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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 5, 1924. to he considered to prohibit the park- ling ot auromotites in the siiesls all “Religlon includes everything that's At Weekly Luncheon icen appointed to the regular force on | New Jitney Stations|nicut avs carrying on repair work on good and excludes everything that's The regular weekly meeting of the A 1, 1904, Another officer who has | Jitney statlons in the center of thz" [ public nighways except 17 | P A bad, and in order to gef, it you have : e n considerable service is Policeman | ;. o f, s | ta3es of amergency. cludes in order to get the things that | hotel at noon Tuesday at which time |the regular for May 1, 1907, - | {08 O e to which reports| NEW INTERNATIONAL 0Dk it includes; give up the bad to get the | a talk on music will be given by Fred | | have come! that traffic i3 being held| Washington,/May B.—Feychological Policeman h"{Ordinance to Locate ompleted 20 3 ¢, having got to sell all that you have to become | [ j richteous, Lions to Ellloy Music E THE NEW 1924 AUTOMOBILE | up at central points due to the taking! uspects ci a new internationsi order An attractive program has been | Chapman street line, Chestnut and|Franee, and Mrs Temp' ) ps anged and it is expected that all\!nln streets, Center church, South| United States de'egate, de.l'ler!:d "“~ arge number of the Jocal school‘church, Park strecet and Franklin|opening speeches, ho!ding that uni- POLICE ANNIVERSARIES teachers will attend. Fdward E. | square; North Burritt street line,|versal peace, goodwill and coopera- Captain George J. Kelly, popular | Weeks, principal of the street | Myrtle and Main streets, and the Cen- | tion would fulfill the spirit ot Qhrl;— captain of police, 1s entering on his |school, is auditor of the association. | ter church; Seyriour avenue line,|tianlty and bring abeut a morai up- 18th year in the regular department. e | Commercjal and Main streets, and the | lift of mankind, Tady Annesley of ! He was a roundsman and sergeant b e | Center church; Commonwealth ave- England, Professor Oertrude Wceker fore being promoted to the captain The success of your pastries depends (nue line and Oak street, Winter and|of Switzerland and Mrs. Edith Wsler— Captain Kelly was promoted from the |largely upon the flavoring extracts you Main streets, Main and Myrtle streets, | worth of Australia, open=d the discus- supernumerary ranks en May 1, 1907. }us(n Baker's insures success.—advt. |Center church. Ordinances are also|sion on the subject. 3 at the Y. M. C. A. g | Lions clubs of New England will by | The service next Sunday will in-{held on Wednesday, May 7. |3 clude the annual “Ladies’ Day” and a large attendance of .women is expect- . ) ;gaod. You don’t have to give up one |C. Latham. A splendid musical pro-| COUNTY TEACHERS' MEETING JRev‘ Joml L‘ Da“s says Mans‘good thing to become religlous” . [gram has been arranged and a large | . T T oo o s frage. [on or discharging of passengers, Pro-| were disc wsod by numerovs speakel | There were 240 men present. Next [attendance 15 expected. Secretary | cefing of the Harl- | sed stations include: Arch street|st today's scesion of the Wemen's In- BLUE BOOK - Trast 0 Pallowinen It Kevnols [ 20ney.i.be Mothess Day, ‘Tomar- Otirien dise Jristonlly ecmplecsd ar | orc COULAL SMSUOIY & ons 208 ™ill | ine, Walnut and Arch streets and the | ternutionel League for Peace anl ‘\ il row evening the executive committee |rangements for the trip to Providencg be held In the Hartford publie high | Gonter ehurch, eliminating the Y. M,| Frecdcm, Mrs, Anita Angspurgh of | will meet for supper at 7:30 o'clock | where the district convention of the lgoy01 auditorium on. Saturday, May |C. A stop at Main and Gourt streets; | Germany, Miss Anrdee Jl;u;’l: of p ton Johrssn, | | “Business began when one man ;'Ienl'm’d that he could trust another {man, and business will fail when men | "y inaustrial committee report- eel that they cannot trust other eq several vacancies for good men {men,” sald Rév. John L. Davis yes- |seeking positions. {terday in his address to E\Lryman'sl IS HERE Why not plan that vacation trip' now? Stationery Dept. o L DICKINSON Drug Co. 169-171 Main St. See Our New Line of Sasieni London Pipes Very Fine and “It Pays To Buy Our Kind” Voice Culture @pecial Attention to Beginners James D. Donahue 'fl nu';l";o SIG! Room 31)-319 Booth’s Block Tralnes of Yale University aa aronus — DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D, S. T. R. Johnson, D. D. S. G gen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. NURSE IN ATTENDANCE POTTER THE POTTER PRESS OUTH 81 