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—_— ALL THE LATE BOOKS oF FICTION Can Be Found In Our CIRCULATING LIBRARY Book Dept. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO., 169-171 Main . Spring Suits and Topcoats for Men are arriving daily. They are made of the finest fab- ries and cut in the latest | styles. ‘Attractive prices | prevail. Make your selec- tion early. HORSFALLS 93-99 Xdsylum Strect Hartford. “it. pays to buy our kind” 3\ Announcement Just received a shipment of | high grade Persian Rugs and Carpets. These goods will be sold at the price better than reasonable. Just call up B.Y. Jones PHONE 285 Showroom: PATRIOTIC SPEECH ' Sure Relief FOR INDIG ' THRILLS AUDIENC (Coutinued from Tirst Page) lwe can live up to its teachings we |shall have discharged our responsi- | bilities as citizens with no apologles |to ofter.” Mr, King remarked that {1t wus Mayor A. M. Paonessa's | birthday. He didn't know how old [the mayor was but sald he wasn't | | ola enough to be referred to as the | “old gray mayor" Il then intro- | duced Mayor Paonessa, who com- | imented the® Fourth Degree for | making this a better land for the | people who live in it” and exhorted ! the ngembers to continue thelr effort in that dircction, As a tribute to the mayor, the banqueters sang *I7or He's a Jolly Good Fellow." “Debunking” History Before introducing Rev. Dr. Guil- wy, Mr. King said that someone as- serted recently that “history is the process of being ‘debunked’.” “I'his thought was seized by Rev, Dr i o agreed with the senti- | ment thus expressed and proceeded to do some “debunking” on his own |account. His subject was “Washing |ton and Lincoln and Their Part in | | American History.” | The speaker dwelt on the obstacles | Washington and Lincoln had to| estic, rather than foreign, conditions, | particularly hery on the part of those who should have helped to |nold up their hands. He sald that great men in America had always been subjected to villification and referred to the campaigns of per- | sonal abuse directed against Wash- |ington and Lincoln. In this connec | tion, he ventured the prediction that the name of Woodrow Wilson will |be revered equally with those of Washington and Lincoln after suffi- clent time has elapsed for the peo- | ple to assay him at his true worth. | Rev. Dr. Guilday referred to the strong religious Impulses which moved Washington and Lincoln and of their burning faith in God and His guidance of the world's greatest | democracy. Stressing this point, Le declared “the man is a traitor to his country who trics to interfer | with the progress of Christiani & Dr. Guilday's Address In part, Rev. Dr. Guilday spoke follows: | “It 1s a remarkable and thou | provoking fact that the three of our greatest presidents— Washington, Lincoln and Wilson, | | span almost two centuries our | Tistory from early colonial times to | the present day. When W lives of was born on February Georgia, the last of the | had not been settled by Oglethorpe. | Washington was a man of 43 when | American war of independence from G Britain began, and was 7 when he took the oath of officc in New York city on April 30, 1751, first president of the United | than 10 veave after 14 ent in- 80 in now States, ave Wask 1 | 1799, the seco of the United States, / coln, was born on I"ebr and while Lincoln was the organization of 1 known as the republic ir 1856, there was born 1her 28, of that year, the b terity will undoubted | third greatest presider tion, Woodrow Wilson was a boy of nine when th shed over the wire that Lincoln had been assassinated and that his murder John Wiikes Booth, had fled to V | ginta. When Wilson died or vuary 3, 1924, 148 ¥ our day from the Decla dependence, “We are still too close to the feelings of the last decade to esti mata Wilson in his full stature | our third greatest war pre |t is n practically | Washimgton's | will one day bhe sought I of Wil ingularly in the The threr like in many T 1 eareer son 385 Commonwealth A\vel\ue| ) face DR. LASCH Dentist Quartz Light For Pyorrhca 353 MAIN ST, The SHURBERG COAL CO. 55 Franklin Street Phone 2250. PURE — RICH CLEAN—{ MILK One of the best ways to avoid | catchiug serfous flls in your home | is having us supply our PASTEURIZED & CLARITIED MILK | for raw muk is never really pure | and it is often the source of ty- phoid, intestinal troubles and other fllness. Try OUR MILK. United Milk Co. proble ind to master ms t instine teok was precis same anger still the reward the fetime | what is s eived during their people has a curious similar the Wa se mirrors of tra { . | 50 | 50 gt | sented ingt Queen r Mal Frank E. Goodwir 49 Woodland Street New Britain Phone 1610 Ejycsight Specialist MAIN ST. Tel. 1905 | we | and t | tor the \ overcomie, obstacles created by dom- |§ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1925, ESTION “United States of America was dig- 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief REV, PETER GUILDAY, Ph.D. another half a century away from Wilson's d sible to ington and Linco! “It is not only not onl, the truly ms and heart separat whicl and Lincoln above all who have ever [porthern birth hid been quietly re- name the $0 in glor in but it is ¢ future, 1 he stability s follow eternity may cn road tha would require a levelop properly terc can only s to an toueh 1 of the of ts people, tha them along the t by the wayside study their lies ahead. In. in their I display of all those fr gnificent facuities h, it would be impos- him from Wash- | roism, of mind i set Washington of their vi t filt lectu rine state and ire Amer on of the re an, the t we who athway to | now directions | judgments to itself to Ul its inherent fa- audicnee he like high lights canvas, without, however, this. I of point which will help that whole. unde nd us view the sul > Wa ect from this | on nor 1s there ever any doubt as to the outcon which they were in-chief the From the first Yorktown six years later, from Fort | i five Sumter to Appor e of the war in the commanders- American nmat were, 1 is t foreboding W ishington prople xington to rue, day and cruel )d Lincoin he outcome neither stood a in doubt der the armic moment “Roth 1 public. anim s, and vile ¢ generals and officers of th who werr There w fightin ranks of the Bo isities, ad practically 5 Whic 1 met with 1rges on the g for fought suspic t of 1r armies the same \s treachery in the the American army of 1 in the Union Waslington his entire people \n people, sear Philadelphia onps the ranks was ronstituting Iy heartily in artic the deva Har me ted 1y t tropolis of | strong Grorge to Tritish empire 1 ¢ na 1 1 campaigns they mes which | n onr lis- ad pitted en they campol, as for ad 1 Stat constructed actuality gn stat n ¢ {tial campaign of of winter lters out 186 3 ALt Va enty all out while miles away but to hattle of rktown, um- , to un- ty of hut the ed thous- {8 rious | our | critical 2 | With the Smile,” A as that his | was placed at Richmond. {oath election meant the disruption of the Union, The disruption began at once, A few weeks after the election South (Carolina on December 20, 1860, de- “lared in & solemn session of its leg- slature that the unfon now subsist- ng betwoen South Carolina and the sther states, under the name of the solved., By February 4 1861, six states had Joined in the Confederate States of America, with Jefferson Davis as president, and the capital On Pebe ruary 28, Texas joined. There were frantic attempts by the northern and southern leaders to reach a com- promise, and hope was held out that when Lincoln. was inaugurated on March 4, 1861, he would announce a policy of conclliation. After the was ad .nistered to him by Chiet Justice Roger Taney, the first Catholic to obtain that exalted stu- tion, Lincoln asserted his poliey— the union of the United Btates was perpetual; secession was fmpossiblc. Three agents of the Confederacy were in Washington consulting with the government, unofficlally, asking for recognition of the independence of the south. TLincoln refused of course to receive them and their ef- forts were vain. The Union was to be preserved, and from that moment the Civil War was more, than a pos- sibility, Ifort Sumter was fired on just before dawn on April 12 1861, and the United States flag was haul- cd down as a sign of surinder. “I do not know how many of you have stood on the ramparts of thc old Battery at Charleston with your cyes gazing upon that mass of ma- sonry out in the harbour where the most awful conflict the world had seen up to that time began. The four years which followed beggar all description. I shall not jattempt it. But what should be stressed 1s this—again the leader |ehosen by Divine Providence to save the nation’s life found that the wea- | pon for defense in his hands was a broken rced. We know now better |than our fathers how President Bu- {chanan and Secretary Floyd had |treacherously designed the coming |conflict. Nearly all the trained offi- |cers of the army belonged to southi- ern states and they resigned as fast as those state seceded.' Officers of and when Lincoln began to | measure his own forces, he was met }\\\Hl blank dismay. ‘Confusion, cor- ruption, and complications were un avoidable, and caused the president unutterable anxiety and distress. 