New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 28, 1925, Page 4

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manager of the “Campus”, the week. ly paper of Middlebury college, Mr, [Egan, who graduated from New | Britain high school in 1 s al * SHIP CAPTURERD s = > * ATNOWICKTS DEATH. 1§ NOT YET HERE Fad Supply Valued at Fully‘ it LR Gary, Ind., Police Without Clue “Gloomy Dean” Discusses Mor- * | Three Men Arrested in New York as| : | f f " $130,000 on Board enepetetun stoor Tt e, 10 Munderers Either | tality, Novels, Bivth Control — —_— A ey | bed of Valuable Cargos, New York, April 28.~~The two ! A Gary, Ind, April : charred iy NE COHN masted French auxlliary schooner | ' SER CACE ‘:mj_T"[h v'f',"' and mutilated body of a young wom- (NEA Service Writer) Mousmee, carrying liquor valued at | 0.+ alued at $38,000, together|an found alongside a road near here | New York, April 28.-<The gt O ey | With two motor trucks, early Mon- | 5 whole | $150,000, and a motor boat Which |y o norning, became known this Sunday still remained unidentified i | world has come to known him as | was found near it, were brought into T o et ieaasn morning with the ar of three @ Chesterton morgue today despite '(he “gloomy dean of St. Paul's Ca- | YD) SEON L LS CORSE) men' cHars th suspicion of the cc effort de ¢ Rt v SO Ty harged with suspicion of the continued efforts to identify it and ¢neqyal, London.” he selzures 20 es o ST discover the mutderer, TR e the melsures 20 miles ol S ASSUry ISy |y iiougn | police)wers rellctantitol eaifs i it B R D BRthe ey, WHliam alph Enge, Park, N. J., lato last n Aul‘ . discuns the Koldup, it was learned| J8TY Officers did not credit re- | “moat brillfant snd liberdl mind {n Ten men found aboard the Mous- | by o) ais 1 revolvers to POrts that the girl was a victim of the Church of England," *appears mosiandteunmmenitountienitismos vompelithaleiiot both trucks gangster warfare, and sought tp far gloomier in outward aspect than r rat were aced under guard. o il M ““(M“]_u incladine r a touring car. in which they |identify her from the always Increas. | P 'nWard thought. He is gloomy RS M . I 1‘ o ‘ I pe | Vere taken to Long Island CHY. |ing list of missing girls as a scientist is gloomy, which is to ptain Maurice Lafitte, Wil Dbe | wporo they wors thrown out with . #ay that he is skeptical and inclined eharged w‘\l‘m{?llt.\.r\lw,\ to land StinaatEeD Dr. A, O. Dobbins of Valpariso, |to challenge the doctrines of come :“yxinr;\ L '\rv];?;l‘: Ly he prisoners are Canice coroner of Parter county, and his as- | placency. , of Astoria, L. 1., and Louis Mor- 'sista r, . 0. Seipe 3 T'he joy of church liberals and the . 2 tact with the schooner. ) pan AR pand Lt LT Dods o R D s ol i REV. WILLIAM RALPH INGE i e R e e A rd fofIola] and Hugh De Marehe, 21, 0f Chesterton today to perform an palr of conservatives, he admits 16 cap coast gua A e e that in America he might easily | #ald, marked the first time a foreign e SR autopsy as 4 part of the coroner's ey the fate of a heretic. could quite as easily be seen Intelli- th !lm‘rl‘wr ‘;u' ‘1“ ;H“‘; rxtj:j( T ¢| POISON LIQUOR SUSPECTED. 1) o :l;h‘.\’ 1; lms\s::”LH n::rksl“i;\f A shy, shabby man s the “gloomy gently loglcal, It skeptical. Mousmee was anchored of 2 idgeport, A 28.—Police are jgentification, {dean His ¥dlack traveling sult| “Social ostracization” is his solu- Bt tTe SeLTi Ry it ner e 5 investigating t death of a man| The girl's nge was placcd as in the M.m\‘-‘l the effects of long wear. It | tion for persons who figure in such St et E 1 o Hoavy suary e 241 River stroet | neighberhood of 20. had taken on a mirror-like sheen in | scandals as the recent Dennistoun | Coast guard ofticers eald that the about midni onday by Dr. A. J.| Whether approaching maternity “°Me sections and a dulled, graying | case. Mot it ed Tt OMtoteE TTe kerak of t emergency hospital, might huve O R TRD [ fn others. The deep lines of his| “They deserve nothing less than A A el e e S e 1 q the man as glaying, Dr. Robbins sald he could ' and the unruly nature of his | complete ostracization,” he says, “I a Brilish crew. At that time | Geo 2. B 50, of the same ad- |not tell. Judging from the condition 'iT suggest an unkemptness. His | would not have then admitted to the of llquor were found in | dres eved by polic of bits of oreans that had failed of timidity fs accentuated by a slight company of decent men and women. | reloased shortly | the man died from the eff £ dostruction in the gasoline fire kin. deafness, which causes him to stand | “It would be useless to deny that | o under an §8.. | Poison liquor. dled by thoss who disposed of the With head slightly bowed that he | such people and such forces are at| 009 bond. | G body, he said, the young woman MAY better concentrate, work in grades of English society— | No resista was