New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 25, 1924, Page 2

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B e o o T ———— g listmas ards Sample Books of Personal Ch Engraved Cards now ready for your inspec- tion Stationery Dept. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO.,, 169-171 Main St. . ARE you aware that our capital Suits combine quality and style at a saving to you? We ask you to sce for yourself the fine Work- manship and rich colorings for fall in these $4O v suits. .. HORSFALLS 93-99 X{sylum Street Hartforl, “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” | | | [ i |ing him a big salary, and if he were e A .5 AP A & GRS, HOW MUGH S A AN WORTH? [ ol Speaker Says Scigmist Esti- Iates Value at 98 Cents tu “How much 18 a man worth was the question put to the Girls' conference 1 the South Con- | V! gregational church this morning by Rev. Allan A. Stockdale, o First Co H | egational church of | pastor Forees,” 0., In his talk on “Unseen | “Is he worth as much as Mr. Stofkdale pointed to kalser as an example of a man was worth, | “Is he worth as much as he earns k Dempsey and Abraham Lincoln were eited as examples which would Mr. Stockdale said uld estimate the value | \‘ributors to the well- of mankind. a Kentucky scientist has juse vzed man chemieally and found ‘worth 98 cents. Mr. satd his church was pay- viio cost more than he thin nobody cc the great co him to he worth only 98 cents, somebody was ung, He then declared that ue in this world came things. Lite is made itiful by unseen things, he said. We do not have a | God which we can see, but we have tangible things which help us ap- proach Him. The lines of Gothic architecture all point upward to- ards heaven to lead thoughts that | way. Speaking of literature, he sald it the dictionary has all the words, but it takes imagination to make them beautiful. He defined a zood hook as one which, for every page one reads, malkes one think | two or three other pages. Music s | produced by a visible organ, but| there is mofe to music than a set of | pipes and keys. Panting is scen as | but those are merely sression of thought and imag- getting most of the from unsee = wa es, ination | Comets are now proph d so ac- he that i get out t elescopes and scan the | Skics at just the time the comet ap- pears on schedule, keeping a I»DYVI"F heduie than the hest express train. Whatever power," he declared, “can hold this immense body on fits | nd move with ab- uTately sa tronomers S0 year cours solute regularity, is certair > take care of our little problems. Message To Boys' Conference Mr. Stockdale had just come from o Older Boys' copference in Merl- | den, g news that a | tford | . elected president of | After ned bea messa an rer brin 1 becn following the Boys' Conferer 5 sreetings. Wild times re. Wish you were with us to en- | oy them. Thank you for sharing | ¢ Mr. Stockdale witlr Don't be sel- | fish and keep him. We're trying to | be worth more than 98 ce nts. How | of First church of | . you are cnjoving the | th ing on | Woman had inves o The regational hurches, th NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1924, group conferences on “My hest for the highest in my Church School,” Dinner was served fn the Fipst Gon- nd Trinity M. E. delegates were guests |of the high school at the footbal game witl, eleven this afternoon, ¢ Troy conference Organ Recital By Mr, Beebe Joseph C. Becbe whl give an or- re, ace. Mr, Sto © plans to ta ra and the The conferen e as th exp that more is being dork, er atlendance is due to a holdup in {the mail, the announcements repos- ing in the Hartford postoffice several days du ge shipme \DELINQUENT gan recital for the visitors this eve. ning, after which the motlon ple- “The Man Who Played God," will be shown, Ithe girls will attend their hostessos, Older (afternoon, the final session will take Tomorrow morning church with At 3 o'clock in the ockdale will be here again and speak on “Getting By." Ik, about his trfp to iturope this summer. The Everyman's Bible class | furnished automobiles for taking the girls to thelr homes he also placed its orchestra at the dis- | posal of the convention. ehe played at the suppers last night has and has This or- it of the high school ce is only about half of last year, but the ! 8 their satisfaction for to the pressure of nt of circy TAXPAYERS APPEAR IN POLICE COURT Pleads lector's Inve: Her Delinquent personal linquent to as in the c kowski of 4 the court th Hungerford found it Poverty But Col- stigation Explodes Defense, tax payers made their first appearance in police court this morning, but Judge Wil- liam C, neces- sary in only one case to order the e up the 82, That | of Mrs. Anna Bucz- Beach street, who hat she could not pay | s she did not have any money, ax Collector foun d Lopes. o here were four Spanish quenis summoned berore the court, but as there present, Assistant {liam A, Greenstein asked that the cases he continued After court adjour 6 $2 to Collec charge drawn. 