1g- jnorance and zeal often provoked more trouble than could be corrected | |and jealousy, rivalry and partisan- | {ship made matters worse | J'rom the disaster at Bull Run, on | July 18 1861, to the disaster almost | moved, < |She n. 10 for | per- more | llan, it was a harrowing time for the |commander-in-chief of the army {and navy of the United Statcs. Had Gettysburg fallen in July 1563, and | had Lee's plan to make Philadelphia |the capital of the new nation the |Confederacy was determined to carve lout of the United States succeeded, | the war would have been won, and |union would have passed forcver. | After Gettysburg, it was but a mat- ter of wearing down the south, and this was accomplished by Grant and | Lee's surrender at Ap- “vvm'\lkn\, on April 9, 1865 ended 1) war. Six days later Lincoln lay dea. in Washington with an assassir bullet in his brain. | | “Had Abraham Lincoln had the | | good fortune to remain in the presi- ¢ after the surrender of Lee, fa no doubt that he would { have carried out a reconstruction in | conformity to the high-minded and lofty purposes which had carried | him through the war, Washington's cight years in the presidency (1789- ) gave that matchless leader | the opportunity he needed to weld | the nation together. «After Lincoln's h, the country had no great leader until Grant hecame president in 1869, During those few years, the harm was done — a harm it is largely forgotten by the influ- cnce of the Spanish-American war and the Great World war, but not wholly so, if indeed, it ever will be forgotten. I have now sketeh Jy the public life of thes | true 1 very brief- two in- ble leaders - and Lipcoln. Let me that that public life cight years of the among the powers What were the lessons both presi- ¢ from the struggle of were the al lead- was, first of this out- standing factor in their lives — war to them ver for a moment an end in 3 | towards a greater good; and | greater good was the indcpend and the unity of the on, in the ordinary much better covers ninety- place world nati dents took which they 2 There was n jtse solcly a way, was a man than tary; John Crow James Tynan, P, J. Riley, Dr, H, I, Lasch, J. ¥, Ryan, J. J. Welch. The reception committee was com- posed of James Hy Curtin, chairman; Joseph Ryan, Willlam O'Brien, John L. Ross, George H. Shine, Philip J. Smith, ‘George W, Sullivan, Thomas J. Smith, Thomas A, Tarrant, W. C. Wall, J. L. Ward, . Zimmerman, John J, Walsh, Dr, Frank A, Good- win, Edward Hayes, E. P. Burns, Dr, H. T. Bray, Bernard 13, Doyle, John Cooney, A. J. Coholan, 'Thomas Cranley, Joha Conlin, G, M, Coholan, Dr. B, J. Dray, Thomas Devine, 13, J. Wagner, Philip 'agan,R. A, Grisé, J. M. Hallinan, Joseph M. Halloran, H. C. Hart, Charles Hayden, Dr. J. L. Kelly, M. H. Kenny, George I% Leghorn, John Leeney, Steven H, Lynch, Dr, Henry Martin, P. C. Me- Intyre, B. A, Moore, Dr. I'rank Me- Guire, 1. J, Mawe, W. J. Mulvihill, A, €. Malong, ddward McCarthy, John F, McGrail, Dr. W. T. Morrisey, Frederick Malona, John J. McCabe, James McCabe, John O'Nell, John C. O'Brien, Dr. D. W. O'Connell, BIG STOCK DIVIDEND Los Angeles, Feb, 2 of an 80 per cent stock dividend was announced last night by officials of the Union Oil Assoclates following the annual stockholders meeting to- day of the Union Oil Co., of Califor- nia and the Jatter of which is holding company for the former. Prench scientists have invented a radio receiving set that can be car- ried in an umbrella. caused by the tardiness of McClel- | The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century. The box bears this signature G 2pore Price 80c. edu Lincoln. The former came from a line of Virginia aristocrats; the lat- | of hard . But the wos! ter was a product ploneer life of the middic in both, there is the al | factor that knew, hazy, theoretical wa is not a stat life, but something fought for, and whe for again and again. Both history of government too led into the historic Dol they not in tha won, | political must be ought w the 1 he minating | | anacea | government. has its strength ngth of the popuiar voice; for all Democr 1 but it stre has also herent in Both men | a consclousness of our nation, Both honest, Ais | otic, dig the weaknees that by the were filled with the of were masses upright patri strong. sincere, terested erificing, modest and T us religious belonged t you of what church Lin- member. But both taught as well as l\(-HY word, that if among the od, 1gious. exactly Wa nomination fewer fust what sh- ington could tell oln wa by their exampl spoken and written | America is to remain nations of the futur Lasis for its superstructure | must not ccted, and basis is religio During th ment was furnis Serenaders,”. ase st which be ba 1 by 1na Krawitz, solo- ist. The evening was conc! dancing, music hanalian Bac orchestra M s master of ¢ { mont | menta congister ¢ James M. P. Clerkin, comm secre chairman; hete is one | An Illustration of a Fluoroscopie The Victor Health Office at 85 Washington Street, Hartford, Conn. | Entire Building, Just Behind the State Capitol and Known as the| 01d Brainard Mansion, 85 Washington Street, Devoted —Declaration | nion Oil Associates, the | READJUSTMENT OF ALL SCHOOL COURSES PLANNED That Present Currlculum Is Crowded 1s Opinion of Educators at Session,* Cincinnatl, Ieb, 26.