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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MALRCH 22 1926 ) ] ujlu('n(h)u of ")m federal councll of 3! Al Pl N " to com th 0 14, urer feeling of vesponsibility, 1 Is nothing to guide the Inexperi 1hv||n;hl'-;| (')l' :,Illrlnlt in I\nurh':l. o8- 0 i [mend the ctiorts of the DeMolay, to | onstration of wise aifeetion, 1y that, | have o .id that many tathers tail be. enced in his cholce of food. sorted that statistics showed a de- " LU peak to their sons and certain of you know very weli 1 do not mwan |cause they do not trust their som 1 4 b stat L | Bpe E [ 1K do ne an | eaun vy do no 8, " he elective system had its origf | .r ase in erime, in deaths from al- | ~ thelr father ny squashy sentimentality, lar because tiiey do not lay upon them in the tremendous growth of lno‘v‘vl! h E T;\_ohulmlh prison population and ar- | g N | “Tho old adage has it that ‘lo from i 1 i, howesver, the responsibility that teach independ. edge in the last century. The fund :;sm tor drunkenness glnce prohibi- 5 | VIR (15 0 wiso father who knows his &enuinc and consclous oxpression of |ence, Lot it never be sold of you, of facts In an increasing number of an, 2 » . own son.’ But, as a matter of fuct, @fceetion. The hen flelds finally became to great tha While many of the gains at- eils c iy hAIEbe bc e an o it=-and mado it lke Himselt— tather tried to lay upon you! b . 1 educators, completely overwhelmed i tributable to prohibition have per- | ), . when wa locate it, we shal 1 the I ! | N too often inclined to give mor nowa locate | shall find, It you, the sons, would make p f had to turn the task of selectior istod and aro dountiess pormancnt, | PASLOL TES Each What His At- - tha larg : slad—and wor Five Marks Shattered in Culyer 0L 1nterested 1n Foll, Thiey day satod and aro doubllws pormant, | astor Tells Each What His At 12 thele o shuse ot “windom to. 11k, 1at 1 ot arecst yar of youe tathrs siad—una woua 'iron | Fifg Mark BLOTO0 10 CBIVOL |over to Araen tramumen win ooecy a shi ersal of the fi lo : ) tho sons. And being myselt in the OUF LO¥. Somio one will say hero [tho keyatone into that arch of per. : Hot, RUANAsd 16" mikke wiis Hiid ..Have Bus Week.Em] trend oceurred in 1920," he suid. nda AAER QNG 0 T — With & amile that the easlest way (o | foct friendship, whioh is the surest i bl it AUR. waa SO e 1G8 position of hoth son and father i ile Contes Ihis burden of knowledge which i [“Wo shall never make progress in it hax been revealod fo mo that | !N BOATt of a boy Iy throuh his proof of understanding. do not fall| threafening. 16 arudl ehbalitie Tat citizenship by inducing people to I et the reverse is true also. 'Ho is a blomach my friends, the heart [occasionally to demonstrate your loy- —— der its weight s analagous to thy New York, March 22 (P—Prohi- | 0bey laws because thoy are laws. | 3jore loyalty and'a better under- | wiss son, who knows his own |O0 that routo (s of another sort. W alty and affcction for your fathers Culver City, Calit, March 22 (T/— structural overloading of our elvily Bllioniwaa dstendoalas a Kroat ads L‘\;l,_y lnwlr'nuzu win lts way with the | yia,ding betweon fathers i i : aro talking about the heart of a boy [Ono example which we Christians - L s " I'i'. : "l "'1' ization. 