New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 24, 1923, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

" WHEN A GIRL OF TEN FALLS N~ SNDERSTELSOF = =0 =immmsmaaeany | “ LOVE WITH A REDHEADED oy 'S WMERSON. - -=.%y THE WINNERS 4 | nd theip prayers were answer f f A .., Former Brewer Talks to Members ™ o n"Serinin s haa”a"vies \ Literary Efforts of the lass upstairs dedicated to the janitor’s of Bille Class ol 1o Gkt fon the o Fr eSh Kill e d lad arouse enthusiasm of critics—Some of them present- i Liront eat. The et moring v eall from 4 ed for your approval “Billy Sunday—the fakir’ was the |me he needed me. 1 didn't know B 3 subject of an address hy “Al" Saun- | \What 124 happeped to John, 1 g : 1 e T — g {ders, for over u year with the Biny | L Would tand ot : ermon ! Sunday eampaign party. at a session Millard, He was By Josephine Van de Grift | the janitor and his family = moved |or i Sl Bible ciass vestorday | tY0lcHl Am %, aad here s NEA Service Staff Writer | ay. s been o a ar now oty PSR AS it e | an exampl some of (he Americar 2 Brookiyn, N, ¥, ec. 17—Romance! (| THE FLATHOUSE [||since Nathata hus set eves on magor Mmere: There wire 224 men preee | figl of oduy. i court oom s It raced from a brown-cyed, red- !blfl the image of the red-headed boy | .0 (0. rorced to 'r‘;ig" as song ' Just opencd he judge 18 sitting up ff headed janitor's boy up to a window ROOF | will not die. She still writes poetry |10 0 Nt O O tien. assist. | o0 his chair trying to look .“\;\.' ‘,“4 en th L+ Wwhere a little girl was sitting. lubggt }Iin:)- idir ke nt Secretary B. F. Armstrong, led | 100Ks at the officers un And now ten-year-old Nathalia \ E e’s coming to my Christmas par- |0 gnoing Mrs, Howard K. Hortor 4 Clara Ruth Crane is writing poetry | BY NATHALIA CRANE {ty, though,” she says, “and I'll cer ::;,,g":‘.‘,’,"'.;:,',“,,:r,.d‘I.I.(w "4‘ \:“,.‘_." "|what i the charge” Drunkennes e Tt Ty 30 that is making venerable educators ||| I linger on the flathouse roof, [and breach of the peace.” '$10 fin® or ¥ Drawn This Morning At 10:3 and elderly, gray-headed editors stand | the moonlight is divine, around and wonder. {]| But my heart is all a flutter like tant. hopes for the | this time. '$10 or 30 days in jail.' ‘But For months editors who published the washing on the line. o PPN 4 in part: e A 3 | Christmas part “Let me pay respects to My, Sun- ] haven't the money.’ ‘Weil, Are the Following: 2 prisoners. Then ys, ‘Officer [tainiy be glad to sce him agaln.” = |fcature introduced by the Red army, | 400 breach of the po i nnie | ver in another part o POBkLE b el ae BrikBand war fird adiii ] ays in jail, ext case run - | where Roger goes to school he is ness,’ and it happens to be a woman her poetry thought she was an adult. They needn’t wonder, at all, for I long to be a herpine, I long to | love can do anything—especially when be serene, . | it's love for a nice boy like Roger (|| But my feet, they danee in an- ||{Breat poct some day. I tried to write [ o0 who is of such vauiue to the |t 1 3 - » < PRERE . Jackson. . swer to a distant tainbourine, |||50Me Ppoctry once but I didn't get | o6 L TG L M Sun at morning w talked to 11927—MRS. J. C. BEEBE, You see, Roger's father tended the | very far with it. No, It wasn't about | 0 " rryere are hundreds of organi- furnace and looked after the walks in (|| And, oh! the dreams of ecstasy. ||| Nathalia. It was about a kid who | ol 5 fiving to make this a bet k the apartment at 781 Ocean avenue Oh! Babylon and Troy was afraid to play for fear he'd get | C 4 i which to live but Mr, Sun- |¥OUT prejudices” I told him where to % where Nathalia lives with her father I've a hero in the basement, |||Ns clothes dirty. day. by the grace of God, is bringing | ¢ anl went