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i H i ! ‘ DARTMOUTH OPENS | ITS L&TTH YEAR President Hopkins ~ Addresses Student Body Today Hanover, N. H.,, Sept. 17 (®—1In telling the student body at the open- ing of the 157th year of Dartmouth | college today that understanding wus the vital quality needed I'resident Ernest Martin Hopkins said that the most important question involv- | ed in the Scopes evolution trial ‘was not the right of a legislature to deny the children of its state the modern theories of leaders of sui entific thought." “It was a question, rather, in re- gard to right of these men of learn- ing to remain indifferent to public ignorance and to refuse to assu any responsibility for interpreting to men not technically trained what men of sclence have believed and why they have beijeved it. Fven if the attempt to do something of this in the trial had been successful, its influence could not have offset the long period of superciliousness which has characterized the attitude of many a man of scientific attainment towards those who were not of his eloth. Unfortunately for education al progress, dogmatism and bigotry were the exclusive attributes of no single camp in the issues which led up to this trial. “The theory of an aristoc brains is fallaclous if it starts with | any assumption that brains are ex- clusively the possession of any for mal group whether defined by birth, | worldly possessions, social station or even previous association with & formal institution of learning. The theory has justification only if brains are to be pald deference wherever found. “It {8 not well to blind ourselves | to the weaknesses of official college | organization even though we do not | know how to correct them. The col- lege process is admirably adapted to {mporting knowledge, It has some of | L el tat cultivating ineni| | Now iHiavent Sopt, BITH(P = Many [l mant fto know 1a, Syyhat kind of gence. It does little towards culti- [high churchmen of the Anglican la man are you? We stable, ad- vating understanding of the interre- ‘L_mh will be here the first week in |mired, solid, successful businessmen lations of facts and of the unity of |November for an Anglo-Catholic |break the ,.,,m”” laws and laugh | knowledge. This therefore has to he [convention ~at Christ Ipiscopal at them. Then the man with the he |church. At the opening Rt. Rev. C.|criminal mind and less restraint, left to the self-education of student, without the spirit of which none of the college contribution is of much worth.” In commenting on the increased ease of communication in modern 1lite, President Hopkins rema od that “we need a selective process for {dentifying good ldeas even more than for choosing desirable fresh- men."” ACCEPTS CHALLENGE PRS- Pittsburgh Woman To Try To Prove Herselt a Medium In Test De- manded By Harry Houdinl Pittsburgh, Sept. 17 P—The Rev. Dr. Alice 8. Dooley, pastor of the Pittsburgh Church of Divine Heal- ing, announced today that she had accepted a challenge by Harry Hou- dini, magician, to prove herself a medium and that the test would be made tonight on the stage of a the- atre where the magician is appear- ing. “1 will do my best under the con- ditions imposed by Houdini,"” she said. The conditions for the test pro vide that the woman answer three questions submitted, by Houdini in separate sealed envelopes with a cord through each of the envelopes. Houdini has offered a prize of $10,000 to any medium who suc cessfully meets the conditions. He sald other prizes offered by scientific publications and organizations would bring the total to $30,500, and that he would see that the Pittsburgh woman receives all the prizes if she answers the questions. e APPETIZING TONIC GUARANTEED T0 RELIEVE INDIGESTION Every bottle of ABSO-DIGEST is sold with & money-back guarantee fo give nb- solute and immediate relief from indiges- tion, dyspepsia, heartburn, flatulence, gns and other stomach disorders. d y The Miller-Hanson Drug Co., Gty Drug Store and tho Dickinson Drog FREE OIL McCARTHY’S | a day. | BIG FUR OFFERING WOERIG | PEACHES AVERAGE Pelts Valued at $350,000 to smu_mm} Are Placed on the Exchange at Two Baskets Sell for $27.90~ Seattle by Traders, Wash,, Sept. 17 (®) - A nd Siberian furs, pelts of i i o b, were ot ,5:',‘. Dollar Worshlppers Hit | mwo baskets of peachics from the York, 13 J. Rogers orchard sold for $27.50, A fone of thembringing $19.50 and the at the regular meeting of s from firms In New Chi 3t Loul Montreal Pacific const states were present A single silver fox other $8, from fur the New Britain Rotary club today | Alaska hrought §210, the hghest ',y e Burrltt hotel. One basket | Individual priec | was soll to George Atwater and the About forty per cent of the mink oy to Dr. ¢, W. Vivian. They skins offered were sold. The best [y epg auetioned off by Vice-President prico pald for Alaska mink WAS | paymond Gilpatric and the pro- (“ Other pieese ranged dowh 10 .oy will