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—_— \ i BOCKLETS POST CARDS I} “PULL CARDS” “CUT OUTS” iy PARTY FAVORS ‘l Make Your Selection While the Line is Complete Stationery Dept. — THE — DICKINSON Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Buy Your RING GOLF SWEATERS Now at a Reduced Price Fine Scotch Jackets in attractive patterns —3$16.50 grade At $12.95 SFALLS Isylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” {TH ANNUAL END OF SEASON SALE Now In Progress Have a Suit Made I'o Your Measure $35.00 Ye London Shop Tailors 43 MAIN STREET “Let Us Clothe You We Know How.” DR. COOMBS The Natureopathic Physician and Chiropractor has MOVED Into His Nature Cure Institute 19 S. HIGH ST. Opposite the Post Ofice, where he has installed the new Biological Blood Wash Voice Culture BAR TRAINING HT READING James D. Donahue Room 318-310 Booth's Block Trninee of Yale University Sefton Drive Phone 1274-13 “ . Specinl Attention 1o Beginuers YOU'LL DO BETTER at AXELROD’S are out of the High Rem Dictrict IVORY Diyralin Universzl Favorite 2045 Of During This Month. An Hdeal St Valentine's Gift Axelrod’s Pharmacy Park cor. Meadow St Axelrod for Accuracy et Us Fill Your Prosoriptions CHURCH CROWDED, RECORD 1S BROKEN Largest Crowd Ever in Protestant Clurch Here at Bible Class ever be- Protestant W in this eity, Everyms Bible morning had a total 1,156 men, which took from the lead holow Bible Mount Vernon. N. Y., and almost as- ure: New Britain el of win- and cup in the inter- est, Although arker had made | men on the stre h promise of 638 from Works, few membe expected the session to equal or exceed the class’ previous high record of 1,058, at- ained the former Governor Sverett J. 1 The cluss op 1 than usual by the new Armstrong. men_ from present, each iargest ssembled a a total of held by the away . 1,500 Arthur for an assured the Stanley President a drive of day 15 minutes earlier 0 service otor, B 1sical I Between t Works an wearing a ass hinge, attached to the lapel by a red, white and blue | At the same time 3 hymn were presented to the class Stanley Works | Jvery available seat | was taken The Sunday school room was thrown open and promptly filled. The balcony was opened and las promptiy filled. 1In the choir box and around the pulpit 200 extra chairs were filled and ushers and class officers ctood in the rear. The return of the old time en- thusiasm within the past few weeks has been somewhat of a sensation and the class again is attracting much at- tention. Men were present yester. day from Mount Vernon, N. Y., Bos- ton, Philadelphia, Vermont, Water- | bury and nearby ctiies, Séveral men | were noticed in U. 8. Army uniforms. Sitting with the Stanley Works men was C. F. Bennett, president of the company, and a number of othe officials. Representative E. W, Christ, secretary of the company, is {a former vice-president of the class. | Ralph Rritton, song leader, also a tanley Works man, sang a solo, On the pulpit were a number of |sample boards containing displays of | the Stanley Works products, Promi- nent among these was a butt hinge | measuring two feet square, and | weighing 15 pounds. The hinge had a center pin which is 114 inches in ‘\lluml‘!r'r and 30 inches long. The { whole thing stood on a base which | was 28 inches square The total attendance figures were 11,156 for New RBrituin and 681 for | Mount Vernon, with Staten Island |out of the contest and not reporting. ] Next SBunday will be Russell & Erwin Sunday. The following Sune | day, arrangements have been magde to meet in the Capitol theater as it is not expected the church will be large enouigh to hold the crowd The program for that day has not yet been announced. On the 24th of this month, which is the last Sunday in the contest, Rev, A. B aylor, of nsburg, Pa., formerly of New Britain, will deliver the address, Mr, Taylor was at one time di- rector of the class and he preaches February Rev L Davis will lead the singing At the meeting yesterday James ¥ Lukens, chairman of the committee, stated that his committee had jobs for two The general of the Whits ded congratulations to the tue armies on their successful banquets. Vice-President spoke about the coming convention and asked to entertain delegates over 1 Among those present yesterday was Colonel A. H. Thompson clerk, who with John Morley present, worked on the same butts the men rday Stanley 1867, Reaburg cral army, ent rejoined his work- Works for the was present Stanley were small coat ribbon, books by the in