—The problem sadjusting the public school cur- riculum, an issue paramount in the was dis- cussed at.a general session of the superintendence department conven- of field of publie education, tlon today. That the curriculum is overcrowd- od, too varied and fn need of a thor« ough readjustment, if not a radical reconstruction on entirely different principles than those on which it has boen based during the last 26 years, is the opinion of most educators, Dr. . ¢, Broome, supertntendent ~ of Philadelphia |schools and chalrman of the commigsion of the currieulum, sald chool people are ready for an attack on the problem,” he added, “provided proper leaderehip and as- sistance can be glven, Isolated but successful attempts at curriculum re- vision have Leen made In several cities and then work of the curri- culum commiesion during the last year has been to collect and analyze these studies, The problem of reworking the eurriculum is too large for a single agency and there must be concerted offort by the proper agencies in the formulatjon of new courses of study, Dr. C. H, Judd, director of the school of education of the University of Chicago, aaserted. “Conservatism which comes from tenaclty to estab- lish customs or from commerclal sources on whom the vevision of the curriculum will work & disadvantage must be overcome by organized edu- cational forces,” he sald. | HELD FOR DISTURBANCE Carl Tinti of €9 Pearl atreot and Bdward Willlams of 66 Bassett street “were arrcsted Jast- night by Tollceman Patrick J. O'Mara on re- quest of the state police, who said that the two men were wanted on charges of breach of the peace al- Jeged to have been committeed at a Wethersfield dance hall, The men wore turned over to the state police and taken to Wetherafield. AN IMPORTANT EVENT Two World-Famous Victor Artists will broadcast THURSDAY EVE- NING and can be heard at our store. OVER THE RADIO TOTI DOL MONTE 5 will sing Rigoletto—Caro nome Lucia Di Lammermoor—Mad Scene Barbiere di Siviglia Marietta Don Carlos and others COME HEAR THEM O IN! GIUSEPPE DE LUCA will sing Barbiere di Siviglia— Largo al factotum and others IT’S A TREAT HEAR THEM ON THE ER THE RADIO What Is Your Choice? A RADIO or the VICTROLA-RADIO COMBINATION? We Have Them Both. 60w | \ HENRY MORANS & SON 365 MAIN STREET If It Is Anything in Music You Can Get It At Morans’ Music Store VICTROLA OPP. MYRTLE y Examination as has so ormerly been the case. While there I8 no sensation of the high voltage current golng through to This Coming Form of Treatment. The reason a great many people c: ‘ng first one trealment, then another obedy ever found the real cause of he dark against the hidden forces of disea X-Itay s one velous instrument lis, because finding the cause of dise t the X-Ray it 18 virtuaily impossible to loc All authorities agree that ) ven to mankind. It isa m ns an ills and silments. The tass of people A o1 he t “Ray i e opening Mhe Vie Hartf Wage-cariagr cat have the benefit of an X-Ray re just beginning to re T tinue to suffer year after year, try nd never gefting any disease. They are struggling i of the greatest blessings eve the alleviation of huma is half the battle. W the exact cause of m e what a wonderful in ey have thought of i 1th Office’s lar - ! even th esamination. X-Ray Examination as Made by | better, 18 that rich man's | Light, | The Madical Director of the Victor | Health' Office, a physician of recog< nizgd standing and abllity, for the past 25 years in Hartford, announces the opening of his large Electro-The- rapy Institute, occupying”the entire bullding at 85 Washington Street, Hartford, Conn. The building for- merly known as the old Bralna»d Mansion, has been undergoing altera tions tor several months, arranging to accommodate an equipment of the latest inventlons of Electro~Therapy, and a visit through the institution will be a surprise to thote who are not familiar with what medical scienca has been doing during the late war and immedlately prior there- to in inventions to treat chronic dis- & ‘The army hospitals of both Europe and America have been able | to accomplish results heretofore un- thought of through this coming form >f treatment. Physiclans of this community are | cordially invited to call on The Victor Health Office and inspect this nstitu- tion and to bring any of their cases for epecial attentlon without charge. During