buck to bed like a 12191—MRS. EZZO0, and mother. { he's the janitor's red-haired ! . men by the hundreds to the knowl. | Schtleman. —Later 1 discovered that | 59 Beaver street, Citz. d And one day Roger and his gang boy. |edge that Jesus Christ is the Son of | 1UShcs and sevcral others hud been : F 4 needed somebody to help out in a ! SUMBIBIMIIMIMBILIIING | 500 and taketh away the sins of men, | L00V0rted. T hurricd over to see him AL game of hffie-and-seck. Up ata win- ||| There's the music of his mallet | “Away back in 1914, T lived in “‘"M“‘ hen we met, he took hold of my 5103—No Name, dow in the second story a pale little and the jigging of his saw; THE BOY {city of Seranton, Pa. It was a busi- | pand, n’""." Sl il 1 Hillside Place, Bristol, Conn, In wonder what he's making on i ness man of the average type and had [ (1 e WIS face, 1o wald, was sent to j; “Nathalia is a fine girl,” he says, |, " g didn’t have the $10 to pay i is the Paul of his age. “and I guess she's going to be a have A is no man in the United States ¥ care about is the money. [ John Hughes over the © he said, | g 14 Parkmore. Ci Saunders, I wani you to lay asid B 2 that lovely cellar floor? | as much use for the church as the | - v - ~ - . st | dovil has for holy water. [ say to | i converted. 1 will never take an- | 12579—CHARLES RICHMOND, p He loves me, for he sald it when [vou, that the man outside the church | *!IF ATk as long as 1 fve: | Sharpe Station, Plainville. we met upon the stair, : ’ { measyres it by the lives of the peos |, “HE Lt SUE, SOUD SS BUSY Snd 3 And that is why I'm on the roof | ple who make up its membership = e bl tosntes (chiges : I 4 ¢ | there closed up their places si- 9! A E to get a breath of ulr. ' |, “1 came to this country, a green- [ CI% Lo P e B e A e it horn from South Wales. T understood | 1150 A0 el 10 the tabetnacte, ' 1 Queen street, Plainville. Me said it! Oh! He said it! |the language of the country but had | ¢ "0, €0 NEER G thl my help could And the only thing I said i {no edueation, had never seen the in- |~ . i RECHIOS e y A Was, “Roger Jones, I like you : side of a school se until after my | "% !° 8O 11163—R. PELLEGRIM, Jts : d b 3 - . g ‘ | “A little Welshman came in to me : 168 Whiting. Plainville how to make | for your ha is very re 4 onversion but or hair ry r conversior told me 1 had cold feet and a W A > ”""I‘" oh . | vellow streak be I would not go. | 3 @ parte hen intruders came “1 us 0 W inar pick 5 e P e 92917—MISS MATSON a-tramping through the hal ng slate Wo as mort ¥ o d 12217—MISS MATSO! J i et e Ll Ly Care of Landers, Frary & Clark. k He's got my pocket handker " in those days than it is now here hicf and I 1 : ball : st ) ki was John Hughes at chief and I have got his bal i ! is absolutely no n any ma the hoad of the band which was at ing poor in the United States if that| ., wine ) 8 Yot WA, Wae 8 an el 3 And so it is, I'm on the roof 4 ) man in willing to give an honest day’s | g\ U }Iw‘lv”.’iulu)"g\;:::v‘| o ”'»;‘1 3 18036—MAE (‘,OLI\.' : Oh! Babylon and Troy! G labor for an honest day's pay. Work [ we went in together and| &1 342 North Burritt street. in love o o is & healthy thing for a man to be I'm very sure that I'm The crowd began cheering. “They | days, idleness is the ery el e : Vs | as we marched down the aisle to the 345 High street. “When T was 13 years of age, T was | qron Alone, upon the starry heights, i | Then down came Billy Sunday. teansplanted in a mine, On my first | “10 I'm dancing on a green, was 8o shocked in my life as To the jingling and the jangling job 1 had considerable trouble with! | (o \inen't saw how he was dressed 12295—DAVID of a distant tambourine. e the donkey 1 was driving. One day |y o0 1 8 ed. | § - 1 ; {he ran away and fell over an em- |} LGS Py NSre. 3 Naed Who 249 High street, City. was killed and I lost | D¢ Was and was told it was the great To the stamping of a Mmmer " { bankment and | evangelist P and the jigging of a. saw, {my job. My mext joh was opening [~ .gi ol by sivias aes % - NATHALIA CRANI And the secrct sort of fecling oysters and for this T recolved $2 8 | rrienda I have & surprise for e’ g i ¢ ll.