the church musical when John od mer army ex Red and recent Harold w Rible Gee clasy cers city type o | worn by at the Harold E |of the Red in Brooklyn ers from the Stanley ceeaston Oné man who has been with 1 Works 40 vears, fi | been there 35 who have been t More thar sent at class ye Works In formerly PL now a law st have o ye nen doz who were t his Introduction bef Mr. Davis paid a tribute lenham, who was prese he asked to st a whom a pleasure to Works, whether one rand there o greetin Mr. Ber ham and Visit To stanley Works. Clear Your Skin With , Cuticura "=’ Sonp to Cleanse ¥ ent to Hoal DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D. S, T. R. Johnson, D. D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bidg. industrial | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 19 lass of | 300 and 700 | 1 JoMedicjn‘e ‘Best for Colds Bronchitis, Asthma and all Ithroat troubles. Builds new |Strength. | NO DANGEROUS DRUGS | Over Sixty-Eight Years of Success | | —— |through the Stanley Works was to go !into the great offices. Though a good many of us do not realize it, these of- fices are probably the cleanest and nitary in the whole state, “I went into a little room where 1 saw the pictures that had been painte |ed of the men that really made the Stanley Works from the official side, There I saw the picture of Frederick T, Stanley, the original Stanley who was instrumental in belping to estab- |lish Russell and Erwin, and then af- ter a couple of years in the south re- turned to New Britain and starfed a little bolt factory. Frederick Stan- ley was born in 1802, After his ex- perience with Russell and ¥rwin he started this little bolt factory in which he was the manufacturer and salesmanager and all of the rest of it, He made up a line of boits and then hitched up his old mare and drove out in the country and sold those |boits to the farmers, He would help {them attach the bolts to their barn doors and come back and make an- |other supply. That started about 1842 and ten years later it spread out into what is now known at the Stanley Works, with a ecapital of $30,000, which today 1s worth about 26 billlon I mean millien! A minister has no of money after it gets above 00. If T say billlon where I mean million it make no difference to me- and very little to you, so you don't need to laugh at me! Anyway, it shows the prosperity of the business in SBtanley Works, here was the picture of this great man, Frederiek Stanley, who was in- |strumental in this town not only in |starting this great factory, which has grown until there now are factories in Ohio, in Canada and Jupan, and all over the world the Staniey Works is known: its absolutely universal, It is not enly known there but is doing a great and thriving business in these |countries. That man started some- thing and he did not realize what he doing. Not only that, but he was also interested in the things that have made New Britain what it is. The plans for the city water works in 1857 ~he was very much interested in them and had a great influence in bringing them to pass, ested also in the city parks; bringing to New Britain the state normal ool, which has just now built jts buildings out in Belvidere; also n getting this lttle railroad—branch i that from New Britain down to Berlin, known as the ‘dinke Mr. Stanley was largely influential in that, and the first engine that ever 1 over that roall bore his name, He mayor of New Britain at His character itte to H. } are of Stanley Works as sec You men ne in this city time and woven i Alwo William Vineteer came 10 the retary and treasurer o they work ability f for t men o Young e arity, men o truth rosits New ga the river ' integrity to = cit t New and that river Piritain f this count «r cities of o bttt leading apgely due to these fluener ms 1p & t the Stantey We Hart B A to the Stanies lerk and = wars ag e, oW pre g over stock v Farm this 1 and keeping hi Mr \ wluy, directi It's one that's to k¢ He was inter- | |these men are here today. We are very glad to have these men, and to- day they are showing the same spirit that they show in the Stanley Works, {and that is the spirit of making no | difterence between the management jand the employes. They try to do |away with the distinction between the | management and the men at the desk or bench or machine, and they have |done a wonderful work. THere is a | great spirit of loyaity and cooperation {in the Stanley Works; you can sce it all through. .If they want to do a thing they seem to