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MOTHER OF SEVEN GETS JAIL THREAT Must Stop Selling Liquor, Judge Tells Mrs. Seidor Warning her that she will go to Jjail and her seven children will be placed in state institutions unless she discontinues making and selling liquor, Judge B. W. Alling in police court this morning imposed a sen- | tence of 30 days, cxecution suspend- ed, in the case of Mrs. Alphonse Seidor, aged 40, of 223 North street. She was charged on two counts of , violation of the liquor law and | pleaded not guilty, but on the wit- ness stand she admitted having had ! customers who patd $1 per bottle. | Her husband, who is at the state | farm, had a “still” and made liquor | before he was sent away, she said, | but she has not made any although she has disposed of some which was | left over from her husband’s batch. Officers John C. Stadler and Danfel Cosgrove testified that they ! raided the tenement about 2 p. m. Saturday and seized the “still,”| which partly filled with mash, | and also took some alcohol. They said she told thei: she recelves $9 from the city and another source, | which is rot sufficlent for the main- | tenance of her home and the support of the children, the eldest of whom | is 13 years and the youngest two years and eight months. “Do you want to have your chil- dren taken away?” Judge Alling asked her. “No, no,” she replied. “Well, you stop making and sell- ing liquor, then,” the judge told her. Fraud Case Continued The case of Warren S. Harris, aged 39, charged with obtaining money under false pretences, was | continued until tomorrow morning in $500 bonds, on request of Attor- ney Harry M. Ginsburg, who entered | a plea of not guilty. Harris, who is a former naval officer and later operated in Florida real estate, was | arrested by Officer Stadler Saturday | on his release from Hartford county ail. He is wanted in New Haven and New York, and the United States government has a chargo of mis- appropriating government funds while he was fn the service. These charges will be heard after the courts of this city, New Haven and New York dispose of the case. Plea For Leniency Fails Francls Nulty, aged 21, of 252 Wirdsor avenue, Hartford, pleading guilty to the charge of theft of articles of wearing apparel and a diamond ring from T. K. Haynes of 24 Camp strect, on November 27, asked for another chance, and promised to take the pledge and kaep it, but Judge Alling shook his head negatively and committed him | to Ch © reformatory. Gty said he was Intoxicated he went to Mr. Haynes' room | and committed the theft. He said he ild not have done it had he been | soher, Every time he has been fn | trouble, drink has been the cause, Tecney testified | gave Nulty a when the latter J. . Haynes also cngaged, a room for him at a local hotel, but Nulty did not use it. Knowing Mr. ‘nes would be out of the city on iving day, Nuity went to his nd packing up all the cloth- ing he could find, made off with it. S ant P. J. O'Mara testified that Nuity denicd having taken the diamond ring but his mother, hear- ing the police inquiring about it, said she found the ring in her home and her husband took it. She prom- iscd to return it to the police, which she did. All the articles reported | stolen were recovered, the sergeant said, with the exception of three pairs of shoes. Mr. Haynes testified that the diamond ring was worth about $15 and $70 would more than cover the value of the clothing. Nulty, in reply to Prosecuting At- torney Woods' question why he did | not return the artciles when he be- Mothers, Do This— When the children cough, rub Musterole on their throats and chests. No telling how soon = the symptoms may develop into croup, or worse. And then’s when you're| glad you have a jar of Musterole at hand to give prompt relief. As first aid, Musterole is excel- lent. Keep a jar ready for instant use. It is the remedy for adults, too Relfeves sore throat, bronchitis, ton- silitls, croup, stiff ncck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, | pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, chilblains. frosted fect and colds of tha chest (it may prevent pneumonia). To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children Ask for Children’s Mustcrole Are You Rupture: Iteltove with the oper Hon. Free Con.wiation S. M. BATTALION Rupture Specialist Opp. Depot. 