New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 18, 1924, Page 17

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY EERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1924. | | out he showed the stuff of which he | look to the Center church as their|8mallest Monthly average, June 265 PL"W Tfl PREMIE“ was made when he took his political ‘FIRST EH”R[;H HAS [ chureh home. Largest monthly average, April 340 | Generous life on his hands and opposed flwj | “There are 50 children in the : 9 currents which were rapidly taking | | church school; 76 In the Cradle Roll, | Foroliment ! - his country into the way. He cham- | and carylng numbers of women in the Department Scholars | ploned peace by negotiation. English classes. S8sven Armenian chil- | Beginners . aie g Stood Fast dren were baptized this vear. | Primary ... IEETERERRTREE | Howled at in some pubifc meetings, | oo | “One thing that this small mor.|Junior o Sl 0 s ush so I SOl H d denounced in some of the newspapers, | (Continued from Bixteenth Page.) |munity would mention with pride, 1| IPfermediate and senior ... g oLt 0 0 I A0S | vituperatea by demagogues, he held | | belleve, is the young Armenian phy-|*9"!" ok serenly to his coursey It was to cost Armenian Department. | sieian, Dr. Kupellian, who is doing so Brmsh Goummem him his seat in parliament and netted | “The number of families is rapidly | Well not only among his own people o . him two defeats, the word “pacifist” increasing. A few over a hundred|but In the community generaily Mfficers and teachers having been pinned to him. jwor» reported last year, this year, “Respectfully submitted, ' | He broke the hoodoo about a year | there are fully two hundred fa es. “LAURA T. BEELYE, " London, Jan, 18.—To be the first|ogy whan he was clected from a| -Immigration has somewner ro | “Church M Cradle roll labor-socialist prime minister of | wegh constituency and triumphantly | créased the numbers, but marriages of Report of Treasurer, Great Britain would of itself be|iejanteq on Dec. 6 last. Upon his|men already in this country to wom- | Receints, $5,069.95. Tetal enroliment enough to give James Rameay Mac- | posppearance in parliament about a |en brought on or to thoss found in| Disbursements 3$5,069.9% Girl Scouts donald a sure place in the history of | yeur ugo he was made the leader of |nearby towns has done more fo in-| st Eediond Eoy Scouts i his country. But he has other things, | hig party, which made him the formal | crease the number of homes Btigre of Machetary A. T. HANCOCK, Secretary too, that make him unique in theljoaqer of “His Majesty's Opposition.” | “There are always many eagerly| Number of sessions R 1 long MMe of British premiers: A great event in the life of this|awaiting the opening of each quoty to| Average attendance Py Total $911.73 Howard Arnold of Thomas Mahanny, St. John, N. B. He is the first cliet officer of the |;yy was his marriage to Margaret | bring their friends from the old coun- | Smallest attendance . 5 [ Watter fund (in bank) $125.91 [ i grown sprung from B family of hum- | Fthel Gladstone, daughter of Dr. J.|try. About one-third of this number |Largest aitendance . H.'D. LITCHFIELD. Treas. | They're doing nicely, thank you. So's the mother. ble farm laborers. H. Gladstone, and a kinswoman of | | He is the poorest man who has|ihe famous prime minister. A cul- ever held the office, tured woman of the world, a student He is the first teetotaler who has|of men and events, ehe, too, wrote | ever held the office. books about labor movement, especial- | He has traveled to and studied on ly as it applied to women. T]‘,,"_‘; the spot more portions of the British | wag a love romance broken off only e o 4 empire than any prime minister in |, 1911 when ghe died. The bereaved < history. husband wrote a beautiful and moving i F 4 ~ So it will be gathered that n very biography of his wife. interesting, very human figure has Has Little Money suddenly emerged into the full blaze In his husy ife Macdonald has had m“:aubducny and attention over he‘ra. nefther time nor opportunity to make % acdonald’s career s something | mych money. He