New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 26, 1926, Page 3

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> NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 26, 1926, EXPECT 1055 0F 10,61, P SEATS Rep. Wood Predicts Return of Democratic Strongholds —— Paul Smith's N. Y., Aug. 26 (P— A loss of perhaps ten republican seats in the national house of repre- sentatives at the November elections is foreseen by Representative Will R. Wood of Indiana, chairman of the republican congressional cam- Paign committee, Mr. Wood, who spent yesterday at White Pine camp as the guest of President Coolidge to whom he re- ported on the campaign prospects, points out a reduction o fthe party's working majority, now 35 votes, to possibly 25 was to be regarded as | the normal aftermath of the sweep- ing republican victory of the presi- dential year of 1924 when many | regularly democratic or doubtful | districts returned republicans to | congress, | The issue in the congressional | campalgn, which is to open Septem- | ber 7, is to be prosperity, Mr. Wood informed newspaper correspondents after a visit with the president. The disclosures of large expenditures in primary contests, he asserted, would have little effect throughout the country as a whole, adding that a single Southern state has committed more law violations in elections in one year than the northern and | western states in two decades. | No modification of the Volstead | act is foreseen by Mr. Wood as a surgent republicans will make no gains in the northwest but that the regular republicans may gain a seat or two in Minnesota and that they will hold their present strength in Iowa. 5 The chairman views the party’s seats from the far west as secure and believes there are prospects of slight gains in Brooklyn and per- haps in Kansas and Indiana. MEDICAL STUDENT STILL BEING HELD (May Yet Have to Face Man- slaughter Charge Cleveland, O., Aug. 26 (P)—Emil Balanescu, twenty-one year old medical students will be held in custoday untfl city chemists report on the analysis of drugs and mec cines found in the stomach of sweetheart, Dorothy Elizabeth K k, whose death in a hospital Sun- day led to the youth's arrest. It the report find the girl died |from the effects of the drugs which | oy hc suitor is alleged to have given her, Balanescu will be charged with manslaughter, police said. If he is exonerated of Miss Kirk death, he will face charges of admin- istering drugs in violation of the state pharmacy law. Coroner A. P. Hammond said poisons had ‘been found in the girls' | stomach but preliminary examina- tion failed to show a quantity suffi- clent to produce death. The coroner result of the elections, for he be- |said he did noth believe Balanescn lieves that the sentiment for prohi- bition has not lost strength. Neither does he expect that the tariff will be a serlous issue. had been guilty of any malicious in- tent in giving the girl medicines. The youth admitted th-t he had ad- ministered potions to his sweet heart | “Why change.’ 'he asked, “to the|t0 relieve her of an illness: which democrats who in 1914 Underwood tariff brought in about soup kitchens in our cities?" The next general revision of the tariff, in Mr. Wood's opinfon will not come before the presidential tion of 1928, and if a change is then made it will be upward. Discussing the congressional pros- pects of the republican party in various sections of the country, Mr. Wood reported that the greatest losses seemed imminent in Pennsyl- vania, although he believed the| prohibition issue and the senator-| lal primary campaign in that state | were not decisive factors in creating |, such a situation. | “hats why 1 cAN sMOKE THEM MORNING , NOON an) NIGHT” “I used to think that a half-dozen cigarettes a day was my limit. 4#d it was! .. with the old-style blends. But ‘stage-coach’ cigarettes, jarring to nerves and taste, are a thing of the past with me. I ride the 20th Century route to cigarette satisfaction —the OLp Govp line . . . Get aboard, man, . .. if you want a cigarette you can smoke morning, noon and night without taxing your tongue or taste.” The OLD GOLD ' E SMOOTH(EST) CIGARETTE O SR Q 2 for cents both major {game. The Reach baseball guide for | them. 1926 says, on page 264, “Washington made eight double p |double plays for the Senators Mr. Wood anticipates that the ln-lfl\‘e for the under the |caused her to have “moods of de- pression.” BASEBALL RECORD. Springfield, Mass, Aug. 26 P— elec- | New Haven is believed to have made | lieve a record for organized baseball for a | continuous single nine inning game when it|YOUr jazz. I do not call that hap- |; reeled off six double plays in the | Pine |first game of a double-header at The record for is five in a single Pittsfield ye: and Detroit made four double plays in the Wash- ngton-Detroit game of May 21." hox score of this game shows our TENETS OF FAITH | Finds Jazz and Commercialism | Rated Too Highly Here | New York, Aug. 26 () — Jiddu | Krishnamurti, el&ected by theoso- phists to become the vehicle for the spirit that animated Jesus| Christ, is here on the Messianic mission of redeeming America from | | jazz and commercialism. “I do