be able to get to- |gether and do it. There's that splgn- |did spirit. One man said, ‘It's the | kind of place I would like to have my son work. “Now I started on my first build- ing. My guide took me a mile or [two up the track—I thought we were going to Plainville. T warned him he must not take me out of town. Af- ter we had gotten away up there he showed me on the right was the |building where the new machinery |was made. He said, ‘I don't know |whether we can get in or not; they | don’t. usually let people in there. |said ‘Who's at the head of it?" He said, ‘Mr. Doolittle.! I said, ‘If you ever get me over there we will get in, he's my Sunday school superintend- ent.' And sure enough we got in, and I thought I'd gotten into a Methodist class room. All the men I knew. T went in there and saw something very interesting. These men were mak- |ing new machinery to fit any special {need. They send up to these men and they make a new machine to fit a new need-—create it. What a glor- jous thing that must be to a man. |He's created something, constructed something to meet a need—nothing {like it in the world. | “Then -we went up and saw this |process in celd rolled stee) They |told me that the principal thing they make is hinges and butts. When we got outside I said to Fred (Wooster) /1 am going to confess my igngrance |{to you right now: I don't know the difference between a hinge and a butt; I don't really know. What is the dif- ference? ‘Why,’ he said, ‘a hinge is —i8; why ves, a butt's—a butt fs— Why ves, I'll show you directly,’ So we went along and when we got down to his room where they are making all |kinds of buckles and bolts, ete., While |I'red was in the office there I spoke to his foreman: ‘Really I don’'t know |the difference between a hinge and a butt,’ He pointed out two there on a box and sald ‘that's a hinge and this |is & butt’ ‘But, I said, ‘What's the difference? ‘Well,’ he said, ‘that's on |the outside of the box and this is on [the inside.’ Fred was inside listening |because he wanted to know what the difference was himself, and by that time he rushed out with a catalogue and showed me ‘that's a hinge and [this is a butt.’ . “The next man I came to was Mr. Wainright, who is scared to death now |because he knows I'm going to tell [this on him, He stood up a while ago land sald he had been there 35 years, |and when I got rid of Ired I said, {'Mr. Wainright, do you know the dif- |ference between a hinge and a butt, and will you tell me the difference?’ ‘Now," he sald, ‘a hinge—a hinge is jon the outside and is a long strap | hinge, and a butt is on the inside and it is sawed off.’ Then Fred rushed |out with his catalogue again, and they |had an argument. The only thing I wanted to know was what is a butt. I had a billy goat once and I knew what that kind of a butt was. I saw that nobody i |the difference Detween a butt and & hinge. 1 went over to Waterbury and esked a man, ‘What's the difference between a hinge and a butt?’ and he spent the rest of the noon explaining | {it to me and I do not know yet. I went home and got a dictionary, and that said that a butt is a sawed.off ‘hinge. It is called a butt because it |fits into the edge of the door and butts | into the casing and that's the reason it |is called a butt. But I don't think it |1=; but, apyway, that's what he sald. it's calle® a butt because it fits into {the edge of the door that butts into the casing, that's what the dictionary sald; but probably the man who wrote it never worked up at the Stanley Works. no difference between a hinge butt. | “I noticed in studying the hinges lof Bible times and the old Duteh pe- tiod in America. In Bible times they had old doors that swung with a pro- | jecting thing that fitted into A groove, |and then, also, samefimes they had Shooting Star and a Harsis & Ewing Motris Fis "o« Coprright ant hington shot of station the rifle He unusuul i pion 90 i& u wiar combination, Stanley Works knew | As near as I can tell there is | 24. Boiled beef is ever s0 much more tasty and digestible if you always have Gulden’s with it. Ready to use GULDENS | | | iron. Come down to the tenth cen- | tury and a little later and they had them made of iron, and these were |crescent shaped hinges, and some- times the end was flattened out into a serpent's head and they used to| make a great deal of floral work, ete. | The Danes at one time pasted or| nailed up the skins of their enemies | on the .doors of cathedrals and | churches, and then that praetice fi- | nally passed away and instead of hu- | man skins they used the skins of | animals. They used to flatten these | they began to do away with the or- | namentation and began to make plain hinges, In the Dutch period you will’| {find the old T hinges. 