New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 18, 1926, Page 2

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NEW BRITAI DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 1926, eSS T e e Denatured Alcohol and Priming Ether | | for your automobile || The DICKINSON | | day | IER-PATTISON PLAY HERF AGAIN by Music Lovers The narles of two-plano nation's two major \umi. artistry--Guy d Lee Pattison — played ‘return in New The engagement' Br yesterday event 1tain afternoon, was under the ausplecs of the New Britaln Musical elub, and the As 80 yester cxthetd place, tha Capitol theater was the ecase last == the team satisfaction to all Maler playing since the year, gave and Pattison together close of the hey perform as one; doubla the capacity and as each alone high rank work Is a unique haen ever have long war — that hut they have )t one planist, s a planist of of thelr team- “0 contribution to DRUG CO. | 169-171 MAIN ST. n | | tion Horsfall’s Winter Sale | | Men's Clot! , Furnishings and Shoes at tremendous red: tlons — mee these values — bu | them while you may! | stressed A Group of Fine | MEN'S SUITS | —1n good styles and woolens, well tailored and worth nearly double | | their price $20.50 tive mfuJ‘*Js_grn.Al valucs One Group of YOUNG MEN'S SUITS Very fine valu —young men'’s ;| . §24.50 | One Group of TWO-TROUSER SUITS Some ] Xtr lckers—for | sport or business .. $39.50 HORSFALLS 93-99 Ydsylum Strect HARITORD “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” S J. D. DONAHUE Voice Cuilture tested Tuesdays and from 2 p.m. t 9 p. m. 3818-3. Studio 3818-2, 5 Volees Fridays || | ! ttes, ki |a M. C. LeWitt’s : UPSTAIRS JEWELRY SHOP! Room 4 299 Main Street New Phone 3100 ;\‘r, CLEAN LVERYTHING UNDER THE SUN NATIONAT WINDOW CLEANING COMPANY 24 Tremont Street Telephone 530 Dr. C. W. Vivian DENTIST 205 West Main Street Extractions, Dental X-Rays 1052 Phone 705, DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN q\,m | playea tana the concert platform The program wa variety, and was particularly note- in that it introduced th ultra-modern numt master of modernism This contemporary Italia belfeving that all has t can be sald with regula- harmony, fs known as one most advanced In the realm of sonance, To foin two keys half a tone apart and somctimes thres — s all in the day's work | with Casella. Before the pianists the trlo of ear-rufflers Mr. | in one of his characteristio &peeches, warned the uflr- ence wh to expect, hut gratefy the fact that each mul would be very short. The first lus ed only a minute and the othe not much longer, Ths three numbers were of a rot {called “Puppazzettl” and their dividual were, “Serenade 1 Ber “Polka." Their | rmonic character was quiclk- ‘evident, but their play of wit |t jocose nature were equally | | evident. Nobody cd hls hands | ¢ to his ez ality, broad smiles | 4 | abounded at euch extrayagant key- | board buffoonery. Such th | difficult for one player !urme of | {the inconvenience of playing in two but | ef-f one of opulent wort been sl is { Mater, short I and u\ | {or three keys at the same time, | with two at the keyboards the fects are more easily attained, The | laudlence yielded a gleeful recep- tion. | Brahms figured twico on the pro. gram; and Bach once. The Brahme offerings we six “love waltzeg, and varlations on a theme by Haydn. The Bach piece was a fantasia and fugue. The Brahms | waltzes were melodious, loaded with subtle accessorle, whils the variations were tremendous in | scope. Some modern planists of un- common skill remain elightly |afraid of a Bach fugue, yet how good they can sound was amp ilustrated by the performan D | yesterday: A planistic version of tha coro- ! nation scene from Moussorgsky's “Boris Godounoff” promised much, nd the little lecture that preceded it gave a succinet {dea of what the music portrayed. The deficiency of the plano version. however, was too much was left to the magination The Arensky “Valse” must he popular two-piane composition, it heing the only number on the pro- zram yesterday that was played by he twa artists last year — except “Arkansas Traveler” en- As last year, the “Valge" got a spl 1 reception, 1t being on of those scintiliating numbers ¢ are kinematio grapsed, Rachmaninoff's “Tears" appearcd to live up to its tit but as it i sustomary verything Mr. Rachmaninoff writeg by the popu- larity for the | core minor" for cntrancing arrangement “Beantiful Blue Dan- waltzey ereated a furore. It 1t the end of the program and 1 anyone arose fo leave conclusion, ntributing g a popu An of P did gt s to ot at nobody