New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 19, 1925, Page 2

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INVALID UTILITIES Belts Crutches Trusses Supporters Qur assortment large enough to admit of suit able selection for any de- mand. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO., | 169-171 Main §t. Men’s Suits and Overcoats AMen's $35.00 Suits e %2275 e 528.75 Menis g0 at ... D&T+00 | $34.50 ‘Men’s $50 Over- “ coats go at ' Women's Dresses $16.95 $29.95 . $34.95 i P ORSFALLS 95 99 Msvlum Street 4 Hartford. 5 to tuy our kind” ‘Women's $50 % Dresses at . MNomen's $75.00 Dresses at . “Women's $85.00 ;4 Dresses at .. COAL The SHURBERG COAL CO. 55 Franklin Street Phone 2 DR. LASCH Dentist Quartz Light For Pyorrhea 353 MAIN ST. METAL WEATHER STRIPS Install the “Accurate” Saves 1-3 in Coal Bill T:-E. WOODS 37 Franklin Sq. Phone 1873 e Ladies and Gentlemen’s Suits Dry Cleaned and Pressed for ONE DOLLAR Goods Called For and Delivered Star Cleaning Co. Office antl Works Branch: 293 Main St. The Burritt Gift Shop 72 W. Main St. Washington’s Birthday PARTY FLOWERS Complete Assortment o CHOCOLATE COVERED CHERRIES (in liquid) 69¢ per pound The Burritt Gift Shop | 72 WEST MAIN STREET (Opposite The Hotel) [ | | former THE WERALD CLASSIFIED ADS BRING RESULTS N Pleas For Reltgwus Tolerance Athew Britain Bankers’ Banguet Rev. Walter J. Lyddy and! They soon | arn when they reach Ellls Island fea are paved with gold. Phl'lp Tl'()llp of New [that all that glitters 1s not gold. Haven Make Addresses. P ade Walter J. Lyddy . Mary's church gnd Ehilip Troup, cditor of the he fifth annual banquet of the Britain « Americ stitute ¢ t 18 for by Rev. of Haven postmaster and New Haven Union, New m In- Burritt the Plainvil was toastmaster. 100 guests, the sing rief period "Trust Ther Robert alte with ny about rnat- Clem Lewis. Mr. Prior an ced New Britain chapter now member: g bank Bristol Tather 1 been in N time hn' in that tim tha has employecs t the 107 at he has he learned and al speakers and nerosit city edi- of spirit hroug! | torial writers, d out the guests were simply individuals importar only by the extent, gave and received h their tellow me all be superiors, sor of us must be subordinates, b subordinate must realize that it only by a manifest of his cJ proves his real said He pointed out that q day people go into banks to 18 vice about financial affairs. openly confessii ant of things in employes liave expe the attitude towards ese friends of the ciped to increase the value of the he explained. called attention 1 population of New these people start an homes in ots of Amer- He poin to they co- operation w “We cannot worth of bank cosmopolit n and he Tom their Europe the belief that the s Rheumatism Is A Joint Ailment New German Discovery Gives Quick Soothing Reliel For Creeky, Swollen, Painful Joints. al science has defi \' y hat rheumatism | and nerve joints internal intection prov raent is caused by such as a blind § {or an infected to 1wl 4 carricd by blood to the delicate membran hich ti ich throws off poisc lining the joint oint tisst s W kens dries up oint en about fluid causing [larged joints which |pr causir > intense, . swollen bring nerves of the a sure on the joint of rheur “lu us regard our \luung [ we would expeet him to regard us,” | he religlous tolerance were [a8 you at |in lereatures of God are the | pe nd say a short make, which | to | 15 pocket in a tooth | o fellow advised. “It makes no difference to what church or religlous denomination belongs, he is of God the What you have he n lack, what lie has you may lack.” Here the priest told of ‘his own travels in Furope among the Vo and Italians. “Although the United America i8 the only country | world for me, T did learn thay wherever a man may roam the same,” he States of the suid. “You and wormen forvign born parents are showing ir ability and expressing the tal- ents \MM\‘ natu has given them. Lot v place ourselves on & ‘we are the people s’ They are en- liberty and free- and T know that young men of nited Sta titled 10 the smme dom that we ar Address By address by Mr, Mr, Troup “When Mr. Prior requested me to speak before this chapter of the An Institute of Banking, 1 mu s that 1 knew very little American Institute, de- atever cxperience with nd banking 1 may have s is conside r a newspaper man hecause we are supposed to know everything about anything and ban had, fession ! anything about everything—and then some. 1 naturally was flattered at being invited to sit in with bankers and prospective bankers, Of course I have been called upon frequently to consult with bankers, but not ex- to take dinner with them. This is achicvement for a mere newspaper man. “Fortur ¢ Mr. Prior these pamplilets