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ELOQUENT ADDRESS =" is 1o gath BY BISHOP MURRAY - . - Appeals for Interest in Catholic Social Service Work A men & Y. M. 1 hear ¥ liary Work of Ht Other capa A &) bis Need n M Daly J. la the u chapter otic Wor were ¢ Nishoy As Y mads his adw Bty the througt er young Strangers highways work THE GREAT DANGER OF HIGH men and ssure and headache Thousand high blood p ize It Dizziness, lessness, 1 tell-tale signs. It by some functiona the vital organs such as the kidneys or a habitual clogging o intestines. When this happer usually does, In the middie ture calls for help and the to answer by dolng doub pumping more blood to the part of the body This cre. often resu read so often A sim fe blood pressur 1 the cor cause it, is now offered in Bialin. Blalin will remove your blood pressure by acting quickly effectively at the seat of It will stimulate your cleanse the system of the that Interfere with the tioning of the vital organs. Bialin will make you fer a few days. ient tablet form good druggists such Brainerd Co., The Dickinson Co., City Drug Stores. is work; terrific remedy Iver be can BLOOD PRESSURE i Na heart tie attacked seientitic hig! the trouble and impurities regular func- better in It is put up in conven- had as the Clark & Drug reate a that they problems to b 1 at large problems that fills not the spirit W admit there That eriRin alene solved net it s peaple ' highest Faperience With French Orphan s cerainly to thwart our endeavors own, Or ere Ing woman ; came y broug supposed t over to be 1o be well ousands by ple N cortain ¢ I mentioned in she had proached, t by the high women who have charge ganization, but by workers and asked if she Ike to have an education, plied that she would, she opportunity she it solutely of to continue in take *‘advantage Very frankly sh idvinee and so came to me in distress vhat I could do to help her. out rejected by with- to me about was & French or- hundreda and cared meaning articularly young wom- E under the anization of and over been ap- minded of the or- one of the special would not She Immediately was told that if she wished that must decide between and her religion because it w the question for her her own church and of this opportunity, any A8 a consequence she to find re- as ab- such out and ““This evening I wish to consider the problem from the larger point of view even if there were nobody competing What Sometimes we to our neighbor with us. is our duty matter? our dut) is to us and memb: mediate a duty But we know ciation with the of relative © yone o that at view, we lose the whole spirit of the fundamental teachings LUFFY marshmallow, rich with the flavor of crushed mint leaves, coated with won- derfully smooth chocolate and slipped into a dainty glassine envelope. Five cents. Kibbe's nut cream bars are made from se- lected French walnuts, Louisiana pecans or toasted Avola almonds, embedded in creamy fondant and covered with smooth, chocolate. sweet Ask the candy man for Kibbe's Candies. Our own fleet of motor trucks insures fresh delivery to your dealer. Wherever good candy is sold 225 ARCH ST. R S - S N A S a in this think that very simple mater and that if we really take care of the obfigations that come long the lne of natural duty immediate our oWn family or im- really discharge 1d expect. if we look upon our duty from that narrow point of of the church of which we are members and of the NEW BRITA Every Minute Counts fight Onee let constipation get a grip en you, and your system is wide open to P0% of human ailments, Btatistics show that to be the prepertion of illness that has comstipation for a starting peiat, Pills and eathartics are as dangerous to the system as constipation! Your physician will recommend Kellogg's Bran, beeause it is nature’s own relief from constipation, Tt is seientifically prepared to relieve suffer. ing humanity from constipation and it will do what no other foed ean do! It will give every sufferer permanent relief if it is eaten regularly——at least twe tablespoonfuls daily; as much with each meal in chronic eases! Kellogg's Bran is wonderful in its patural, positive aetion, It sweeps and cleanses and purifics the bowel communion of saints. Responsibility of Everyone T is an obligatien for us to co-operate in providing spiritual &nd temporal we fare of those not as fortunate as ours It stunds to reason that rge 14t obligation effected either by our own persona service or by asking somebody as our delogate 1o undertake charge it for us, There many duties that we us Individuals, could not undertake to discharge ourselves. For example, if a little child w run over and crushed by an automobile and you wero alone at the time There was no hospital near and no physiclan available, There was ab- solutely no human being within reach at the time. What would be your obligation? You should leave every other duty and give all your atten. tion to preserving the Iife of that un- fortunate victim Men know from experience, that such o task would be almost impossible for every indl. vidual and therefore they come