234 High st same address, Robert Fseriva of 3 T igated the woman's and ‘found that her husband is em- | ployed steadily and that they own the house im which they live, woman was held at police headquar- ters until somebody appeared paid her tax, Quintelina Topes of strept was Lopes who had paid his tax, g0 he was discharged ralgned before the court, he produe- ed a receipt for his tax, | plained that he was evidently listed twice at the city hall, hoth as Topes They wer Bernadotte Loomis case The and 45 Cherry d to be Quintelina When he was ar- and ex- delin- was no interpret Prosecutor Wil- until Monday. d, the four paid tor Loomis and the iem were with- Paul Rametta Mary Rametta and Odello Afayette street. reet, A number of warrants for other inquents are e and will in be the hands of the rved if the peo- | Wa One Grateful Mother’s Tribute “I would not be without the famous Dr.Trues Elixir for it Is a faithful friend all year 'round. At first signs of dull feeling, fatigue or restl ness I give my children doses and then rest assured that everything will be all right.””—Mrs, Flora Desaults, Worcester, Mass. The ‘‘kiddies" LIKE Dr, True's Elixir—graddmothers call it The True Family Laxative | Will relieve every. member of ; the family of constipation, $1.20; 60c; 40c, —“ T e — MURDERS FAMILY, THEN HILLS SELF Massachusets Man Uses Shot- gun on All in House Topsfield, Mass., Oct. 25.—Homer Kennedy of this town, yesterday shot and killed his wife and their two young children and then turned the double-barreled shotgun on him- | self. Three older children were at school at the time. Kennedy, . who was 50 yrars old, recently euffered a nervous breakdown, neighbors said. Kenncdy had been absent from | home several days. Yesterday aft-| ernaon while- Mise Irene Walsh, | daughter of the chief of police of th@®town, was visiting Mrs. Kennedy, the man walked into the room and without saying a word raised the | shotgun he was carrying and opened | a The first shot killed Mre. ISen- nedy, and two more were aimed at | Richard, four years old, and Ellza- | Leth, an_infant. Paying no atten- | tion to Miss Walsh as she ran out| of the house to call for help. Ken- | nedy fired his fourth shot at his own | head. All four died almost instant- lv. The three children absent at school ranged in age from seven to eleven years, According to Chief of Police h, Kennedy bore a good repu- tation im the town. Until recently | he had been employed on a large estate here. TODEFEND SUIT Honcyman And Jartman Deny As- EAPERT ESCRIBES BUDGET SYSTEN Expresses Surprise Some Fac- {ories Manage o Survive . Charles R. Stevenson, president of |the Stovenson Engineering corpora- tion, and cost engineer for a num. {ber of nationally known manufac- |luring concorns, spoke last evening at a joint meeting of the Rotary, Lions, Kiwanls clubs, Chamber of Commerce, the Hartford City En- ginecrs club, the Hartford branch of the National Association of Cost |Accountants and the New Britain and Hartford branches of the Amer- !fcan Soclety of Mechanical FEngin- (eers. The meoting was in connec- Ition with the “management week" The smpll Successfully used for over 73 years !movement and was held in the state trade school and followed a dinner at the Burritt hotel, where Mr. Stevenson was the gucst of the ex- |ecutive committee of the local A, 8, (M. B. and representatives of the va- rious organizations. Mr. Stevenson took as his subject, “Budgeting for Better Management,” He said the present rate of pro- duction in America surpasses the normal demand, but that the normal increase in demand would eventual. ly absorb this if European competi- tion does not affect it otherwise. He said American factories are running under good, mediocre and poor management and expressed surprise that some factories-can sur- vive with the management they have. He'compared a budget to the finer tools of an expert mechanic and said “budgeting for better man- agement means using the right kind of managerial machinery,” Budgeting, according to the speak- er is most commonly used in this country to operate the financial af- fairs of the individyal. He drew a word picture of a man and his wife who sit down together at the begin- ning of the year and divide their es- timated income into “so much for rent, so much for clothes, so much for shoes, so much for amusement, 80 much for magazines and news- vapers, so much for charity and so much to maintaln a car,” Then when they total it all up they usual ly find, he said that it far exceeds the income and they must go back and figure all over, While admitting that these bud- gets usually are balanced only in theory he sald it is the only intelli- gent way to handle the family in- come. He mentioned some large corporations throughout the country which operatc on a budget system and said the same system that is ap- plicable to the one man butcher €hop, also applies to the industry employing 15,000 to 20,000 ren. He defined a budget as a definite plan upon which to operate and ex- plained that the standardized budget is divided into two general divis- lons, the operating and the sales and the financial. He explained that fn figuring the operating budget, in- ead of the old fashioned cost mys- tem, based on the cost of a job after sault Was Committed. it is completed, that the factory fig- must show handling costs, accounts recelvable, estimated- investments, invested capital and quick assels pp———— wnoor: STATISTIOS One-Third ‘of Philippino Children Regilstered As Puplls Manila, Oct, 25.