1 have scen | pictures of them in Pennsylvania and | you will find them in magazines. The last evolution of the hinge is the butt | —this sawed off hinge. It is hidden | away—'a hinge that can be hidden | away. And the latest thing in that | line is the ballbearing butt’ I won't say anything about the material or how it is made, but hefe is a ball- | bearing butt. That keeps it from | wearing out and helps in the smooth- | ness and the beauty and the ease in reducing friction.. One of the things | they put hinges on doors for is to make them silent. JHere is a door showing how this ballbearing butt will work, and that, 1 suppose, is the very latest thing in butts. The Stanley Works is one of the first concerns in the country to make cold roiied steel, and out from the Stanley Works go the hinges on which the doors of the world are hung. “We speak about the ‘open door and the ‘closed door;' the ‘open door lin China,’ But every one of these things work on hinges. (One of the | differences between a door and a man is—that the door is no good until it's hung, and a man is no good after he's hung.) Everything hinges on some. thing. The Stanley Works itself hinges on something. What does it hinge on? The character and the dn. | tegrity and the ability and the deter- mination and courage and fighting spirit of these men like Frederick Stanley and Willlam H, and | these other men. It hinged upon these men at one time; this whole concern was hinged in the very heart and soul of Frederick T. Stanley, If {he had failed you men would not he yorking in New Britain; and not only {ioes it hinge upon the present man- agement and their integrity and sagacity and ability, but it hinges also /wpon the cooperation of all the men that work in the great factory. Stan- ley Works itsclf hinges upom that., 1f (they did not have the cooperation and |the loyalty of the men who work at the beneh, all of their sagacity and all of thelr understanding would be as | nothing because you have got to have cooperation, and their success hinges upon the loyalty and the cooperation of the workmen throughout, | "“Stanley Works' success depends | upon three things: Its capitalization, | always having a great reserve, Ilimi- nation of waste, and also upon its #pirit of democracy and cooperation, Which really is pecullar, it secms to | me, there in the great Staniey Works. “And then, my friends, 1 thought |away from that, how that your sal- vation and my salvation hinges upon the sacrificlal death of our Saviour, | i“ He had not come and shown us a | new way. As Socrates said, ‘Unless a being from another world comes and shows us the truth we are Jost in darkness” The brightest mind of the |Greecks said that. Christ came and died for you and me. Balvation hinges on the sacrificial dcath of Christ. Not only that, it also hinges upon whether spt Christ and | follow him. WHe said of Jerusalem ‘How often wouid 1 have gatherbd you," ete. And today Christ calls men, |and whether or not they lead the lite | that is successfui in the moral sense hinges on whether they aceept Christ and live for Christ and follow Christ. The salvation of society, the hope of | | this old worlg, the industry, hinges, absolutely hinges, upon whether we | get the spirit of Christ, the message of Christ, the motive of Christ into | society, into national life, inte inter- national life, and whether we get that message and motive of Christ into business. We hold in our hands the | | destinies of millions of people in the Wfuture. We hold the lcadership, and our continuing as a leader among the nations hinges upon whether or not | we continue 1o practice the teachings of the Bible and the message of Christ. And when 1 think of a hinge I think of that upon which everything | depends and that does depend upon | future. God is calling America, | calling the leaders jn industry, the caders in labor, everywhere, to fol- | low.the spirit of Christ—the spirit of | justice and fairness and Jo which is the only thing that will save this old world and save society.” Hart | WOMAN'S CLUB MEETING, The New Britain Womanis club, of which Mrs. Buel B. Bassette is presi- | dent, will “Guest Night” | Tuesday evening when Bernice Schal- ker, soloist, New York city, and the Mendelssohn