New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 22, 1925, Page 3

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ROME VISITED BY MANY PILGRINS Zation D. C., Aug pligrims, To 5 well as thousands of American tourlsts: all-roads again lead to Rome, the eternal city, which is the subject of a bulletin from the Wash- tngton. D ., headquarters of the National Geograp’ “Rome, the cradle tlon, ofers more to the religious devotee, gist, the historian or the sthete, thafh any other city, and perhaps, more than all of them together,” the bulletin states. “Like its incep- tion, Rome cannot be or learned in a day, The remark of the French historian. Ampere, who said that a ‘superficial knowledge' of Ttome could be acquired in a ten vears' visit, gives an idea of vast number and variety of its at- tractions. A Modern City of Today ven the casual or hurried tour- tets and pilgrims, however, cannot fail to be impressed with what lit- tle thev see or learn of the mother eity of our languages, laws, re- liglons and many of our customs. Tome links us with all other cites In its prime the long arms of the rivilization of the time to the rude tribes bevond the Alps and the Mediterranean, and, through them, to known world Rome of today is this Rome. At first it is very d pointing, with its smooth-paved. sunny streets notorious houses, trolley cars, lights and hotels. all of much like thoss madern citiee. There is of the famed soven hills or temples and ruins of histary beoks. “This ters the great, b built over a rand the latter is exposed onlv 1n a few To get a romantic pic- ture of Rome ene must walk by the Colosseum in the moonlight, er toiter on the Bridge of Angels when | the star-refloctions dimple the sul- len Tiber, or it by a fountain in a rose-scented garden when the| nightingales are singing. seven Hills Shaved OfF “Perhaps the vivid first- hand impressions of Rome today of the moderness of its hotels and business houses, the number of its churches and the beauty of its many fountains. No one expects the latter. but no one forgets them once goen, Their rushing waters is one of the few characteristics of the ancient that has heen carried nto the modern one. The flash and glitter of thelr h spray, and the rush and plunge of their heavy streams is a refreshing note fn a city which knows no half- tones. For in Rome everything is | tare to the pitiless glare of the sun or cowers in the deepest shade. | “The seven hills are still there, | but the intervening centurles have | greatly modified them. The modern eity s rolling. for the anclent hi!l-i Washington the Holy Y to many o socjety of our viviliza- the sightseer, the archaeolo- seen the the rest of “But the not » contentional mo- elec- them other tric ot fttle trace the the visitor en £ has been ancient one, fg beeans ity at its newest side modern city aater most city ~tossed | eypross City Ts Cradle of Modern Civili- {the Trajan column, | buiidings | comparatively {and | though | tians |READ THE HERALD (] tops have been largely shaved off and the valleys filled in to eult the exlgencles of tho trolley car and automobile, Ruins Tell of Anclent Grandeur “Palatine Hill, with its ruins and trees is visible; as is the Capitolina Hill, which rises some- what abruptly from the center of the city, erowned with churches and other buildings, and the Monte Quirinal, with its royal palace and But the Monte which was never has hardly any slope and would be indistinguishable but for the church of San Glovanni in La- terno. The Esquiline Hill shows the domes of Santa Maria Mag- glore; the Aventine Hill, the home of the ‘opposition’ since Remus fled there from his brother, drops off rather sharply toward the river but is «smooth and rolling in the other Alrections, There is nothing teday fo distinguish the Mente Viminale, near the raflroad station. “It is only in the Roman and Trajan forums, and in such isolated as the Castle of 8. An Trajan's suceessor, Hadrlan, erected as suitable mausoleum for himself; the Colos- seum; the Baths of Caracalla, mutilated, defaced. robbhed, that ons i able to Cello high, or Caelfy two geln, which a ete., and scorned gt | come conception of the grandenr of [ Rome in the days when the will of its ruler world Largest Series of Buildings “Rome today is a city of 664,000 people and the capital of united Ttaly, But united Ttaly is eneh a recent phenomenon that, in the minds of most people, the city still stands for two things, — the remains of antiquity and the seat of Catholicism. In Et, Peter's the adjoining Vatican, Rome has the largest continuous series of uildings in the world. The esidence of the Pope, about seven thousand some say eleven wenty courts and more ed staircases additton there r churches throuzhout the eit cing eter was law for the known a Yatican, contains rooms, thousand than two scores o t religion > fivs Patriarch- churches of the Catholic faith, all world and every ial congregati throughonut the are also located in are magnificent th eaquisite paint- and other works of gpendthrift dayvs of middle ages and the Renails- when Pope and patrician aled each other in adorning their ity “But aside from terminal and several up-to-date ho- tels, Rome today has only a single contribution to its former glory the massive monument Victor Emmanuel 11, uniter of modern Ttaly. Before It is the tomb of Ttaly's unknown eoldie However, its Talazzo delle Finanze, the of the country, modern has a building covering thousand square yards, the treasury building in Eu- onee aceredited Reme, They fices, and mo: reveal edi- in s, the the the railroad 1o in treasury Rome thirty Inrgest rope. FIVE MINES Cherbourg. Ifrance, Aug. 22 (M- Five mines, drifting 70 miles from Disppe, have been reported to the maritime prefect. Measures been taken to have them explode. ADRITT ve SSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD Congressman, at 5 By CLARENCE MacGREGOR Member of Congress from the 41st New York District From virtually every part of the United States 1 have received ex- | pressions of wonderment as to why | at my age and with my long legls- | |latlve experience T should be attend- | ing Cornell university. Why not? {1 derive two benefits from going | 4 |back to school. First, I acquire | some knowledge of the course T am studying, but, more than that, T ac- quire the vienpoint of the younger generation, | No man is too old learn, and the older T become the more I real- ize that The real time for study is when one {s over 40. One gets more out | of college or any other study at that age hecause of the experisnces of life he brings to the subfect before | ¢, him T think that any man my age could well afford to spend some time back in the classroom 1 went to Cornell to make a study of the modern industrial svstem. 1 wanted to know more fully how the machinery works. T wanted to know why the flnflar‘ value travels upward and ward Also whether it fix prices K tr [ w s to il H | |Z down- was goad or bad whether monopalies ||, showld bhe permitted; what should | our atfitude he toward railroads: | whether the federal should ar should not attempt to control business: whether the gov- ernment should engage in business: | g, what could be done to bring about a |, solution of the so-called troubles be- | tween capital and labor: whether or not our capltalistic system was the best or a greater human relation- <hip could be formed. T manted to | learn more about the wags the distribution of products and of wealth, and the old familiar ques- tion as to the farmer and his trou- bles Tn brief, it was mv effort to learn it possible what je the best way ta bring about a state of soclety where every man and woman may live in | happiness The range of knowledge is wide. think everyone appreciafes it more| o and more as the hair grows graver. | Tt to me that there is no fiald of activity that forces that coneclu- <ion upon one more than servies in congress problems that are pressed up on our representatives are tremen- | i Virtually problem is of [, such vital importance fo the wolfare | of the peaple and the nation that a | congressman svmml endeavor to| troaden his field af knowledge. | A time goes on civilization grows | more complex. Onr industrial sys to A system, I hi D j n The n dane avery it 18 a dellcate machine. la People a the present time than at any time in | & history. The factory system, the (b railroads, tha telegraphs. the M--r‘v phones, the automobiles and many | | nther great inventions have bronght | the people closer together, | That s why T am attending Cor-| Il University, To find the way, if | | possivle, to the comfort, the har 1i German submarine |and munitions would have worthless and Hindenburg, and not | | Wilson would have won the war. The admiral speaks of submarine | |warfare as a “God-glven gift" which | {7ad been entrusted to Germany in | !