1In colleges the tendency | public on its ow: rit B HonE;) 5 ont of wl are the issues of life' ¢ take from tha Jews is W ve rocently established speed rec. % vance fn the moral history of the |” 8 own,merlt was the plea made’ by Rev. Theodore| “Koeplng In mind. therefore. the f which are the issue lifo! imay take from the Jews Is just thi ki Al iy in 10 specialization and Jepartmentag: United States gnd attacked as wun- | Th Dortind, Malne, at Momorial| s Greene, pastor of tho First Con: | difforing hut . mo aanfe. trecon. | AN the heart T ani taiking about is |of family loyaliy—und the uftcction ords wo roken hero yestorday in |0 IRECISIEUEN 264, MepaTmAig : s services for General Neal Dow, | ... Phssaird il Iy morm | e elonmot e o, fonée ITHCCOR- fhiggor and harder to conirol than |due to parents. The fifth command- | tha 230 mile automobile race, a AU8 ¢ k N workable” and in need of modifica- S°rvices » | Bregutional church yesterday morn- | ollable viewpolnts of youthful gons . o X et e e i alit d o thy | check of figures today revealed, Ben. |(Nterest of students in them. On tion In an unusually busy week-cu | “father” of {ho Maine Prohiblory |ing, in a sermon to members of Na. | and maturs. fathers, let us seq | "3, EASTIC capacty. diftloult as that e A s R QL Eos torny o ;",“f.,_!,f,‘p remedy must be found in broaden of speeches and statements on the |18V passod fn 185 Dr. Brnest 1. | (10 MROR 1o fombers of - and maturo faf : ) | mother, the e g IS : ing and dramatizing education. One qur‘s‘:lon Cherrington of Westerville, Ohio, ||+ “f“l LRI U T, ARYAURIONS 4814 TBANALLC soded hero fs not aftec- [0 the land, which the Lord, 1 Officlal notlce of agltation re. | Beneral scerets of the world d er understanding hetween the reason why football attracts so muek 5 Alr. Greene said in part: enerations, Wo are taking it for more of the undergraduates® aften girding modification has alrcady ¢80 ;‘”‘““;‘;' “;,;’"“';:‘]"‘- sald that | “Req) religion 1s eternal, ranted here — that as Christian tlon fs that a foothall g (6t been taken at Washington, o sub- | aerng the difficultles nocessar- | what Jsalah is saying here, Ana the Wl churchme o arc b p Eanet ot shrewd mindd el o (Vltal, dramatic whole. * committee of the senate juliciary |1V Involved greater progress has AR ind churchmen we arc both as | o equality, |dom of generations of shrewd mind miles an hour, eclipsing the | committee voting to hold publfe DeeN made in the first six years of ... It 1s something which wve all belteve at | rathers and as sona equally sincer 1t is means to self preservation. |record of ] » by Peter i 8 the same conviction | iy, our scareh for the deeper things| “Bnt now we come to the other Nearings. The matter will be de- | COnstitutional national prohibition clded definitely by the full commit than has ever been known in con- 8 x Y pig [ But it goes infinitely “deeper than | de Paolo at Miami, Fla, February |Prince of Wales Likely vhich gave rise to the somewhat hu- | ot life, the realities of the spirit, | $14¢ of the shicld, ¥ address myse o Besbasrlvitiatwoel: nectlon with any simila: effort at en- |41y roligious, The gener Wlons ) that, It cuts straight to the heart, |22, . ho values that mako for butter OV 10 You who aro tho sons horo ity 11 SR SEMELE €6 B0 s s _To Attend the Funeral Ly 1 | foreement of any other important e [N& now, here, and heroafler, """"’”.’j'.\. \.Ii! I o ”1”\ ¥ -‘-‘;::.‘»Nr.fl' [truth that loyalty, liko charits, be- cubic inch displacement Songntegsns Dacsky Misich M cBue hoard Roig tempeiinios and | e | gomsisne go. Mut thetateat (orGod fpring filia’ matios brisly. boforetia | VieASm fon3ollin|so W6y cq ns at home! We learn the Jargcr | today there begins a new era in % — King Haakon of Norway public morals of the Methodist Epis. | [eder ““"';"“‘ 0_.»