be devoted tu some char- e Ina frar EeFR o aicTin |itable cause to be determined by the ) [gots 0 board of directors, (aradiusronisnosatantd ost ANSKR] That much of the erime and mis- R ie fag I life is caused by the fact that el e 19% [ most_ncople place the dollar above pelia HerR g0 d TSk everything clse was stated by Irank bl “;'\’]'::‘ ‘)‘q\lr""“m :“‘m‘”»’ ‘wa | JeWell Raymond. Mr. Raymond N | said that men today have four real e iy all olter skins were soid, dcHires. They are work, play, love e oy ind worship. He said some men LB £ like sclentists and educators live for | 7 their work alone; many men are VETERANS HMEET | dominated by thele natural desires {to cara for and protect their home {and loved ones: some prople live for Eight and Eleventh Connectieut Vol- | their interpretation of the scriptures {anA their hopes of completing a good | unteers of Civil War Days Have life, while others live for play and | | get play out of their work ! | He said the jails are overcrowded !in some sections; people are in in- Merkden Reunion, Meriden, Sept. 17 (A—The veler- ans' associations of the eighth and 'Stitutions: there is privation and su eleventh Connecticut volunteers of | fering, all because people put the | the Civil war held their nual meet. |dollar mark above everything else. “But the dollar is not the most im- porfant thing in life,” he empha- the eighth regiment association; An- |sized. “When your mother was drew Gordon of Hazardville, viee making sacrifices for you was she | president and Charles M. Parsons of | thinking of the dollar? When your Noroton Heights, its captain. [father gave you your start in life Sylvester Delforest of Chester, was | was he thinking of the doliar? elected president of the “Some of us are yellow dogs, ‘flee’ regiment association and Henry B. | We are covered with ‘flees’ Gage, Hartford, secretary and trea- [hecause we flee from all responsibil- surer. |ities, when they are for the right motives. | “I don't care how much you have, tods Colonel C. 1. Upham of 15 re-clected president of ing Meriden v eleventh ! dogs. CHURCH CONVENTION | | B. Brewster, bishop of the diocese, [when he finds himself in a hole, will celebrate mass and the preacher |gives in to his eriminal impulses. will be Rt. Rev. B. I, P, Tvans, co- | “There is many a good fellow in adjutor bishop of Milwaukee. a crowd, who isn't fit to live with Sl in his own home. | P — “I want to meet men who have | CONFERE ) MEET veal warmy handshakes, not the Raltimore, Sept. 17 (A—Conferees |kind with the clammy mitt, |selected from the fields of trade, ‘ “Are we the people who can stand |labor industry, finance, education, [for our own ideals? Use what you! journalism, politics, sociology and have to get what you want o Inissions tenizht will open a three- | Watson House of Hartford, form- |day discussion at Johns Hopkins erly of New Britain. and Tarl J. university on Chinese-American re- | Arnold, secretary of the Bristol lations. Admittance to the confer- |Chamber of Commerce, were among invitation, m-v\mus»‘lh" visitors. committee of spon-| Abraham Buol was named chair- | | ence will be b ly extended by |sors. man of the program committee for Others on the com- Rackliffe and A German national cooked in beer. {three months, imittee are Fred O. Ray Leach. dish is earp, Explorer Turns Nurse .. Fridtjof Nansen, renowned Arctic explorer and high commissioner of the League of Nations, here is shown spread- ing cheerfulness among a group of Armenian orphans at a Near East relief home. | arganized and related to one another ;lTnificatiO:-PIa s to | Beecham's Pitls _ - o B A raerrrys NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1925 L L e S OLD BREWERY SOLD Main Plant of Springfield Brewerles BRANDS KELLOGG AS PETTICOATED Company in Springficld Brings Owners $118,000, ” S A Springfield, Mass., Sept. 17 (F) — o« Uy Tho sale today for $118,000 of the main plant in this city of the Springfleld Brewerles company (Continued From [irst Page) marked one of the final steps in the passing of an industry famous in western New England in pre-prohi- bition days. A local syndicate took the prop- |CCnUY ignore that America had shown the world liow she treats people of the Kind “whom we often much too compla- " and hoped it would erty for investment, The company |P° an object lesson to the British formerly operaled four plants here | People. and in Chicopee and for a tine s after prohibition began manufactur- Bars Are Lifted ing non-alcohol beverages. Washington, Sept. 17 (A—The — American government has thrown EDUGAT]ONAL STUDY |1p the bars against Shapurji Saklat. vala, communist member of the British house of commons, who sought to visit the United States as a British delegate to the inter-par. Practical Application Being Look- ! liamentary union to convene here od Into in Mass. next month. Because of § Boston, Sept. 17 (M—The possibili- [fory fy of developing courses of greater |parliament and