in the hope that T me inspiration in_them this occasion, One of thé Bul- Anierican Tnstitute of It is an excellent publi- cation and worth many times fts ubscription price of one dollar per » this January number T find 1lent inspirational iy rare sent me in of the resting organization. ment own- an- tomobile fnsy James D, paper very Good > more ahout payel and point of view t ven a man would hz lit possible in the space of a 1 know now, nks what constitutes a any good newspaper short article Mr. Forgan, good never had m short time nof Ler, “It m Tonal nd not gatior 89 trans- a mere accommoda- we hel \ensive statement s of th ¢ of the endc estate, plant, or have adequate secnr- and one or more good . tomer's ha Alance proper proportion to jabilities, » hanker ack on if the ghofild have note and if 1 inks a | CAP ITOL | bankers are human and are | impulses, | their heads. | just when, where and how this is o, | conquer, man a8 | article by sons and daughters of | Troup was :\.\} ble of a cen- | to | good noto “ehould roprosent, 1| wouldn't need to negotlate it, “And yet Mr, IForgan tells us that ' tible to better human influen: Sometimes, h» says, their hearts yield against the judgment of his must be on Sun- days and bank holidays. However, e does ‘After 't say, reading this discouraging Mr. Forgan on a good . 1 was glad to come across this HHM gem quoted in this pamphlet from Karden: “*‘Digcouragement is one of the same | greatest of human uuuul(& It is an | Burope predicted fhat we would fall ay | unmitigated curse.’ “1 then and there to be too down heartcd about Mr. IYorgan's article, especially since 1 discovered in another part of this pamphlet a statement from the Pyramid to the offect that ‘Every person who enters a bank is an as- And thgn I picked up this other Ittle bookiet, called Progress—issued Wy the San Francieco chapter—and 1 read there the story of Stephen Miller and his absolute failure as a book salesman, but his unprecedent- ed succeas as an instri men, until today he is telling 8 bank clerks how to sell themselves better to the banking world and the public. So I decided not to be 0 darned glum about what Mr. Forgan sl constituted a good note. “And then I picked up this Bank ssued by the Denver chapter —and 1 learned from Mr. Loash president t do any good to bs loom. Well T got a real Kkick out of thes: three booKiets, so kindly contributcd by Mr, Prior, actly what I was looking for — a topic to tulk about on this occasion that might be of interest to thosc embarking on a banking career. “Iortunately this occasion falls in between Lincoin's and Washington's birthdays and that suggested to m a theme that should be uppermost in our thoughts during this season of patrictic anniversaries no matter what our particular vocations or vocations may be. I want to tal® to you about our country and your duty to it as a citizen. “All nations and races have mads their contributions to civilization and progr The Hebrew people made 1 supreme contribution to religlo {thought. The Greek during 1 {brief climax of their vace, were pre- eminent in speculative philosophy, architecture, sculpture and the drama. The Itomans developed ary colonization to a high de- built aqueducts, roads and es and gave to us the great v of the public law, large parts of whjch still survive, ] Italians, in the middie ages and U»’ renais- sance developed ecclesiastical organis tion and all the fine arts as trib- to the splendor of the church. nd gave us a system of repre- sentative government and publie jus- tice. The Dutch in the sixteenth century made a superb struggie for > thought and free government. Irance in the eighteenth century Children-Love Castor 0il the New Way Tiioy Domit Know They Are iaking 1t—s0 Don't Tell Them. that it doesn" & it ast but i s wonderful mell and ho keep millic people 1w blame them? to tak form for t castor nk you olate, 10 ean 1 now Ll m any Iruggist { DAYS BEGINNING SUNDAY NIGHT § PEN ANDINK IMPRESSIONS OF MAR.ION DAVIES JANICE ‘MEREDITH L__O?grf%’%h /« o ACOSM)POLITAN PRODUCTION > RELEASED BY METRO-GOLDWYN N A ' WASHINGTON CROSSES 2" 'THE DELAWARE. ¢ ‘ P new meaning inspirational and encouraging | determined not | of a trust company, that| this banking business is a peculiar | one—which I'll concede is true—and | al/ but I didn't get ex-| a man! REGULAR KEITH VAUDEVILLE Children Tuesday and Wednesday taught the doctrine of individual liberty and theory of human rights that has galned wide recognition. Gertany, during the nincteenth cen- to the \L‘l\“l“l nt and spirit of natlonality, | “One would think from reading this record that there were no new flelds of progress for our America to And yet, our nation has marked at least five new milestones lalong the road