New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 21, 1925, Page 2

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e |BIG VALUES IN 3. BOOKS - Regular Price v $2.00 and $2.50 3 NOW . $1.00 Book Dept. THE DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST, Can You Read Chinese? Of course not! ' §o we'll give you the o'd Chinese provarb in English— "One words." look is worth a thousand And {t's true, We cannot convey In typs these new Fall models in Horsfall clothes sven with Danlel Webster at our elbow— So—we'll eut short on words and ask you to take one Jeng look TWO-TROUSER SUITS From an excellent manufacturer. $38.50 HORSFALL-MADE FANCY SUITS—$45 and $50 Compare them with any $60 Suit. HORSFALLS 93-99 Msylum Street “It Pays to Buy Our Rind” Charles Evans Morris, M. D. Office 708-709, Pilgard Building Hartford, Coun. EMANATED RADIUM AND ORGANOTHERAPY CALLS MODERNISH HALF BOLSHEWSH New Britain Pastor Tells Why He Is Fundamentalist Modernism of today {s half bol- evism and half paganism, accord- ¥. L. Brooks, of the v. Mr, Brooks in his sermon last evening spoke “Why I am a Fundamentalist” He outlined & aumbar of reasons why he prefers to be a fundamentalist rather tbaa a modernist, The sermou follows: ‘The modernism of today {s noth ing less than the prophesied apos tasy of which we read in II Tl It 1s & twofold organism than that le sure to bring |disnster. It o one-half bolshevism {one-hait paganiam in that it denies |all revelation “Satan began hir assault upon the beginning by : he next t d to opposition, and then to mutilation In thess jatter days he has worked the game of imitation, and has al- ready begun his final atick on nulli- fcation Two years ago there was held in New York city a gathering of the editors of the daily papers of a o tain syndicats, Two great ftems of news were discussed by this gather- fng. There is no set of men who have a keener sense for real ncws than the editors. The one item of discussion was the hoom of Henry Ford for president and the other was that modernism was threaten- ing to divide all the existing denom- inations, “Wa should on our guard against this evil. We cannot afford fo ignore this wave of which seeke to rob us of our revela | tton 1ot cry against this apostasy for it tende to create a disturbance s the way Pharaoh or the people of Joshua. Isafah, Jeremiah, Jesus and be they went are not afrald to disturb the devil! Wa are hearing that we must re- |spect academic freedom and per- {sonal lberty. It st liberty of {thonght and speech that is neded day but it is loyalty to the truth | Academic frecdom and personal Iih- erty may lead one to declare th constitution of the United States is lform of government. Let some teacher try it and see what will hap- pen. “We are told that many medern Ists are good peopie, therefore we should not oppose them. lgoodness has been inherited from {orthedox teaching. The next gener- lation of modernists will be a differ- lent clags of people. “There are seven points of differ ence hetween the modernist and st, as follow he fundamentalist le is the word of God; judges men. ‘The Eays the modernist man judzes the Book he fundamentalist s is the Son of God in a sense in which no other Is, Tl modernist says that Jesus Christ is IN REJUVENATION |a son of Giod in the sense in which CANCER, GOITER and ALL GLAND TROUBLES Write for Interesting Booklet | Home WeT WasH ! i LAUNDRY i{WASHES CLOTHES AT SMALL COST ~ND A )\ CIOTHES WASHED SWEET CLEAN AS THID SPRING SHINE. WIT WASH PLAN AN PHONE () 2821 | Tortured by rash on face Resinel stops itching and malees akin clear and smooth SUN- |alt men “Third e fundamentalist says [that the hirth of Jesus Christ was lsupernatural. The mode t says [that the birth of Jesus Christ was natural, “Fonrth—The lthat the death The modernist says that the death of Jesus was exemn ifth—The fundam t man is the product of spe creation fundamentalist saya of Jesus was cxpla [tory {man is the p | sixth, | that man i duct of evolution fundamentalist r, fallen from of says iginal righteousness and apart from Jeeming grace fs hopelessly The modernist says that man is the unfortunate victim of enxiron- irough self-culture, God's r Jame 1 by talist fafth in th sultin t man truth the nine-fold The verbal o frin the fa itutionary a seurrection ment aternal salvati | | " A coming of Chriet words that are 1 wrongfully by mod altet Tama free 1 || seience evolution is ¥ upon which it is based is suscept! J in that it defles all authority; it is | modernism | We are told that we ghould | digobedient to the Paul created a disturbance wherever |! 