elsewhere, Secretary practical application, eliminating Kellogg has ordered revoked under “refinements” and subjects virtual-|the immigration law the passport Iy obsolete, while retaining funda- |visa which already has been granted mental branches of study, will be [him at London. investigated by the Massachuset!s Kellogg's Position state department of education, Com-| “I do not believe in curbing free mittees have already heen organized jspeech. nor do I believe in making to hegin an Invstigation expected to|this country the stamping ground T for every revolutionary agitator of Effort will he made to dnqry-v.m:n“nwlm- countries,” Secretary Kellogg whether subjects taught have heen |declared in announcing the decision 00 numerous and not well enough |to bar {he commons member from American shores. The administration’s decision Possibility of Developing Greater | | klatvala's inflamma- and revolutionary speeches in Courses will he studied and tested o determine whether action ghould he |which is in flat conflict with the ex- taken on suggestions of parents and |pressed view of C‘hairman Borah of teachers that texthooks shonld he |the senafe foreign relations commit- overhanled and subjects formerly tee, was announced immediately aft- useful but now of little value should [er the secretary of state had confer- be eliminated. red at the White House late yester- A stoering committee has already [day with President Coolidge and besn named and chairman of seven | Representative Theodore E. Burton sub-committees appointed. All [of Ohio, a member of the arrange- members are superintendents or as- |Ments committee for the interpar- sistant superintendents of schools, [llamentary meeting, Tropaganda Visit The crefar: announcement quoted from recent utterances of Saklatvala in parliament and else- where from which it was concluded that his mission fo this country was in fact to spread revolutionary pro- paganda. Senator Borah, who had made known his views on the matter fo Secretary Kellogg before the deci- sion was announced, declared before he knew that Saklatvala's passport P Come Up Next Week Nashville, Tenn,, Sept. 17 () — The 15 conferences of the Methodist Episcopal church south, which meet in October together with big Holston and Louisville conferences which meet September 30, will largely de- termine the success or failure of the pending plan of Methodist unifica {tion. With the adjournment of the et 14, fe |¥isa had hoen ordered revoked that Missourl conforonCes. ot 41 in 1o considered such a course unneces- Sy RCLTa Dizasus cliig ise | eyaana R TRe SR SR baliotad Wt ourl conference polled the largest would imply a greater restriction on Sttsl it uny sBnferenue which Tan| . - [Detel i dns Linitad Bies tian anygeon) “Slin Great Britain. None of Saklat- Imet to date, voting 195 to 14 in vala's revolutionary utterances in favor unification, i of unification, his own country. the senator said. Snakes Get Drunk Morgantown, W. Va—Either the moonshine liquor or the copperhead snakes will have to be annihilated in these parts. John Ross, state trooper, says the snakes are drink- ing the stuff and becoming so vicions that they are actually dangerous. He says he has heen forced to kil five | of the snakes after they had he- | come intoxicated. He found one snake drinking the liquor from a broken jug in an abandoned house, |8 he says. { WOMAN'S LIFE SAVER Mother of Nine Convinced One Dose of Beecham's Pills are the Remedy for Sick Head- aches and Constipation “Your pills certainly have done ‘Wonders' for me. I am thirty-eight years of age, been married thirteen years and am the mother of nine children. “I was suffering from headachesand constipation for nearly fifteen years when happened to read oneof your | B ‘ads’ in the paper. Having a head- ach that day I went to the druggist and bought a box of Beecham’s Pills. Itook a dose. That dose was a ‘lifc saver'tome. Since then I have had | no more headaches, and my health ! is good. I recommend them to 'R whomever I meet.” | Mrs. H. LaVigne, Jersey City, N.J. | BEECHAM'S PILLS are “life savers” 10 all suffering from constipation, bil- iousness, sick-headaches, and other digestive ailments. FREESAMPLE—~Writetoday forfreesample to B, F. Allen Co.,417 Canal St., New York Buy from your druggist in 2§ and §0¢ boxes for Better Health, Take USE, SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM SATURDAY, SEPT. 19, 1925 On The Opening Day of Our New Service Station, We Will Give FREE, With Each Purchase of Five Gallons of PAN-AM GAS (zood For One OLINE, FOUR COUPONS, Each Coupon Quart of PAN-AM MOTOR OIL. .These Coupons Are Redeemable With Each Purchase of 5 Gal. AM GASOLINE. NO FREE OIL ON SEPTEMBER 19th West End Tire Co. 387 West Main St. A glass at noon Is one real boon —Says a little girl who knows. The milk serve your little ones — and they should have plen- ty of it—should be ap- proved for its purity and full-creamness. That's ours. ESEIBERT 