is the kind of man | like that of our own presidents. He |who really doesn't care for it. Neith- y HARTFORD had no royal road to preferment. His | oy [joyd George nor H. H. Asquith parents had to work hard for & Uving | gre richi men, but they are comfort- -— gt ably well off compared to him, and H ex-Premier Baldwin and the late Bonar Law were rich by comparison. | | Maedonald lives in a plain little | | home out in the Hampstead section of || | London. He also owns a small farm- house type of home at his birthplace, Lossiemouth, Seotland. His tastes are of almost spartan simplicity, He doesn't drink liquor at all. He is a nonsmoker except in | times of great stress when he is some- | times seen to puff at a cigaret. He {180 govrmand. Plain Seotch fare 15 | to be found on his table, i His favorite amusements are golf, |as one would expect of a Scot, ana | | wa . P d by » of his | 3 < : . N N Rk Aeupinl hone ot v g Presenting the Most Approved Styles in Plain or Fur Trimmed His favorite indoor amusement fs I Models For Women and Misses |reading. He is surrounded by books. | They are everywhere in the house oy He bhoth reads and speaks French ana AT1-3TO l,i LESS {0 knows the best of two literatures | He is charming and genial in con. THAN REG(TIIAR PRICES | versation and he is a clean talker be . cause he is a clean thinker = g Like Rooseyvelt The best models, the best materials and the finest furs, com- r«\l;\r‘ f.,(;n:yE\‘-:“':o:;."Wx,:r:mm«;\‘}: :U bine in making these Special Coats the greatest values of the got 8 trick that Roosevelt had—that entire season. And with our own stock included at sharp reduc- RAMSAY MACDONALD of getting g the best out of a book I tions, we offer the greatest variety of choice in Winter Coats of - ————— in a very rapid reading by knowing o ; every wanted type. Sizes from 16 to 5214. end the boy had to take his share of | DOW to skip the unessentials, the hardships. One of his old friends told me he At 12 he knew what it was to la- {8180 had a Napoleonie gift. The fam- f OUR FINER FUR TRIMMED bor on the poor stony #oil of a Scoteh [0Us emperor hud devoted friends —in I COATS FORMERLY COATS FORMERLY ¥ S farm. Bue he had all the intenss e | every company in every resiment of UP TO $75.00 $49 ;75 UPTOS$115.00 ... ...... $79 :75 $l lg\;s\'r The new year thus far has proved very generous to the home Look what it hrought! Benevolences gira of the Beot for learning and the intense firm will of the Scot to obtain | Memory, for names and faces. He COATS FORMERLY < Sl - . wonld gf line of diers IRL COATS FORMERLY : 4 | nd oRN e on the shoulder af- UP TO §79.50 . . - $65 15 Yo $135.00 ........... $89.75 $l 19 75 He get out of the free schools of 57 |fectiond¥®ly, reminding him ot some Tastbemouth where he was born | B . , years 8ge all the book knowledge ,'I'wl' he had done that lwv'\"fll"’v‘ '”v‘d“ COATS FORMERLY COATS FORMERLY avatlable to him. He burned the can- | 9°r his emperor's eye. So Macdonald | [ 4 $ 7 J 5 $95 75 $ l 29 75 dle ot night. Befors he attained his | has the-triek of remembering good | VETo s . i ? Al g ‘ g majority he blossomed out as a typical | POlitieal work that simple private young Beoteh school teacher, He had |members of the party organization 11t the plough and seythe behind him | have done. end placed his foot on the first rung Rupplementing his reading, he has . e of the ladder that Ird topwards, also traveled widely. He has been ADVANCE STYLE Fnters Politios to 1India, Australia, New Zealand, He fell under the notice of Tom | E0uth Africa and Palestine as well as Lough, & well-known liberal member [ #1most every country In Europe. He has never been on American soll of parllament and was appointed his /i shéretary, As such, he eame into| At No. 10 Downing street, the fam | , touch with parllamentary life and be. |0us 0ld house inhahited’ by British gan to study national guestions, The | premiers, the hostess who will preside more he read, the more he became | OVAF Whatever social functions are | I'OR EARLY SPRING WEAR \ convineed the two old political parties | BIVen will be hie eldest duughter, Miss | curried no meseage of