0 Ged, give us men who |° a tarce and bolshevism is the best © All their | s the Bible contains the word of |! e modernist says that can | reasona for | ble of n pler explanation ‘ Upon historie and moral grounds we must arrive at the same conclusion ‘ The Least ju robs man of its sancity, gov nient of its author« ity, the Dibie of its trustworthiness, the church of her power, and Chriat of H Such a theory is not based uf ki galned and verified by e \ and 0) t thinking.' { ‘Fundamentalism 18 a religion of | hope while modernism with its denfal of the supernatural is a liglon of deapair, 50 far as it is pos- I sible to call t a glon at all.” re- SEES RETURN OF JEWTO DWNTAND. I5 a Matter of World Signifi- oance, According to Speaker | The year of jubliee for the Jevs | has hegun and the Jew fs returning | [to his promised land, according to | | €. A, Wise, viee-president of the In ternational Bible who spoke in New Rritain yesterday, He took as his subjeet, “The Year of stude ! Jubilee.” s Mr Wise based his “And 3 year, and proclalm liberty through- cture on shell hallow the a0th ~ |out all the land unto all the inha [tants thereof; it shall be a jubi unto you: and ye shall return ever ! man unto his poss 2 and lyefurn every man unta his famil Mr. Wise showed that in this levery h0th year was to Israel a year | of jubilee, a time of rejolcing and restitution, in which broken families were reunited and lost homesteads | were restored He said the that there were of these jubilee perio cach before the antity of the times of restitution would he Aue. God, through Moses, had fore- the Jews, that if they were we to which as la nation they had pledged them- selves, He would punish them for it. “Then shall the land enjoy her abbaths as long as it leth and ye he In your enemies | 2 Chron 26 he =afd, the ful IW”"”' of this prophecy s record ed: “to fulfill the word of the Lord |hy the mouth of Jeremiah, until the .nd had enjoyed her Sabbath | long as she lay desolate she kept h, tn fulfill three score and ten * From this it is evident, the aker said, that Tsrael had fs ohserve properly the of which the jubilees were the chief. at one time God caused the [Hehrew people to sufter banishment from their land, and cansed the land to ain idle as many yea as | lthere ald be jub periods | In reference to actual {ime when this fubllee gystem s made, | |Mr. Wise said {n part: "The jubilee Ae to date from the | me they en 1 the land, that is lthey entered during the year which Ihegan Octobyer 1, 1576 B. €. The ac- tiz thelr entry was in the ve sh Seriptures indicate designed to be 70 of 30 years cal jubiles war (Evstemn was T | hence the first year of ear perind was but six {mon b crop years it was sufficient in length {6 be counted as a whole year. From | the tall of 1576 B. C., to the begin- | Ining of era the ferenc |vears, | 1 threa-fourths o r longer brings us to Oct. I . the full end of the 70 jubi In connectien with this Mr. Wise | #aid that the jnbilee of the Jews had actually begun in that th possession of their land 12 v of March, 1325 the 4 out of Ne time the flag has heen raised fn 2 }(‘rl,rm-|n< . Wise B uded JEED ent of provided ler and throngh ftse had in view, the release | nd from the debt of &in ndage and servitude” | ed from an extended Eurc y& he realizes as ney vail in o present t When vou cool | off suddenlyand when you sleep | | in a draft. yon { get a Slight | Cold, causing Headache, Neu- ralgia or Sore Muscles. To Stop the Headache and Work off the Cold The box bears this signaturs 12 POINTS MADE | points in w |in his promise to G 7 byore Price 80c. for the sols purpose of showing that the defendant was & notorious crimi- . SureRelief | i FOR l"D'GESTloN | I'-lr'\y;‘.’n‘?uflo:y i i whenteridones ~ 1s allowed to come into court which showed the commlission of other hat reversible error exista he- cause of the prejudlelal eharacter |of the state's attorney's arguments to the fury, Limited Degree “That after the case was given to {the jury for consideration and the | jury retired they returned and made a request as a result of which a time table was alowed to go to the jury for consideration. "That the court erred In {ts charge | when it limited the jury in con- sidering the degres of murder. “That the general statutes of Connecticut says: ‘No person shall be convicted of any crime punish- able by death without ths testimony of at lsast two witnesses or that ich is equivalent thereto.' Other Murder Trials “That the court erred In ever. ruling the defendant's motion for change of venue; the defendant | claims to have proven by the evi- {dence and the exhibits filed in the hearing angd by the testimony in the trial of the cass and given upon examination of jurors.” i Many famous Conecticut taken during the trial of Gerald}ypaig “eoncerning the Chapman for the murder of Police-| prosantation anq procedurs of the lv of New Britain. Chap-| court during the trials ars cited to brief in| gupetantiate the claims mads in the appeal from the ver-{pyjer ncjuded in