\\ll.l‘flL,fl. A I'm in love forever more. | week. he startsd to- tell the churoh what it Sunnyledge, N. B. ROGER JACKSON “The morning | was married T could | was responsible for. He told the Do you think it's any wonder, ||| [rot aftord to buy a pint of milk. In |y b v e room would 8867—POLISH ORPHANAGE ’ with the moonlight so divine, 11916 1 had over $10,000 owed to me |, "0 C T Tht it 1 nle e closed up at midnight if the church \ "edesd) % North Burritt Street. RONIANCE | That my heart is all a-flutter, and it was net the poorer class \llml‘ll‘] ite duty Fivant te hayts et like the washing on the line? o = did not pay, it was the fish aris- | yien that every evil organization flour- S b n tocracy who did not pay me d Lk od Hoontine tha thirat don $ . n BY NATHALIA CRANE OH, ROGER JONES |[ togracy who did not pay me. cwuren | 8120 Decause the church does o db 3896—C. POTETZ, 500 members | g 51 Woodland street. ! { - ——— 3 JAT A CRANE where there were over Oh, I'm in love with the jani BY NATHALIA CRANE who had not been to church for aver [, ¢ UrBan 10 talk of Jesus of Naz. tor’s boy, ! ’ girl was sitting, The d that we sail, 1 shall two years, That kind of a Christian | )0 0 o (¢ God dressed 1ike < - ’ 1@, ctobon Moyt F Mt “Would you care to come down IREdny tar wn il L st w d dressed Iike he was 0569—WM. REISCH He's going to hunt for a desert isle In our geography. began to talk of Jesus of Naz leave this brief note, {will go to Hell so quick you cannot | He taiked of chick els 3 ) 8 and play hide-and-seck with us?” For my parents I hats to [||see his dust, He has no more Chris- | (o’ oost: What did ne ooy nome Main street, Southington. n {tlanity than a frog has feathers o s M Ah e Seei | Nathalia sald she would. And that “I have flown far away to an ght, 1 wil reach abeut{l 1987—J. GOOD, | was when the damage was done. | isle in the bay [1914. The only people who were not [ (ot o0 ek 4 % tha “ {t00 busy to hear him were the church | a" i+ 4d he looked at me. 1 31 Greenwood street. queried Roger politely. ankoy “Billy Sunday came to our city in| - For days afterward Nathalia scril . " it oy tree e With the janitor's red-headed Cilstgteiotod sl b A :---r‘t”:l': ‘m‘:r't’;'hir "h""m bled and seribbled. “Look, mama, boy.” | members, | went right on mlm. ‘»1\:'“4.« 0,“, g 298 st [#he said. “See my songs.” Roger Joncs! Oh, Roger “Men, T hope that it is the love of [minue. "I had a vislon of the birth. 23511—BERTHA K ——— Aight mice place, just At for ||| But Mes. Clarence P. Crane, bring Jones! [Jesus Christ that brings you here to- [ iee "Geuin and resurroction of th & h, 31 1—-BER A N - = e Ty a busy woman and not suspecting | Oh, Prince! O, Knight! An: || day ittt | 12 Farmington avenue. At 2e Bt e senn that there was genfus in the family, i “Scranton was Ifke other citios. | g gpe’ o i VBN o R OBl home and : " " " v the dumb “ ¥ Ay did just as they felt like | g sl i | ” y T AN T Oh, I'm In love with the jani. ‘\':'l".:(rlrm songs” down dum We "\‘hl to play at: keeping ‘.)Q.T,r; Him: n{u”" ll‘hllr"h"' piiierd LT \lv)mm ,)uw hing a drop of li. 7818—MRS. AIME BISSONETTI, ’ ” alter, \ouse, » quor, I wondered if God so loy M 3 e g vy H oo hfl: he can be; | "In despair Nathaiia turned to her Beneath an old oak tres. three months in the summer for a va- | oy ) ROREERE ‘1.‘”n.:|~,.3 n,.r:.l,:h.}.'