christian mother future for God shaping their d Our mother most potent people in the The beauty of mother love, he hen comes the mother of John* 19 from making a gveat addyess w #00 audience like that HYRS Judges, senators and congressmen sald “No, it wasn't Y 'Well, what was the proudest day he was asked of your life | “*The proudest day of my lite I was & boy, 12 years old, and got my first pay envelope at the ead of the mother and said, ‘Here, mother, you Dr. Ablquist Compares Modem "““xa. wemen if you s bave tre #o0d fortune to have with you Type With Those Bible Describes "o ar' " sieeentus 2oar she has done for you. The time will come when she is no longer with There is nothing new in the mod- 'you and then you will knew what ern shifter and flapper type, for Way mother meant Prophet seoms that mueh Isalah this same creature walked the oe jice (s gone. It seems as though and he warned o euiding star of life ha declared Rev ne | Vere rendered e Qua of 8 Mildred Swanson and Hul. Ik “Teach Me to Pray." or asked the young peeple SEAIR. | If thelr love and devolions 1o mether My was like that of Governor Johnsen of ¢ from Oklahoma 10 Calls | Minnesota, whe having just returs King before ar and what When she s gone it of the light and joy . upk be. low the horizen and the way is en. Abel A, Ahiquist, pastor of the First 4t o8, "OTHOR SEC 4 s n chureh, last evening in his ‘Behold thy mother, the beet He amserted 'riong of thy youth and the com. that this sort of femininity had been .. o0 thy mature years assoclated with every deeadent era in' .., v 1 San the Bistery of the Werld The following musical selections The pastor took as his 27th verse of the 19th 3 Then aaith Jesus to the dis| g4 °c " yohngon and Messrs, Hild- ciple, Behold thy mother! And from | oy SRR T0G (OIS . that hour that diseiple took her unto Soprano Solo, “Songs Mother Taught Me" ., .., .. Dvorak first part of the sermon, Dr, L Mise Alva Bentson Ahlquist spoke about the beauty of coneiaito Bolo, “Hold Thou My mother love and our debt to moth- —y.gn shape the Miss Hulda Johnson humanity by | guartette, “Shadows of the Eve. children according 10| pine Hours" Shelby s aro the paritone Solo, “Mother, My Dear” world to-. | Mr, Walter Falk et: “Mother" Hosmer Briggs {llustrated by the old and beautiful legend running thus: An angel came down to earth and looked about for something to carry back to heaven, There were three things that attract- ! ed his attention, a bouquet of fras grant flowers, the smile of a little Iabor day or some of the other great | o came to the home of John Wesley. | the flowers had withered, the baby's days in the year but some of us will | we went into the little prayer room | smile had vanished: only the motn ! never fail to remember Mother's Day. | where he spent hours of prayer, Write a letter to mother or go to| Among the four greatest people of church and show your appreciation to | their time was listed the name of Su- her. No one can overemphasize the zanne Wesley who gave to the world ‘er's love remained the same, *. | mother's love is the only thing on earth pure enough for heaven,” the L angel exclaimed, influence of mothers in our national | yonn \esley. She was the mother of { He spoke of the responsibility of life, in teaching the young. Oh, ho\\" 19 children and she instructed them much we owe to our parents, no one in the things of God. She was the can overestimate. We can change our | oo "0 S na e g she in. ! natonality, our names, our residence, |y iot0q them in the things of God. | but ‘we can never change tha blood | g Tl vhe daughter of a minister, that courses In our velns. Some of e o g minister and mother of two us to the day of our death will bear | 1% B0 & the stamp that mother has placed | ™.\ otiler great mother, Captain| ,‘;,;‘;";‘fi fouls and upon our hearts. | g,y “nother of the Salvation Army. others of the worid have not L. 5 i When she died, 100,000 people viewed | written our great masterpieces, neith- her remains and shed tears. Oh er have they painted Madonnas, built | €T 2 o) ’ ’ , 3t Panie | What an influence this mother had. any 8t. Peter's in Rome or 8t. Paul's! Wil 40 0 HECGe Lt o nother, in TLondon, composed great music, | ot B A IR of whom have not been great writers of A:uFAi1 d, ‘All T am and ever hope to books, nor been inventive geniuses of | € said, 4 Prtaident j be, I owe to my mother.’ our past history; the great bulk of | P& > that work has been given to us by | Garficld Kissed the Bible on his in- man. This is largely n man made | Auguration day and then placed it in world but women have done more|the 1ap of a littie old lady nearby; than this, more-than writing or paint-, 1t was the Bible his mother had given ing. ehiseling great statuary of tha|him when he was a little boy. As; wotld, ‘ecatise women- have given-to, Cleveland said upon the eve of 'hls the. world the men who have been | election to the governorship of New great enough and geniuses enough to | York state. f" mother were alive, I give to the world these inventions. She | Would be writing a letter to her. I has not painted any Madonnas but in cannot tell how different it is since, a finer spirit she lived them in her she has gome. I believe all my suc- home. She wrote no lofty poems, cess has been due to mother’'s pray- critics call art, she }ived them in her | ers. Bl Leart. She carved no shapeless mar-! “John Randolph said, ‘When I tried | ble out with a finer sculpture, she |to make an infidel of myself, I could shaped this soul of mine, She built hear ringing in my ears, my mother's to great cathedrals but her life voice saying, '‘Our Father Who Art in| cathedraled God. ‘Heaven,' I cannot turn away from “In the heginning of history wom- God and the Bible.’ Napoleon praised en's influence was not as great as it is his mother and gave her credit for today. But coming up to the present shaping his great destiny. 1 prefer day history, women has ever had an|for a friend a man who has never re- increasing influence in the lives of hu- | sisted the tears of his mother. When manity until today she stands an I went out to preach in California I equal of man in every walk of life, stayed at the home of a man Who Now a8 never has she gone into the preached with me. He told me that industrial and social life of the na- | when he used to go out to dances, stay tion. Not only has she done this but out late, his mother would pray for| she has gone into politics and in many | him constantly. One night he crept walks of life has shown herself su- fnto the house quietly and he saw a perior to man. If women follow their dim light in the parlor. He looked God-given instincts in politics and re- | in and there on her knees praying for form rather than listening to cold | him was his mother. 8he had stayed reason of men who have gotten the|there all through the night and it world into such an awful fix as it is| was now 2 o'clock. I°rom that time in today and will go by a kinder sense on he gave his life to God and now is and love for law and morality and | pastor of the Methodist church in a town in Ohio, all because his mother SNSRI | ayed to God. God saved her son. | In a graduating class of ministers, 100 | of them credited their start in the T"AT'S M.I. WE nfl iy | ministry to their mothers. Some men | | were talking about the Bible and say- : R 4 ling what versions they liked best. ! HERMIAY-B)G8 Arid EAFAL They all had their different opinlons Glasses | but one man sald he likes his moth- p— 3 er's version best. They asked him BUT WE DO IT RIGAT what that was. Had she written any| 3 Bible? He told them his mother had | written a Bible in her everyday life Eyesight Specialist [read that Bible which was his moths | 3 N ST, TEL. 1905 [ er's life. i “You women, it is the Bible that | you live in your home. A little boy | S once made out a bill for the various e Chores he had done around the house, | 4TS against the evil persons and ten- L He had itemized it and the total was s, It told what mother owed to| H yd | o1 - DR. BENJ. L. PROTASS || 126, Tt {out what mother owed to]iyq next generntion. The demand to |the flapper. This young person should motherhood and sald that we must race be hlessed. The second part of the sermon Dr, ! by Chinese bandits from the Shang- Ahlquist prefaced with the {interro-| hai-Peking express last Sunday gation: “What of the motherhood of | “little fox trot over the.rocky hil | Ku Hung Ming ridicules the womanhood is ever an accurate index ' cign writers for expressing indigna- of the state of civilization. The fu.|tlon over ture of society s reflected in grow- | “howling treaty-port snobs.” He com- ing girl of today. The wives and|pares the bandits Klan in America after the Civil War, ers of the future are today at school | He says: shaping their own and the nation's| ideals. ! have been calling on the people of ! China to rise and put down the cor- rupt make-believe government at Pe- In consequence chambers of commerce held indigna- tion meeting and the students parad- ed the streets and smashed windows of the state ministers. “All activities have been of no avail make believe government—the eign loan making machine. the next generation?’ The soul of mothers of tomorrow, the social lead- Modern Flapper Not So Modem A specimen has emerged known as read the Bible, the third chapter of Isalah, if she imagines that she is a new type. Hera the pastor quoted: *The daughters of Zion are haughty, and walk with outstretched necks, and wanton eyes, mincing as they go, and making a tinkling noise with their | feet, with anklets and pendants and | mufflers and perfume boxes and the rings and nose jewels."” The insignia of the flapper is a sneer for morality, Ladylike de- has become this daughter's disgust. She glorifles in her giddiness and she | treats life-as a joke. “Let us hope| that these types are the exception picts in the days of Rome's decline. | eyes, the mincing step and the tin-| Dr. Ahlquist sald that the church crimes ha fin the jungle while savage tigers have held the road,” he said, “We have heen playing with the tin horn of | childishness while the megaphone of truth has been permitted to rust and corrode, World Wants Fighters “The demand today is for the fight- ing saint. Fighting editors who will| not sell out to a political party. | IYighting preachers who, do not shiver in the presence of a millionaire. I'ighting mothers who will up in| dencies of the age that would degrade day is for fighting men and women, Miss Alva Bengtson and Mr. Alfred Erickson DEFENDS CHINESE BRIGANDS’ ACTIONS Ku Hung Ming Insists They Are, | Real Patriots of Country have an enlightened and cultured By The Associated Press. womanhood and a pure and ennobled | | motherhood if our sons are to he!literary great and our daughters good, if man- | fl"‘hmvs LS, hood is to come to its best and the |China Standar customs regulations. ExpEriRicen of e woman Kl nRDEel e Vidut R reniATineT MohOaRN WO a seized within the three mile limit with a_cargo of liquor aboard estimated at |about 800 cases. Two shot were fired across the schooner's bow, he sald, before she hove to. | babe, and a ‘mother's love. Theas | thres the angel carried away but when he reached the pearly gates, | genius author “Foreigners and the foreign press s of Chinese romance— rise up to do what foreigners and the hesdone—put an end to the| meanor which was the mother's pride, | corrupt make-belleve government at been obliged to make foreign ladies| rather than the rule,” he said, {do a little fox trot barefooted over .“The pitable prototype of this girl | the hills at Shantung one must re- may be found in every decadent cra|member the organization in Amer- in the world’s history. It is the old|ica after the Civil War, called the monotony of sin, which Gibbon de-|Ku Klux Klan."” Ku Hung Ming says the object of The prophet Isafah saw the flapper the Ku Klux Klan on the streets of Jerusalem and!rupe!-bnggers and negroes. preached a sermon about her. He|pect of the bandits he says Is to warn noted the rubber neck, the wanton | foreigners and diplomats not to pro- | or pet the queuless kling at the ankles. This modern|negroes of China who have in their type has been able to add nothing to| hands the power to bring the coun- Isaiah's original.” | try to rack and ruin. Ku Hung Ming concludes that if seems to be satisfied to expend {ts the vietims wrath on little sins, while great|thelr hearts they should be proud to ve festered in the bddy|have the honor politic. “We have been killing flies| perience, tect, patronize of the fox trotting ex- Britain can speak by telephone to British Aircraft Experts Are Looking Over Entirely New Project. being examined | Breat, slim, metal saloon, like a long | tapering Pullman car is the basis of | thel» daughters, the mothers of!the gleaming sheaths of a featherweight metal alloy this great air coach will 2 5 = ; DR. HARRY PROTASS and #he placed the Toc there With A0 [\ 16 do not care what the world says, | be designed to rest on a long frame- BPENTISTS other bill of a_differcnt nature. Bhe|g "qq0e o falls to do, 0 long as they | work which will have wheels like & 252 MAIN ST. mother for providing a nice, Christian | keeping step itemized it as follows: Willie owes 0|40 conucious of the fact that they are | rallway coach. i of| The convevance which will have (Over Globe Clothing Co.) {home all his life, for nursing him |y .;von and marching with the heroes' day and night accommodation will |good to him and feeding him, noth e —— | ing. Total, Willle owes mother noth- , : "“|{he pastor pleaded with the young| celve its passengers. When they are | . 