New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 16, 1926, Page 5

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; NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDN , JUNE 16, 1926. [ faith was 45, and the whole [to be included in the tables of the craft owned by Arthur Curtiss| The firing by coast guard patrol K. K. K. TENT BURNED, | refused. Later when the leoturer EUN&REGATI”NA[ | pumber of nevw ork capltalist fir- |boat No. 207, which was reported to Father Peter Rice of 8t. 4 |including those added by transfer | dum. ames, New Y | I e o et h »d the Iy v church of Hudson, pro- | ana restoration as well as by confes- | States where the largest gains in FOR CARLLESS F[RING },,l‘ PenEYOar kY opoosia fTnton g RS “'(.f ] t the meeting which had slon, was 74,930. Both the number | membership were made, were: a1l w: “}e en route from New York. jcral hundred persons at Miami last | .h received by confession and the whole | Massachusetts with a net increase of One shot crossed the bow and a sec- |saturday, is being invest d by ived conducted for a week were number recef are the second |28 1 rowly missed the BOW |,y ‘puarg offictals, A score or {-Catholic. 1 t 1 The shot 1 I turer sought to continue, |largest for any year. The record |fornia with 1,604, Michi an. The shots came from an g 5 % : Being Tired Upon As Rum |unseen vessel on the shoreward side, |MOre shots were fired by the patrol Wiscon: Crowd Objects to Anti- | Catholic Utterance June 16—A Ku Connecticut with 1,861, Cali- |lscort to Swedish Prince '((‘pull‘ifi wat | e hun- h commotion had been Past Twelve MOl]lh Pm(}d net growth is due in part to the af- 1,546, New York with and S Al i & s anti- uld not speak. The meet. | ) filiation of twenty-three Protestant |Iowa with 1,160, | Rmner |but atter an ofticer of the AR L LChRROd) A quoL S Raeni y a lec- h the burning of the o . D Evangelical churches of Pittsburg, | The states where the largest gains alled out s identity, SIghork Rbefic dnjthie riversing | ent. There were soveral Dbriet e f . Teatest in Gh[llchs H]S(OW | Cincinnati and St. Louis with the |occurred in apportionment benevo-| Now Yo e 16 UP—Shots fir- [Proceeded without a fur SERRCa b T Kathe ounters between the opposing fac- I 4 | National ~ Congregational Council. | lences were: California with ed at the private yacht Aloha on | @NCe: ~Mr. James on s way to ible Fort D ¥ 8 DR QIR tinng, ! —— | The membership of these churches | 772 increase: Connestiotit with o may o ot the e 4 008 98 |Newport to greet Crown F in_direct line of to hear Alfred Brown, | RSO R | ¢ York, J —Sfatistics in- | is 6,296. The total growth of the Massachusetts with $17,00 DAY E0 SR SE QORI PHNGS 0 [thyns Adoluhugiof Ll ik, ¢ r. When the re than 2,600 passengers were { t yea s the best yet | denomination in membership for the | Hawailan Islands with $13,747, Min- SWeden at Newport, R. I, presum- [believed a rum boat chaser had donc and jury, which g “America,” a in the past year, by the five v tory of the Congregational | decade since 1915 is 121,246, | nesota with $10,5 ! 3 im boat chaser, have firing and that a report of £ adjonrued s yestor T 1 to stand operated alrplane lines in SHsivenesking fife Uitk biatéatars| W AN nciaasd o1 3 iititios il A been made the subject of a protest |Incldent would go to Washington. ing any recommendation : Setan th A6 Ko ] contained in the denomination’s new | amount raised for local church ex- to Washington, while alleged pro- \ year-book ; penses, 18 reported; the total raised | miscuous firing by a coast guard 1 ey 22,665 in meme | Was $19,807,607. | trol boat at Miami, Fla., is bership, a new record for a year’s| Invested funds held by the |two and a quarter AR e = B R e e B 3 growth, is reported: the total mem- | churches were increased $1,775,633, | year. a, a large square | { BREsh Ty pawE the total now being $17,119,481. The ‘ W ATk i gain in valuation of church property 3 i 6 was $12,220,013, the- total value of raised for the regu- | the Prop of the churches now { ] nt benevolences, | amounting to $144,410,250. 5 r e —————— . > and forelgn missions | A decrease of forty-four in the o Il s " [ total number of churches and a de- 1 Il case of $456,947 in total benev- | | AIR {olences, were reported. The de- | | < W led each year except | crease in the number of churches re- ! | vy one since the war, is considered es- | flects the movement for larger and A G ¥ | ‘ prelally noteworthy as o mumber of | stronger churches throvgh consoli- | 8,549 511 Working Women in United States ‘ } denominations are reporting large | dation, federation and the elimina- ’ i | hrinkages from the high level of |tion of small churches in over- wants to keep her job or hopes for | | b ry giving attained five or six | churched sommuniles, according to & DAIAH ans, sho|miust! giked! har i S 80, | Rev. Chares Emerson Burton, D. D., health, ey : ! | Tho Congregational increase in | sccretary of the Congresadional No- AP, (kT (i e | L I ual apportionm benevolences | tional Council. down, and T was tired v | Seventy-two new churches, includ- : . ing twenty-three Evengelical ou ‘0 CALL US Protestant, were received into the d I decidec W it 1L membership of the National Con- medic the Vegetabl wpiie? 