[» m.uns: on, goes on forever and ev Manne lot me sugg to these fathers|Cf MY own cxperience as ‘,l“ fon ot} valties in time by being loyal to broad track racing, the inauguration | KIN§ Gustav of H“‘vlll“n and prob, copal church, in a statement at the |~ Conditions Improved nd customs change. Doctrines, | jrosent that — if they would un. |0P7 Of the best and most AP lsome individual, to some one to of the g ably the Prince of Wales will by capital, discounted reeults of nev r. Clarence True Wilson, Sccre- thetle and understanding fathers| o o = ™y look up. Some ARADS reordaithal wes present at the funeral next Sunday ATy ol U Aol i creeds and symbols arise, scrve thelr | jorstand thelr boys arl - they G i r paper “straw-votes” and asserted Y 2 8 oard — of | purpose and depart into Limbo. But | niet” exercise g patience, real |that ever lived one to whom we may be true.tarday probably will remain unmo. °f Dowager Queen Louise of Den. ¥ TeRtad o r e it rk, who died Saturday., King that the drys were fgnoring them, | [CHiPCrince and publio morals in an | iho eternal vorities go on &nd on | (it aug wise Iirst of all, if you would improve | ypy not let that some one t Hill was not alone, however, in the | Christian is deeply affectéd by thy The best referendums on prohibition, | A4dress at Berwick, Pa, credited |and on. Because all of us believe E | the erefanding existing p, vour father? And why not lot £aid the bonrd, are recont congres. | Prolibition with —saving America (i decp down inside, we are gaihe To, the sons, silting here in [ vean voue fathers and you S him know that you are trying hard A e at ’ ath of his mother. Crossing from Monall electisng LGXIARE Garsh | from tho evils of post-war depres- d here n this old church today. | (hese front seats, let mo suggest— | ¢\ o"to oxorcise o greater tolerance {to be loyal to him? ,“,l\m,”\:,.:)' iy "é 3 I"‘,Ml k) ,r"h,,'l: his palace to that the the dowagey won with monotonous regularity by | $100 suffered by Iuropean countrios. | jecause 1 believe it will with all my | 1t (1Y wonld read their fathers gttt S e S e A e L 1 | queen yesterday he met a group of overwhelming majorities. S e Nt in the New York legis- |heart, 1 stand up to declare to you | @isht, there esity for the i or oot TR e i o4 | Press photographers, stopping ang Empringham, national secretary of | W also advanced a step over the faet, And not only is He a living | ihcreased sense of responsibility g 1(‘ " ;" ‘1;. rds that | he said: “This §s the home of my the Church Temperance soclety de- | ‘"eck-end with the Wales bill pro- | fact, but He fs revealing 1im und a demonstration of loyalty. ———— Rl ¢ **| childhood, which now disappears.” lvered another attack on the en. | Ylding for such action scheduled to now to the oncoming generaon. He S ) (] G (L Al Nty u t's world's record of | BT torcement law of St. Luke's Gpisco- | “OMe before the upper house ecarly 1t in every birth and every cselty for a better understand- | oongidors the new libertles, the new 13 £r m”“«:r 54 hgur'ym_‘”nm for | READ WERALD CLASSIFIED ADy pal church, | this week f oW ever morning and ¢ between tho generations was | jjeals which have come to the youth | ceive Complete Report on the Do- a‘ S ~n‘; e m[p-' ‘d"”n pa FOR YOUR WANTS Ho told of diegulsing himself and | . AL Phoenlx, N. Y. Arthur I i ry evening. 1le is forever! patience. And what s the ot our world. But try to remember . Feete e S R et s i visiting “speak-easics” and other [PuVis, sfate superintendent of the | “Unfortunately, SEOn D St BCER LU RDEeRCH DIOR Bl = (noloramodRtalia ohatactoristic (ERIRESAREIUERERR. Siianediy e At places where lquor could be ob- #Ntl-saloon league, urged New York |are those in (he world who doubt ft. Simply this: Fathers must learn 10 | of your age. There are no mere 1n-| London, March 23 UP—The cabi- [y eocodstars at the . rate of | talned in all parts of the country, Tt | FéPUblicans to et in lino with the | My observation fs that nearly all of | bo patient with cons becauso this |olerant folks, perhaps—than young net had before it today discussion | |35 7¢ miles Sl was this fnvestigatlon, he eala, National party” by enacting a st theso gheptics belong to the older big job of being a father cannot | (oks, and only think what harm in- of arrangements for the expec The 100 mile niaric 0t 18154 Hads Quaker Oats wWhich convinced him that prohthi. 