6 SON) 437 PARK ST PHONE 1720 ; NEW BRITAIN, CONN MAKE SURE ITS SEIBERTS you M * This is an exc present or future needs. Every article sold during this sale is taken from our regular stock and will be sold away below cost. DON'T FAIL TO TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY SAVING EVENT | See Our Windows The Porter & Dyson Co. - Jewelers and Silversmiths Where Quality Is As Represented M s s o O had yet brought punitive action. Borah's Position “If he comes here and does vio- late any law of the United States, put him in jail,” he sald, In one of these he was quoted as declaring he was “going to Americ: as a friend of the working class, adding that he was ‘out to work for a revolution and for the day when the workers will control the whole world, but before this comes you will have to face cold steel.” North Bend, Ohio, Girl Is Slain, Negro Now Sought Cincinnati, Sept, 17 (A=A mur- der was revealed last night when Edna Boswell, 14-year-old daughter of a North Bend, O, farmer, was fatally injured in a ravine near her home. &he died in a Cincinnati hospital several hours later without regaining consciousness. Physicians sald her skull was fractured. They sald there had been no eriminal at- tack. A negro is being held. The girl had left her home late In the afternoon on an errand When she failed to return at dark a search was started. The girl wnas found in the ravine, her clothing torn to shreds and nu- merous cuts and bruises on her bhody and head. (onstitution Day Is Philadelphia, Sept. 17 honor of the part which University of Pennsylvania men played in es- tablishing the Constitution of the United States, which was ratified by the states September 17, 1787, the national colors were displayed on the campus today, Constitution Day. The seven men who attended the constitutional convention and whose careers were closely allied with the early history of the University of Pennsylvania were Benjamin I'rank- lin, Thomas Mifflin, James Wilson, Robert Morris, George Clymer, Jarde Ingersoll and John Dickinson. Business Is Dull in The Hard Coal Fields Hazleton, Pa., Sept. 17 (A—The average traveling salesman coming Ito the anthracite coal flelds these | days must be of an optimistic turn |of mind if he expects to get any or- ders, for he is likely to find business rather dull, due to the suspénsion which has been in effect since Sep- tember 1. Merchants are not placing any large orders pending developments lin the situation and are buying only |in sufficient quantity to meet their immediate needs. Money is sald to be getting “tight” so far as the miners are concerned and much of the trade done at the &rocery stores and meat shops is on credit. The Porter & Dyson Co. Announce A SPECIAL SALE OW IN PROGRESS Leather Goods Fountain Pens Umbrellas Novelties eptional Main Street Observed at U, of P.| (—Tn | Axelrod’s Pharmacy Offer To All Who Suffer Stomach Agony, Gas and Indigestion Money Back if One Bottle of Dare's Mentha-Pepsin Doesn't Do You More Good Than Anything You Ever Used With this wonderful medicine you can banish indigestion or dyspep: catarrh of stomach or any abnoimai condition ‘hat keeps the stomach 1u You can be so distressed with gas and fullness and bloating that you think your heart is going to stop beating. ¢ const \ d one bottix s eR e Ve o)A (enasl| SonNiANtATaUsIHan AN CRAHORHY. «d that your breathing s short and | ™!!l Prove it GEEAL YOIRDIARELES QXA And how happy you will be whei Baspy. your stomuch 1s as good as new. for You think perhaps you are suf-|then dizziness, nervousness, sleep- focating. lessness, headache, dull eyes and You are dizzy and pray for quick |other ailments caused by ¢ disor- relief—what's to be done? dered stomach will d ppear and you will be your old huppy. content- ed self again. Axelrod's pharmacy and every regular pharmacist guar- antees one hottle of Dare's Mentha- Pepsin o show the way to stomach comfort. Over 6,000 bottles sold in one small New Jersey town last year— ask yourself why. Just one dessertspoonful of Dare's Mentha-Pepsin and in ten minutes the gas disappears. the pressing on the heart ceases and you can breathe deep and naturally. Oh, what blessed relief, but why not get rid of such attacks alto- gether? Why have chronic indiges- tion at all? e LUXURIOUS 1925 AUBURN SEDANS FOR HIRE | To the Businessmen and Factory Executives £hould vou need one or more modern motor cars for business purposc or for outings or special occasions at reasonable rates calls us up. THE AUBURN TRANSPORTATION CO. Taxl-Service. “Ride in Luzury” at Reasonable Prices. BURRITT HOTEL PARKING STATION New Britain Phones 687-3; 1390 Plainville Phone 55-3 Business men and factory executives watch this space tomorrow night. SPECIAL TO STUDENTS TYPEWRITERS FOR RENT Any Make, Late Models . . . §10.00 for four months New Britain Typewriter Exchange Telephone 612 96 West Main Street Silverware China Jewelry Pencils opportunity to purchase for New Britain