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win the favor of God by blowing first hot, then cold. He challenges {us to blow elther hot or cold, Thos MISS PANKHURST | who compromise arc really on the side of the encmy, If we are for Him at all we are for Him very | clearly and \very stron, There is |no filekering of the light Gives Her Views on Fundamep: |5 beeve rods ot falists and Modernists 18 the only thing for a child of Gad e c—— ’ that the |to consider, “When all this controversy is set- wha | 11ed: and the separation of the true and the untrue takes place, then the advertised | quty of the church will be glorious ! #s the principal speaker at the con- [cne, it will be a responsible one, vention of the Gospel Missionary so. [ \What meseage shall we then have (o | clety, now in sesslon at the People's [ give to the world? | church, made her first appearance | «ywwe have today to ghe a very yesterday afternoon. Together with : + . | particular emphusis 1o the truth that u de Torinoff, she | Miss has been Christabel Pankhurst, for rome the Baroness Le outhard, who ls serving as hoa: fyy o vory door, we can no longer be ' | i’ ‘,J")“ reputation that had come |S11eNt on the subject, We must not ' Rlisa et i ihurst as .a |81UF It over. We must put it over | speaker was amply sustained. She | With the emphasis that ~ve would if | we sald, ‘'The housc is on fire’." I a meniber of the British bar, holdiug the degree of L. L. B, and | The Baroness rendered three se- naturally speaks in a logical and |lections during the afternoon ses- forcutul manner. A large andience |sion. She hias a elear well-modulat- | Broeted her ag she spoke on the sub- [ ed voice, showing evidence of great Joct, “The Lsscnptinl Message.” She | training, | i in par i at the afternoon Julia Hawxhurst Other speakers shall long re- Alllong session were Mrs, that am sure When e first | | been in service oter ovs that he has but a short time F he went to Africa, xhe was } he is making the best of it or! <hiould say, the worst vhite woman ever seen in her ter- “This i= o jmportant time in the yitory, Th had no house to live history of America. Today, one of |in at the time of her arrival, but your great denominations, the Pres- | ,ow a large, Christian settiement is byteria in session, and a great | pound there, with a church having a | controversy fs on hetween the fun- |y onerehin larger than the mother | gamenraliats and the modsrnisth, | yrey, 10se who believe In the Tible an : oge whofuallerimthal Bl | At the evening session the praise | W”“‘ m"l‘ ha e service was Ied by Rev. €. A. Af- DELULE e wood, a retnrned missionary. L. H modernists, hut 1 de not like the |Taylor. treasurer of the G. M, & pame. We are reaily the modern. [Presided at a zymposium in which three voung ladies took part, Miss Fanny Knowles speaking on the sub- | looking for and hasten- he day when He shal ists who a inz toward put an end to all controversy. There ject, “Seeing” Mrs, Helen Tuttle, will be no more modernism then. | “Telieving” and Miss Edith Brooks, Vill there? We 1 the eve of faith | “Doing.” After the symposium Mrs. can see this day approaching Merwin Tuttle ang effectively The god of the Modernists can| Mrs, Knapp gave some glimpses t the world what it necds|or the field which so stirred the | taday, cannot give the human heart | jearts of the congregation that they at it needy today, vesterday and | spontaneously sang the Doxology. At er. There are many virtuous, | hig point In the service a surprise men, but the world, the flesh | was sprung upon Miss Tankhurst and the devil are too strong for any {and the Baroness, Rert Armstrong man to conquer in himself. | was called to the platform and ng away is all forctold in | quested to lead the audience in sing- d if we read the letters |ing an original song written by Pas- churches, given In Revela-ftor Brooks put to thne of a second