New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 22, 1926, Page 3

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CHARGE BRIBE N MAINE ELECTION Gonld Also Asked to Explain His Expenditures Portland, Me., Nov. 22 (M—With 1epublican control of the senate depending on the speclal election in this state on November 29, Ar- thur R. Gould, G. O. P. nominee, was faced today with charges of cxceeding legal expenses in the re- cent primary and. with having given a $100,000 bribe several years ago to the premier of New Brunswick. In addition, there was a demand before U. 8. Senator James A. Reed, of the senate investigating committee, seeking a federal in- quiry into the primary situation here. Fighting back at his opponents, Mr. Gould declared that the “bribe” story was old, and asserted the money had been paid by former business associates in a railroad construction project as a political ghost in an effort to bring votes to the democratic party.” “The democratic charges went back to the time in 1910, Gould was in- terested in the construction of the St. John Valley and Quebec rallway. They quoted Justice McKeown's finding in which Gould's testimony that the money was a political as- sessment as the price of getting rail- road legislation through parliament was called into question. | Forced On Him “Mr. Gould represents the pay- ment as practically forced from him. I am not so sure that this is so. 1 |think he was only too ready to pur- |chase an advantage by making a payment of such a nature. Added to this fact the premier was looking after this railway business himself. |confirms me in my belief that Mr. |Gould deliberately set out by the payment of this money to make his position secure and to evade the con- |sequences of future defaults, should |any be made by him, by placing the most trusted public officlal ingthe province under his control.” In answering the bribe story. |Gould declared the evidence taken |before a royal commission had been |glven when he was endeavoring to |obtatn payment of $400,000 which |the province still owed him and his |assoctates. He further asserted that |when Premier Clarke, a successor ot Flemming, later sought an addi- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1926. JEWS' RETURN TO PALESTINE AN OMEN L. B.S. Speaker Sees It as Be- ginning of New Order Land is seen as an omen of the be- ginning of a new order of things in the religlous life of the world ac- | cording to an address by E. J. Cow- | ard of Brooklyn, N. Y., who lectured | ed yesterday at the I. O. R. M. hall | under the auspices of the Interna- tlonal Bible students. Mr. Coward took as his subject, “Many Coming Back from Hell, Soon.’ "He said he did not select the | subject because it was a sensational | one but because it was in thorough harmony with the Bible. He quoted scripture which prophetically stat- ed, ‘Hell gave up the dead which | were in it." The texts used for con- | stderation were Hosea, 13:14; and | Rev. 20; 13, 14: which he said, state | that 1t is God's purpose to ransom :manklnd from death and from the | power of ‘sheol’ (Hebrew for grave, pit) and to destroy both death and The return of the Jew to the Holy | friend. On the contrary the scrip- tures states that it is an enemy. The Apostle Paul in 1, Cor. 15:26, states that the last enemy to be de- stroyed is death and the restoration of the, dead will take place during the thousand year reign of Christ, thay beginning of which reign is to be marked by a time of trouble such as was not since there was a | nation. Danfel declares this when he |says that at that time ‘many that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake'—Dan. 12:1-2. This fact is further corroborated by Jesus in the 24th chapter of Matthew. the old order and the beginning of the new order under Christ is the return of the Jews to Palestine. Thelr coming back into favor is pointed out as one of the evidences that the blessing of all the world and the restoration of the dead are soon to begin. Romans 11:15 reads, |'For if the casting away of them (the Jews) be the reconciling of the world, what shall the receiving |of them be, but life from the dead?" In his prophecy about the end of the old order of things Jesus states that the generation which witnesses the beginning of the signs which he ! mentions will also witness the com- | plete establishment of Christ's king- |dom; ‘This generation shall not | pass away until all things be ful- filled,’ Matt. 24:34. There 1is no “Another {ndication of the end of | RAPS PARENTS FOR SCARING CHILDREN (Dr. Vanghan Says They Are Guilty of Injustice shock is the result of sup- | pressed fear during the war, ac- cording to Prof. D. D. Vaughan of Boston University, who spoke to the | members of Everyman’s Bible class yesterday. Dr. Vaughan spoke of |parents who use fear of ‘“bears, tramps or other imaginary dangers to discipline children as unneces- |sarly brutal. He said In part: “Christlan teaching is conducive to normal mental health. Any one ‘0{ the three Christian virtues men- {tloned by St. Paul, faith, hope and love, leads to an optimistic con- istructive attitude toward the facts jof life, and when we comblne all |three of them daily Uving becomes | helpful, happy and triumphant | “Psychoanalysis has brought to jour attention the evil results coming from fears that found |{lodgenfent iz the mind in | Shell When the nu his fifteen ) to his pat to the ed ook him r00f. e for a walk ar old daughter yleld- treaties and little room under He on a chest and istened for outside sounds. He kept moaning wouldn't came. Three and come vs and three nigh “They nobody ned. —a lit- whispering near e, listened and lis tle room—all alone, nobody came.’ “Since children do hot have a background of facts and experience, and s ly terr sometimes hypochondria for our remember periences of nce they or around a situation hildren that ac see through y are easi- Serious lifelong ev result from childhood and various xes. It is unfortunate s do not more of their own early childhood. canno '} “Parents are often unintentionally brutal grown- a child by used monly and cruel children as same psychological background they trez had t n though they as wrong to cor- of fears com- for threats, fear of It is ve bears, tramps, policemen, ete. “Growth should come from with- in. safe da ct and reason. dark leave reality and not im A child should and night. Do not coerce a to subdue fears feel secu e ath a child is afrald of a dim light. Let 1r the mental ba beca selves. and chear. ed in faith, hope an eliminated, they useful. they are afraid of their real would be faced bravely full love, with fear will be happy and ty is only common of $106 was raised for HIGH SCHOOL TEAM - TOBATTLE ALUMNI Grip, Beloin, Scully and Politis 10 Be Seen in Game of the feature footba year wil ning at 10 1d in be st o Wiilow Saturday afternoon, clashes wit alumni team to hool names on coll: w B . If children are train- | students that the alumni have bet- ter football players than the regue lar football squad. To make the game an Impartia) affalr, a part of the proceeds will be given to Irank McCarthy, former High school football captain, who has been tated for several years now with paralysis. Frank |was stricken with the dread afflic- tion and was unable to take his lace with the New Britain team last year agalast any of the season’s op- ponents or t Hartford High school. The Georgs raw game is belng engineered by Paris and 1is expected to out a large number of High school students and high school grad- Officials and other details will ounced at a later date Hearings on Changes In Names of Streets Hearings on changes in the names s will be held fn room 201 this evening at 7: the City Plan com- for changes in at the common n it it was pointed out es are so confused r streets and avenues that the city are at a loss are confronted with the tic fore plic campaign contribution and without y 1" ontribution of $50,000 he had | bis Imawlodgs. |advised his assoclates to reject the | hell. The speaker further stated: The charges were contained in a | demand and that as a result legis- | statement often be diver tion to other t not be suppressed Shell shock from fears |doubt but what we are living in |that day.” |caps throughout life. “The word ‘hell’ as used in the| A “ : The lecture was given under the Srove issued by a committee ||ation was passed which “put us out | Bible does not mean a place nfw,"qpxcu of the Inlg:mat!onal Bm'excnfim“{-'h:: w:: f;r?c‘c:is :r:”a!n soclated with the campalgn of lof business.” | blazing fire and brimstone, nor any- | g;qe ’ Fulton J. Redman, demoeratic| In addition, he said the supreme |thing at all resembling that though ;| Eadnteseasoolation. fLaoim Jfok fillten §deys jand ihree rather than senatorlal nomince. This statement, | ooust of Canada, before which his|not in the slightest degroe! Quite | [Bishtsy anagredsonibreadiend fater i fn il e daind st which was in the nature of a Te-|gssociates unsuccessfully sued the | the reverse. Instead of a place of | {The parents had gone away and the S e “?14',\"’ & “l,s, S port on the New Brunswick sitta-|province, had failed to find any|fire it is described as a state of | TS )itear (Wb it ion, reviewed the investigation pribery or attempt at bribery. darkness (Job 10:21); instead of a| et Ol RS e e not pla alumni game ste as the holiday alum of boys who ha e Fordham te and Politis, One of the proposals is a change of J me street and Hunter road to nue. This would make ue one of the largest s in the city. Opposition from ¥ owners is expected. |childhood and that persist as handi- nor ridiculed. the war of a prope I B. S. A. LECTURER HERE T. E. Barker of Boston, Mass, also will lecture this evening at eight i attending Ford nette who has' bee: conducted by Chief Justice Harri- son A. McKeown of the province, in which the jurist characterized the payment to Premier J. K. “IFlemming as a “bribe.” Charges Arc Filed In the meantime Secretary of State Frank Ball at Augusta had announced a hearing for next Fri-| day on a petition filed Saturday by Rev. A. F. Leigh of Randolph. The clergyman, ho was prominent in the Ku Klux Klan organization in this state, charged the senatorial candidate with having exceeded the | $1,500 allowed by law. Gould re- cently filed an expense-account which showed disbursements of 31,324, and through his attorneys will ask today for specifications of the accusation. The Klan was credited with hav- ing supported another candidate in the primary which determined ominees to succeed the late Sena- tor Bert Fernald. Mr. Gould won decisively over three opponents while Mr. Redmond was unopposed tor the democratic nomination. Gould's supporters today charged accusers with unfalr and 1ith hour tactics and asserted that even if there were any reason for remov- ing a candidate’s name from the bal- lots it would be physically impossible to dp so, since all have been malled the various citles and roughout the state. Referring to the expense inquiry | petition, as well as the plea for fed- | eral investigation it was said on Mr. (ould’s behalf “that it is very evi-| dent the petition is solely to stir up hostilit Gould himself, went further denying the bribe story, and formal statement declared it “an- er cheap attempt to dig up some | lnwn!