.; 230 South Main street. And down Ym e ssthat bed father. And then for the first time [cation. Such things were detrimental [y e 85 &0 T g making a raft it became known that a child prodigy Your hair was red, your eyes - '": '":’,::' ,",.r,(:n‘ln 1'::::!:1" ":f “On April 1, 1914, 1 was able 290—MRS, VAN GORDER, v ocess of expressing her- ere b give six cents e opinions of | g, ,pe ¢he Wd of that « zelist - : Out of an old settes, et 5 TA0 prmes A% SEmeTY 1 You bed :r:',“ sl moet all the men fn the United States who | Wk e 'I of that evangelis 73 Jubilee street. . o had a freckles se 204 | Whe ed that my sins were Here arc the first of the poems in- You were the father of my dolls are detrimental to the word of God.( goppivan, | said 1 would te g every| |epired by Nathalia's great love for My husband—I suppose {There is no foundation for salVAtion |,y y)4¢ Josus Christ came into the | 36~MARY G e, Roger Jackson. In them Roger 1s y in this world but the word of God. | yorq to geek that which was Jost § g i \’Z) address g | generally given the name of Jones, Oh, Roger! You were only nine [ never knew a '"":' 1o take 80| w1 called up my wite and told her.{ B i because Jones makes better poetry And 1 was half-past eight; much liberty with other people's | g " pe oot the door, her Pl | and besides, one doesn’'t care to be It really was romantie, or | He'll carry me off, I know that he will, For his hair is exceedingly red; And the only thing that occurs to me Is to dutifully shiver in bed, t ‘v:nin.'” v Billy Bunday 4l Wi filed with tears of joy. She satd, ‘you | 2176—MRS. L. HICKORY, too explicit about the object of one's As good, at any wate, B |are the best man that ever lived [ dian Rude 4 ) ¥ s e ned v ! A 188, stol. tender sentiments. At on :{Iw\“fi 'n nrwv'\!r“l ‘r:u”x "% | That night 1 asked God to give me| 151 Curt dristol Py e Sype . the courage to be a man. I found |§ But alas and alack, for true love, ' Many : O e oy Tt that lifs away il the | 184 Oak street. i: [ work down your faith ‘ ] 18289—-D. MARCHIAN, ¥ Stabbed Twenty-two Times 118 Tremont street. In Argument Over Craps | 15165—MRS. CARLSON, 20 Henry street. t| Danicison, Dee. 24.—George Ruk- . |stella, 21, is in the Day-Kimball hos 3 {1 his head and body said to have | 23q10—MRS. A, E. CHURCH, been inflicted by Matthew Wilkonis, | §§ 143 Kensington avenuc P | 31, a cousin, as a result of an ar {gument in a dice game at 4 o'clock | I 525 S y SONIAY - il Wk 15258—KASPROW, .‘ brought before Justice Frank M. B g 33 Allen stieet, | [dard and held in bonds of $2.000 for s i F 4 4"‘;“:1'«:‘? :y ‘.;”,l‘.:v,‘ Ve :,. ! " }("{‘W)“ Three additional Turkeys were ‘ ( [ will live. The argument started in | @& away for “good measure” Rukstella’'s home in Wauregan. Wi and awarded to : fter him with a chair and e 1f-de < i fente he protocted himbeil With his 8008-—-WM. MILEWSKI, pocket knife, 61 Stanton street RECE[VE YOUR CHECK Two (‘h"ildrcn Die h} : 8 KARSNIK. S068—M. 3 Fire That They Started : High street DECEMBER 1st 1924 | Gaiiipotin, Ohio, Dee. 24—Two chil. ren of James Cheman are dead and 7551—-BERGERON, nother is not expected to live ¢ f 12 Milk street, City. csult of a fire wileh they started by ) aying with matches and which de royed the Cheman heme, in the Daniel Cheman. two: James Chema 4 We Wish All Our Friends and Patrons ree: Mary Chema five as probably fatally rmed The ehil- comanen 8 A Very Merry Christmas it otigl gt Bty : S children were envelope Satvea 1 New Year of Greater Prosperity DISNER 1S COSTLY Paris, Dec. 24.—1t w take a fat thousar in Paris tonig s asking 25 francs with wine extra ments that advertis ging 200 fra fef feature tion of turkes cranberry or any ot Champion string-% world.” is the titie cla fl his weight.

Other pages from this issue: