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COOLIDGE'S EULOGY OF WARREN HARDING Tribute to Late President Broad- casted to World by Radio Washington, Dec. 11. — PVresi- dent Coolidge’s eulogy of President Harding, which was broadcast by radio last night follow: “One of the brief poems that have touched the hearts of men is that wherein Leigh Hunt tells of the visit of an angel to earth, recording the names of ‘thoes who love the Lord." “‘'And is my name there?’ ' ‘Nay, not so,’ replied the angel. *‘Then write me down,’ he was told, ‘as one who loves his fellow men." “The Angel came again to show the list of those who love the Lord— “‘And lo!" the name of him who loved his fellow men ‘led all the rest.” “It will be hard to find a better picture than this of President Hard- ing, the man we loved and mourn. He loved his fellow men, and because they felt it and knew it, they loved and trusted him. His whole life, from the knee of that cherished mother who had an inspired faith in him, down to the day when a sorrowing world laid its tributes at his brier, was a continuing testimony to his de- votion to them and to their faith in him. “Some will say that such a sweet and gentle nature could only have found its setting and its opportunity for service in a strange and peculiar time. Perhaps they are right. Yet he came to the world's stage in an hour when it seemed set for other characters. The captains and the kings, the armies and the navies, the men who weuld have war, and the men who would not have peace, had long dominated the Where “ g them could made, “FREELONE” COoRNS lift right off place be Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly vou lift it right off with fin. gers. Traly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Froezone™ for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the eal- luscs, without sorencss or irritation. Guide Posts of Business IDING along an unfamiliar road, you depend upon NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1923. could ear be found, gentle, gracious soul? “Yet he found his place. He caught the ear of a war-tired world. He called our country back to paths of peace, and gladly it came. He beck- oned the nations to come and sit in council. He pointed them the way to peace. He set example of readiness te cast away the sword from the arm of might. He sought for men and nations a peace—the only true and lasting peace—based on justice and right. He stood first and firm for his own country then for mankind. His sincerity and frankness won to his side those who sensed the great truth of human brotherhood. So he led the way to the monumental accomplishments of the Washington conference on limita- tion of armament. “The same simplicity and direct- ness marked his program in domestic affairs. His was the steady, strong, inspiring hand of guidance and help- fulness. It was never the mailed fist of compulsion. He knew that the | greatest need of the world was peace with industry and production. He asked for these, and with them for thrift and the will to make good the losses what had been inflicted in the years of strife. He called his coun- trymen to set an example of these homely virtues, and they did. He gave without remorse of his own strength, down to the tragic end. He rose above misunderstandings and mis- representations, but he was curiously incapable of hard feeling toward thosg who were unfair with him. In a time when the minds of many men | were prone to seize upon hurried con- clusions, he held back and dared to take his time and thought before de- ciding. He was free from the pride of opinion, but strong in the deter- mination of conviction. He had that calm courage which could not be over-pressed, but that was firm and final when decision had been reached. “He was crticized because his own country, under his leadership, did not move forward so fast as some wished. But when worn out by the struggle ‘hv‘ had so bravely borne, he laid down |the burden, his critics saw ¢ rly | what his leadership had accomp [ They saw that it had been a leade | ship forward and upward, in an era | when most other countries were mov- |ing backward and downward. They |saw that prosperity smiled once more jon a favored land. They saw that | prosperity and material well-being were somehow strangely rare in other |lands. So they came to realize what 'his modest, unassuming leadership | had wrought for his country, | | It was natural that such a char- | acter, passing from the stage of life, | should leave the multitudes a sense | of personal loss, Secldom indeed has |any man's death left that feeling |among so many. He was mourned abroad and at home. The conviction was felt everywhere that he was one of the men best fitted to serve a dis- tracted world in a difficult period of its history. | “But he was not permitted to fin- |ish his task. He broke and went down | {under its load. In the hour of sor- row for his loss, men and women were | {moved to a broader charity, a relaxi tion of partisan excessbs, a determin- | |ation to be fair and moderate and rea- | |sonable. His life became, in the tra- | gle sorrow of its end, a lesson in the | value of simple and modest ways, “We mourn him today, and we shall {mourn him so long as remembrance holds before us the picture of his pa- tience, forbearance, faith and Chris- for this kindly, sign posts to guide you. _ : the thank-you-mams in a flivver or soaring along in a tian tolerance. tues, men who have the strength to rise to high places. They are the virtues that seek and cultivate in world. men need to these years of stress in They point the way to salvation for | men, for nations, for humanity itself. | We may well hope that his example to his own countrymen and to the world, may spirit of charity, accord and true fra- ternity, whereby shall Le lighted the lamp of understanding to show our feet into the paths of peace on earth, We may well con- sider by what means we can show our appreclation, and by what method we can best enshrine his memory.” good will to men. ‘)-rm\. 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Kellogg’s Bran, with its datural bulk, sweeps, cleanses and These are rare too seldom found among the help greatly to brin Indian chiefs, unable to read the with instead of Money Tu Burn Gorman housewives w0 worthless, Whether you're hitting costly car, they do their work equally well. Today, as you spend your money to fill your needs, advertisements are waiting to direct you. They are the guide posts of business. They point the short, straight road to satisfaction in buying. They will serve you well, whether you spend much or little. vir- the g a and write, now use the finger and thumb print method nessed mark in dealings United States government. wite the have money to the purifies. Tt not only gives relief, but it regulates the bowels. Every mem- ber of your family should eat it— every day—at least two tablespoon- fuls; in chronic cases as much with each meal. Try Kellogg’s Bran mixed with a hot cereal, or cook it with hot cereals, adding two tablespoonfuls of Bran for each person. Other popular ways are to sprinkle Kellogg’s Bran on hot or cold cereals or to eat it as a cereal with hot milk, You can make de- licious bakery products with Kellogg’s Bran, Recipes on every package. Kellogg’s Bran is not only nation- ally gold in grocery stores, but can be had in individual packages in first- class hotels and clubs. Ask for it at your restaurant. Be certain to eat Kellogg ’s Bran daily for health s sake! ALLEGED HURDERER " HELD INPARKCITY State Policeman Gets Man Ac- | cused of Slaying in New York | Bridgeport, Dec. 11. Salvatore | Mangiacapre, known in Bridgeport as Antonio Ferella, was captured here last night by State Policeman Leo Carroll and is being held at the po- | lice station without bond for the | murder of Simon Di-Mauro in New York eity, March 27 of this year. Mangiacapre has been trailed by po- lice all along the Atiantic seaboard and was arrested last night at the door of his rooming house at 639 North Washington avenue, after State | | Policemen Carroll and F | two ir | lowed him from his place the Acme Shear company mitted that upon first com to Con- | necticut he had lived ided |in a hut at Long Hill, a thinly popu {lated district, near this city. Whils {in this state he went under the n of Ferella. Detectives from the | York homicide squad will arrive here (early tomorrow morning to take| charge of the prisoner. LESS AND LOOSER and 1 fol- at ad- ow surance investig ha of work He ing a sec life | | | German Women Advised by Prominent | | Gymmastic Instructor | | Berlin, Dec. 11.—German women | | do not devote enough time to physical | exercise, in the opinion of Dr, Her-| mann Altrock, of the Berlin High| school for gymnastics, He advocates jally in rhythmic gymnastics and urges| 'them to swim and row as much as| possible, [ Fewer and looser clothes and ex- posure of asx much of the bhody as| possible to the sun are urged as a means of producing fresh-blooded, | healthy skin, Organization of ! | women's athletic clubs, he believes, | would be a great aid to the health of | German women generally, | It is necessary to go 300 miles up the Nile before reaching remains of temples. Do you stop to read the advertisements? They are published to tell you exactly where to go for what you want' They lead you to values of which you would never know were they not there to guide you. And remember that advertising always points out goods of unquestioned value. When a store or manufac- turing concern puts its name on goods and tells you about them, you may be sure that they are worth con- sideration. It does not pay to advertise unworthy mer- chandise. 10,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY Published by the New Britain Herald in co-operation with the American Association of Advertising Agencies THE HERALD HAS TION OF ANY PAPE FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- BLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN It is the Only Local Newspaper With An Audited Circulation THE FIDELITY FINANGE GORPORATION 87 West Main Street, New Britain, Conn. MARYLAND ASSURANGE CORPORATION Baltimore, Md. 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