New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 11, 1926, Page 2

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e LEGION BALL NINE TENDERED BANQUET Advance Fall Showing of Writing Paper Stationery Dept. The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN ETREET K GLASSES THE INVISIBLE BIFOCALS We Accurately Fit the Most Dif- ficult Cases—And the Cost is Favorabls to You A, PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Over 40 Years Experience 300 Maln £t Phone 570 = HEADQUARTER OF ORIENTAL RUGS Large Btock of Persian, Turkish and Chinese Rugs to select from. Furnish your House with the beauty of Orient, and you will be pleased. S. V. Sevadjlan 162 Glen St. Tel. 11 45 Grand 8t ’I"Iv Res., .I'“’\»T “WHEN IN HARTFORD DINE WITH US.” Everything we serve very best, If you don’t believe it come in for a test. Wholesale and Retail Depart- ment in Connection. THE HONISS OYSTER HOUSE 22 State St. Under Grant’s HARTFORL _ DRIVE YOURSELF— NEW CARS TO RENT 230 en hoar—10c. » mile. SUNDAYS AND HOLIDATS 25c. an hour—18c. & mile. Sperial rates for long trips. You-Drive Auto Renting Co. Cor. Seymour and Elm E _ CROWLEY BROS. I PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street Estimates Cheerfully Given on All Jobs — Tel. 2918 - WEDDING RING SHOP DIAMONDS 140 Main Street, Room 1 Upstairs is the DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGE! : Battery Service Successor to Gould Battery Service Co. 170 East Maln, ncar Summer BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING Gencrator, Starter Repatring GOULD BATT ‘Rll‘m FREE TESTING, ING Phone 708—Ask lt)r Rudy AUBURN TAXI PHONE 611 Frank E. Goodwin EYESIGHT 327 Main Street SPECIALIST Tel. 1905 A majority of Ck believe the end roming of the battle will . 5 of Fsdra Damascus, in the year 1934 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1926. %, FOUND! WOMAN WITH ' T00 HUCH T0 WEAR Queen Marie is First to Publicily De- FRENCH VETERANS - LOUD IN PROTEST - 400,000 Voice Disapproval of Kmerican Terms clare Wardrobe is too State Champions Lauded for, Victory and Sportsmanship Full Parie, Oct. 11 (P—Queen Marie ot R riving in Paris had complaint—*no- has too| Parls, Oct. 11 (® — The mo outspoken public protest yet ma against ratification of the Franco- American debt agreement, made by the representatives of 400,000 war veterans to Premier Poincare, has considerabls fluttering in aved c 3 totine tical dovecotes. 1t i h i . veterans declared petent and Eetlub amount of the debt was o told question and a st honorable ng infl eha: be that another | caused 0 the out of cc remains th g all her en- eting her ar- lepart tomorrow. Na- ing of governm withstanding the prote neare by rep- foremost question pol not relaxa- in the ted the salon ' to see some ngs and other cannot is polnted o the veterans SHOWINGINCREASE Tubercalosis Mortality ~ How- i t ever, Is on Dechne City licrms an's Home car "f';‘-hg";:ji [ Week’s Activities in Catholic Churches —— St. Mary's Church Anniversary & will be cele- at St Mary's Tomorrow for e late We: ay k, for the late Thursday m 2 for the la Johanna y mo: 7 at 7 the late Mary from tuberct a8 been lecrease in CHARLES ¥. SMITH. r meeting of the sons terang of the Civi address reity of Iowa the of Publ 1d eald investigators fact finding” pe- heart disease, and Feaeeclly ROt clatr George rday serve is ti ve it, come ar on Mrs, eting of the Holy le will be oon at 2:30 of the he Dr. Robert M Institute of ¢ told of Prospent stree le west. He ex- vill hold a reg disease anc state armory for a more t § o'clock irt § at th ehome of an, 70 Mo street D. W. O'Connel of 369 Main street left Saturday to attend the an- al convention at the American crapy in Chi- plans to be away two nd will visit friends in Min- returning to this it 1s told many nicable After Others Fail Peterson’s Ointment Big Box 35 Cents power of Petar- | commu are the causes and number of deaths of babies, mber of accidents and occur be safety les are not enforced. nesota hefora The Camp Real Estate sold today house on Park By and Katarzyna American Sportsman Out | For British Boat Titl 11 (P—The an §ports n, A. K. Macom 0 make a great effort the Cesarewich and caps of the ason. Th xt Wedn For g commisston \ on d to Mar Mat- lega. ket, Oct. Fire Proof Roofing To Be Di;cusied Xvain pecial meet- at the ittes of s will be re-| is not inclined further in repre fire-restst Marvel and § with Provi lalana t ove the am m & game Rhode Ruptured? recommendations of {. Bishop, who pre 1 the suilding code, and is aiming to for- | r a policy which w0t be 80 restrictive, won Cesare- with Forseti and the Masked Mar- | the Relicve the 8 sufferings ond tortare to rup- tured people. ¢ are cured 3 method which does away with the epera- tion., ths 80 1 next it steps At ot T BACK lf\ PRISON. . Oct. 11 (P—Amerigo Du- | erved a short prison term in the ki bing and socialist, BACK ON FULL TIME, fass, Oct. 11 (P—The Associates will | e on full time t time for his pa summer. About | killing of th ed by summer it will estor, | Free Consultation S. M. BATTALION Rupture Speclalist rearms || OPP. Depot. 