LTHAM. MASS YOU'LL DO BETTER At AXELROD’S Edna Wallace Hopper's Youth Preparations Complete Assortment Axelrod’s Pharmacy 228 PARK ST. XELROD FOR CCURACY It Us Fill Your Prescriptions "Phone_1274-13 HT READING that he can trust God, and it fails {when he no longer ‘trusts God and when God can no longer trust him, {and just as everybody must make a {venture in beginning business so | | everybody must make a venture Yn | | beginning religion. There comes a | time in your life when you have got | to risk all you have on the fact that | you will succeed in this religion. There | comes a time when you must break | with the old associates, the old habits, { the old ‘way of living, and start utter- 1y new in life, and there are thousands who will not start because they are afraid they cannot succeed. There are men looking at me and listening | to me this morning who are afraid | really to cut loose from the old habits | that are binding them. They fear they may not hold out faithful. Tt is the same fear that keeps you out of business and success all your life, I want to tell you that in business and in religion hoth there is a venture. You have got to throw yourself into this future life; you have got to trust something or somebody and your own powers, and if you do that you will not fail.’ There are 20,000 failures in business in the United States; but ‘where there are 20,000 fallures there are a great many more successes. There are probably thousands who be- gin religion who fail, who give up drunkenness and go back to it; but where 10 start and fall, 40,000 begin and continue to the close of life, and the Bible says that a man will re- celve his reward if he holds out faith- ful to the end. The saddest wrecks are those that take place in sight o the shore. . “I say there is a venture, and you must trust-yourself and you must have faith, and every man has got to start somewhere, You cannot start any younger than you are now. This is a good time to start in business and in religion, T have sald there's a great deal in business that is true in're- ligion. “Business has got to have a man's attention, his energy and his interest. And certainly religion demands a man's attention and his.energy and his interest. If it is a half-hearted religion it is like a half-hearted busl- ness. To be a successful business man you have got to put your whole life into it. If you neglect it you know | you will soon fail, The best farm will | g0 to ruln through neglect. Some | men make & great start and have a | great vision, and when that enthusi- asm of the first few months is gone, and business is not coming in so fast and isn't as rushing as it might be, their ardor cools and thelr enthusiasm lags and they begin to lose interest, and it's a failure, “Some people do the same thing In religion, They come into the church and become enthusiastic. ™ They rush into the work, and in a little while their ardor cools and their enthusiasm begins to fail, a littie while they have no interast in religion, Your business will be a success if you can keep your energy and keep your in- terest in spite of the obstacles and failures you meet. If you can only keep-that enthusiasm and interest and energy in religion in spite of the aif- ficulties and hardships, why every man's religion would be a success also. The same principles that obtain in business will obtain in religlon, and the very qualities of religion—kind- ness, love, honesty, righteousness and sympathy, all have a great place in business, It {sn't enough to have en- | ergy and foresight d enthusiasm and shrewdness, you have got to have | good will in business and kindness and politeness. | ““Phere are a great many things that | enter into business besides shrewd. ness. You have got to have the hu- | man element in business and in a| store or in the mercantile business. or wherever else it is. Kindness, po- liteness, sympathy, the haman ele- | ment enters into business the same as it does in religion. I am beginning to think that the more religlous a man is the more likely he is to suc- | ceed In business, No Bargains in Religion “There’s one thing that doesn't| work in religion as it does in business. You cannot have sales in religlon— fire sales, mark down sales. $1.98 was a shrewd thing in business but it won't do in religion. Those who try to cheapen religlon and try to sell it |to the crowd because it is reduced in its demand, hecause you can do any- thing you want and get by with it; that destroys religion. They destroy religion. There is no cheap religion. 