to- gether and develop the profession of surgery, develop the great institutions of medicine where the work may be carried on in a more efficient wty Those institutions depend upon us for support. We have already recognized our duty to society when we con- tribute to those institutions to care of the tlcular cases that we personally would be obliged to care for but which are cared for by ¥hose who are skilled in such work. What is true in that obligation is true in regard to others, “In regard to the religious educa- tion of children. It is the duty of every father and mother to take care ot the religious education of his or her child and yet it often happens that parents cannot discharge that duty and they turn to some other organi- zation for it and what do we find Thousands and thousands of parochial schools established all over the United States. ing their lives without tompensation to do the task that is the task of In- |dividual parents, ‘l “There are those people in such a state that no one knows of their ac- {tual position and so we have in our |day that extensive work known as so- |cial service in which individuals who |are really sincere have an opportunity to safeguard the interests of their | neighbors. | “Inasmuch as we cannot take the [time from our duties at home or em- i ployment to scour the city of New | Britain to find those who are in dan- ger, it becomes necessary for us to organize in order to designate some- | jone who will give all their time, at-| Itention, intelligence, training, experi- | ence and fine noble motives to doing| for these dependents precisely what | we, as individuals, should do if the matter were brought to our individual |attention. Someone will be maintain- ed by funds that you contribute either as members of a diocesan organiza-| tion or voluntary contributions in any | way. You will provide the amount necessary to maintain one worker. One | worker will find a task that seems al- |most impossible and if she tries to| | cover the entire field she will be dis- | couraged. Tnasmuch as all the people |of this city are organized into a large | | parish organization, the problems can | easily be brought from the individual | parishioner to the pastor and as the | pastor has several other duties to per- |form and it sometimes is hard for {him to get on the inside of the case |1t should be called to the attention of one who will be able to get the infor- mation desired. | *This program ere every p of wr the the of may be to dis which you started | tonight to care for individually, is one | | capable of the greatest possible devel. opment so that it will not only take care of the broken homes, the helpless take ' Thousands of women sacrific- | DAILY HERALD, in the against constipation! traety it scours out the dangerous toxie polsons; it puts ¥ back en schedule time without irritation or diseomfort ! Don't delay eating Kellogg's Bran each day in some form! Tryitasa cereal eprinkled over your favorite hot or eold cereal or cook it with hot cereals, In the latter case, add two tablespoonfuls for each person and mix with the regular cereal and coak a8 usui Kellogg's Bran is simply deliclons made into muffins, popovers, raisia bread, macaroons, pancakes, ete, Recipes are on every package! For health s sake get some Kellogg's Bran immediately, All grocers, First-clasa hotels and elubs serve Kellogg's Bran in individual pack. ages, Ask for it at your restaurant, IN by more individua iniformiy p the whols ing and living and tian men and womer teaching of God If we undert ® confront us and give help the less fortur their lives, ther tributing somethting be of vast importance community of New Hritain but the the state of Connecticut and the United States of Americs which are all is un- der the providence of God." BILLY SUNDAY ATTACKS BISHOP BLAKE'S VIEWS importa standard of ems as up our time to te and bulld up certalnly are cons that is going to not only to this Also Assails Darmvinism, Saying 1t | Tends to Make Athelsts Out | of Good People, 29,—~The sanc- he brotherbood ristianity 1s 8. Blake of Columbus, O,, May tion of bolshevism a of man toward which C striving, by Bishop Ldg {the Methodist Episcopal church, was | attacked in a sermon last night by | “Billy" Sunday. He also deplored the tral monkey theory” or Darwin, he natural tendency of Darwin- ism is to make atheists out of good people,” he declared, adding: “The theory is not only unproven bLut it is untrue. Mr. Sunday enumc of a number of univ suld, have publicly ¥ | belief in the theory of ¢ their disbelief in the Bible. “Why should we permit these fools or any of the other moilycoddies who think no better than they do to teach Christian student bodies {n schools hat are supported by taxation,” he | asked. “The sermon delivered by Bishop | Blake in which he characterized the soviet government of Russia as a splendid example of true Christianity in itself was as un-Christian as it was un-American, Mr. Sunday linked the ‘“chatter of |the evolutionists” with the “destruc- tiveness of bolshevism™ as a force against which the Christian mind and | nation must always be prepared to| fight. | PRy e . T R |Millerand to Unveil g Statue to Friendship Chaumont, May —President Mil- lerand will unveil the monument to commemorate the friendship of the United States and France here June 3, in the president of Premier Poin- care, the members of the cabinet, the | ambasgsadors of the allied and asso- clated powers, and the marshals of France., M. Poincare is expected to deliver an important speech on the forelgn policy of ¥France. ted professors sities who, he | oclaimed their | volution and Younge; R:)ckefell‘er Is | Keeping Fit Via Squash | New York, May 29.