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Mus. to A CHRIST'S BIRTH NOT QUESTIONED Stience or Research Fils to Dis- prove Bible, Bishop Says mith Expected ttend Convention 21 Rev, Brewster, —Right Protestant 1, B Epizcopal bishop of Connecticut in his annual Address to the diocesan con- in Christ Cathedral ate yesterday said, in reference to the May Chauncey vention church present controversies over the creed that “among our people many have been wont to believe in the Incarnate faith in what the cribes as the arnation. Re- crence has been tery daid hare to vtie criticism until peor in little perplexity and confusion of mind.” ald that in the discussion there } heen a disposition te isolate a single article of the creed from its setting. i A ancient ¢ come down to us with the accun on and n generatior 1 'atholie consent, with Christian consciousne ceumulation of tre and conviction than personal expericnee Son of God with Litany beautiful mystery of His Holy cently that veil of re plucked = the serut many of our IRT KNOX SMITH MRS, HER that Mrs. president, will at- convention of the Hartford County League of Women Voters in this city Friday. This will be the first time the league has held its convention here. Several reports will he on the activities of the national convention at Buffale, It is expected Herbert Knox Smith, state tend the annual ted authority of the this ge-long stimony - of said its isured experience in any or indivi any single in the It is of tra- ageously putting forth in daring ven- ristial tur amination trend of any @ observed that t lition has weight of authority in pro- portiop as it is free, An essential con- ition for genuine .authority is lom of res 11, ission, truth nt of « s or particilaroa gy he fact recited in this particuls artiele is not the foundation of our faith in Christ but is itself vindicated by the chureh’s faith as a whole, wherein this article has its place, as romething withonut which it were not casy 1 the incarnation could how the Son of God could be made not a man, but main one with, and yet net one among e stime y ion and dis- naug hip, 1S T carch, inve Christia has 1 ALY conceive how to fear from revere scholar st zards such m well losure have come to he; on study and investigation ion the and ity church ittempt The investig y be patient puthon to remember that the faith delivered is not a mere deposit to he preserved in detachment from per- sonal and present day living, and that wcceptance of any about Christ 8 less vitally important than genuine ith in Him. The church bids us to look through the creed to Christ and . pass on from intellectual assent Into arucles ot survender of personality when “" deep calleth unto deep.” mean what ought cone interpreted in certain We 1 sub. ecordance with truth as made n the light of think region face now of Hades below the earth's the right hand ed locality in the | yesnrrection saceepted oia) UNIFICATION NOT T0 BE DECIDED JUST YET s want 1o ind M Fix Date to Vote on Reunion Resolution Southern alists to Final May the confer Tenn, 21 Tothodist The r ses special we of the south, by the session here to proposal for unification I h ythe general con- northern branch of the expected to he fixed at an by the committee on ar. hended by the Rev, 8, H rgin of Ban Antonio, Tex, t meoting is belleved on adopted by a vote of 10 Bishop Warren A, Candler ny, U. Vo W. Darlington 13 Dickey later issued a ng opposition ta the o ground that e early a deprive the annual con right 1o thay profer, called by placoy nt tishops in chureh, for July adopt erence of th church, is ments their constitutiona delegations, if confarence shops also pointed ty the the roliege special ques stitutiona of ring on vority te eall isly paragraphs the annual ser the ed to for ratification intention of tha hishops a suh special e ter would discussion g any prrpos: of Aewonting ir opinion i example, proper time for fderation of #o grave a sub- the oid all question of t as and m lat . na ation 1d a over, wonld he more conducive nd harmony NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1924, in the deeply embedded heart,” Offers No Patent Panacea Stating republican principles, Sena- tor Watson sald the republican party NDIANA KEYNOTE {added that the republican party did (Continned from First Page) | not believe that, by undue extension - of the power of government, the na- | tion has been lindered or halted h_\,‘vinn should be made a huge charit- certain wowerlul‘-ahl. institution with a population of the efforts made by z | dependents. clements temporarily in control of the | " ‘aye from our people” he said situation, to break down the falth of | “the {ncentive to labor and to accu. the American people in their national | mulate, strip from the administration regardless of ita effect |ANd the enterprising the rewards of sty Hationatl For ( their endeavor and this republic will . - °T I sink into weakness and oblivion, We the newspapers of the land republicans have no sympathy with liave reeked with atories of public cor- ! socialism, that imported product of ruption, exaggerated out of all ,,.,,_i European social and economic condi- portion to their true value, hrnxdcut‘ | American on government, weeks tions, with which America has naught from the capitol at Washington as an in common. “If we are to keep up the stride of overture to the campaign of 1924, progress struck by this nation, we Defends No Wrongdoing. | must bid industry go forward. We ““The republican party does not de- | must be frankly friendly to those en. °nd wrongdoing in public