these is the case of the jury and a request fOr & of ctata against Gilligan, in which ¢ trial for the condemned man. | Amy E, Archer Gilligan, proprietor Points as Cited of the Archer home at Windsor, was The 12 polnts cited are convicted of murder; tha state | against Schieifer, a labor leader and | the state against Feront, 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everpvhers INCHAPMAN A Tawyer Tor Condemned Man| Files His Appeal Hartford, Sapt, 21 —Citing twelve revursible error may exist or to ch exception was : murder manner of yers will file a of the “Raversibla error exists because he trial court erred in refusing to segregate nitneseses for the state and In denving such a motion | made by the defendant of | “During questioning | Rev a8 J. Feeney, & witness I Do~ \r. and Mrs, Jossph P. Sweeney of vv~L presence n?rr:, Sury to | 'NIs clty, has been transferred from L e S ;!\Q‘Ch!n;!e”m‘:slon flelds to Korea, 52 having declined an opportunity to e v""':f";‘l_""“‘""'”’"m,_w [return to the United Etates to re- antaln. 't as done for the pur.|cuperate stier an iliness, s Y REm sy rhand . This fact became known yester- ey |day when R B. F. Meyer, su- | perior of a new Chinese mission field, appealed to the eongregation of St Mary's church for support for the falleq | foreign missions. Father Mayer also certain | told the congregation Father Swee- [ nex's brother has been ordained a {deacon at Maryknoll and next year i1 depart for the Chinese miseion Aelds. The second member of the Sweeney family to prepare for for- ign service is Leo Sweeney, a former pupll at St. Mary's school. introduced as ——— to the crime The first {ssne of stampa in the introduced | T'nited States was in 1849 Leo Sweney to Join Brother in Far East Joseph H. Sweeney, son of the state, officers ceted were In ths co I v as it doea appear that they sat down when requested by Mr. Alcorn “That the state's state's attorn attorr conneet evidence “That the verdict was against the nee. t frrelevant allowed In evidence court testimony wa by the tria Trrelevant 'l testimony relation aparently rstimony “That ing no rged and Free Evening Schools OPEN MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 21ST AT 7:30 P. M. TO LEARN ENGLISH Go To— (entral Junior High School, Corner Main and Chestnut Sts. Elihu Burritt Junior High School, Corner North and Lee Sts. Washington School, High Street. eE———— TO EARN GRAMMAR SCHOOL DIPLOMA Go To Central Junior High School, TO LEARN A TRADE Grades VI, VII, VIIT Go To-— State Trade School, South Main Street Machine Work Electrical Work Shop Mathematics Drafting Printing Auto Repairing Bricklaying (arpentry September is the best month for Planting Evergreens and Rhododendrons, and the best way to choose them is in the nursery as they grow. Drive over to the nursery and select your own plants. We dig and burlap carefully while you wait. If you have a planting problem, bring a picture along, and we can help vou in selecting the proper plants. HOLLAND BULBS—We import direct. Bulb list now in the hands of the printer. Please ask for a copy. THE BRISTOL NURSERIES, Inc. BRISTOL, CONN. . Nurseries Located Between Bristol and Terryville GET A BUCK SAW = Watch that wood pile grow and cord after cord of wood get lined up for the winter—if you get one of our Buck Saws, sharpened and set to whip through the wood ot A e] 750,82 25 One and Two-Man Cross Cut Saws 3! to 6 Ft. The Abbe Hardware Co. TEL. 407 405 MAIN STREET This Beautiful SERVICE —The Range With THREE Separate Ovens and Mercury Thermometers. Without An Equal For Finest Cooking, Baking and Broiling SINCE 1832, Fuller & Warren Co., Troy, N. Y, have been famous as manu- facturers of good Cook Stoves. This range, pictured above, is their VER_Y BEST Combination. It is mighty attractive in design, unusually well built and finely finished. Not a holt ov serew head is visible on front of range. THIS RANGE has THREE Ovens, a coal oven and TWO.gas ovens, one of which has a good wide broiler. It has spacious Cooking Top with FOUR full sized coal holes and FIVE gas burners, including simmering burner, and automatic lighter. It has Pyrex Glass Gas Oven Doors and accurate Murcury Thermometers on all THREE oven doors. It comes in regular black or the new Gray Porcelain Ena.me! finis]i. which is very beautiful, lasts a lifetime and forever does away with blacking. Range also comes equipped with the new Gas-Coal Coil Water Heater, if desired. Given With Range During This Sale Only This Beautiful 42-Pc. Set of Dishes Exactly as pictured, 42 Pieces of American China, very attractive- {§ lv decorated in three colors. §13.50 Value. GIVEN FREE WITH RANGE DURING THIS SALE ONLY Buy NOW—Range will be held for later delivery if desired. C. J. LEROUX, 174 Arch st.

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