—John D, Rock-| Old West to Live Again as “Pony Express” Pounds Its Way Across Plains From St. Joe to Sacramento BLACK LINE SHOWE ROUTE fly'lflnv\' of & message signed by President | killed, But in only a lone instance IXPR FOLLOW OLD PONY WILL IN BEPTEM. 88, WHICH RID- |Harding. At a signal they will leap to the SOME ORIGINAL CARRIERS saddle and gallop down a street lined GREAT CHARIL WITNESS THE INCLUDING P LOWER TENECK, LOWER RIGHT, By NEA Serviee 8t. Joseph, Mo,, May 20.—The Pony press—probably the most colorful and romantic paragraph in American history—will live again ! Next September, roads hetween this city and Sacramento will resound to the hoofbeats of the mustang. It will be like the reawakening of characters from an old book. For the Pony Ex- LEFT, AND JOHN 'head west, with cheering people. The faces of each will be grim. The ponies will The 2000.mile race will be on ! | A hundred relay stations or more. | Hundreds of horses and scores of rid- | ers will be waliting at points across| the distant plains—waiting for their turn in the pageant. . That message in duplicate from the president will be relayed across the | route of the first western mail route —the same route that became a fore- runner of the great rallroads and ex- press companies of today. Charles Cliff, now gray and old, wiil pregs has come to be but a fascinat- |, "y¢ the gtarting point here to bid ing memory. The Pony Express Revival organi- zation now 1s mapping final plans to & 5 % R R e | the riders Godspeed. Sixty-three years ago, as a boy of 16, he rode a mus- He was | reproduce the famous mail route of |,."¢ tha firgt to cross the perflous, 1860-61. Tt will be in connection with the joint Mark Twain and Bret Harte | celehration to extend throughout flw\"‘ | west, Hundreds of horses several and Indian-ridden plains. At Sacramento another veteran of e plains John Seebeck, will walting to greet the last relay, eight | or 10 days later. In 1Ré0, Seebeck, | score of men will be used. And Ye-|ynen 91 vears old, rode with CIff. cruiting of the latter now {s revealing a heated competition. It was on April 3, 1860, at 5 p. m.. that Johnny Frey, 20, leaped on a black pony at St. Joseph and rode west. At the same moment, in Sacra- mento, Harry Hoff, another youth, eaddled another daghing mount and turning eastward, was off like a shot, Thus started the Pony Express. Now, on a September day yet to be named, two youths, like their prede- cessors of 63 years ago, will stand at attention beside two impatient mus- tangs here. Fach will be handed a FRANK McHUGH FAVORITE WITH POLI AUDIENCE tion of “Six Cylinder Love” hg Stock Co. at Palace, Hartford. Truex B : and his company Ernest {efeller, Jr., Is keeping fit by playing | squash tennis on top of a skyscraper. | In black tights and jersey he played yesterday at the opening of a new out- door court on top of the Whitehall building near the home of Standard| | 0il. Besides impressing spectators| | with his well-knit physique he showed | dexterity and speed in covering the court. He lost 16 to 13 to Walter| | Kidde, New Jersey highway commis- | | sioner who designed the court, one of | the largest in the country. " In Air Classic made a greater hit s in their presenta- tion of “Six Cylinder Love' than did the Poli Players at the the- ater in Hartford last night. This coni- edy by William Anthony McGuire is clean, wholesome and thoroughly en- joyable, It is full of human interest and Is capably presented by the stock players. The work of the director is evident throughout the entire production, especially in the automobile sale scene in the first act when the newlyweds are both so cager to learn how to drive the car. Fvery member of the cast, a few new faces appearing In this production, did well. Mary Dent- s Marylyn Sterling, the sweet, de- who calls her husband A weetheart,” hy,"" and could not have with New Yorlk ler mure wifs “darll “dearle, her audience with her affection and faith shown to friend husband. Arthur Howard was seen to better | advantage this week as the husband suleotudl rain sivade.is oo e sleoionlid the husbamtl who steals to pay for his wife's unintentional extravagance, sac rifices his home, antomobile and be- gins at the bottom to regain the con- fidence of his employer, he is typical of the married men who earn $30 week salary but live on a 8150 a we salary. That Frank McHugh lished himself as Hartford audiences last night's performance when he applanded upon his entrance in the second and third acts