2%, and warned that Empire § neration. They ¢ the appar- | be aceomplished in a hurry. tlerancsoothor idess oustomsiand ey ol fengiouse ol comm oas) lpy Fiees i Conms et e et tlon was “an ufter failure.” ropublicans were. “in. danger from ent indifference of the youth of our | “If a man would know his son, ts has dono our world in thel op0rou of the recent breakdown |wng selipsed by Lewis average of e L Prohihition As Faflire competing with Tammany bidding | day to the forms and cercmonies of st make him the sibject of | past. Your father's home may not | (AR OF T FCeqit (el KON il LD D L L) stands b “Prohibition has failed,” he safd, | [0 beer votes.” “liglon. Nor is this all. They be- study, 1 uso the word fhe exactly your fdeal! It would per-| 5% € TEUS G MAtOls BETHE |1 S FliDsvore A lam y “because, the people of this country All of the motropolitan papers ‘moan the loss of old restraints, the ‘perpetual’ advisedly. There 18 no | naps be strange, if that were actually many to membership in the league. | o¢ 131,005 for 130 miles set Februnry never really believed in it, Tn GeVoted columns to prohibition dis- |crumbling of ald barriers, the dis- discharge in the twar of being & ' the ease But, whatever you do—| g " o on” Chamberlain, the for- | gs ']:" SliclassadliT Hills aokeAlat ou tllro h Rochester there are 100 more | 980N and the New York Times appearance of old ‘loyalties. The father and no vacation either! don't try to reform father and clgn secrotary, was to unfeld o .\“S e 0”1-“-"‘“ el y llg ‘speak-ecasies’ today than there were | PUDlished a special article asserting | world is full of such ‘Calamity There will be moments when you | mother, It just - cam't be domel|p, o or Baldwin and the ministers | ag miles r: si(‘mp lanted the rr"‘-“ . saloons before prohibition, In an- {4t the Pacific coast h run row |Janes' just now. You have heard | would like to resign from the en- ‘salll And o certain peace and |\, Ty ol oy the Geneva situation, ord of 131.408 mm? by Devore on the mornin, other city in an area where there | 5°0Tely less wide spread than the |them, I have heard them. In fact, | terpr - but that too is mpos- | stability, essential to all happy fam- | CF FEFS CF chief representas | the Miami bowl, . rni g used to he three barrooms, 17 |OP° that hovered off the Atlantic (it has been my lot as vour minister | sil And the boy is continually haken, when you it. Hill won nearly Half the $25,000 ‘blind-tigers' were found in an | S¢AD02rd a year ago. acquainta of a few changing. Just about the time you| “Every one of you—worth his salt David Lloyd George is expected pycco m‘.«mn‘ £10,000 1: 'h‘n‘ win. Your's search such per already in this city. | think you have him all figured out, | —has some ideal for a home of his| DAY 0¥ Beorge 13 expe o | A oG Dr. Empringham sald that his | e ; = 2 L ""‘; ‘”‘y’y”"“ ‘]"’]“.’Iy]';““' Same thing happens to change the fown. : el 1::, ",j realitys | @ reduction in the forcign office ap- ]\—yp lp)‘l,‘ A e & | That's why millions start total abstinence " " ik 18 1o worry abo or- | focns yonr dr 2 ce % B a 2 oy e : & : greatly in his search for violators of ¥ r generation. The difficulty * they do not take thelr sons great changes to pass in the home | &80 1S delinquencies at Geneva. REVIS[ON OF METHODS O feel right through the morni the law. At varions times he bosed i hat = has so h‘l‘i(;‘vox ,m\i-‘p'n- into their ¢ % I ence z(“ld there- : “f:nh],»‘. ;in\')”lvll:D:In-'}.