‘ in | in a| HARTFORD FIREMA GONMITS SUICIDE ‘ Front of Express Hartford, Nov. 22 (P — Captain Michael J. Cosgrove of | Engine company No. 11 was in- |stantly killed Saturday noon when {he jumped in front of the Water- | bury-Hartford express at the Flat- | bush avenue railroad crossing. De- ! | spondency caused by transter from | | Hook and Ladder company No. 1, ;\\'hs’l‘e he had served a number of | years, and recent financial reverses |are belleved to have affected his | mind. He became a member of the |Hartford fire department January {19, 1907, and would nxt year have |been retired with pension. He was president of the Hartford Volunteer }l“lremnn': assoclation. Besides his wife, Mrs. Margaret Sullivan Cos- grove of 36 Oak avenue, he leaves two brothers and a sister. INSIST UPON ' E MP'S BALSAM for that COUG/ “Three Recent Noteworthy Improvements Await Your Inspection Improvement A —has resulted in a smoothness of engine operation that will prove a genuine sure. prise as soon as you take the wheel. Improvement B —has given the car a quietness of oper- ni‘onmost unusual in cars of this type and price. Improvement C —has added to the car’s durability and de- pendability —qualities which have always set Dodge Brothers Motor Cars \Gaptain Cosgrove Jumps in| Chemical | place where shrieks and groans are | heard, it is described as a state of | silence. (Psalm 115: 17). Instead of Jreprssc—mmg in any senso pain and | suffering, or remorse, we find it is a | condition of forgetfulness. (Psalm | 88: 11, 12). Again we read, ‘There is | no work nor device, nor knowledse, { nor wisdom in sheol.’ (Eccl 9:10). “The whole world of mankind has come under the sentence of death because of sin and imperfection. This condition came about as a re- ! sult of disobedience of | father, Adam. It is generally sup- posed that Eve was to blamo for the fall and the trouble that has result- | ed from it, but this is not so. Adam | was the responsible head of the hu- man family, and it was his dis- ! obedience that brought ahout the sorrow and trouble which has cul- minated in death. ‘The wages of sin |in death. (Rom. 6:23). , “Jesws, by his sacrificfal death on { behalt of the human race, obtained | the great privilege of restoring them in due time. Not only the living, | but also the dead, thosc In hell, will | be benefited by this arrangement. |‘He 1s Lord of both the dead and living'—Rom. 14:9. ‘He has keys of death and hell and bring mankind forth'—Fev. |“By means of his judgments they | will learn righteousness'—Isa. 25:9." ‘Those who are disobedient and un- | willing to accept the blessing of the |age of restitution will be destroyed 'm the second death from which Ithere is no resurrection, as shown {in Rev. 20:14-15, and Acts 3:23 | The lake of fire here pictured being will struction. “The Biblo does not uphold the idea held by many that death is a apart. ‘The car must actually be driven to appreciate the far reaching importance of these improvements, We urge you to make this personal test at the first opportunity. Touring Coupe . Sedan & Special Sedan ...... Delivered .. $ 885.00 935.00 990.00 1040.00 " S. & F. MOTOR SALES CORP. ™ Telephone 731 1129 Stanley Street We Also Sell Dependable Used Cars Dopce BROTHERS MOTOR CARS the | 1:18. | {a symbol representing complete de-| our fore- | | o'clock in the I. B. 8. A. hall, 259 Main street, room 219 on the sub- ject: “Deliverance.” The lecture is glven under the auspices of the In- ternational Rible Students associa- tion. Mr. Barker has traveled for the last 25 years lecturing tn the larger cities of this country and England. The public is invited to at- tend. No admission fee will be charged and no collection taken. h she said the boy committed, better was determined to make him face confess. He was not guilty and |could not bring himself to confess The parent came home In three days, and he was released. Twenty- five years later housekeepor wrote to him asking forgiveness, {for she had learned the truth. When he was 60 years old he was seriously il and, in his delirium, he begged |his nurse to take him to the attic. Fear, in adul childho ruined d the Just a foil wrapper outside but of our finest pipe tobaccos ins: it and overcome it. midity ften come from training; e affected manners do it 1 of the alumnus and sensitiv Fe wror lives have been aning parents s like a mill . It unstrings the skins of the g empt morning to s he b of se ho are posing the present CHILDREN COUGH PERTUSSIN| WILL BRING one ide! GRANGTR ROWGW COT MRADT TOW P\PES (ommon-sense economy ' plus genuine tobacco qualit F PACKED in tins, tobacco of this quality would probably cost | fifteen cents—but packed asitis in inexpensive heavy foil, it costs buc ten cents. Common-sense economy indeed—for this soft foil package, with its outer glassine wrapping, is light, tight, comfortable, and rolls up smaller after each pipe load. But forget package and price—it’s what's insidethat really counts. Put Granger Rough Cut in your favorite pipe and compare it— for rich mellowness, good taste, slow burn- ing—with any pipe tobacco you ever smoked. We repeat—*one of our finest pipe to- baccos”—and your pipe will bear us out! GRANGER ROUGH CUT

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