«e1f protection against “the fnhuman government |¢nay ft was the vunrestricted | marine ot reports of judicial in such manner as ta prevent in- jury to public raorals,” Lerd Darl- ing has introduced a cireulate or publish « matter {injure public morals. TNJURED HIMSELF FI ! 22 (P —Td- | tem s a gigantic structure, and yet ! ward Palmer of Dedham. wha broke | signor to J hone in his foot whan he drove his more interpedendent at [niotoreyele around a parked passen- 3, in College; Says Time for Study is After 40 ness and the peace of the people of the United States. To make it a bet- ter land, To bring to tho problems that confront me as a member of ongressa a great and wider knowl | vdge. Tt 1s my conclusion that our coun- y will become greater and better, {and the conditions of life for each | individual more near to tha fdea) if o continue to buld upon the foun- atfons latd by our forefathers fn the old Constitution, and that the more | we wean the people of the Unifed | tates away from false Utoptnr | dreams, the more certain wo can be hat we shall reach the {deal of cit fzation, (German Defend: U-hoat and Assails Blockade |, Rerlin, Aug. ollweg deplores the fact that war was 22 (P—Vice Admira no! |started earller and carried through | ithlessly. For then, he declares ir an article in the Deutche Allgemeine ‘yu‘nfli\‘y}fin\ armaments eitung, all American proved lockade which, though sanctione America, was a violation of al recepts of fnternational law, The writer emphatically d campaign which merica to enter the ermans “who still adhere tn tha pinfon, as Count Bernstorff " war, {Briton \\nuld afeguard Morals of the People, London. Aug. 22 (A — With ‘WM, of “regulating the publication proceedings | 111" in the House of Tords i makes it unlawful te "print, any indecen surgieal. caleulated in ivarce or separation cases or hysiological medical details The penalty ts Imprisonment not | or a fine| xeeeding three months ot exceeding $0,500, or both. T} reasure does not apply fo the puh- cation of matter in separate vol- me or serfes of law reports, chnieal publications he legal and medical professions. ED 850 Dedham Mass, Ang. r bus into another machine, hob- led inta the Dedham court on rutches yesterday 30 by C. al Judge Sanborn ruled that [though Palmer was the only person njured he was part of the public en- | dangered Palmer paid. he and how These reports The Measure of Your Message You may buy “10,000 circulation,” is it merely a “claim” of the publisher? A B.( (Canada. widely his me s, by the authentic, they contain, mmh]o the advertiser to measure exactly sage has been distributed. The measure of your message is the number of actual readers reached by the publications carrying your advertising. but is it delivered, " offers a serv ice that will enable the adver- tiser and advertising agent to measure every message placed in the leadirg publications of the United States Every day in all parts of the Continent A. B. (. auditors are checking the records of publishers, . ings are tabulated in the form of A. B. C. reports. and their fin reliable, verified da Ask for the latest A. B, C. Report on the It is a member ER 12,000 HERALDS Herald. of the A. B. C. DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- TION OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN The Herald is the Only New Audited Ci Britain Newspaper With An irculation or d- ta SATURDAY | the nies sub- | induced | Theee he refers to as “poor simpleminded cos mapoltan souls.” “proceedings | The or to relation to or in| intended for, and was fincd Judge Sanborn for driving 0 | to endanger the iives of the pub- 20 Lay AUGUST INCREASED SALES SHOW TRACTORS ARE POPULAR First Half of 