he Clem sonata in B flat 1. This op herehy (e uainted with the hos oni th prog ove with & compares sum of | erected; Theodore Pekrul; Vogel; yolo: For Colds | SPANISH NEEDED, Grip, Objeets o Discontinnance ol - Study at Hartford H. §. and as a Referring to the is the fact that Span- Preventive I 70 million pe , a great many of whom live | in countries with which the United States secks to strengthen {ts com- merclal and social relations, Prof, | Andres Guilliano, head of the Span- ish department of the New Britain High school, fssuad a statement to- |day opposing the dropping of {ish from the forelgn language cur ricula of Hartford High schoolg | movement s language of now on foot to discon- %*; s iz\!‘*"’g’ Serious illness and com- plications often follow an ordinary Cold. Check it; use the old Reliable, Safe and Proven Remedy, “Lax- ative BROMO QUININE.” The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet. Proven Safe for more than a Quar- ter of a Century. The box bears this signature ©. 7pore Price 30c, DRIVE FOR $4,200 10 START PROF., ANDRES GUILLIANO serman Lutherans of St, Jnlms tinue the teaching of Spanish in the Church Pledge That Sum for Sub. | Hartford institution on th scription to Wagner College, [that littie Intorest A campalgn for $4,200 for a sup- |, L o Guilliano's cription to Wagner college at Sta- en Island will be started by St John's German Lutheran chur according to a vote taken at the annual meéting yester The report of the treasurer for showed receipts ‘0 69 and expenses of $6,440.26, leaving a surplus of $76 $1,028.46 was is shown in it. statement fol- > for Americans to enter into cloa relations with Span- ish races until the Spanish language is mora spoken by most educated persons in America. “Most i nt people confess that the of Spanish in the United s is 4 matter of great importance, and that it is the language with which the people of the United States will have most to do in the future, due principally to the proximity of the Central and South American countrics | “Questfons of Spanish should be separated from poiitical matters and missions. The following E H P stave officers were John: Hiltpold; Fenske and trustee, Richard Carl Bauet; en- Peter Nuss. INTRODUCING— feacons, secretary, ecrefary SARAH JONES THE SUPER WASH VOMAN GUILLIAND SKYS an- Imillions of inhabitants with { | through rome ground | propaganda to subetitute German instead of Epanish as it scems to be | the Martford High| in 10018, “The future success of Spanish 1nl e United States will depend upon v general willingness to recognize the merits and culture of the Span- ish people and this is a point that we should strongly emphasize. "I believe that the study of Span- ish is useful in the public high schools when directed by competent teachers, | 'As in the case of other language: '4‘ the study of the Spanish language | affords valuable training, | “l hope that the teaching of Spanish will remain an essential ature of our secondary schools {training and an important subject in the curricula of co! 8 and uni- versities, 1t is the language of 70 whom we are secling friendly relations, |and it is the key to one of the most |important litcratures in the world. | |There 18 no question of the valldity lof its standing besides Lrench and |German, “Those who speak against Span- {Ish are either ignorant of what the panish speaking peoples have ac- |complished or they oppose it personal reason, | “Spanish is a more practical sub- |ject for American high school stu- {dents of the present day than French | lor German and should be taught | than is now the c tions requirc that the present and | |tuture generations ehall be put in | {touch with our southern neighbors. | 'he instruction in Spanish now | |our means to that end, sin Latin- | |American history and sociology are | Inot yet taught in our high schools. | “Spanish is a langua with a |great abundant and vigorous liter- ature and takes rank as one of the | most important European or Ameri- | can languges both with regard to the population using it and because of ity intrinsic merit. | “Spanish is like the vhich it is a product. No country | lin history has survived o many | centuries of misrule and manitested | ch enduring vigor as has Spain. “The two great languages spoken in the western hemiephere are Span- ish and English, and in the interest of international understanding if no other reason, it behooves the nations art of the globe to learn other's language. sanish, with its phonetle sim- plicity and richness of expression, furnishes the American student with excellent linguistie