officials in | terprises, small and great, which vither state or nation. The pretense have made of this nation a vast work- that the personal guilt of an isolated | shop and through iInvention and or- official is a party matter is essentially | ganizing genius have gained for hypocritical. The attempt to make | America supremacy In the financial it appear, on no larger grounds than |and primacy in the industrial world. vet hava been developed, that the | Correct the abuses, certainly, curb and government is reeking with rotten- | punish departures from standards of ness, is a kind of politica which strike | justice and falr play, to be sure, but not so much at the party in power as|let us not vield to the cry of the at the heart of government itself, | demagogues and theorista that the “The effect of this remarkable cam- investor, the producer, the carrier, the paign has been to ereate distrust in | distributor, shall be regarded and the hearts of the people and fear in |treated as public enemies, least by sn all phases of business. 1t has bred | doing investment be driven from pro- a morbid state of mind throughout | ductive enterprises ,ih fires in the the country and in such an atmos-, factories go out, the wheals of our )\jvs“ya! initiative and enterprise are | railroads cease turning, and the chilled, | American people pass through wi Industry Is Affected. they heretofore h.p\-- prfiri-fi(‘!d ;:E “The present is filled with doubt|eause of the temporary dominanea in and the future with forebodings be- | government of destructive forces cause no man knows what the mor- | pledged to tear down the pill row will bring forth. As a result, the prosperity,"” st KL e, 0 SR e B RGO BB HAIR,-!HIS JUDGE RULES crease, and the great prosperity we Saye Hushand Has No More Control have been enjoying as the result of confidence in our goverrment, confi- Over Her Halr-Gut Than Over Hee Vote | dence In our institutions, confidence in | our institutions, confidence in the| soundness of our husiness enterprises | and in our financial stability, and con- fidence in our fellow man, In slowly | waning because of these repeated as- | savlts upon them all for purely par-| tisan purposes. | Has Faith In Govt. | “Believe me, follow republicans, | when I say that the government of | this nation is clean and safe and sound. Relieve me when 1 say that the foundations of the republie still! sland, secure against the atlacks of |o¢ piy wife, Jenoie, She said she had those who would nndermine or over- (her hair hobhed yesterday and when throw them, safe In the affections of | Jacob arrived home he expressed his the people whose rights they proteet ' disapproval by striking her, and whose interests they safeguard, | o« wouldn't mind a plain bob,” sald Tha spots on the sun do not blacken | Bilverman, “but ahe Is 32 years old the orh. The few Instances of official |ang ought to know better than to get wrongdoing are infinitely small &8ione of those what you oall King compared with the cases where publie | gy officials have heen and ara patrioticals | wrimes have ehanged,” said Iy and honeatly doing their duty every | nourt, “It fa now one of woman's day and every hour, |inalienable rights to vote, Surely s ] Praise For Coolidge. | person capable of easting a ballot “The standard official ‘conduet | mygt be presumed capable of choos. under “""n':""' idge ia high, In very ing o hair.cut. You are placed under truth never higher, and hopelesa in- " deed would be the future n‘; W e public should any other mile obtain, Knowing the president of the United States as all Americans do, his integ- _ FATIS, May 31.—The reparation rity, his zeal for the national welfare, | COMMiasion held a meeting today at his inflexible morality, his fixity of | "Which Austro-Hungarian quastions purpose for the right, 1t i unfortu- :”';:”d'""";-“' Among thess was the nate that, with all the great post-war L Of American eredits for the problems confronting us and demand. | "*storation of Hungary. ing solution at our hands, tha busi ness of the nation should be haited for weeke by the leaders of the party out of power who have bean a.nnxod‘ in an effort to biacken the govern. ment and besmirch tha republican | party. ' “We all know that that effort has bern a dismal failure, We all know that the people have Rrown weary with the flow of gossip and the flond of scandal with which they have been ieluged from Washington. They are irtercated firet of all in the weifare of thelr eountry and in the proper soln. tion of its problems, and net primar. 1y In the efforts of political leaders to guin a personal or a party advantage, nd 1 greatly misjudgs both the tem- per and the apirit of the peopls ff, when the ldes of November coms, they do give uamistakable evi- fence of the fact that they have net Aoreived inta helieving that mud-slinging 1« statesmanship, that slander 18 logic, that vituperation is wisdom, and that those who think and | act a8 if they were, greatly offend the American people’'s sense of propriety and justica and fair dealings, which i Chicago, May 1. —Judga Burke, in the municipal eourt has riuled that a tusband has no moma eontrol of his wife's hair-cut than he has over her vote, The ruling was in the case of Ja- cob Silverm arralgned om complaint the DISCUSS REPARATIONS, LEONARD CLEANABLE been This limfoérap?