the next seven days The Victor Health Oftice offers®consuita- tion, advice and examination, includ- ing & fluoroscopic X-Ray examinutiin and blood prossure test for only §3.00 and if the treatment Is started at once the charge for the complete ex- amination is but $1.00. During this offer The Victor Health Oifice is ar- ranging ‘terms for treatment 0 low that any discouraged woman or man in this aity or vicinity ehould be able to have the benefit of these wouder- tul_inventions of medical science. The Victor Health Office obfect In making this offer is to give every sufferer a chance to know what can | be done with the modern Electro- Medical Sy or_ her own partfeular case The examination is the most fm- portant part of the proceeding when | & sick person calls at The Victor Health Oftice. While the cost during this special offer Is reduced to almost nothing, it I8 as accurate &s if the | patient had paid the regular exumins ation charges in full. The most delicate man, woman or child need have no fear either of the X-Ray or | of the electrical treatment ,as they are harmless, painiess aud safe in the hands of experts. Modern electrical treatments have no comparison with the old crude ’clee!rlc batteries and shocking cur- gents. At this institution the cure rent that lights homes and runs rect cars 18 used and is harnessed to the wonderful machines by which | every jar and jerk is removed and it n | is then sent through the body as soft- 1y, smoothly and pleasantly a! a ray r| of sunshine, Such treatments muy be | given as the High Frequency D'Af- sonval, Diathermic, Oudin, Tesla, Faradic, Sinousoidal, Auto Condensa= tlon and other currents: also Vibra- -|tory treatment. Thepmo - Llectric Ozone inhalatioh, medicated y | inhalation in eddition to many other ¢ | treatments, the cost of which 18 so I moderate that it is no lunger the em,of Treatment in his | privilege of the rich only, often the body, the patient may Dbecoimne aware of the force in his system by the doctor touching him and drawing out a string of sparks from any part of the body—or even illuminating an electric globe while the patient holds the globe fn his hands—All the time the patient feels no dlscomfort. The effects of electrical treatments are often marvelously rapld. ~Relief is often felt in ope or more treat- ments. The expensive and elaborath elece tric equipment, as well as careful dlagnosis, the extreme care in gecur- ing pure drugs make The Victor Health Office’s treatment more ex- pensive than ordinary treatments, yet owing to the Jarge numbers of pa- tients treated it is possible to place the price of treatments within the reach of all. 1f, in our Medical Director's opine 1dn, your cace cannot be greatly bene- fited, you will be told so and not & penny of your money will be accept- ed for treatments. However, many, cases pronounced incurable under old methoda, may be quickly benefited by new methods. A visit to this Institute of Electro- Therapy is a revelation to the sick, who #ee innumerable scientific ape paratus which are no more astonish- ing to them than they have been to electrical experts who have made in¢ spectlon and pronounced them mare velous, Among the ailments treated by The Victor~ Health Office are anemia, asthma, biliousness, bladder and blosd troubles, bronchitis, bowel trouble, catarrh, cohstipa« tion, ear troubles, dyspeps female troubles, gastritis, hendaches, heartburn, {ntestinal trou-s bles, insomnia, kidney trouble, liver complaints, nervous debility, hem- morholds, or plles, Psorlasis, rectal troubles, rheumatism, stomach trous bie and other affections of women. Many men and women today are going through life ufering from 80] deep-seated chronic ailment. They realize the seriousness of their condition, but are seemingly helplesa as to what they should do. They have tried doctor after doctor, th(z and that treatment, hospitals, health res sorts and sanitariums without bemefit. They become, discouraged and lose hope of ever recovering their health again. Many times they have been troated for the wrong aliment. Th ordinary physical diagnosis may ha falled to reveal the real troubles, tharefore the important need of the X- with, its marvelous power of making it poseble to sctually SEE into and through the body, the doc- tor can often getect &t once many couditions that by old methods were impossible. The Victor Health Oftice has o0 of the best Ray equipments to bé had and never falls to use this won help where they deem same. in making thelr examinat rough in every way. ! The office hours announced are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Frie day from 10 2. m. to 4 p. m: Wedne day and Satmday 10 a m th 8 p. Ing and Sunday 10 a. m. t 2 p. 1 o B = S P R T TR e M