—The total ex- penditures for the publlc schools of the Philippine Islands during the year 1923 amounted to $7,220,000, or $221,000 lead than for the year 1922 according to figures made public by the bureau of education. A total enrollment of 1,128,997 achool children was recorded in the public schools for 1923 out of & school population of 3,077,467, The percentage of attehdance through- out the year was 85, A total of 26,780 teachers was employed, of whom 329 were Americans, T the public schools only the English lan- guage is tanght. TEAGHES FARMING ALONE IN ARMENIA Miss Phyllis Brown, a Vassar College Girl, Shows Methods Djalal lu, Armenfa, Oct, 25~ Amerlcan 'fnewspaper readers win scarcely recognlze the date-line on this story, for Djalal Oglu does nov appear in any gazettcer or geogra- phy. It is a town of 6,000 souls, de- tached from the outside world and buried in the heart of the mountains of Armenfa. It doesn't oven boast of a telegraph office, newspaper, automobile or trolley car. But there Is a Vassar college girl here, Miss Phyllis’ Brown of Poughkeepsie, N. Y., who is teaching the Armehians American methods of farming Miss Brown, who is connected with the American Near East Rellef, not only has made two potatoes to grow where only one grew before, but she has taught the Armenian peasants American methods of dairying, cat- tle raising and poultry culture. Be- fore coming to Armenia she took an intensive course in agriculture at ‘Vassar college, graduating with high honors. The young American girl has in- troduced the “project” system of farming in Armenia, which proved so successful in the United States during the World War. 8he began her work here by giving instruction in agriculture to classes of destitute Armenian orphans. But now she fs conducting several large model farms, which attract great numbers of farmers eager to increase their knowledge of agriculture. Miss Brown has produced vegetables of such superb quality and size that the natives think she is supernaturally endowed. They were amazed when she produced sweet potatoes, which ‘have never been seen in Armenia. When the correspondent arrived in Djalal Oglu, after a ten-hour trip fn an ox-cart over the Armenian ! Is it not time to present yourself with a new pair of 4 P Scissors or Shears We sell only the best by test Ev/ery pair Absolutely Warranted Herbert L. Mills HARDWARE ! RFAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. ‘Warranty deeds filled for record at the office of the town clerk last week included the following; Win- centy Kulmaic to Antoni Wolak, Booth street; Joseph Skorupski to Mary and Peter Wichrowski, Gold street; Scbastiano Gozzo, et al, to Lucy and Santo - Nicomede, High street; Charles 8. Contaras to Jo- seph Tutles, Glen street; Anna and Stefan Pedolek to John Miglines, Wilcox street; Morris Tulia to Vie- toria and ‘Wincenty ‘Tess, Queen street; Mike Sowa to Morris Witkin, Washington street; Bernard Boyle to Mary and Joseph Bujnicki, Stanley street; Rosamond Sahrbacker to Al- bert Fles, Burritt street; Sebastiano Gozzo, et al, to George Esmail, et al, High street; Louie 8. Jones to El- bridge Wightman, Ten Acre road; A. Bajnowski to Rozalle Strankowski Overland street; John C. Barrett to Katherine and Michael Guzzy, Buena Vista avenue; Meyer Zinman, et al, to 8anti Ciancl, South High street; Bodwell Realty Co. to Elea- nora and Jacob Babula, Sterling street; Harry Alex to Henry Morans, Main street; Bodwell Realty Co. to Guiseppe Motto, Mitchell - street; : Mortimer and Herbert Camp to Al- phonse and Charlotte Mercier, Mc- | Clintock road; Joseph Motta to Do- ' menica Giannone, Mitchell streal; | 336 MAIN ST. Camille and Salvatore Biondi to Anna Glowacki, Beaver street; Anna M. Damon to Ethel R. Hickp, West Main street; Morris Appel to Wal. enty and Mary Cichowskl, Curtis: street; John Ciaffaglione to William Saben, Vincent avenue; Charles and Harriet Francis to Frank and Louise Hughes, Slater road; Edward Green- stein to J. F. Kallerman, Carlton street; Elsie and Joseph Levy to Cammela and SalvateW®-Dj Cerbo, Prospect street; Dora Hittlelman to Charles Narusewich, East street. OFFICE BOY TO PRESIDENT. John L Merrill president of th: All American Cables Company, was recently honored at a dinner given by his employes and friends, He has Tbeen assoclated with his company for 40 years and explained at the dinner that he had begun with it as an office boy, a fact which only a few of his closer friends knew. DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D. S. T. R. Johnson, D, D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. NURSE IN ATENDANCE