‘():\;n\yx".rn'\;\yx');; 'I‘m; pracediite s the tsusllaltars you must have well-balanced, 8s o commorcial traveller, g these and so much te t n the confidence of | together have built up for you! ol Hi = UF TEAGHING ASKFD ¢ t fast, A o e et an " || Boods are Better || e s (o s s e Sy s o |1 9 5 st moten o on | | cqapite eod at ek, At P i ea WAt et we sto a quick to take in the essential merits | youth that childrer d be seen | o ° — inner—yt t 'hlflrfi. ):fl;;s\v\fi.“l‘wv‘,lm«.“;Inlfl:,;:.‘v‘;. ann demerits of parentatiol sisa ol andlriot Host EBut ie sitnation al L22 : mdl{!wxyl't& flmjcvn::‘(sax:?cn he e irix:daotfdfv‘;xonir you usually get that slums, however told his ;mwr & Al foods (vu_r\rnvcr"lwn served 4 1 after all, 45 | also the relative importance of fath- | quite different today. T find in most | 3PP! IR SHo COTRINonS: et g ¥ % 3 & in’ tem For to tempt . el ik i 1odern American homes that chil-| There is nothing, however, at the | % 3 i But at breakfast the great dietary H3ATe | arh ara i e o Appetit 1 1o start digeation I misunder- | er's place and social standing in the | modern American hom | sl b s b Says Present Day Needs B ; conditions among the poor ) perly. | that exists between the [ community. They recelve and pass | dren are both seen and heard. And | presen sugg | mistake is most often made—a hur- [y poor sinc Different Customs. ried meal, often badly chosen. of a boy—God 'that you falled 1o carry the load | tlonate condescension but a recipro- | God, hath given thee.' did not st He covered the 250 miles dis- cal relationship of love, a relation. |into the decalogue by any accld®wi. tance in one hour, 54 minutes and «hip that impifes a certaln amount |It represents the accumulated wis- 14 8-10 seconds, an average of narous remark that ‘Man is incur or the opinions and viewpoints of | |your elders | “In the diffienit years since the | war, a greater rift has grown up he-l tween the generations than ever be- | fore, and it is not strange, when one | gritish Cabinet Tomorrow Will Re- tive of Great Britain, prohibition calls for charity in his Vith all feh pnfi_;..;m’:n?’,‘,;x tions, 8 amount of fon the reflected judgments of other | that is a good thing. Tt |lsh.'?'n(1fl ‘n | :l{;"s'a\‘Hll'zu‘(h&i&v:::lan. nccordms‘ district have virtuolly disappearcd, § Fhonia b ‘Iwa. it Ev]uh o L SIS SR el pare i i ergtath atHors) (hen|| 1h e o o8 donsi arilldchatiors il | (SIE ‘Auates already has| discussed|| Cambricgs, Mass) March 22 (P prm'x’: eg;s’; g,’e‘:(' i‘l’,“,re‘"{,“jl{,i? S aedisceit avent dntof e e excited and thels Julces figws ||| diferences 10 he found In the waxing | —to tako our ehildren Into ent vo. | morebos that ‘el MLt ta Selt-e (i) G S iy o Presidont Glenn Frank of the Uni- | Eigitch (iR, Bress fuana bulder; Pederal Attorney Briory B. Buck Tho lemon juice supplies vita- 1l waning inferests of life. But a | fidence and help them to realize | pression in the family require th i 11 the | oy on e SOOERD, OO0 er | element, plus all-mpertant wikke Yy Eniory k- and organic slts and af deal of this misunderstanding | what is expected of them fn time. | father and mother. to whom you leagues, but ho has not met all the |view published today in the Harvara | pielt PR “bulk” that makes s s ord b which are direct digestive | 5100 T8 or in some sense [In this matter of trust, also, T be- |owe your very existence, still menicersfofitiefosbinel: | SHimson, com parecite prasent lacylsiskitives eldom needed, is the die- Hoator e Veolstaaie st o I An excess of fish and meat ||| Overcom liovo fathers make a grevious mis- |rights to their ideas also. And 1 - — |tive eystems of American collegcs 10 | yeyic'yrge of the woeld today. 