of progress since it fcame into existence. First, we have proved to the world hew a great varlety of races and ereeds can be made to dwell together in unity and | be fitted for the e ise of political \fllf'(llllll he so-called wisdom of in our great democratic experiment on this side of the'acean and yet, it is literally true, that here has been erceted God's crucibleand into this melting pot have gone all the races | creeds, ideas and idcals, that for |centuries kept Europe in interm- inable Tonflict, not that they might be destroyed but that they .might be harmonized and perfected and made |truly serviccable, America asks no- body coming to our shores to forget | nls or her native Jand and any of l1ts inspiring memories, * | “Rather do we seck by fostering this reverence ‘o the motherland in {order to establish ties of lasting | fricndship between them and our own. We know very well the citi- {zen who forgets the land from which he came, has not in him the spirit to become o loyal citizen of the land to which he has come. The only thing we ask, and we demand it, is that there can be no divided alle- zlance hetween our flag .and our and any othef, cond great contribution of | ica to civilization is our accep- both in theory and practice, principle of religious tolera- “tion, As we look back on the his- tory of Kurope we can see how for- tunate ‘it was that the colonization of North America by Europeans was deferred untll after the Elizabethan period in England, the so-called re- formation in Germany, and the struggle for liberty in Holland, Asa ' result our colonists were people who in various ways, imbibed the prin- ciples of resistance to both arbitrary, | civil and ecclesiastical authority. ' Hence came the determination to cp separate church and state in| this country. And religion, at least | in theory, and to a marked extent in practice, has been tabooed from our political life. The doctrine of re- ligious liberty is written large in our constitution, and the great ptinciple of religious toleration better under- stood and more firmly established in this-country than in any other, How pitiable the temporary outbursts of intolerance seem in the face ot this record. Like all small things they will pass away. “A man once said to a friend, ‘T am a 100 per cent American, I hate the negroes, the Jews and the Cath- olica’ The friend replied ‘Then I | must be 200 per cent American, I| hate everyhody.' “Religions intolerance doesn't count among fntelligent people, If e anybody it is, because you Aon’t know them. um is a sign of | ignorance “The fourth great r-ou(rlhu(ion of | America to progress is in the do- 1 well-being and 0 where on carth, at iave personal and proper- rights been safer, has inventive | genius been more prolific, has edu- cation been more widely diffused the governmental power been dequately, freely and justly d, has wealth heen more widely distributed, has any country inspired greater loyalty' than our own. America is worthy of our Lest solicitude, hecause it is today as always the greatest land of op- nortunidy on God's footstool for people who are worth while, Ninety per cent of all the names contained in Who's Who are of peo- ple who began life in this country jn le circumstance: The great m nts of the has more exered ority of our presi- » poor boys, “The leading captains of industry came up from the very bottom. I reeently reading Elbert Hub- s ‘Little Journeys to the Homes at American Business Men® of the twelve names cited by him in this hook, everyone of them was a typleal American life story of L auan who began his career in this we PROGRAM After School 15¢ !schools of one kind or another in country from the humblest begin- ngs, “One has only to read our nows- papers carefully to note every day that America is still a land of op- portunity. During the World War our president was a man who had earned his own way through Prince. ton and his cabinet was composed of men who had come up out of our common life, When we levied upgn the brains of the nation to promote our war endeavors, we drafted Hoov- or, Schwab, Hurley, Ryan, Baruch, Vanderlip, Edison, Stettenius, Vall and a host of other worthies, all llv- ing proofs that ours is the great land of opportunity. “How puefile in {he light of this record secems the mouthings of many of our soap box orators and their ravings about the capitalistic class in this country. “Who are our capltalists? “They are the twenty-five million Amerlcans who bought thirty billion dollars worth of Liberty Bonds. “They are the eleven million Americans who have deposited eigh- teen billion dollars in our American banks. “They are the thirteen million Americans who have deposited eight and a half billions in our savings th 