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THOMAS B. MORG is is the articles on his Benito Mussolini, as told to| . Morgan, Rome manager the United Pre: Each article | this series h 1 personally vised, corrected and approved by | cmier Mussolini.) Long hours devoted steadfastly to vk come natural to me. I do not| bave to be forced to apply myself to | be they the mere | routine of every day or other new Jhases in the affairs of the nation. \s the inevitable and never ending nts itself daily, Tam ready ke it, willing, anxious to accomplish until the day’s tasks are | | brought to a close. Work is al passion with me, even the most mo- notonous routine finds me concen- trated on it until it is completed. This natural bent for work, I at-| tribute to four things:first, my tem- rament; second, my training; third 1y heritage; and fourth, the indomi- ble will to reach the goal I propose o attain. My temperament restless 1otive power. It is a force which ropels me. Tt is present in me » be exploited, to be turned to this r that advantage as my will dictates. must be doing something, If e 1s nothing to be done I creato mething to be done. My whole life 1s been dominated by this temperi- ent. I have s bes tuated » do something - has been vil momentous times for me ugh them all 1 have been riven forward by ihis force. When I have faced disaster and defeat, has kept forcing me on- © the fufure and Wheneve ure of here was a I rarch to t al, it helped me ip the path and continue alwa orward toward 4 never known lagging b have had many t but I kept going and going, filled with a perseverance which was bound to reach its mark. As child, I met a child’s reverses bu pt on. When I faced the world E d to bhe going squarely into difficulty but T plod 1 onward with my whole strength a fiber. I worked hard with my hings to 1 Sudden draughts in @ hot room cause atiffness RELIEVES STIFFNESS GAUSED BY CHILL Pressman tells how newspaper workers keep fit The pressmen working in a newspaper office at Dorchester, Mass., used to have great trouble with rheumatic stiffness owing to frequent sudden draughts of cold air when the doors were opened to take in rolls of paper One of their number began using Sloan’s Liniment and hey all [chip in to keep Sloan’s alw d for the entire shop. ¥ “After my day’s work I rub a little Sloan’s Liniment on my back and legs. It never fails.” Sloan’s gives real help because it doesn’t just deaden the pain., It gets at the cause. Apply gently, without rubbing. Right away you feel the comfortable, lowing warmth as the new blood is grought to the sore spots, and soon the aching stops. Get a bottle today, All druggists—35 cents. Foreign Countries. OINTMENT is Applied, hecause It is Pgsitive in Action It begins immediately to take out the Inflammation and reduce all Swelling. The first application brings Great Relief. . Stops Itching Instantly and Quickly Relieygs Irritation. Severe tests in cases of long standing have proved thit PAZ OINTMENT can be depended upon with absolate certai o any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Pi Recommended by Physicians and Druggists in United States and PAZO OINTMENT in tubes with Pile Pipe Attachment, 75c and in tin boxes 60c. The circular enclosed with each tube and box contains facts about Piles which everyhody should know. PARIS MEDICINE CO., Beaumont and Pine Strects, e S 1569 as told to in all parts of the world. sixth of a series of hands and the time I had to my-|permits a diversion of the thought daily life and work {selt I deveted to culture and pre-| proc paration. I was ever on the alert. I battled for what I conceived right. I went to war. I fought with that ame spirit. I returned and con- tinued the fight, am still fighting jand will continue, urged by my spirit until my task is done. Must Be Busy P And, in my adolescent years this temperament coupled with hardshipr | | drilled me for the tasks which later in life T was to face. The adversity of my youth, stretching year after | year, trained me to meet difficulty and meet it by hard and work, It was inevitable that this constant grind to keep soul together and the desire to use my spare time in aeccomplishing some good would create of me a working automaton, mere active and more powerful as the years passed. Idleness was unknown to me, for, even when I tramped from town to town in search of work, I never failed to take along a volume of poems or philosophy. Work had be- come in me an ingrained habit. A beneficial remorse seized me when I was not engaged in some useful effort. I wasi ndeed unhappy when there was not something to do. I was one out of my world, It is just such training, T think that should be given to our children. I should be drilled in achieve- ment. They should be saturated with this spirit of work. It should be a part of their physical and men- tal cquipment. The years of adoles- cence should be dedicated to the formation of sound habits to stand in good stead throughout life. 1 fear for those in our schools and universities, who fool away their time in uscless social pastime. The growing are the formative vears, and habits and rules of life should be inculeated which remain the dominating quality, regulating their future and determing their good to the world and mankind. I believe that as much liberty as possible should permitted the child to determ b one conld call thi of experimentation, of us perimentation to find:out w is best adagked for. Once, h this natural inclinaiion has been dis- covered, the line of the child's con- duet should be fixed toward the aim determined. Severe applica- | tion to duty and the cultivation of rules of physical and mental con- duct ingrained in the individual are imperative needs fo enable him to achie dedicate his Tif Ancstors My ances can trace, were devoted to the soil. T come of stock whose long hours in the fields in the region of To- logna for centuries have developed a vace of sturdy progeny, through | blood of tions of tireless Work was a heritage od on from generation to gen . My father leit the soil for orge and anvil, where fire and knotted the muscles of his ¥ frame, My mother was a zealous searcher and teacher of knowfedge. They have