and third pters, we | gamiliar hymn, Tn nn ref- can pretty well see the -fidelity and | erence was made to Mis@Pankhurst fideiity of others. You can never |and the Baroness. After the Baro- had sung a solo, Miss Pank- ke again on “The Signs of with reference MAPLE HILL NEWS udly Fible 5 this special | The Maple Hill Bridge club will X e r mect neat Tuesiay afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. M. J. 3honts on iart street, | Morris Nerdstrom of New York for spent last 2d with his moeth- er, Mrs, M rom of Kobbins avenue | ] Woman's club of Maple Hul will | meet this evening at the home of . Mrs. N, E. Mann on Lobbins ave- and Chlldr JU e lo make pians for the Children's d June Mrs. 8. H. Sprague and Mrs. Fred | Gross of Theodore atreet are in Boston atiending the national con- COMING TO evon e NEW BRITAIN - e s Miss Eleanor Pr . 'roudman and | dman of Fred- | ast week-end in relatives. Bridgeport Representing visiting The Newington Garden club met | therine Rowe on Cedar street, | ADAMS. N. Y. Newington Center. | m'epara»1 tions for the Hower show to be held | in the Newington chapel, June 4 Lupture Metliod Expert | \ere made 0. E. Green, personal representative LD Zl 1“‘.“ x‘;r'n"r‘ I,\v‘v:“ Ad i ?‘n'\fi. Mrs. T. G. Clarke who has been 5 New ERritainiiGonnl rrom i Bridag G e n AT son X d | N Fivery ruptured man. won. | V2 #ailed yesterday for her home | ) G J Lingland. Mr. and Mrs. Voke | S e e e accompanied ker to New York The Rice Method for Rupture is AT known the werl] ru’f[ 0\25,1;;:1’,,,,:‘ Rev, Harry Martin, pastor of the eo this Method' demonstrated and (" iNSton Congregational chureh, | has accepted a call to the Congre- | ave a Rice Appliance fitted to you i Absolutely no chargg unless you are BAtional church at Three Rivers, atisfied 10 kecp the Outfit afier FAIMer. Mass. He will commenge | aving the Appliance adjusted and | his duties . AUSUNLELS) vou sae how perfectly and comfort 4 ably it holds. No harsh, deep-pross. | Mra. H. B. Olmstead and Min | flesh and make you sore. Can bLe |are in Ithaca attending tbe spring | worn might and day with “positive | festivities at Cornell as guests of | omfort. Saft. rubher-like composi- | Herbert Oimstead on pad, any dagree of pressure re = iiced Mys. E. B. Proudman and Mrs Don't wear a truss all your lifs Harding were delegates of the when thousands have reported cures Hill Woman's club at the through us the Rice Metl 1al State Faderatian of Woman's Why snuffer the hurden of r ibs held in Bridgeport, last Mon there i a chance to he free from day and Tyesday russ-wearing forever? Anyway, ft will eogt you nothing to come fn 2nl | W. H. Prince and family who re- | carn all about the Rica Metho cently sol4 their house on Stuart | the wenderfui opportunity for strect to Mr. Bush, formerly of | and cure it offers in your case | Bristol. have moved to Springfisld, | member this expert will he there |\fass. Mr. Bush is the new super. | nly two days, then your opportunity [intendent of the Union Manufactur- | vill he gone. Just ask at the hotel [{ng (‘o sk for the Rice Expert and he will ¥ <. Call any time from 9| re Wi A Robbins {0 6Epimi lov Tite il Seanis d at luncheon and | ‘ ; . ; bridge Shuttie Meadow club 1 ; .“\' et ouportunity |vesterday. The first prize w.*] [T the ¢ " on er i v | . awarded to Mrs. Theodore Wallen | Lo iC . |awar | WM. 8. RICE, Ine. Adams. N. Y. |ana consolation to Mrs. Winiam | s Fitze]] B Harold Ski re MOTT'S RUSSET BRAND Philadelphia A SWEET APPLE: CIDER the SeMmuiRlin hiacparents ind Mrs, E. J. Sh of Th ‘ Will more than realize your son stree evpeciations T fird Ads Are se o thril 10080 quarts sold the first woek || 5000 * LDAE L) n New Britain ARSWwer the numerous ads amd eob. e — o taln & Batter position ! Letllashmes e inye ,”"’l“‘ ":‘" who opened the mecting with a de- gether und the (houghts and tne [votional half hour and Mrs. James liourts 10 Him ‘who is thinking of us |A: Cowee of Troy, N. Y., who urged | Lo L e ta expecting the great |the necessity of tha confession of sin | Uny of all dave which shall fuii) |and clean living in order to ebtain | that prophecy, ‘1 shall come agaln |(rod’s best, Mrs. Crowee is the wife | trosive xou unto myself, that |of & noted banker and business man | re | um there ye shall be also.’ roy is the mother of Mrs, | | srent comfort to us in |l.awrence Southard of Berlin. The ¢ because the enemy of last speaker was Mrs, Myrtle Knapp, wl and man s very busy, He a missionary from Africa, who has NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THUKSDAY, MAY 71 =1y 'p reopening Sat ved kept officers 11 Hat 8) " THE 1 though they g am's children’s costume irther outbreak. party, Judd's hall, Saturday evening | shots Cool Ardor. 0 1o 10 v'clock. Admission | The rush whi ) All children's classes are in- | shooting started hen yand o vited.—Advt men, armed with rocks and bottles. Best work and enlargement with | attacked the line of policemen and KEITH VAUDEVILLE film developed. Ohrnstedt. | fir n guarding t Vst side of No Advance in Price s the jail building. Efforts of fir 1925 f. o. b, factory—plus war tex The enly 4-Door Coach-Brougham on the American Market | Performance Who said speed was not possible—or safe—with balloon tires? “‘Cannon Ball Baker” in his Rickenbacker Six, shattering one cross country record after another, has disproved all such theories and written a new chapter in motoring history. Here is what he says:— “Balloon tires are adaptable to high speeds, only provided the car is properly designed, in perfect balance, and possesses perfect ‘steering qualities.’ “Rickenbacker Six has all those qualities; therefore I can protect myself from many shocks with soft balloons and still driver faster than any other car has ever averaged over the same roads. “If steering spindles are not scientifically designed, the car will shimmy. “If springs are the old type—deeply cambered, short, choppy kind—the car will jump all over the road and have a tendency to leave it at curves. ““If car is not in perfect balance, rear end will be ‘chasing the front’ all the time. “If frame is weak, rear wheel will not be able to follow true! “And, if brakes are not 100 per cent efficient—if they grab or jerk or skid the car when applied—then the driver must take turns faster than is safe if he would master hi average. And, of course, taking a sharp turn at 50 or over is liable to ‘roll’ the balloons off. “Rickenbacker steering, balance, springs and double depth frame, give a degree of stability, steering precision and ability to ‘hold the road’ to a degree I never have found in any other car. “And the mechanical 4-wheel brakes, render it unnecessary to take turns at dangerous speeds. “I can decelerate from 70 to 20 miles per hour in a few feet —take the sharpest curve, and then with this 65 horse power motor, get away again so quickly as to make an average which guarantees any record I go after.” M. IRVING JESTER 187 Arch St. New Britain TR nb WO RTH Y 22 233 o beat the mob bhack with streams C' l single-fue ! rds. O Lo Plerce [0 Llks, wili hwold & regular meeting SQUARE DEAL GARAGE []A“A MBTRI[S o e e e ity Items AR : - 1l | y hroke thro the line, At this| - ni | ‘ \ Spring Hat Shop reopening Sats 1 opencd tfire, diseharging about | A8 A e ¢ New England Grocery Co, o Tohnt MucArthus of Seymour 3 most of them into the ajr.! Y Shave rotunied. 107 pogton Thomas 1 D venue hies it known he was not Waterbury Men Arrested and Cars o Flic mob immediately fell back and | thelr home after a visi VM gug pa e “MucArthur' arrested as a i ’ iR 1 Lmma Noren of Lyons st A FEY With 10 Mutliated Numbers Fwe WOllllded ll] A[lefl]pl lO e wounded were treated at hos- vaate sl “‘“‘ on, Victor I rth Me of Ma e play The Path Teported Foun, | N ) ¥ ¢ = 1ame cooked luncheon, Croweli's | Acros Hi I. 0. 