1925 Show That These Tead in the Sale of Farm Equipment. Aug. 22 @ lead farm equipment sales through- out thie first half of 1925, resea | | Chicago, 'I'rnc'lnraj, . as shown department ot the ; National Association | Ea sun by of Iarm uipment Manufacturers, cyed its officlals who are hea most of the 200-0dd firms mak- ing up its membership and sclling | through some 21,000 dealers to the | farmers Plow and tillage tool makers re- | port the first half of the year ahead ! {of 1474, and the tendency towards I bigger equipment to eliminate man and lhorse labor is move marked than at any time fn the history of the tractor's deyelopment. Oliver Plow works reports 20 pe inerease. One great eompany its two-row cultivata 50 per cent ahead of last which | =l od eent | estimater f 1 Lusiness n The Machine per cent drill American reports over 1924 geeding 1-3 in grain increase [ 1 e first half of 1 24 p o\ period last vear n\'h Morse & company on farm scales, gas engines. windmill, water sup- has seen u r the same Fairbanks, | pastorate of the ply systems and feed grinders, the 1| reports shows 1 | - - Patents I sued to ‘ Connecticut People | (List furnished by the offi Haro!ld G. Manning, Walk-Over of + §hoe Peter F. Augenbraun o Lock for automobile doors. Henry W. Banks, 54, Norten, signor to Loomis, New York, N. Y Howard M. Barbe jgnor t0 €. B n“rr“ & Sons Co, | York. N. ¥ 11 nism a me William 1. Bean, West Haven. Locomotive smoke box structure William . Broekhuysen Haven, assignor to the Safety Car | freating and Lighting o, Motor | starting Maynard Relay device. William W. Dedge, Jr. lectrical condenser. William H. Edsall {assignor to H. L. Judd Co. fain hanger. Tatrick J. Fitzg assignor ta the Fif7g t| n Tartfard. Church Meriden Ine. Cur- ald. Torrington, rald Mfg. Co. Kolh. Fairfield. lto the Bullard Machine Tool Bridgeport. Automobile bumper. John R rean, Gilastonbury, B. Williams Co. Co., ping hox | Richard Tishau, New Haven H tvr\‘»r\r to the Westinghouse | gpring o, Air spring. Franels Lindenthaler, Headlight, | william Lorenz, Hartford |slgnor to tha Otaka Fabric | Paper-crinkling machine. | willtam P. Meselex, Stamford, as. ;: gnor to the Yale & Towne Mfg. Co. i deposit lock ’ Willlam G. Newton assignor to the Peck Bros. & | Lavatory basin faucet. Tran Ostromislensky, lsmmrd. New York, N. to the Naugatuck Naugatuck, (2 patents), [ styrol composition and making || same. il samuel H. Page. Strattord, as- | signor to the Amorican Fabrics Co Rridgeport. Tace. Conrad ‘Posinszny, _Hat eleaning Hauid Chester J. Randall assignor fn the Goodvear's Rubher Glave Mfg. Co. machine Edward as- A Safe New Haven Cn and M Y., assignors hemical Co. Stabilized the New Rritain ndia . Stephenson | Speclalty Co., Hartford. pad Frank Wagner, aurel Wil N, T |and A. Anderson, South Norwalk Coin controlled apparatus, Trade-Marks Registerad Cheney Bros., South Manchaster, Silk fabries in the plece. The Collins Co., Collinsville knives Willlam Frubleugky Medfeinal preparation or salve n the treatment of trachoms | The Fuller Rrush Co. Harttard { Vanity cases containing rougs | face powder. Fenry & Geerr, doing business as | the Hoxite (0., Stamfard, The Turner & Stanten Plcture wire. shade | ehalk lines, ete, | Tahels Registorad Rirchard Chemieal Worke Mart | ford. E-Klip-Sol the Tdeal Cleanar. | For a eleaning finld Trade-Mark Applicants The Blakesley Novelty Cn., Bristal | Flanr mope Dictaphane Cane Fluses , Nor- rord wleh 1 Fare Rridgapert Record resurfacing and reeard shas | ing machines, Touls P. Fancher ness as Superior Rakery Bread The Heminwav [ tawn. Pure and artificial silk | ries in the plece Locomobile ™a. af Ameries porated Rridgepart Antamabiies and constructive parts therent. Frederick 1 | negs as Fesential Fands o ! Rreakfast cereal fands alsn doing bue! Thempean Sk TCatar fah Yncor Aning bust Maridan Sparks Newspaver For Blind Ts Started hy Jananese Tokva Aur. 22 (P—A daflr news paper printed Rrailla, the publication in Japan far the Wind recantly has been fssued. Tt consists of two sheats printed on bath sides giving four printed pages Sor Bhoss hin chnnss of news r Xi- FRiTAH mura. 3 wealthy Tapaness thrapist, it financing the anterprisa and the At a) rod editor is & Hirohasi newspapers the Tokyo police autheri ties are somewhat embarrassed as to tn Japan are cation ae {t e Aepartment is '| millar with the Braille system Aaimed no ane In tha palics Walllngford, | Abr | Saxbrook, | Naugatuek. | Toast | Hartford, assignor to the Stsphenson | Telephone Harttard | and | 211 Main street, New Britain.) | tamford, | upon assignor to the Yale & Towne Mfy. | bestle. Colloidal fungzie- | | da1 sulphur .