left priceless heritage in the body and mind with which I am endowed. Then, above and beyond my ac quircd and natural zeal of work, I have the t aim set before me fo make my 7 at and to re- to ther glory theirs. My s heen look into the future and there T s the mark T have fixed. It st the powerful lure, prevailing on me to achieve, keeping me steadfas fixed, firm in my purpose to re the end. My fourteen and sixteen hours of daily toil are as nothing which the future holds. This pas sion to accomplish for my people draws me to my task, T will not let one jot or tittle go undone that the reat aim may be realized, that Uy may take her place in the fore- ont amongst the nations of the rth, Stern, unrelenting duty transcends Il to bind me to my task. There is imperious “must” compelling daylong toil to go on. The toil of the day must be done, for tomor- row will be another day, too, with its tasks and ¢ ons. Never shall that whieh can he done today be put off until tomorrow. n into the night the work continues that today’s work be done today, 1o 1 for tomorrow tomorrow's own whose veins coursed the countless me a v long T am tfort, 1 action, T OINTMENT FOR ALL FORMS. or PILES riainty to Stop Louis, Mo. { Rome Manager of the United Press Copyright 1927 by United Press Associations. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part prohibited severe | body and e the ends to which he may | tion itself NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, “MY TWENTY-FOUR HOURS” By Benito Mussolini, Premier of Italy so that I make one task | the complement of the other, one becomes the repose for the other. | There is always some one process working when others may be resting. | T am therefore constantly producing though all my faculties may not be | in operation. I need therefore ask | for no respite. I cannot rest. A | day’s idleness clogs and puts my | out of gear. The short | n my duty would allow would serve to no purpose. I either must take a long rest or keep on soing. I cannot suspend for a long time, for my life is too full of mo- | tion. Each stop requires adjustment. My machine is best when kept in | action. I am able thus to dedicate | | my life to my work and intend to continue unceasingly and severely | at 1t until the end, then if repose | { there be, T will await it in the great | | beyond. The next of Premier Mussolini's | § articles in this series will appear in | tomorrow’s Herald. The subject fs | “I Eat to Live.” Mussolini tells why | he has refused to “dig” his grave | with his teeth,” and how he has ar- | ranged his diet to give him the max | imum physical and mental effici- | | ency. He has also changed-the diets of the Ttalian people. Y. W. C. A. NOTES Blue Triangle Club The January business meeting of the Blue Triangle club was held last cvening at 7:30 o’clock in the club rooms at the ¥. W. C. A. building on Glen street at 6:30 o'clock. Miss Bertha Parker presided at the meet- ing. »stello was present to organ 2 cla in painting and other special classes were formed. Athletic Department New swimming classes will begin | on Monday, J and on Fri- ay, Ja 21, ration for | sses will be taken any time The classes will meet at | the following ti: Mon to 7 o'clock, 7 to T:30 o'clo to § o'cloc { ours for F > the same A class in classical and clog danc- | ing will be formed on Tuesday Jan- vary 18, at 7:15 o'clock. | he gym schedule will be as fol- nesday and o'clock, swi Friday: 6 to 9 ming clas Tuesday and Thursd o'clock, basketball, t 6 to 0 gym- and Wednesday o'cloclk, plunges. BOY SCOUT NEWS 6 to 9 Much interest has been aroused in !local scouting circles by the appear- ance of Dr. Georg “isher, deputy | chief scout cxecutive, as guest and speaker at the annu meeting of the New Britain Boy Scout council | § next Monday night. All scout mas- ters, assistants, junior assistarts, council members, merit badge exam- | iners, and scout dads are invi ind the meeting will be open to all men interested. It will be held in the hool gymnasium. Dr. Leon . scoutmaster of Troop 2 of sent cat personal | § > fathers of all boys in Lis troop, asking thom to he present. | § The members of the council execu- tive committee are personally urging | the 60 council members to be in t nee | The first meeting of the proposed out alumni association will b held in the Chamber of Commerce rooms Thursday evening. This as- {sociation is open to all former scouts, {irrespective of the rank they attain- | ed who have reached the age of 19 ) vears. Several favorable respon | {have heen received to the cards mail- ed out by Harold Tayntor, who is | {organizing the organization | A first air course is heing organ- | »d and will be ‘conducted by Neil | MeDougall, first aid expert of the lo | | | | cal council. New Hampshire Woman | Slayer Is Sentenced | Berlin, N. Jan. 11 (A—Mrs. Ella May B 1y plead- led guilty to a c of murder in the se 1d degree in connection with {the death of her husband, Samuel, {1ast November 11, and was sentenced 2 5 years at huard labov ackett confess that killed her husband after| ied life because she that he wu going to “leave" | Brackett was down in an outbuilding on farm at Cole- brook. His wife fled across the Connecticut river into Vermont, where she was arrested the next y. She apparently attempted to commit suicide, volunteering t in- formation that a g; on he was self inflicted She was indicted for murder in the first de e, but ate permitted her to plea to a t-Proof Pocket at Last Invented 10 (A—The pick- in professional par- lance, has at last been foiled. | The international snssociation of clothing designers in convention here has announend porfection of a | “pickpocketproof pocket.”” It con- fains protective flaps designed to baffle the most astute member of the light fingered professi The delegates tod debat- ing such weighty how sack coats for fall should be |cut and just how many b ) |$hnlll‘| be alloted per suit. | An old building in Trim, Treland, | that has been used as a county jail, | then an industrial scliool ter as a b ks for the ATies, |ana still later by the State |army, is to he reconstructed as an armory for the Civic Guards. 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