0. ¥. Hall, " d yfl(} WO INeeroes scveral False Alarms, & Uo—-Ad ’ Yo Tivnoh!s Orch e Waterbury, May 21.—(AP)—Ten Adding to the night's excitement (\"r-"‘ Eherift M H iy ja 0.9 B. 1 ¢ el eeveral fire alarms, all false ¥ automobiles sald Dby the police to| oy (AP) WAt sonailied work of | ¢ItIs recentiy ut the New | et o bear mutilated numbers, which were | piyve men were wounded: one ser- persons who desired vert fire. | General hospital, iy . uncovered at’the so-called Square ! lously, In an exchange of shots be 1w om il Marion Hat Shop . Deal garage, 590 Hamilton uvenue, | V0D ‘-Hllwr:vl guarding w’ Dalla Armied s, shot Jay,~—Advt SREELe ounty jull and a mob of about t g uns, rm T %, and en of 124 Fast Ma esterday afte t \ y l rday afternoon following the hundred persons shortly afte e, ahout 75 oflcers main et suffered racture of t | arrest of John L. Andrews, 23 8t | ¢'clock this morning. AR jail through- | right shou in a fall f A tree Joseph's avenue and John Williams, Bent on Lynching. out the night. The jail is considered at his hom He fs 590 Hamliton avenue, were taken| The mob, bent on taking I'tank roof. The two mnegroes are|being treated at the New Brit over by the detective bureau today | and Lorcnzo Noel, negroes thers 1 in one of the top floors of |General hospita and were to he “processed” today, | indicted yesterday in connection story structure, The only Gulbransen player pianos at \Mforans The ‘“‘procees” will consist of using | ¥ith two murder and criminal as the upper floors is by |—adit a device on the ten machines in |~atlt cases, was driven af ans of a small ele which in| Ralph Chant of Bain street n order to bring out their true regls- | @bout 30 ghots had fifed. All| tim emergency be auto- be operated on at the New Diritair tration numbers, of the injured were civillane. The | matically fastened to the top of the General hospital tomorrow Andrews and Williams, arraigned | 001y officer wounded was Sherift| shart jon Hat £hop reopening fat before Judgs Abner P, Hayes today, | Schuyler Marshall, who was struck | The negraocs were arrested Jast| urday.—Adst were granted continuance until | 0¥ a fiying brick. Friday and indicted yosterday after Doy Scout Troop 1% of the Stan Thursday, each under bLonds of The wounded are Dwight Stewart e of them was said to have con-| Memorial ehurch will give an ente . $2,600, N. E. Duncan, J. J. Young. Tim Jolly | fceand to the killing of Ryan Adkins| tainment in the basement of the N (AR DA/ Q N2 l 1 ST' fously wounded, being slot in the! panion on a lonely rond north of the | ments will be served. The proceed : ) City ltems le. Mis recovery is doubtful, T ¢ night of April 12. Frank | will be used to purchase specia Unless you see the “Bayer Cross hlets you are ers wore only tly wounded | also was feted for the mur-| equipment for the troo bl 1 v S0 > 2 out 100 men and a wo rofder of W, . Milstead -and assault| Mr, Graham's darce Friday eve not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe arrested and pl in the ) upon his woman companion on the | ing, Newington Grange hall. A by milli ‘hed h Wt z 5 : i ! n G y millions and prescrib y P jans 25 years reduction, Vietor Red Seal{ charges wor against 1 night of April 25 [ past classes and friends are invited % d prescribed l» physicians for 25 years. ed records, C. L. Dierce Crowd Is Dispersed [to attend.—Advt ’ i " After the attack, the crowd around | o Sl e, e Accept onl v .8 ) man of New |the jail which began congregating (£ v : o rm o )| Royal Arcan will hold a regular ST T . ’\n'r)l«‘ former paster of the First (early in the night and at one time ( _\ p 1 T OL | R GO R ”. ich kv ; 15 pro L"l'\ilfwu,ll()n.s, ‘l:"\;vK\:IV'Y]V‘V"VI”;\M' x \.H ~||u"<>k at the [ was estimated at 5,000, gradually | | GRARTING SUNDAY—Your Last | o'clock, the busincss session being HMH' Bayer umjnuc‘ ‘r; tablets i ,'”‘f.