\ \'Vas‘ _Telephoned This remarkable example of transmi tures sent from Cleveland, 0., to New York success. Within 45 minutes of the time a ion of a photograph by telephone is one of 15 pie- ~the first time pictures by wire have been sent with photo had been taken in Cleveland it was being ex- industrious | ' | WILL GONSIDER Ti - FOSDICK DISPUTE General ASs-e;nth ol Preshyteri- ans to Take Up Women's Rights Mich, May What has been called an equa 21 rights Grand Rapids, movement for women in the | launched at general Mrs, Charles of the Wom terian church, assembly a year ago hy Amory Blinn, president an's Missionary society of Cincinnati | Presbytery, will come up for |during the general assembly of the lchurch to be held in this city be- ginning May 22. At present only men can become elders and ministers, and lonly these are eligible for election to tha Presbyleries and to the general assembly. The movement of the Cin- |cinnati women is “to from Presbyterian rules and regulations the restrictions in connection with the | participation of women in the official affairs of the church.” Among other documents to be con sidered by the gathering is a memo- rial from Chicago Presbytery asking the general assembly to take cogni- | zance of the world situation with re spect to warlike preparations and to take steps to’ represent the mind of the Preshyterian church against the ontire wa= system. Chicago Presby tery In this memorial petitions general embly to issue "a deliverance op posing the anti-Christian philosophy which imagines or pretends that war i Inevitable; te declare it to bhe our deliberate judgment that the war | system as a system is fundamentally | opposed to the teachings and exam- | vle of Jesus and must be speedily |abandoned 1f eivilization is te escaps | |collapsa; to affirm our unalterabls | conviction that any and all interna- | [tional diffienlties can bhe effictently | |and permanently settled by confer. | {ence and coneillation and, indeed, can | be settied in no other way: and to pledge our cooperation twith ether | |ehurches and with forword looking {men evarvwhers in a erusada for the {mwift outiawry of war by interna tional agreement.” Another matter that will he brought to the attention of the assembly s the action of the Preshytery of Southern | Arizona requesting the (inited State government to close the Mexican bor. der at 8 o'clock every night, and ask- fog that a dry territory be establishag 50 miles wida to the mouth of the ' American border with Mexicn, The basis for sueh action 1s the declaration of the Presbytery of Southern Arizona | that large numbers of men, women, boys and girls are apending hundreds | |of thousands of dollars every month and wrecking Hves by orossing the | border into Mexico to gamble, drink, | dance and enter various vices of the underworid, | While the general assembly s dea- | {termining the controversy caused by the action of Philadelphia Preshytery protesting against the preaching in the ¥irst Presbyterian church of New | York of Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick, a Baptist, accused of heretical tenden cleg concerning the Virgin birth and other fundamentals of the Preshyter- fan faith, Dr. Fosdlck himselt will ba abroad. He ta scheduled to deliver a | serien of lectures in Europe and to action remoyve | ehicken dinner the [turned the meeting over to President Ithwaite of the Lions who called on different members for speeches which Harry Hancock read a plece of poetry of his own composition which was thoroughly en- the | joyed. Gardner C. Weld, secretary of entire Fosdick tter, with all the of- | tlhie New Britain Rotarians, told the ficial papers in tl €, will be re-!meeting how happy he was to be ferred early 1 the neral assembly | present, to the permanent judicial comm¥ W n, the supreme court of the Preshyt from the gene LIONS AT NEWINGTON Local Club Swoops Down on Gri |address the joint assembly of State and Free Presbyterian churches | of Scotland at the same time that th Presbyte general at [were willingly given. Grand Rapids is considering his preaching New York church, It is conside probable that an assembly H in the d O HAVE Hartford, May 21 staff are directed | orders today to report to the adjutant at the state armory, Hartford, Tumn at 6:45 p. m., standard time, attendance upon tl wernor at a view tendered to 1 by the come manding officer, 169th infantry, 169TH rian ehiurch, aside assem by The governor's adjutant general's Hall Tor a Chicken Dinner And | ___ <r S ey despondent—try salves—no cut- remedy that is Kly banish all mis- nothing. Ask Clark & or any good druggist for Leonhardt’s Hemroid, Dancing—specch-meking Aplenty. ) of t took o Newington Grange eir llding. A was by the The Lions clt s ecity casion to visit in e woid. No A harn teed to a evening ne hecome ser H 8y there of Gray wag a general jolification meot dancing. Harry d a Lion After a ing and ery or cost wrainerd Co Dr. Granger was master of | | ceremonics. short speech, What a wholesome drink for them! Cliequot Glub Ginger Ale has a clear, sparkling look that tells you of its pure, clean goodness, It tastes good. It s pure. Give the children lota of it. They ol like it The Clicyast Chub Company, Millis, Masa, U 8. A; Il Order by the cas from yor grecre, drugmist, or confrrrirnes = = JOHN A.ANDREWS & CO. “The Big Furniture Store” hibited, completel; eloped, to a group of interested spectations in the American Telegraph and Telephone Co. building, New York city. The new process of transmission by electricity has been perfecied, making this possible. The picture here appearing was not retouched, as is cus- tomary in the arrangement of most news pictures. An action picture is used to give an idea of how well detail is preserved by this process. 132 MAIN STREET Tel 72 BRI SIS 13 SRR A SR B |