450 Asylum St Hartford, Conn. Open Daily from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. For appolntment Call 5-0255. !served the papers came sober, sald he had been intoxi- cated every night since Thanksgiv- ing. He did not recall entering the room and packing up the clothing. He did not recall that there was a diamond ring included. Asked whether or not the authorities of any other place want him, Nulty replied negatively, but Prosecuting Attorney Woods told Judge Alling Sergeant Ellinger believes the young m=2n is wanted elsewhere. Proprietor and Gambler Fined Harry Boragian, aged 41, of 119 North street, was fined $10 without costs on the charge of keeping & gambling house, and the following were fined $3 without costs for gambling: Harry Boyg, aged 38, of 123 North street; Harry Korkian, | aged 32, of 102 Broad street; Leoxi Atuman, aged 49, of 20 Glen street and Steve Troplan, aged 425 West Main street. Officer Thomas J. Feeney testitied to making the arrests Saturday aft- ernoon in a coffee house in the Palace theater building on Main street. Ho seized $1.10, which Judge Alling ordered turned in to the po- lice pension fund. SUIT FOR $6,000 FILED Actlon for $6,000 damages has been instituted by John Eshoo ogainst Shlemon Paul, through At- torney Joseph G. Woods. The writ is returnable in the superior court the first Tuesday of January. Con- stable Tred Winkle served the papers and attached property of the defendant on Washington street. Action for $100 has been brought against Thomas C. Smith by Charles Goldberg, Nair and Nair represent- ing the plaintif. The plaintift clalms non-payment on a note. Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Horwitz which are re- turnable in the city court the third Monday of December. EIKS’ MEMORIAL PROGRAM The annual memorial exercises cf New Britain lodge, B. P. O. were held last evening at the home on Washington street. The speaker of the evening was John T. Gil- martin of Waterbury. Charles L. Stuhlman sang. Women’s Lives are relieved of a great hy- gienic handicap in this way. Positive protection—discards like tissue HERE is now a new way in tvoman'’s hygiene. A way scien- tific and exquisite that ends the un- certainty of old-time “sanitary pads.” It is called “KOTEX.” Eight in every 10 better-class women have adopted it. You wear sheer frocks and gowns without a second thought, any ¢« anywhere. You meet every day cvery business or social demand un- handicapped. NO LAUNDRY Discards as easily as a piece of tissue. No laundry. No embar- rassment. Five times as absorbent as ordi- nary cotton pads, it banishes danger of mishaps. Deodorizes, too. And thus end: ALL fear of offending. You obtain it at drug or depart ment stores simply by sayin “KOTEX.” Women thus ask fc it. without hesitancy. Costs only . few cents for a package of 12 N. EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1926. COMPLEX AND TS EFFECT ON HUMANS Prol. Vanghan Warns Parents of Inluence on Children That the lectures on applied psy- chology being given hy Prof. David D. Vaughan, professor of social ethics at Boston University, are be- ing found helpful in the homes of the city, was the statement made yesterday by Dr. Vaughan to the members of Everyman's Bible class. at Trinity M. E. church. There were 188 men present at the meeting. Dr. Vaughan's address was as fol- lows: “It 1s gratifylng to receive reports, such as have come in this week, of the practical application of the teachings in the class to the prob- nems of home life in New Brit- ain. Yon have avaflable in Hart- | tord, an expert psychiatrist, !a state speclalist qualified to give you the best there is for yourselves iand for your children. As I talked . with one man this weck I was im- ! pressed with the fact that his life might have been changed if the facts we have presented here had | been applied in his case half a cen- | tury ago. Surely the church is eager | to know the best that the | can ofter. Varlous efforts | the desire to get back ag: | Great Physiclan who re {to mental as well as to physics health and vigor. TIs the curse of timidity on your life? In the days of the Apostolic church the indic tion that man had been with Jesus was that even unlearned and igno- | ant fishermen spoke and lived with boldness. Whence came the heroism of the martyrs? A life of faith hope and love gives joyous cOifi- dence. Compare the discouraged Hebrew exiles who hung their | harps on the willows and refused to | sing the Lord's song in a strange land with Paul and Silas who sang the prison daors open and who stop- | ped to bring the ministry of joy and | salvation to thelr persecutors. ' evils of a self centered life are cured when that life is centered in Jesus and such a life Is both sane and socially useful.” Inferiority Complex Discussing the inferiority complex, Prot. Vaughan said: “The instinct of | self-preservation is a dominant fac- tor in human conduct. In civilized |soctety, physical dangers are de- | moved, but psychic interests are in- !tensified. One feels the necessity of | maintaining his place in the esteem {of his fellow men. If men arc de- nfed a normal expression of the ego instinct, they are likely to indulge in {abnormal and anti-social rxpres- |sions. Men thus suppressed become and restless. When a part elt 1 cryshed, when nor- expression is denled so that !one is continually forced to feel in- | ferfor an “Inferiority complex’ arises land the individual secks an outlet | for his suppressed nature, or he may |lapse into a state of hopcless, help- less inertia, feeling that all effort is i futile. An entire life may be blight- ied, and crime or a gondition of