‘. ST disperaedualilious]] Chance to See the Greatest Movi@ || preceded by a supperat 7 o'clo el e ] o Atle and —Druggists. addr i brotherhood | persons maintained of All Times! 30¢; reduction, Vietor Red Sea piria I8 the trade mark of Dager Manufacture of Monoacelicacidescer of Salicyllencid ening. Iteports that the ¢ ‘High Blood Pressure | and Hardening of the Arteries Successfully Treated by the | Electro Medical Methods HERE s an old saying that a man {2 as old as hiy ries, but at that he may be old at forty., Our present-day methods of llv the over-active life we pursu worries we must tolerate, and over-indulgence of food and drink, are some of the maln eon ting causes of bringing about this abnormal eon- Mitlon. Agaln, it might be mentioned, | it is predisposed to Bright's ase, heart complainte and other diseases ng; the the | A erio-sclerosis (Hardening of rterles) may be best described by | imentioning that it is evidentiy a| chroale Irritation of the coats of the arterles with a thickening and har ening of the covering. Tha aceum lation of earthy and stiffening ma- terial In the system causes the v ous functions of the body grad:ally to cease working in a normal manner. | As the blood vessels and tissucs he- come thickened through these a mulations of mineral substances, the bacome lexs active, and if not cor: ed in time mav chanze the artery o rigid-like cana rt and expansion, so that the motion of | the blood is impeded and nutrition fs shut off from the important organs of the body. If th cond!tion {s all>wed to continue the organs become defec. [t ! The Fluroscopic X-Ray Examination can best be compared to Motion Pictures—the Organs are shown actually at work. This ex. amination differs from an ordinary X-Ray photograph in that the | X-Ray only shows a still pose. s that <:2| Very Thankful to the Victor | i:| Methods For Returned | There are various aympto the sufferer from hardening arteries experien a high bod p thers {s a tenden ing blcod to THE ALL-SEEING he n i ¢ - s some s, headache, coid ha and Healtl." lntereslmg TCS- ‘ X-RAY | D L i timonial' of Connecticut!| «icior 1eattn oftice has touna f ? fullness in the hexd, pain . ndispensibie in . at the base of the brain, at t mas heart Resident. | a0k sanaae netioral | complications, ©f breath, I'n n ns fail to revei spats bators pains in the —_— i ower in discovering | hest, shoulders and army, fainty gen : e N Toohiis sations, lack of vitality and la%er en | a n eme exhaustion. Tha asufferer| | sometimes has a fesling of stittn | and walks with aiftic A br 258 6f one of the brittis blood vessels of the brain may re ¢ at any in Apopiexy or Paraly n the means of determin- t the pa- eby enabling G muthrakiof tered time s Many people suffering from h | ing of the arteries wonder if this c st vt ' After Twenty Years of Ill- can In most cases If ¢ d in W 3 prover wa. “The prozer wey < ? ness Now a Well Man tarough Natural Methods, ard 5 1 could not s did € i 2 of this statement oan ba sen (3 the. 0 o1V8 UP 8t L 0o Thanks to the Victor Rt on e -* Health Offices. | a | For {astance, we migh: m ae Aute-condensation Aime ot 2 5 S AX CDACERIE ¢ has me Y | o ess my full ap- AL 3 w the svatem of one that can be tafely depended and [ har w \ e i e relied upen. Hermiets and eafe A & s S L efficacy duce higa blood pre - and to he:d relieve the patient ¢ ge:t g L : many accompanying symptoms 2 h stands out today as ene e c b sexful meshods we nasve in LR thoss %0 unfortunately ot n relief and & B had almest 2 given ¢ ever g abls to s erv k.nd arn e again a 1 heard . £ood w n A cases s e V * tect the blood pressure of every m o s 5a and woman that calls f n s br & would > . M A R ure and soften the . & 00 hard and aga piace S sound hasis of health. ¢ € » S the d . a few » gate sican was P ctor Health Office 85 WASHINGTON STREET, v Enail b pie HARTFORD, CONN. i : e Directly In Back Of State Cepito: QFFIGE =~ 2 e HOURS j