0 o Rieacnorito ittt B erastasiaint ok blocASAT o | B O T cl Ly Lo el et om e e e b e their sons at home 'memher this doctrine of equal rights | READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS |an intellectual cafeteria and nrged X i ¢ each state to decide for itselt the |l juice, ‘though known as “acid” ||| plionted togay (hat Teiy 1A bie, | b bl ennk Of Dbt BEA e oneats S S Rtter and |a dramatization ot learning com- It is food that “stands by" you alcoholic content of legal light wines | | . has an alkaline reaction to i} B8 B SEY o . R s ; L . S erUbnE Iparable to football. through the morning. Food that and beer. A similar solut £ ana |l offse dity” from other foods mothers and daughters, see all too sponsibility. Give your boy some- | mother have some very ’qu i Lol 4 o should start every breakfast i 4 L solution of the < on. Callforaia'ls little of cach other. They have far |thing to do at home—if it is nothing | preferences to assert, some very old EURALGIA fethods of instruction are at | y breakfast in your enforcement problem was proposed [ ling. Prac too little knowledge of cach ofher's eping the walk or sifting the | fashioned 1deals to teach. Not eve nt worse n our colleges than | home. :," a statement by Willlam H. Higgt, bri § hopes and fears, responsibilities and |s . Teach him to take daily ve- | thing labeled old fashioned is wron orheadache—rubtheforehead 'anywhere else in our whole educa- Quick %uakef cooks in 3 to § az:::;:i:g:""m"l for the Brewets' | skins, easiest fo elice ispirations. We onght to welcome, |sponsibility for a definite job and |you know, nor even stupid and fool- ~melt and inhale the vapors m,” he declared. ho | minutes. | hat's faster than plain At Opelika ¥ y ol Yy opportunity to [thereby you help him not only to | ish olactiv stem has changed our | {oagt, Don't_drny_yo}lr:elf the nat- At Opelika, Ala., the Rev. Dr. T, bring the generations closer in the [lighten your burden, but to respect| “If you would cement the bonds of e ratny. wotar | Ural stimulation thia richfood offers. Ernest Johnson, excutive scoretary honds of understanding. And we do |himselt and to carry his own urden. |friendship between your fathers and VABO RUB me stronsly ot an intellectual cafer | — e e of the department of research and lcome the opporfunity which | “A better understanding by fath- |yourselves, try to exerclse, also a Osee 17 Niltia S érsiUsed Yaorly i oL EERERARIURARELE S ERUE | : ; —— Over 17 Million Jars Used Yaarly _ == — —— Community Chest Campaisn g The White Plague Niarch 22_29 S ' They used to call it that --- when tuberculosis was a ghost that swept through a town ]eaving horror and death in its wake. But today organizations like the $66,5 8800 | AW s Tuberculosis Relief have checked the spread of this plague and are teaching people how to fight it. & & & ) In its two clinics--- one for children, the other for adults --- the LYEL ASSOCIATIQN i Tuberculosis Relief examines scores in its work of curing those who TUBERCULOSIS RELIEF are Uiseased by treating them before it is too late and preventing JUNIOR ACHIEVEMENT 2 4 them from giving it to others. Many are sent to sanatoriums, others FRESH AIR CAMP iy ate treated in their homes and their families taught the virtues of fresh SALVATION ARMY £ ~an, cleanliness and proper food which will save their own health. VISITING NURSE 4 | , : n o DAY NURSERY i Tjhe battle against tuberculosis must be ceaselessly waged or the white plague will \ ¢ again break its bounds. Part of the money you contribute to the Commumty Chest BOY SCOUTS ' will help carry on this fight. GIRL SCOUTS BOYS' CLUB “Give -a day’s pay” | NEW BRITAIN /B COMMUNITY CORPORATION Serving Ten Member:Charity Organizations Donated by New Britain Gas Light Co.— Connecticut Light & Power Co.