fn- | different {dleness and parasitism | may result. Speech defects, ph {cal deformity, poverty, drunkenn {tamlly disgrace, shame, i(‘rhlc!xm and ridicule all play !part in developing a sense of per- sonal inferiority. ‘ “Children should not he made to feel that they are unattractive. This |13 particularly true of girls, since at- |tractiveness plays a large part in a | woman’s life. Ona who is unpopu- |1ar or fgnored socially looges con- {fidence In herself, and becomes pe- {cullar, ana is further neglected. so |that a vicious circle is started. T wholo | | has been known to have the benefi- | |cial result of forcing the woman |into a worthwhile career, since other 'normal outlets are closed. It is more likely to crush her for life. Alert and tactful parents, teachers land friends are quick to help young | people in this situation. | "“Alfred Adler of Vienna made a special study of persons conscious of | |a disadvantage when they compared | themselves with others. ‘He found lthat the mind was first obsessed | with an idea of insufficiency, then a protest against the inferiority, fol- lowed by very excessive self-asser- tion. Where the inferlority is not satisfactorlly compensated for, there is a chronic feeling of inferfority. The neurotic attempts to push out of consciousness the feeling of in- | feriority and to turn his own atten- tion and if possible, the attention of oth to the characteristics or pos- | sessions or attainments which he has | chosen as compeneations for his or- iginal defects. The egoism of neuro- ics, their tendency to envy and alousy, their eagerness to under- specially thelr rivals, come from the inner feeling of in- | feriority. They naturally turn to phantasy, and take the easily- reached, ple nt-tasting fruit of the tree of self-deception and fancy. (Groves) Superiority Complex | “The superiorit complex forces ' neen to overestimate their own vir- tues and a nts. They exag- gerate their own importance, and to consider idcas that would 4 to a different conclusion. interpret as conceit from inferiority in- stead. It is really an effort to over- come a defect. But an overappr ciation of or own importance is not uncommon. It is casy fora spoiled child to do this. If his asso- ciation has been largely among those who overestimate him, he will have difficulty when he is taken for what he is worth. Sensitivene: often springs from conceit. i these defects to infancy | frequent The baby learns that | ction comes in response to ! If his method always works, | v becomes an exacting tyrant, makes all members of the 10ld his servants. A child who | had his own way may resulting mental back so much a part of himsel refuse cric he and hou has al have 1 ground T !indulged rather th personal desire. He is domineering, self-centered, for he has never been rifice to appreciate the In adult life, | 1004, others are merely a | for personal gratification. | wholesome contacts with | s where conflicts of desires | lually develop sympathy | cct for the | cre self-conttol has never been | learned the ghost of the tyrannical | self Tives in the adult. | rly Influcnce on Children | “Normal family life is of vital| importance for the growing child. Members of the family are the first | man objects of the child's inter- cst and love. The qnalit later Jove life is based on early im- | pressions received. A child thrives a plant thrives on sun- n 2 child’s love is not re- :mpty heart may be the ter nervous disorders or | nd anti-social conduct. A 1 or tyrannical parent may | op the ghost of anarchy or| clty to haunt the later adult life of the child. There may result op- position to all authority or to the particular institution associated with the undesirable qualities of the par- . e. g. Robert Ingersoll, Johann of injustice, do. 1y con A bitter sense veloped hy parents or e: ons may lead children to become anti-social for life. The life phil- osophy may be a result of this early Those quaint Chintz Cov- ered Chairs are at Porter’s and are attracting consider- able attention. Just th e thing for your Bedroom, BettyLou ARM CHAIR $21.50 These Chairs are made by a New England concern that has been making chairs since 1851. THE CONSTRUCTION IS OF THE BEST Just what you've been looking for. —0— AN IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT They are for sale by a New Britain firm which has been selling good chairs since 1839, THE PRICES ARE RIGHT B. C. PORTER SONS It is | rights of others. | | influence. Parents sometimes in- crease restrictions at the adolescent veriod when youth needs to be pre- | increasing responsibility. | pared for An inward rebellion itself in later emotional difficulties | her than at the time. Sometimes the home is given up or ignored for may manifest | the sake of freedom. “When young people are forced to | choose between facts and a theology that contradicts facts they may turn against the church and religion al- together. Rellgion should not be presented in antagonism to sclence. Science is an asset to religlon of the right type.—the type that does not 5o contrary to facts but beyond facts. | Child Should Learn Independence | “‘He is tled to his mother's apron strings’ suggests a truth rflcognizmli by psychologists today. InteMigent parents make an effort to teach the child to gradually stand alone, 50 that an independent life later is possible. Some parents are not o wise, for they limit both the out- look and the output in life by sel- | fishly or {gnorantly continuing a! tate of dependence. A boy who has not learned to live apart from his mother, who has an abnormal unconccions fixation (oepidus com-} plex) or who projects his mother into every situation makes a poor husband. His wife is not allowed to | be herself.—she mnst be his mother to him. He may have married his bride becanse she ecemed to re- somble his mother. Then he expects of her, not the comradship of an adult equal, but the sort of affection that hayhad received from his moth cr. A danghter's unbalanced d nendence on and affection for her father (electra complex) may. in a| lor wav, ruin married fe for | n herself and her husband. The ghost | | of mother fixation or father fixation may haunt the home, “Men often assume that certain weaknesses in children come through inheritance when they are the re- sult of parental example. A parent plays Invalid or constantly reminds the child that he is nervous. Be cause parents are ncrvous, and thus by example as well as by verbal sug gestion, the child develops weak nesses of character and dispositior found in the parent. Suicldes have heen repeated in succeeding genera tions because of this identification child life to the parent pattern, Th ghost of the unconsgious influence ¢ a bad childhood home atmospher haunts tha lives of millions.” 3. E. Prentice Mfg. Co. Pays Extra Dividen” At a meeting of the directors o the G. E. Prentice Manufacturin company held in the company’s of fice today, an extra dividend of per cent was declared, payable o December 15 to all stockholders ¢ record on December 1. L The G. E. Prentice Manufactur ing Co. was formed in 1912 an went on the dividend basis in 1917 It has never omitted a dividen since that date. PREPARLS FOR HEAVY MAIL Postmaster Erwin of the loco post office is preparing for th coming Christmas rush of holida parcels and cards which yearl swamp mails. As the forcign ma has been taken care of and as i is early for the regular flux of lo cal mail, he Is taking the oppor tunity to install posters emphasiz ing the need of timely mailing. Ar rangements for added deliver service are also being formulate: at the post office. BAGS SPECIAL | Tuesday the perfect answer to op these two days, a most econ stock is complete NOW—Shop Ea FT BOX IREE Medium Silk $1.49 | 3 pair $1.00 I Heavy Silk $1.89 3 pair $5.00 Pure Italian Silk $3.00 3 pair $7.50 Marion Hat Shop Callaban & Lagosh. 95 WEST MAIN ST, CHRISTMAS WITH EACH PAIR OSIER and Wednesday and, if you Our Holiday ) I many a glft problem omical one as well. rly! Semi-Chiffon $1.49 3 pair $4.00 All Silkk Chiffon $1.63 3 pair $4.50 All Silk Chiffon $2.00 3 pair $5.00 SCART LINGERIE ~M. P. LEGHORN’S GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE SAVE Fine Glassware | $ 23-Piece Lusterware Tea Set 15 ON .95 —= Formerly $0.85 6 Designs Other Sets to $15.00 Dozen Regularly §16 Dozen Regularly $16 Dozen ilarly 18 ‘10 ‘10 Regu s Dozen Regularly $16 A Small Deposit Holds Your Gift Until Christmas M. P. LE Main at Commercial 16 More Days Gold Rand qulets Gold Band Sherbets Iridescent Gold Band Goblets Iridescent Gold Band Sherbets GHORN SIEIELIIE505055555 51 5ESSLEESSSSESEELLESEEEEEESSSSSLIE LSS ST SEH3PHHL 3555852855985 9853 555058008, BSSHSHHS PSS SO PBLS LSS SSIBIS 5355 SPSSSSPII TIPS SIS $993055555555999. If He's Close To You Give Him Clothes His Overcoat, his Suit, his Tuxedo, his Furnish- ings . . . They're the things he lives with. They’re the gifts that bespeak regard and thoughtfulness. Let’s help you choose the practical, durable and wearable gift. You'll see some beauties in Mags---Kuppenheimer Overcoats And whatever you want in sportswear . , here’s YOUR store. "N.E.MAG &SONS Your Christmas Shoppe MAIN AT EAST MAIN ARE YOU GOING TO SEE “THAT'S THAT" TEFIFETGCETIVTITTTIVEOIM L4 PICPEPEPLETITITTTEIFVIFTIT IO 00 000000000000000 ANNOUNCING LOWER PRICES for CARS WASHED at the Ten-Minute Auto Laundry (Division of Franklin Square Filling Station)l Because of the large number of cars we areé washing daily, we are able to announce a reduc- tion in prices on small cars effective at once as follows: OPEN CARS: Ford, Chev- rolet, Star, Overland, Small ; Chrysler, Whippet, Pontiac' COUPES: Same cars as listed above SEDANS: Same cars as listed above, including the Essex F. E. R JR MOORLAND FARM Golden Guernsey Milk The Best Milk Sold in the City. Raw milk containing all the Vitamines. Costs Let us leave a quart with you for comparison. R. WEIDMAN, Supt. TEL. 3940. formerly $2.00 $1.75 formerly $2.50 $2 00 formerly $2.50 Absolutely safe. more, worth more.