offered t} | COMPANY 1 MAKE might previously have been a moth- His mouth, thin-lipped, droops in | the ‘smart set’ 1 think they are ard when the Mousmee was Major Reginald Stowe of Middle- er or might ¢ been approaching /& smile, self sarcastic, half good- called. They are not English society, | and the motor bost cap- . commander of the third Lat- that state, although a positive state- humored. His eyes are brooding, | however, but by-products of an age tured , inspe b/ vany 1 at the ment was impossible, even a bit sad. vitiated by immoral novels.” | it L rm nig! d compli- | Unless some distinctive body mark- | He talked of sex-literature, the “And what is your opinion of the | T. Squire ing was found, Dr. Dobbins said he | igures in the Dennistoun case, birth | so-called sex novels?" he was asked, expected the spectacles found near | control, science, the stage, “miracle | “They are doing no end of damage. | ; 2 ——— the body to prove possibly the best | healing” and eugenics in a manner | These books make immoral uses of Mrs Roger W. Egan of 50 Court READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED clew in seeking identification of the | that would probably secm gloomy 10 | the word love propagate the idea | stree(, has been elected advertising ADS FOR YOUR WANTS girl and her destroyers, |a confirmed aptimist, but which | that the marriage laws can instantly ¥. MILTON EGAN HONORED E. Milton Egan, son of Mr. and | Reduces Prices Effective Midnight, April 25th Hudson Super-Six Coach $1250 Was $1345 Fi-- Pass. Sedan $1695 Was $1795 Seven-Pass. Sedan $1795 Was $1895 All Prices Freight and Tax Extra This is in line with the Hudson’s policy of always giving the world’s greatest value orld’s Greatest Buy Everyone Says It—Sales Prove It | nosis. We must substitute sense and | man, The program was announced be set at naught when the fancy of Cl" S L d 4 & man or woman turns to someone T Ys urch St. Lady Another Booster “The young woman of the time- | what we call the flapper. Is she a N bit worse than her grandmother?" or = s was asked, “I don't know her grandmother," was the witty response. “But the girls are steadying down. There was a time after war when T could not have said exactly that.” With the modern blologists Dean Inge fears that the more intelligent geople are having too few children Neat T 1A b0 siye dR vtk ae and many ill-fitted persons are hay- ( Just couldn’t get around tho house ing too many. g to do it. “We are breeding from the : 4 of used tom and dying off at the top, 0 up or down stairs was mpossiblv, unless I had help. If T sat in a chair for any length of time I would be- come so stiff in the knees that I had to gradually pull myself up, and then stand for awhile to got the kinks out, Four different times last aspirin _and lniments without a bit of rellef and finally one of his pithy epigrams. after sceing so many New Britaln But he hesitates on the suestion of people getting wonderful benefit birth control. ‘That there should be x v R W " from the use of Nox-Ri-Tis I finally some form of regulation, he earnest- : A bought a treatment and to say the Iy believes, but the spreading of ] g ‘ 4 ) results I obtained were remarkable birth control knowledge Is “danger- |RE e 'l would be putting it mild. Why I feel ous for those who would use it out- like & person eighteen years old and slde of wedlock,” he adds. “I have lived In New Britain over | I can run up and down stairs as good He expressed surprise that legls- | thirty-seven years and most every|as any one. The stiffness and pains latures of various states in America | one knows how I have suffered for [ have left so I get a good night's should have ruled against the teach- | the past 2 years with pretty near all | sleep and never get tired. Another ing of evolution. forms of Rheumatism," states Mrs.|thing my heart doesn't” palpitate or “The more serious effects will be | Benjamin Olson, 28 Church street. | flutter as it use to, 1 can't recom- | on the legislators,” he observed with | “I had pains and stiffness in my|mend Nox-Ri-Tis too highly." his wry smile. “T should say that be- [ arms, legs, back and knees, that gave | Call at Miller-Hanson, 80 Church tween Darwin and the legislators, | me agony every time I moved|street, and have Nox-Ri-Tis fully ex- | the latter are the more dangerous.” | around. I couldn't steep at night with | plained to you by a representative He deplores the tendency to chal-|the pain and I couldn't walk, and to| from the laboratories, lenge sclentific discoveries. —————— The attitude of many clegymen | and churches in going in for “divine | the program last year. He s mow healing” 1s seen by Dean Inge as a teaching at Storrs, Conn. In thé | “dangerous return to old supersti- | 4 | afternoon there is also a recital by tion: , Mr, and Mrs. Durieux, of New York, “There seems to be an extraordi- | M I | collist and planist. The third night nary revival of superstitions that| I ARd" ¢ Louis Stallings will give a full re- had been thought discarded. Occult- |~ © = =~ e “5% | eital program assisted by Mr. and fsm, magle, spiritualism and &0 | Mrs, Durieux. Miss Stallings broad- | forth, enjoy a popularity which 50} d s . d[ | casted from WEAF New Year's years ago would have been fl\ought.over 200 TleetS UhSCTll)fi Or'|\|x!