-nn‘,‘,.n.g,., i Stonington Sheet-feedin gmv'h Raptist helief as- | Ship- | | l i Stripping | | | | | sity, ready 1o withdraw provided the DR, FOX WILLING | teren T0QUIT POSITION (But Demands Baptists Them- selves State Position Riverton, N, J, Aug, government () Dir Henry Yos, blologis! here who was last year dropped of Merc for teaching e from the faculty Ga., and who has been asked hy the ch t Macon i tion, Tattnall Square Baptist chur | to qnit the denomination for all nnorthodoxy, today sald he wou soluntarily on one condition he M. he Quoting from terms sencihiggicei ot M the pastor, Dr. Fox sald ald Fugute, stood Tatt nall Square deacons and congrega tion officially went on record as de nying the right of an individual Rap- tist to be the sole judge of thesound- ness of his doctrinal views. Dr. Fox sald this right had already been asserted, and won, by Dr, Har ry Emerson Fosdlck in accepting the Park Avenus Fap churct the “Rockefeller Church,” in New York city. He cited Dr, Tosdick tipnla that Raptism by immersion there was 1o be optional Tt was on assurance of thi hy a Baptist clergyman, Dr said. that he himself was persuaded to enter the denomination in Clarns- Tennessee, in 1918 After his troubles at ersity last fall, Dr, 48 an entomalngist anrk in the fight the United States department of agriculture fs making the fruit-feeding Japanese tist s right Vox ille Mercar nni ta do research TWhen he ap uare church several weeks ago to 1 Stump & Banks, | fransfer his membership to a New e usual form Intter to such eftect was refused m {4, on the ground that his pub- utterances mere not consistent Tersey congregation e H. D. Chapman. Macan in a letter of Jnuly today. which him 13 | Pr. Fox revealed asked New | on behalt of the chureh apecifieally birth and the divinity of Jesus Uhrist. Dr. Fox answered on July 23 that the ehurch authorities had failed to had raised. Asscrting that he had joned the Baptist church nnder the impression it had no fixed creed, Dr. Tox asked the deacons first to fell him: “Do you, or do not equivocally endarse that the individnal member is the sole judge of the soundness of its doetrinal views, and therefore is froe to formulate the genarally held doc- trines of the church In conformity with what he coneeives to liahle knowledge and sound you the - principle e mor | Macon on or t Univer- | | The Fox cama here | plied to the Tattnall Fhureh principle without dictation or inter- from any human source whatever?” Dr. FFox waa then told that fallure | to commit himself us requested left alternative but to oust him, He accordingly was asked to appear in before Seplember 2 to | why his name should not stricken from the ehurch rolls When Dr, 1 that own query was being evaded, I replied August 11 nough had been sald in the for him to feel that an r the question would be nnequivoca and unanimonsly " e ask Dr. Fox “to go out from us quietly Dr. IPox ¢ ne show cause 1"ox counters his Dr. that chureh Answer to ox replied this week that h M his exp on for u hear paid with his work, all no unles nd 11 " e LI 1 in owe chureh eor an ial no chu mad i hie il the rest to n Rare and Exquisite Collection of Stamps | Aug. 22 () A remark- ton of rare stamps which casket 18 to be soll by a colls was fo hamed Kamel ol K president n a gold tion hers med by Mo- ssaby, 8on of the of Brit- of the | Assembly Assyria ain Fvery visitely who is visiting Gireat page of ! um with Beirnt, Jorus ‘ ies of Asla Minor volume reposes fn a mas- | Is ex handpaintc lem and other ¢ and fhe sive gold and silver inlaid easket m\ Arablan design and Three smaller goid caskets contain medals rating Independence and other events. An refr work i and silver inlaid | commema Arabia | $2.