1 used to think before I was religious —1 looked over different religions, and there are some that after you do cer- tain things and go through certaln perfunctory worship then you can do as you please the rest of the time. | That appealed to me, and it appeals to | !lny old sinner or young sinner either. 1t appeals to anybody who doesn’t want to be good. $1.98 doesn't go in | religion. You have got to make it $2.00 straight. Sixteen ounces to the pound, 36 inches to the yard, all wool, take the shrink out of it, give them exactly what you say and then they | tike it . “There are some ministers whe will tell a dirty rotten story and think they are getting away with it. A lot of | men think that's the way to please | men, But that's the way to make a | decent man disgusted with a minister | and no man has respect for such a minister. You may laugh at him and | you may cheer him: but in your heart you have contempt for him. One man #aid that as soon as he heard of the 18th amendment, he feit as though he would like to go out on the eapitol steps and take a drink—you have & contempt for him. 1 tell you my soul has & contempt for all that. Tt is a cheap way of trying to let down the tars and be popular by making ne demands upon men, You eannot find where Jesus Christ ever did that | Thers's no such thing as reducing re- ligion or making it cheap. You have Bible class on “Merchants' Sunday.” | | Continuing he said: 1[;flAST T" [;flAST | “Religion begins when a man feels | Spanish War Veterans MAIL 35 HOURS Special Air Mail Will Start on July 1 Washington, May 5.—Daily air mail service between New York and San Francisco, with deliveries within 35 hours, or from one morning to tive following evening, will begin July 1, it was announced today by Postmaster General New. The time of transit will be cut to 24 hours probably within a few months, the postmaster general | believe: pedites Mail Service Not only will people of the two coasts benefit by the rapid deliver- ies, but those of the country gener- ally will enabled to transmit their letters more swiftly, as special air mail stamps will carry them from any city for transmission from coast to coast or to intermediate cities for further dispatch by train. Letters be- tween New York and San Francisco now require 87 hours by train, The new service will cut that time down by three-fifths, Air Mail Postage ' Bpecial air mail postage has been arranged and special stamps in three denominations, 8-cent, 1G-cent, and 24-cent, will be distributed to all the principal cities of the country for use in specially designated letters to go by plane. Three zones have been desig- nated for postage purposes, one be- tween New York and Chicago, an- other between Chicago and Cheyene, and the third between Cheyene and San Franclsco, An $-cent air mall stamp will carry an ounce letter any- where in one zone, a 16-cent stamp anywhere within two adjoining zones, and a 24.cent stamp anywhere with- in the three zones, All Classes By Air Letters from points not on the air mail route, If bearing proper air mail stamps, will be transmitted to the nearest air mail field for dis| h without additional postage, Any cla of mall, including pareel post pack- ages, may be sent by air mail but only’ at regular air mail rates, Speclal air mail letters boxes are being installed in the larger cities along the route to expedite handling such mall, Eleven planes will be required for [~ the single trip each wi New planes, with slower landing speeds, deemed necessary for night flying, have been advertised for, and bids will be opened June 10. 1,000 Mile Night Trip The mall planes will fly by night over a thousand miles of lighted air way between Chicago and Cheyenne, the pilots being gufded by automatic ncetylene lights placed every three miles. Every 25 miles of the night air lane has an emergeney landing fleld provided with powerful searchlights, and at about every 250 miles there is a regular landing fleld with search- lights wisible for from 100 to 150 miles when flashed in the air. The existing daylight coast-to-coast air mall which has been in operation six years and which has been merely an advancing service to speed up letter mail, will be merged with the new service, After July 1, no mail will be carried on planes except that bearing special air mail postage stamps, Protest Coolidge Veto A. G. Hammond camp, U, 8 W. V., has passed resolutions protesting against the action of President Cool- ige in vetoing the Bursum pension bill which would have proved favorable to the Spanish War veterans. Telegrams have been forwarded to Senators Brandegee and McLean urging them to do everything in their power to help the passage of the bill over the president’s veto, eone man one hand shingle! 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