tford scnds greetings to | nt. Conference, |ures the cost of labor, materlals and Max D. Honeyman and Louis fother production facllities and then Jartman have retained Judge George |mnakes a pre-estimate of the cost of mountains, he found the young Vas- sar graduate working a huge Amer- fean plougn, drawn by two sturdy LUSE SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM ple who have fafled to heed the netices of the tax collector do not |appear and settle their accounts. METAL WEATHER STRIPS James D. Donahue Baritone VOICE CULTURE New T “Girls' THE DOCTOR SAYS “PASTEURIZED" The doctor’s fami drink Seibert’s 18- teurized Milk and he preseribes it at all times. It is the ideal food for the invalid and for the person of health and strength. It is for you. ESEIBERT & SON| 437 PARK ST PHONE 1720 NEW BR\‘I’!INé CONN. g 3 MANE SURE TS SEIGERTS " Appreciation— HE most effective way to show our apprecia- tion for the generous re- sponsc. the of New public Britain has given to our efforts is by increasing our facilities to serve, Enlarging— E are therefore en- larging the display space in our shop, thus enabling us to show more of our exclusive merchan- dise for your approval Always— JFEEL at tiome to come | in and “just look around.” Barritt Gift Shoppe 72 WEST MAIN ST. Opposite the Hotel Miss Rogers Opens Con e ¥ Zlizabeth Rogers of the local A. opened the conference a service of worship. | ouse, president of conference, delivered the | keynote address, and the session ad- | ourned served at the | South Congregational and Trinity | 3. E. churchesRev. Dr, George W. C. Hill A Mjss Madeline Graulich delivering Aresses of weleome, “'K Supper W e a 14 cheers, each | He n turn in Britain and Hartford engaged | a real battle when they cheered, | ting in their attempts to out- | do each other. but finally subsiding breathlessly with honors even Miss Dorothy Fowler of Weaver High school, Hartford, was elected nt at the evening on. Dorot f New itain choser and Miss | Emily Chatfie De- secretary. Rev. Stal Davis, 13 castern division of jay schools of the chureh, gates. dressed At th sion, adjo A &4 P i fashioned reliable akers .Chocolale [PREMIUM NO.1) 0, By all means the most satisfactory chocolate for cook ing or drinking. PEGU.5. PR OOY Walter Baker&Co.Ltd. ESTABUSHED 1780 Dorchester Mass. Montreal Can. BOC:LLT OF CHOICE RECIPTS SENT FRES paign | vice-president DAWES IN NEW YORK s will bri as reput Mr. remained a aheering. | Hanna, a friend, nd declined into night with an a Dawes cont! i endeavor to get as much possible In preparation for the more ous final days of the campaign. | —Charles G. s speaking cam- ndidate for New York to- s in PBrookiyn. ed today his rest as t the home of C. A. in Montelair, N. J., all invitations and avoided all conferences Kiett to defend them jir the ae- tion brought Morris Racher for 316,000 deanages for injuries which he alleges he sustained because of an assault claimed to have been commiitted on Octoter 20. According to the Racher was not assaulted. The de- fendants deny thet g single was struck and they point to the fact that the police authorities found ino cause for arrest at the time. It |18 their elaim that they merely went ,after an automobile whieh was (iheir property and that there was no fight. |the sa |abled to figure a sales price before |the completion of the job, must fig- defendants, |ure with the preestimated cost as a basis, blow | must be based upon the consuming the job. Then the production de- |partment then is required to kee within that preestimated cost and department, which is en- The sales budget, he said, {capecity of the country, filustrating |the method by explaining that pre- estimated sales are divided into quotas and each salesman's recom- |pense based on the relation of his sales to his quota. | The financial budget, he said, STAMFORD MEETS EVERY COOKING NEED camels, while a class of several hun- dred men and boys looked on. Until Miss Brown's advent, the Armenians had nothing except the old wooden plough in use in Biblical times. Ina Nut Shell fet in a good Maxwell—any n:odel, open or enclosed: COAL AND GAS Only one range required for two either or both of the fuels Giving Convenience Comfort and Economy Here's what you Rooms 318-319 Booth’s Block Speclal Attentlon to Beginners Trainee of Yale University Tel. 1274-13 Install the “Accurate” Saves 1-3 in Coal Bill T. E. WOODS 37 Franklin Sq. Phone 1873 e et i) Here’s Bull-dog power. Plentiful speed. . Rugged construction through and thmugh;\ Practically no vibration at any point. Whole Stor iding ease that enables you to drive all day‘ . without fatigue. Care-free, economical service. Good looks, fine finish, excellent appointments. lnsgect the good Maxwell. Ride in it. Compare i’ with others. Consider the price. Then we are content to leave the decision to you. We are pleased to extend the convenience of time payments. Ask about Maxwell’s attractive plan. " BENNETT MOTOR SALES CO. 98 1£\RCH ST. TEL. 2952 ‘The Good MAXWELL

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