Trio of this city, | composed of Theron Walcott Hart, | pianist: Herbert E. Andegson, violin- ist, and Henry G. Schauflier, ‘cellist, «ill give a musicale at the“Camp school awditorium throughiShe cour- teay of Mrs. Willam C. Hungerford and Mre, Charles 8. Landers. Ber- nice Schalker is an artist of wnususl abitity and her singing in enhanced | personality of distinet chasm. Mendelssohn Trio are too well n o town to require more com- ent than that. with four such splen- artists a delightful program. fuil interest and diversity, is assur obserye of by The ki ol i YALE ALL UPSET OVER PROM PLANS Gloria Swanson and Madge Ken-| nedy May Be Guests Tonight New Haven, Féb. 4—An under- current of excitement, not unattended by mirth, pervaded the Yale campus today on the eve of the Yale Junior promenade, the crowning social event of the year in university ecircles. Publication of the names of two well known film stars, Gloria Swanson and Madge . Kennedy opposite l]le‘ names of John Dodge Hough of Chicago and Walter Jewett Currie of Greenwich, respectively in a list of | attendants at the prom in the columns | of the Yale News omgged the flurry of | expectancy. At first blush. the an- nouncement was looked upon as a| joke on the youthful editors of thej college publication., But recalling uj similar announcement last year and the subsequent attendance of Ula| Sharon at the annual Yale dancing | fete, many students expressed belief that the published guest list might be correct. | Hough and Currie, however, dissi- pated to some extent the wave of| speculation and doubt by declaring | heads out into serpents and wreaths, | that they knew nothing about it and where the wames of By the middle of the 11th century |were in fact to attend the prom as | dancing partners were made known, “stags,” Then campus gossip evolved the story that two well known juniors had been summoned into the august presence of the faculty., Rumor failed to supply any details of the conference if any such occurred, but there was a sequel, namely, the ap- pearance of the names of the two stu- Why Endu dents in the official with a blank opposite prom program, their names, other juniors’ Reéfusal of the university officials {or the prom committee to discuss the matters has lent an air of mystery to the whole affai But many an e will scan the arrivals at tonight's function in the belief that the mys- terious announcement may be _ con- firmed after all. That re Aching Back? es vour back ache day ing throb? Do sharp, rvheun sudden move?. Are you so t can never be well again? Then look to your kidneys! are the blood-filters. Once tl accumulate that comes constant backacae, he irregularities. than he is, Don’t risk neglect! diuretic. mend. k your neighbor! hey \\'(:{k well Kidnevs would | after day with a dull, unceas- atic pains torture you at every ired and nervous it seems you The kidneys, you know, . poisons are apt to filtered off, Then ness and kidney v adaches, diz One feels lame, stiff and achy—years older Help the kidneys with a stimulant Use Doan’s Pills, the remedy home folks recom- “UseDoan’s,”’ Say These New Britain fqlk;; Robertson. St, says: “A strain fro lifting disorderegd and I had sharp, piercin in my back that felt as though someone had struck me a blow across my kidneys. A docs tor advised me to (ry : Pills and after 1 had nsed thice boxes the trouble was gone,” Doan’ heasy my Kidneys Stimulant Digretic to At all dealers, 60 & bax, Fost 0P M1 Kiniry & Accountants Announce That Their Busin Mr L I had [ headaches amd dizzy In WAL A WOrn- [throngh the Jower part of my [hack after doing my washing, A dgithor told me Al Doan's Pills and T wend come, 1 fwas <o well vedicved that 1 have or hiad to nee Doan's sincee” s Pills the Kidn'eys Company and Auditors ess Has Been Taken Over by erner & Hardie Accountants, Auditors, and Tax Specialists 750 Main St. Hartford, Conn. Suite 802 'Phone 2-4315. 259 Main St. New Britain, Conn. Room 403, Booth Block "Phone 2012. M. E. LERNER, Certified Public Accountant W. J. HARDIE, Tax Specialist DANGEROUS WEDDI RINGS ngs worn by Wemen marricd when wide rings Were fn vAgue are o the wadding Why wait until your finger beror make over your wide wodding ring you will emjoy wearing. i deweler andd § fogs hate prevented civemlation of biood making it tender and mviting infection. with their ting fingers so swollen tiat ring with & fine jewelry saw. At & fhodersts cost we will narrower model, ome which * Infacted ® to & newer, Viamond Dealer 205 MAIN ST,