training, Its lit- re ranks among the best of surope, and that it is particularly interesting to the American public is evident from the great vogue ich the contemporary Spanish novel and drama are now lLaving in this country.” nation of | Most Women Wash With Their Hands— Sarah Jones Washes With Her Head. Most Women Use Elbow Grease— Sarah Jones Mixes Brains With Soap Suds. | thea thanks, O Lord God, . . | other people . . | kingdom will be a gradual process | | kingdoms spoken of by Daniel e — INGDOM OF GOD1S HERE SAYS SPEAKER, Blessings at the Door, R, E. Paine Declares “Any one can guess at what may ' happen in the future, Proof is re. | quired to establish the positive ex- anrn of anything. For 1,000 years | Christians have prayed for the coming of God's kingdom. Jesus! and the prophets told what kind of proot would be avallable at fts coming, Now the proof is here, The ' : | | | WOMANS "APPAREL SPECIALTIES, MIDLETOWN == NcW GRITAM. Kingdom 13 the hope of the world. | For this reason eternal blessings | for the entlre race are near at hand. These blessings for both the | living and the dead, include & cor- | plete deliverance from sln and | cath, dlsease and suffering, as well as the curse of wars and profiteer- | ing.” 8o sald R. K. 3 . in a lecture at Odd Fel- | lows' under the auspices of the International Bible assoclation, yesterday, Mr. Paina said in part: “And now the come, at the door. Bible chronology veri- | e, | fles this statement, ak do also the | «igns of the times. Jeeus declared | that the evidence of hls return and the end of the age would be a great: world war followed hy pesti- lences, famines und earthquakes, (Matt: 24:7). The Revelator con- firms this in these words, “We give | be- | cause thou hast taken to 1h~a thy |§ great power, and hast reigned. And the nations wers angry and thy wrath is come, and the time of the | dead, that they should be judged. (Rev, 11 tion is glven by the prophet Dan- | tel who sa ‘In the days of these kings (ruling at the close of the | age) up a kingdom which be destroyed and the kingdom shall not ba left to other people, but it shall break in pieces and consume all these kingdoms, and it shall stand forever.' (Dan, 2:44). Daniel had been describing the four universal empires, wviz., Babylon, Medo-Persla, Greece and Rome: the first three kingdoms of which history tells were destroyed and left to other people and upon the | remalns of the fourth will be es- tablished the fifth unjversal em- pire ‘which shall not be . and shall stand forever.! The cstablishment of this | and will be just as real as Most Women Get Up Ealy in the Morning and Work, and Work, Sarah Jones Presses a Do it. and Work— Button and Lets Science Women Scald Their Hands and Rub Deep Fur- Paine of Brook- | @ Students' | § kingdom has | and the blessings are even | 7, 18) Another confirma- | shall the God of heaven eot | shall never | left to || Tomorrow We Start Our Surprise Week that’s what we are calling this week WATCH FOR OUR :\D$ EACH NIGHT { Special lots of money-saving bar- § gains for every day. The specials § will be worth-while coming for— every item we'll advertise will be taken right out of our own stock, not just bought special for these sales. Please Note—The items will only i be on sale on the day we advertise them for, so we advise if you're interested come early in the day— quantities will be limited FOLLOWING SPECIALS FOR TOMORROW ONLY 29c a pajr One Lot ISE’ GLOVES o formerly sold (Assorted eolors) at §1.00 510 pair formerly sold to $3.00 WOMEN'S SILK HOSIERY One Lot H and SI DRESSES o Dark and light colors formerly sold $9.98 to $24.98 rows in Ther Brows— Sarah Jones Sits Comfortably While Wonder chines Do the Work. Ma- impress wae gatnes he plant clos t for the rem ROYAL SOCIETY PACKAGE OUTFITS INFANTS' and CHILDREN'S DRESSES, WOMEN'S NDERWEAR, . I ;;:mrrmrw i BATTERIFS Auto Electric Service ABETZ Tel. FRANKLIN S WORK OF ALL KINDS o case 19¢ each Women Handle One Piece at a Time— formerly sold C A. $1.00 to $2.50 114 UVABINEL 2860 Sarah Jones Handles a Thousand. (2t Lovers Adopt Unique \\stcm ofil(l '\llln" I’(l Sarah Jones Can Surely Be Called a Modem New Britain Sign Co. Miracle Worker. “Doing Better What Manv Do Well” 34 CHURCI ST, Tel. 894 WOMEN'S LEATHER HANDBAGS Get in Touch With Sarah Phone 904 And One of Her Sons Will Call Bucharest Newspapein Protesting Censorship U may formerly sold $1.98 and $2.98 in ere t's safety omes dow ™ SYRACUSE Y. Jan. 18 (P n fire swept a upied by Kier and earpet ller estat he fire was

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