|t. when McCormick sang after- impossible. Therlfl have l.r-;»n thoze G ) 5 | wards, in the church who have given en- M g | The fourth afternoon there will couragement to the craze for mira- at uaramors eeun | be a band of nine young men who cle mongering in the treatment of ———— | play twenty-three different instru- the sick. | NS 4| ments. The program includes & “Much mischief can be done| At a meeting of guarantors lasti o oop o 0 cartet, This will be one through the exploiting of partially evening more than 200 tickets were o¢ he popular programs, playing submerged habits and superstitions | supscribed for the 1025 Chautauqua everything from jazz to grand whlclh (;i\l[}z:‘tir:: h(:snt h:‘lr‘rhg?":: | season which opens in New Britain | opera. They are on for a prelude adic: s a prope y | oMy es at ni N 3 he | 3 v of ) psychologist and men skilled in diag- | Rackliffe was chosen general chair- | yoqpury, | 0 n Tae fifth afternoon will present knom},.,]g? for ignorance and emo- | as follows: For the opening rm"_\n-. Visocchi, the accordion player, tionalism.” | there will be a quintet of _voun;:“ wWith Miss Werno, in a program of “And what of civillzation in gen- | women, known as “The Versalile| . apacter readings and music. That eraliwas the next qlesion. | Ladles' Quintet.” This corapany Will | pight there will be a play entitied “Civilization s not yet here” | give ensemble singing in costume, | wrpe Next Best Man.” With this “gloomy” Tesponse the |but their main stunts will be novel-| “Tuo jast atternoon will be the \ntecyleviended, [ties such as playing on the 8aW, | jupjor demonstration, and. for the Dean Inge has come on his second | pjanologues, xylophone, —ukulele, | jjigren’s entertainment Tom Cor- trip to America to give a series of | hanjo and other instruments. Popu- | wino from Chicago will fimitate lectures at Yale and Johns-Hopkins | jay songs will he thrown on a screen { everything hn:!l;'(nzhle. Tho a8t universities. | and there wifl he 16 minutes singing | pight there will be a full company A | by the audionce, . | of Hawalians giving their delighttul Clty -lterns [EArghun H BEOSEE Welchman | pysic with special scenery and light- | who was brought up in Lloyd|jnc effects ) George's home town, will speak o | ., gunday the Saturday company Tomorrow .night at 8 p'clock, Bt |“Uncrowned Kings or What America | ;) stay 0\'t;l‘ and give & program Elmo lodge, Knights of Pythias, will | Means to Me.” T enis with Tnalaay exemplify the rank of esqnire on &| The second afternoon there will| ) class of elght eandidates. A smoker | be a lecture “Are You An Ameri- A will follow. | can?” and open forum by Carlton BECOMES U. §. CITIZEN Victrolas, Planos, Radio at Morans. | Chamberlayne of Schenectady, N. Y.| Miami, Florida, April 28.—The —advt. | For the evening program an all pro- daughter of William Jennings Bryan Judgment for the defendant to|fessional New York cast 1n Janc| was naturalized as a citizen of the recover costs was rendered by Jus-| Cowl's great play, “Smilin’ Thru" |United States here yesterday. She tice Willlam F. Mangan in city court | will play. {is Mrs. Reginald Owen, wife of yesterday afternoon in the action of | 'The third afternoon will consist of | Major Owen, a British subfect, and Joe Sankoski agalnst Stanislaus|the superintendent’s lecture, and the |lost her citizenship when she mar- Kulas, George W. Kleft represented | superintendent this year will proba- |ried the major several years before the defendant. bly be Mr, Denlinger, who conducted illm world war. THREE SMART, NEW EVENING GOWNS The unique embroidery on the frock at the left is done in blue and black silk with a spangle bead interwoven. In the center is adistinctive evening gmmofgn\d .]uco,tnmmul | with gold beads. Two long graceful trains fall from the \lflvlst. At t]m_n_xht is one of the loveliest of summer evening gowns. It is made of flesh chiffon over a'lining of silver cloth A soft blue chiffon forms-the interesting neck and narrow front panel. MINSTREL and DANCE HONEYMAN’S AUTO SALES CO. 139 Arch Street AUSPICES YOUNG WOMEN'S HEBREW ASSOCIATION WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 29th AT THE Y. W. C. A, HUNGERFORD COURT Interlocntor—~DAVID L. NAIR CURTAIN RISES 8:15 Endmen—SAMUEL SABLOTSKY, (Daylight Saving Time) JACK PUITERMAN ADMISSION §1.00 S — N — | 1 |

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