'hey are the ten million Ameri- cans who havé deposited seven bil- lions in our state banks. “They are the eighty-three million American holders of life insurance policies, representing fifty-four bil- lion dollars worth of insurance. “They are the seven milllon Americans with four billion dollars worth of assets in our building and loan associations. “Twenty million families live in eighteen million dwellings in this country. Fourteen million of them own their own homes—seven mil- lions, without encumbrance, “There are fifteen milllon tele- phones in this country—more than three times that in all the rest of the world combined. Six out of ten of our American families have tele- phones in their homes. “Thirty million Americans are sc- curity holders of one kind or an- other, “There are e)ghnmn million auto- mobiles in the world, and fifteen mil- lion of them are in the United States. And of these thirteen and a half million are pleasure cars. Over thirty milllon people attended this country last year and there were over one and one-half billion paid admissions to motion picture the- aters alone. “I could giye you facis and fig- ures by the hour, but all of them would not silence the spirit tuat animates the agitator who seems to get his chief joy in Knocking our country and its institutions. “It i not true that the rich are growing richer in this country. On the contrary the real fact is the rich as a rule grow poorer and the poor richer because it is literally true in America, today as always, that there is only three or four generations at most between shirt sleeves and shirt | sleeves, | “We must be boosters for America and optimists. “We must, however, not be so self satisfied as to imagine that there is WOMEN NEED SWAMP-ROOT Thousands of women have kidne and bladder trouble and never sus- peet it ! Women's complaints often prove| to be nothing else but kidney trou- ble, or the result of kidney or blad-| der disease. | If the kidneys are not in a healthy | condition, they may cause the ullltx" organs to bzcome discase: | Pain in the back, headache, loss of | ambition, nervousness, are often times symptoms of kidney trouble, | Don't delay starting treatment. | | | Dr, Kilmer's Swamp-Root, a phy- sician’s prescription, obtained at any | g store, may be just ‘he remedy needed to overcome such conditions. Get a medium or large size bottle immediately from any drug store, Howgver, 1f you wish first to test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for asample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this pa- per. no room for improvement in this country. Grave problems press upon us for solution, We are a no- torlously wasteful nation. We are a notorlously careless and thoughtless people and our political responsibill- tles rest upon us today far too ghtly, We have had a lot of democracy in this country on paper, but net so much of it in practice. The problem of establishing better relations between capital and labor, of fostering a fairer distribution of the wealth increment that all pro- duce, of establishing iIndustrial democracy and economic justice is a very vital and pressing one ,and this brings me to the fourth great contribution of America to progress -=the vesting here in the people of greater degree 11mn\(lu world has he right to govern thefnselves to a (Continued on Page 10) Mags Collegiate Lights OT every man walks into our store and says: “I want a suit with the new style points—the broad shoulders, low pockets, wide sleeves, short coats and balloon trousers” But when we bring out one of the new “Mags Collegiate Lights” with those style features skillfully tailored, most every man quickly says— “That’s Just What I Want” COLLEGIATE TOPPERS $24.50 and Up N. E. MAG & SONS Collegiate Clothiers . MAIN AT EAST MAIN Read “Famous Yells” on the Sport Page Tonight Sullivan MIKADO New Popular Victor Records out tomorrow Alabamy Bound—Fox Trot Call of e South—Fox Trot (rom “Music Box Revue Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Victor Record No, 19557. List price 75 cents Annie Dear—Fox Trot Waring’s Pennsylvanians Thea You'll Know That You're in Love—Fox Trot Dan Gregory’s Orchestra Victor Record No. 19554, List price 75 cents Serenade (from “The Student Prince in Heidelberg”) Victor Male Ch Victor Record No. 19550. List price 75 cents The Victor Company will broadcait & program Thursday evening, February 26 19 occk standard time, artists, Tmace Py 58 MASTERS vorce™ For further details Luca, baritone; and by Teti Dal Monte, soprano; Giuseppe see our advertisement in February 26 evening newspapers. Mhhmvmhwuumd:h&%c"-y Vlc trola “fiT Machine Co. of Canada, “-Ifl i Mh“-m-m’&‘ P VEEISEER S

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