- of offer of 730 was made and af the ed for one stamps Fiji Tslanders Listen to Talk From California Suva, Fijl, Aug. 22 () — Helen | Keller, speaking at KGO broadeast- ing statien at Oakland, Cal. heard distinetly here on a recent evening. Mies Keller was introduced | by her lifelong friend and teacher, Miss Annie M. Sullivan, who faught | her to talk. read and write, helping | the biind and! deat glri to|\ form basis of her remarkable | was noted the | education to affirm or deny helief in the virgin | acknowledge a previous question he | Miss herself hea Australia ports land Keller's voice, which destined to hear, this asion in | New Zealand, Re- | reception of the Oak- am in those not and of the prog o | countries | | | have been received here, l | mobile, IRISH INTERESTED IN HORSE: Aug. £2 () the annual horse show Dublin fir: Aug q W this year with Despite the growth in popularity the auto- there has been a consider- nerease in inferest in harness For the bloodstoek sales more than 8§00 horses were IIHA'!'V‘Vl,l Entries for | of the Noya |Y| week in high record Dublin society, the A ne a1 L ana views of | ! nship. | i I s | o I.\Hhm:\rhw STINNES ESTATE MUDDLE IMPROVES Fmancml Deals May Yot Better Conditions 22 (M —Gradually the the late Hugo Stinnes, Germany's industrialist wizard, ‘are Leing thrown into the melting pot pu of liquidating the Jligations of the heirs to the great rlin, Au properties of latest of the Stinnes intercsts Deutsche Allgemeine during the life of Stinnes, was his mouthpivee 1n ex- his elita on ATan and polities, This powers i had tremendous {nfluence e 80ld 18 the itung, which sing vie Jomics or, upon its readers, 1t was the apple of Stinnes' eye and the children titied p sacred heritage An linfden on, or was the through the banking ahich fs endea oring 1o turn info cash the Stinnes oldings. The price paid s declared en one-third that of the property, and in addi- the purehaser recelved for hanght the good will of the journal offictal printing con- com- purchase syndicate to have value of the tion valuab Edmond Stinnes, cldest son of the al magnate, still is endeavoring to up sell the famous Aga Motor Works, the greatest of {ts kind 1 GGermany, which {8 beset by great financial difficultie Re Amer! and Lendon bankers bought a half interest in the sreatest and most prosperous con. cern that Hugo Stinnes built up. This the I "he Luxemburgischs company, the largest producer of cnal, coke, iron and steel in Ger- hol ster 2L | many, [Heavy Traffic Jams in Berlin Show Recovery Berlin, Aug. 22 (AM—Heavy vehi. traffic in Berlin belies the fdea that the city is still in a more or less paralytic state from the ef- fects of the war, according to a traffic census taken recently by the Natfonal Zeitung at Potsdamer Platz, Crossing this square, traffic in Berlin, approximately 1.461 automobiles, 1,261 bicyeles, 300 street cars, 162 busses and 179 sundry vehicles were counted in ons hour. Subway tunnels from each of the eight tunnels of the Platz have heen proposed as one means of re- ieving the traffic congestion. eniar the center WAR FLOTSAM DRIFTS ASHORE Portheawl, Glamorgan, Wales, Aug. 22 (M — Attached to some wreckage, a brass plate has been washed ashore here which belonged to the American coast guard cutter Tampa. The Tampa, with heavy loss of life, was sunk by a German in Dritish waters, Scp- tember, 1918, Sweeping Price Reductions HUDSON-ESSEX CONACH ‘1195 haw consorship can he applied to the | HONEYMAN 139 Arch St. COACH Now Hudson Brougham 51495 Hudson (:.) Sedan %1695 All Prices Freight and Tax Extra World’s Greatest Values Now More Outstanding Than:Ever 166,369 Hudson-Essex sales for the eight month period end- ing August 1st represents the largest six-cylinder output in' the world’s history. This enormous production makes possible the finest quality at the lowest prices Hudson- Essex ever offered. The same management which established the Hudson Motor Car Company, now, as for sixteen years, controls and di- rects the design of its product and policies of the company. Hudson-Essex World's Largest Selling Six-Cylinder Cars AUTO SALES CO. Tel. 2109

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