3 WITHOUT TOLL gregational Council; the number but T did not begin to ta [ ) GE. C 3 00 i lost through federation, consolida- larly unt Iv 14 g*“ 222355 CHARGE, CALL April o same months for 1 being tion or disbanding 116. The r 1 were prac- increase of $40 In the | fjcally all in growing cities or in the s of pastors is report- The total of churches now | fine and have gain | work in a broom sh, | is not so hard on new churches organiz w L SRR g | -‘.-AL:J-;‘;R L 4 M R T PP now, and I 1. The average salary now is $1 | keep my own %m')(fl, 1 we !‘1\ my 1 i ion to salary, thr crease in total benevolences SR e | the provide | was hrought about largely by a de- A z & | etable Compo and how it has S Beginning Thursday R. F..D. No. 5, Box 27, Atlanta, - BINE | crease of $244,154 in contributions to the Pilg: M rial fund, and | 25 anr astors for their on ! of in cor to | Georgia regation: such — . . o 1s campaigns for hospitals, homes NG W WAILETY Missouri Woman Helped | schools. The Pilg & : Memorial | & . 0, Ne. 3, BOX 27, ATLANTA, GKoRaIA Mo.—1_am_proud to h ¢ the Nttional Council | et = €1 throusn | Many Say Lydia E. Pinkham’s i e churches in tive-year | Vegetable Compound Helps i compiled ual rep i Keep Them Fit to Work : buy me a bot- b the individual local churches for the | 8,549,511 women would be a vast| tlo of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- | | . : i rmy. According to the 1920 Census | table Compound and I was up and | 1 se of 23 in day ¢ Manufactures, that is the number nd | he first bottle was - school enrollment and of 2,423 in the of women and girls employed in all \ § ship of Young People's so- es or | 8 ’u s is ".‘;mflr:‘ d )n» tot qr‘.\‘x: P | 1 s travels able to do all my | 1 hool enrollment is 797,987 and the Aok | on its stomach.” army of | housework, washing and ironing, | 2 : » Young People's | -1 - il | women travels on its general health. | take care of my five boys, and tend | [ : A {18 0DROrtic ! ry working girl that time | to my chickens and garden, where | i i e O e Hilo S d | through iliness seldom is paid | before I had to hire my washing and | e relonton | arenescongs | fofand seldom can be made up, Em- | part of my housework."—Mns. Axxa | 5 be Slyed RUROD oD * | Missionary soclety ployers demand regularity. If she| CoLr, R. R. 2, Parkville, Missour, ‘ l i \ s et S M FEEL BTt FRC I o ER RS y | M | 3 | 'y Ever Held 4 ¢ ' al S a‘ : | in the Downstairs Store | [ $ 369 Values to $35.00 400 SILK DRESSES .l A B it only a desire No—mere desire for change will not ex- plain why so many thousands of smokers | 4 cha e ? all over the country are changing from | ; or other cigarettes to Chesterfield. | ll : It's something more fundamental. Bif a mflflef No—price does not account for this ? sweeping turn-about in cigarette pop- 190 Summer Styles Misses’ Dresses Women’s Dresses i qf‘ ric ularity, for Chesterfield is sold at the II popular price—it costs the same as any | | Extra-Size Dresses of the other largest selling brands. s ‘ No matter what your type— [d . . ) Or zs it all Yes—that's the answer. Itis taste and NO matter what size you wear— = taste alone that explains Chesterfield’s il 0 QUESII0N T gk A fustot xuates | No matter what dress you want— oo . of tobacco quality. oftaste ? We state it as our honest belief that | ] . 8 the tobaccos used inChesterfield are of | the selection js so complete, the choice is so vast, that {4 finer quality and hence of better taste | every woman will find several lovely summer frocks to than in any other cigarette at the price. | suit her own personality at a ridiculously little price! i | Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co, | ! i ~—and this belief is shared by cigarette . | smokers the country over. [ Plenty for larger women, too! ] | v IR 1 f 190 Styles for Every Occasion | B \l |2 for sport, for travel, for vacation, for beach, for mountains, for street, for afternoon, for d ;'* \ shopping, for evening and dinner wear! { 44 i | N J § Sy ; RlCl’l Flowered chiffons, all georgettes, georgette | ¢ 0 with plain crepe, georgette with polka dot crepe, X l ‘ Silks | crepe de chine, soft flat crepes, rich canton | * crepes, polka dot crepes, figured crepes, stnped [ h | silks, printed silks, radium silks, sport silks, washable silks i . I %y Lioserr & Myras Tonaceo Co, ] b }

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