450 Asylum St. nced | Hartford, Conn || Open Daily trom 8 a. m. to 6 p. m. ched- | without a permit week | to 14 months’ | fined 100 lire 1 | PLATES AS LOW AS *10 Better Dentlstry PLATES AS LOW AS Less Money Our rapidly increasing volume of business makes it BRIDGEWORK AS LOW AS $6.50 e worn ABSOLUTELY PAINLESS EXTRACTION You don’t need a lot of money—A small payment when your work is started, balance in small weekly payments. Examination FREE, Dr. KEITH — ossible for us to still further reduce our prices for 1igh grade dentistry. 338 MAIN ST. Open Evenings Imn"acul'”-— seph’ | Therese | mass was sponsored by ption guild will | Nesta of Cherry seph’'s Parish so the Little Fl St. Peter’s Church An anniversary mass on | parents of Claude J. Leroux wi the parish d at St. Peter's ch h’'s mind | T iday morning at 8 . French | The general communion for o'clock. boys of the parish will day morning at for men be 3 rench St. Jean Bap- rn sec- | nesday evening | tiste han at Can ociety Make s Abolish - Marriage and Morals? Four writers—one a woman of exalted social position—another an inter- nationally famous judge—the third and fourth the greatest social novelists in America—give their authoritative answers in the four greatest literary features that have ever been published in a single magazine. JUDGE BEN .B. LINDSEY on The Moral Revolt MRs. PHILIP LYDIG onTheTragedy of Gilded Youth OWEN JOHNSON'S §iGit “Children of Divorce” RUPERT HUGHES’ xovit “ IN a democracy the mass of the people are given to imitatjon of the few. The few in America are the idle rich, who, in their search for new sensations, flamboyantly place them- selves not only above the law but outside the moral code that society has evolved for its own discipline and salvation. ce were secrets held inviolate are today openly ; habits of life once surreptitiously indulged are today boasted cf; customs that have their roots in the safety of society are boldly being displaced by a code that justi- fies “anything you can get away with.” Whence came this amazing change in our manners and customs, no one knows. One declares it to be the direct result of the unbalancing of society by the Great War; traces ts origin to the possession of more h, t overnight, on the part of vastly more people than 1 placed to produce actual evidence Judge Ben B. Lindsey, of the inter- 1s Family Court of Denv ali clse, a brave man, he is presenting i his :m:lmons—undn the startling title, “ The Moral |onsALe AT ALL I l E M A t NEWS STANDS i BOO We Live But Once” Revolt,” in the frankest series of articles that bave ever Ip;":nred in a magazine. ter case from his own Court, related in all their g detgils, are offered by him in support of his belief thata new code of merals, particularly in relation to sex, is being evolved under our eyes today. And in further support of Judge Lindsey’s belief, Mrs, Philip Lydig, all of whose life has been spent in the world ionable society here and abroad, comes forward wi entitled, “The Tragedy of Gilded Youth,” in e 100 cites case after case of youthful destruction estlt of young people growing up in the atmosphere that surrounds their rich and idle elders. Nor is that all. For in the fascinating form of the novel, Mr. Owen Johnson and Mr. Rupert Hughes, themselves familiar with all strata of socisty, present dramatic pictures of just what is proceeding on the inside of that society. Their novels, “Chiidren of Divorce” and “We Live But e,” are written with no less frankness and first-hand knowledge than the articles by Judge Lindsey and Mrs. ition to these contributions of the deepest human interest, the same magazine offers, in its November issue, the best and latest work of the most popular novelists and short-story writers—among others, Struthers Burt, Robert Benchley, Arthur Mason, James Hopper, Virginia Dale, Margaret Culkin Banning, and Samuel Scoville, Jr. Kfi’November ZINE Price 25 Cexts ] | R OO 6 ON ST A A AR T A T AN SIS NS bank. YRR Have you read BUILD AND HELP BUILD CO0BOOEEOE EECLOEUEr €t f f v.C LLEC & wn nv v v e Daily Dividends and How to Get Them? TRUSTCO M BR! R B T T e P P T S N T Y X ¥ ) Tow to Have Money When You Need It \ The first step is simple:—adopt our Daily Dividend Plan. Make the second step a habit: —deposit at least 10% of every dollar you earn in an interest- bearing account here in this B our free booklet OPEN « SATURDAY EVENINGS : T—9 AN vy [ I A A P [ P P P P R PR P P N P I N P A L T R I P e Tt f v ey vy vEr vty Er vt ens e ner 1 hold a whist Wed- St. Jean Bap-

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