4 The . e bank SILVER WEEK |ing. The boy placed the T8¢ back in|. o510 ¢or ohedience to the command- | aboard an engine will take it to an at his "‘O":"'hr lap “:"d‘r‘r::l':':(‘z‘"“ ’“:"li“.n..,,'; “Honor thy thy acrodrome outside n city where it eyes pul s arms & d her nec . " v will be hrought to a halt In the een- . " > AR / k| mother, ays may be long e cen WEDDING RING SHOF and sald, ‘Willle owes mother every. || [%o m LT S Tord thy God | ter of a strange, Intricate frame work thing, mother owes Willie nothing.’ 149 N!"'" Street 2 | “There are some of who will never "",'1:.""' SEE OUR WINDOW see mother again, but thank God | (18 St o his parents, ha | then sllde into position Above & pow. | was not permitted to enjoy any post of trust or honor. They believed that | to which it will be holted. few minutes a railway transferred into an airplane. E It | | S : SNAP FAST- =] = O E Z ENER| |/ Never cuts the thread or wears loose. Quickly and easily ‘ sewed on—and once on, it is on for good. Avoid the annoyance of loose unsightly snaps. Insist on the So-E-Z Snap Fastener. 10c fortwelve. At notion counters zvayd;u. T e "It Stays Sewed”! t la it I through a long sickness, for being ¢ gyt S0 He sald that among of widesprs if any one was con- The coach, chedding its weels, w |run on ordinary tracks and will be In the third part of his discourse | backed into a railway station to re- d wings and machinery, | pain they give their parents by dis- | obedience and neglect,” he said. “How |tess child.” The. wickedness of such conduct. How can | an undutiful son could not he c'p lable of performing any great action, or of excenting justice with impar- iality. | : fldren should consider what harper than a serpent’s tooth,” said heathen poet, “is it to have a thank- should consider the | hey honor the parent who is in | heaven, if they do not honor father nd mother on earth. | “Was it not Lincoln who said: ‘Al hat 1 have accomplished and all that am T owe to the fact that 1, had a| godly mother.” | erful pneumatic tired airplane chassis A church built in 1366, at Horn- | ingsham, near Watminster, is claimed to Congrégational church in Efgland. Cuticura Soap TheVelvet Touch For the Skin MONDAY, MAY 14, 1023, NET REVENUE FROM U, . ROADS OVER 68 MILLION Total Faoveds That of Any Year Ninoe 11T, But is Par Below That Figure New York, May 14.—Net nw'\ne[ from railway operations in 1922, ag- Eregated § ARy year e the record year 1911, but was §4,614,954 less than in that year, it Is disclosed by the 38th an. nual report of the Southern Pacifie Co. made publie today Net railway operating ineome for 1932 totalled §46,222,546, an Increase of more than $10,000,000 over 1921, and net income from the rallread property and proprietary companies combined totalled $32,600,150, as compared with $30,618,777 the pre. vieus year. The direct cost of the shopmen's strike is estimated by Julius Xrutt. schnitt, chairman of the exeoutive committee, as $3,600,000 “Competition fof transcontinental traffie by the steamship lines o te Ing through the Panama canal d In a statement to stockholders, “has been intensified by a rate war between the steamship lines, and the volume of tonnage shipped through the canal w nearly 100 per cent greater in 1 than during the pre. | ceding year."” RST MEETING TODAY American and Mexican Commissions | Meet éTo Take Up Problems Py The Assoclated Preas, | Mexico City, May 14,~The Ameri- can and Mexican commissions which are to endeavor to remove the dif- floulties botween the Obregon govern- ment and the Tnited States hold their first meeting today. On the eve of the first session, Prestdent Obregen made public a de- cree ordering indemnification for land selzed between the beginning of the revolution of 1613 and the promulga- tion of the present constitution on May 1, 1917, This step, it is belleved should simplify diseussion of the land problem by the commissions. The United States has insisted that the Mexican government sateguard the property rights in land held by Am- erlcans, SEIZE BRITISH SHIP Miami, Fla., May 14.—The Esther Gray, a British schooner of about 18 | 5 . May 14—Ku Hung Ming, tons from Nassau, Bahamas, was selz- Sl TS ® mon:|ed vesterday by the revenue cutter ditorial in the North! Vidette off Triumph reef and held on (andurd. here, refers to the @ charge of violating the United States Captain Miller Sl Escope = Plle Torture! MUNYON'S PILE OINTMENT it 1€ homay, comfortat s fica! " F— 1] avace orvasrsre i [—] tries have granted a basic patent on this process, the result of many years efforts. 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