although he had received his share of applause with the other players upon their en- trance in the first act. He is ably as- sisted by Harold Kennedy as Richard Burton, a_neighbor of the newlyweds. Edwin Vail, the director, is geen for several moments in the production, and his work is appreciated nees Willlams scored ber nsual hit as the wife of Burton. "Others were cast to idvantage, k estab- with at was has favorite evident a was SPECIAL SHRINE COURT Those Attending Washington Conven- tion Wio Run Have Own’ Legal Prosecution, May Washington, + who run afoul of the law in Washing v entry in the 12th Grand | of the Aero club of Fr : the air from the Tulleries Gardens in Paris, 1 week will have the al “court” arrested misde ton during Shrinc option of trial hefore a spe of Masons provided they involving on charges only meanors, The “court” is organized with the i | Afoul of Law Will | Shriners | | | Most of thelr comrades, including DBuffalo Bill, whose real name was | William Cody, have gone into the sunset. CUff and Seebeck alone are left. Sole survivors they are of that hardy band of adventurers who risk- ed death to carry the mails. ‘ No perils like those of the originai| Pony Express will face these modern | riders. From the day the old line he- tele- completed, danger the intrepid they were | when the first transcontinental graph line was constantly rode beside horsemen, Sometimes gan until its close in the fall of XSSI.] | approval of the governing authorities | ‘JII\'t'lli]l' Scores in Excellent Produc- armory. of the District of Columbia and the police in making arrests of Shriners on misdemeanor charges will turn | their prisoners over to this “court” | which will sit in the National Gum'rl} SHIP STRIKE ENDED Restored in Fire Room Peace is of Army Transport Enroute From Manila to San krancisco, The Associated 1 Manila, Ma Ttussian fireroom crew \. transport Merritt, enroute from | Manila to San FKrancisco with 540 | Russlan refugees, has been settled and | peace now reigns, according to wire less messages received today from Captain Randall in command of the transport. Before leaving Manila a crew was assigned to the fireroom. But it seems the Russians vere unable to maintain steam in the | vessel's boilers and S about | 100 miles from Olongape, the new fire tenders quit, Captain Rand I'he strike of the | on the U, § Russian or a Fllipino fireroom crew. | On Sunday the army mine planter | | |were troublesome, | worry be | Merritt's | ’ all | simply wins the hearts of g torced to turn back and wireless | clean and stainless and quick resulte 1id the mail fail to get through. It is sald that when Elbert Hub- bard wrote his famous essay, ‘A Mes- sage to Garcla,” he had in mind that bhand of mere boys who braved life for the sgheer love of adventure, The roads, too, will be better now, and bridges will carry the riders across streams. It was not thus in olden days. But despite the absence of the dan- ger from lurking Indians, despite the removal of hardships, conditions, wherever possible, will he much the same as in 1860, Seebeck, commenting on the com- ing ride, recalls his adventures. He rode a strip of 90 miles through Ne- vada. “The worst thing I had to contend with was the terrible sandstorms,” he says. “At times they me and my horse. would blind bath The Indians also But they didn't me as much as the desert storms, “Our orders were to carry the mails at whatever cost. We were told not to fight the redskins, but to run. And out pay was small—only $60 a month. Buffalo Bill was the exception. He received $150." And so, across Missouri, Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Nevada and Califor- nia, shades of the old riders of the Pony Express will dash again. These riders, however, will be spur- red by the cheers of men and women of a modern day. Theirs will not ba the lot of bygone pathfinders, whose only audience was silent wastes, bands of savages, the almost impene- trable forests—and death — that the mails might get through. —_—————— Harrison, left Corregidor with 12 Filipinos, 21l former members of the Merritt's fireroom crew. They wers transferred to the transport that night and the Merritt resumed her voyage, Armenians Have Chance For Correspondence Course Alexandropol, Armenia, May 20.-- Correspondence courses similar to those in the United States have bes come an established institution in Are American relief workers ine »d them in connection with m of night schools to pros ional facilities for ore n over 15 years of age, their vide phoned chiic For Stiff Joints Pharmacists say that when all other so-called remedies fail, Joint Fase will succeed. It's for joint ailments only—that {s why you are advised to use it for sore, painful, inflamed, rheumatic joints, Joint-Ease limbers up the joints—-is are assured. Sixty cents a tube af druggists everywhere. Your Bank Book gives you the feeli of cone fidence that comes in knowin, that you have money aheug for any em ergency. You canopen an Interest Account with this bank for deposits of one dollar or more. Dpen Saturday Evenings from 7—9 Daylight Saving Time