not,” he sald after his ar- rival on the liner Majestic yester- day, ‘“preach repentance or the | remission of sins. I believe it is much more important to lead a | 8ood life, refraining from doing {hirtful things to yourself and | others, being kind and tolerant.” He does not belleve he is a sec- |ond Christ. “No,” he said when asked. “But I beileve I am ‘here to be the vehicle for the World Teacher. That spirit has already made use of my body to speak | from.” | Theosophists hold that Jesus be- me The Christ because the world | teacher, my Lord Maitreya, entered | His body, and Gantama became the | Buddha by the same means. | Krishnamurti s 30 years old, | five feet six inches tall, has blue | black hair, welghs hardly more | than 100 pounds, and was described | by a feminine fellow passenger as “beautiful,” because, it was said, | his features have an almost femi- | nine loveliness, | shnamurti believes in |riage, but mot for himself. He ¥s tennis, swims, reads a great | and finds pleasure in normal ways, but does not meat, drink wine, nor dance. | believes in a cult of beauty | happiness. mar- | € eat He and | | “Happiness,” he says, |in the spiritual and Americans |seek it in the material. You be- that happiness is found in excitement, such as “is found , as it is not a lasting hap- | pine: | Ot course, it people like it, |15 all right, and I do not eriti However, materialism {only a means to find reality | you should not be swallowed by it. As long as you dwell on the| d i h and | mental planes of spirituality you|of those behind the political cur- can forget materialism. Here in | tain,” Mr. Batchelder declared, “that | d|America you concentrate on ma-|self government would not be prac- terialism,” | tical.” Produet of P. LORILLA i3 RD CO., Established 1760 HINDU DISCUSSES =2 | taste, but T do not think it is com- | “discovered” Krishnamurti in 1909 | strong chin, and have strong wills. | against has been hypnotized by Mrs. Be- | other | ably strong mind fluen degree.” 1 commonwealth government with as | much self-government as they can intelligently handle was for the Philippines by C. C. Batch- elder, of Boston, yesterday afternoon States grant up | responsible government. As for girls sn says, oking, Krishna- “that is a matter of mon sense.” New Race of People Dr. Annie Besant, 80 year old head of the theosophists, who and who accompanied him here, believes that a new race of peo- ple is developing in America, Can- ada and Australla, although she did not indicate whether she con- sidered this to have a connection with theosophy. “Pecullar children are being born into families,” she said. “They are of a fresh type; they are in- | tellectual, may be recognized by a | They are aggressive and act on in- | stinct rither than on reasoning| power.” She calls this type the “sixth | Aryan sub race.” | To a reperter who challenged her to compare the spiritual planes | of Jesus and Krishnamurti, she re- | torted, “We are just as competent to judge between the planes of Jesus and Krishnamurti as puppy dogs are to compare the respective | merits of newspaper reporters.”* | The “Messiah's” arrival not only brought forth anonymous profests | his entry on the grounds| of moral turpitude which were ig- nored, but has aroused protestant pastors, | Dr, bavid G. Wylie, secretary of | 0 Presbyterian board, branded Krishnamurtl as “ridiculous,” and his doctrine as ancient Hindu be- dressed up for modern son of the Cen in rishnamurti irical appeal to Barnum. Dr. . B. Meyer, London non- conformist, said, “I think this man with a| t. She is a woman of remark- | and she has in- | an unbelievable | d him to FOR PHILIPPINES Chautauqua, N. Y., Aug. 26. (P—A PLAN advocated n his address on “shall the United | immediate indepen- dence to the Phillipines?" “Through the theoretical argu- ments for independence are sound, he said, there are too few able men n the islands to form a stable and “It is the almost' unanimous belief Mags Announce University Week | from Aug. 27th to Sept. 8th And, like the Yale-Harvard Game, everybody interested in Things Collegiate will attend! It's a real TOPCOAT. ored in all kinds of fabrics! College Styles for ’26-’ here in Special clothing and furnishings Last year University Week was an innovation—this year it is already a tradition. Success is like that. University Week is the result of a year's planning—we have followed college style trends as closely as Frenchmen follow the rise and fall of the franc. And because ows is truly a Collegiate Shoppe we are showing many of our own originations. Especially our “GRID”’ by Kuppenheimer It is a little longer than ordinary —the buttons are spaced wider—there’s more grace—it's tail- And there’s our “U” suit by Kuppenheimer (it always was the best all-around college medel) and furnishings that have captured the colors of the far east and no end of choice. Everything is in harmony with the University idea—and a selected group of prominent University and Prep school men are here to help you make your selections. Model Display from 6 to 8 every evening N. E. MAG & SONS - ¥e Collegiate Shopye, MAIN AT EAST MAIN

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