hope and ad. |Ishbel. He has two other daughters | vaneement to the workmen of Gregt And two sons so that No. 10 will | $ 00 Tiritain. He jolned the labor party have more young folks living in it . and became a convineed soctalist than have heen there since the , A )— < f $ 29 In 1900 he was made seerstary of |QUiths moved out | / . the labor party, a position he held for | P 11 years. In the meantime, alvo, an YALE GAME CANCELLED | organization known as the Indepen- | Naw Haven, Jan, 18 Massachn. | | STRAW BRAID An offering of smartest new hatg for im- dent Labor party-famous in Brtsh | weire Tostitre - of | Technols . di e y s g POIItIcE A8 the "L L. P."-~ws formed, | :\‘.‘.;‘:,1..»”' foipark s ',‘."I‘,h! |+ HAIR CLOTH mediate and early Spring wear. Newest « 3 FOR 86,75 — and Macdonald was made s chalt- yoio coneduled here, Hamilton collego | | FAILLE SILK shapes—newest fabrics—and the range of man from 1908 to 1909 inciusive, He g e has also been cancell. | . 0 C1.OT ; wan made the leader of the iahor | No i for trsctioe o the reeen] B FIMBO CLOTH colors includes strawberry, copen blue, sea party from 1911 to 1814 At the g0y 4y cach case TAFFETA SILK green, wood shades and of course all black rame time his life had been (ull in et 10 : '™ . other ways VISCA CLOTI an unusual selection—at this modest price. An able write, a student of econn PEAY KNOWLEDGE OF LOAN ies, y 1 y Ne Jan na - mies, he had written a regular library New York, Ja 18, ~International i = = > Of genuine vnpnr!vd hnxlls‘v Breadeloth and Merecerized of books on socialiem, among others bankers who v stinted the detnt ben “Soclalism and Soclety,” “Labor agreement with Mexico in 1922, today Poplin in sizes 14 to 17. The broadeloths are neckband and cok end the Empire,” “Socialist and Gov- | denied knowledge of a report from lnr a | o . ars sollar \ crnment,” “The Soelalist Movement.” Mexico City that United States bank- | | A g lar attached styles while the poplins have separate collars. The He algo wrote two hooke on India and |ers were planning to make a loan of | mme la e ear a s value of these Shirts is extraordinary. its problems. He was elected to par- (25,000,000 pesos to the Obregon got liament from the city of Teicester in ernment 1606 and represented it for 12 years | Copres of imported model hats in the most Vil alues to 350 SRS TONDY VN ash wae) e e . | fashionable shapes and colorings. The materials At employed are of the finest quality-—silks and silk and straw combined. Attractive for formal or informal wear— street, afternoon, dinner and $7 50 teiger's —Main Floor SLIK AND WOOL o Steiger’s Millinery—Fourth Floor HOSIERY SALE || p— Our policy is to carry over no silk and OUR GREATEST JAN. DOWNSTAIRS Hosie;y wool hose into another scason, so we are marking down every pair for quick selling. Sb oe Sa le APPAREL SHOP Women’ ' iz vide ribbed FOR WOMEN-TWO PRICES ONLY RS IRUS b : : . o CONTINUES TWO REMARKABLE Sett 1 itd rade wibs e i sl ~45 95c (Examples of values) VALUESIN b s , i thread silk \a'l‘ues up ‘0 e Wonderful values in Oxfords and { xcellent @ e tops and S TN e i ® One-Strap Pumps of patent colt and DRE E‘g e \ w.' to AN dull calfskin; welt soles with low and » 27, 21.00 FOR MEN Cuban heels. ) : s of All $150 Hose AN $1.00 Hose Were 8775 /... D&+ 1D menvs el | howe in thades ¢ —— e ff———= THE ANNUAL JANUARY IMPORTED BROADCLOTH MERCERIZED POPLIN f NOW Including unlimited quantities of $16.75 and $18.75 | { i, us :,”,,, desirable Novelty Pumps In satin, patent colt, dull calf, brown and otter : 2 ke ’\‘!”d“-“;‘ - ‘,‘4 75 The former price represents plam || ' black. and shades of Were 8875 ......... @ and check flannels for misses in sives || wbolink. brown. $2.50 irregulars, $1.3 DAVID MANN Consists of all short and discon- 16 to 12, and the latter price Poiret tinued lines of this season’s best fwill Frocks for wom shoes that sold to £11.95. Cuban and 16. Both are big bargaimn ,. 1o .l“b.f, \ Spanish heels 5 ! von and gT®) -O”er |l Were to $11.75 ...... s7r7 pihaint ot SHOE STORE ‘ Steiger's—Main Floor Steiger's—Main Floor 211 MAIN ST. '

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