New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 23, 1927, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

’ LONDON|——— London is Planning Construction of New Thoroughfare That is to Cost Twenty Million Dollars. New London Street To Cost $20,000.000 London, July (AP—A stretch of road through the heart of London to the dock district is to be built at a cost of 00,000. The new road will be known as the Victoria Dockroad. It will be carried for a considerable distance on arc thus doing away Wwith traffic delay now caused by swing bridges and grade crossings. Nearly 700 houses must be torn down to make way for the road. The govern- ment will pay 75 per cent of the cost, and the London county council 25 per cent.” Queen Will Dispense With Maids of Honor The ancient position of maids of honor to the queen will soon be abolished. When Miss Ursula Lawley, daugh- ter of Sir Arthur Lawley, marries Colonel George Gibbs, treasurer of the king's household, in a few weeks the queen Will allow the appoint- ment to lapse, it is understood. Miss Lawley is the last maid of honor. During the last few years the queen has allowed the number of maids of honor to decline from ecight, the number in the days of Queen Victoria, to onc. As vacan- cies have arisen she has not made new appointments, Mural History Shown In Westminster Hall A mural history of England, on the walls of Westminster hall, paint- ed in spaces left when the new houses of parliament were built in 1534, has becn unveiled by Prime Minister Baldwin. The history is in which have ocqupied three years. Each painting was paid for by a peer. The Duke of; Devonshire, Vis count Devonport, = Viscount Burn- ham. the Duke of Portland, Viscount Fitzalan of Derwent, the Earl of Defby, the Duke of Bedford and Viscount Younger of Leckic con- tributed. The panels show the acenes: King Alfred’s long-ships at- tack supply vessels of the Danish in- vaders in nage Bay, $77; King Richard I leaves England with an expeditionary force to join the Cru- sade in Palestine, 1189; English peo- ple reading aloud Wycliffe's Engiish version of the Bible; Sir Thomas More, as speaker of the commons, refusing to grant King Henry VII a subsidy without due debate, 1523; Queen Elizabeth commissions Sir Walter Raleigh to sail for America and discover new countries, 1584; Sir Thomas Roe at Court at Ajmir aying the foundation of British in- fluence in Indla, 1614; and English and Scottish commissioners present- ing to Queen Anne at St. James right ar panels s for following | Palace the articles of agreement for the union of the two countries, 1707. London Typist Goes Home By Way Of Wales A girl employed in London and living at Ealing, a London suburb, went home recently by way of Wales, a journey of 500 miles. She boarded the wrong train at Paddington station, London, which unfortunately was a non-stop train going to Criccieth, Wales. The train conductor decided he could not stop the train for one passenger. He threw out a message at High Wy- combe, and the notified of her reached her home whereabouts. She the next day. Artist Finds Girls Of London “Artificial” After an absence of some years, Professor John Phillipp, German portrait painter, has returned to London and would like to put the clock back. In an interview the professor urged London girls to throw cigarcttes, hide their knees, bobbing and shingling their He laments that the present are making the “real English type” disappear. Professor Phillip was full of praise for city men in tail coats and big hats. He feels that only upperclass women, look aristocratic in evening dress, ce ha se r. girl Sea Room Is Latest In Interior Decoration An “under-the-sea” room 1s the latest interior decorating here. It is the design of Mrs. Wilfred Ashle; of the ifinister of Transport, and was made for one of this sea son's brides, The wails and ceiling are of sil- ver, green and gold stippled into the shade of mother-of-pearl. There are no corners or lines anywhere, every- thing running to gentle curves. Against one vall is a clock sct in a pink star-fish frame. Dolphins' heads adorn the sofa of painted sil- r wood with coral velvet uphol- The silver-gold wocden bed is in e shape of a shell. Thece are sil- j ver shells ahove the mirror. The carpet is sca-green. Soho TIs Center Yor Commercial “Antiques™ There is a new industry “big money” in Soho, London’s Latin quarter. Its business is to make ‘“old” things out of new, and sell them to American visitors. From the shipping department of the Soho firm issue “antique” cop- per warming pans, door-knockers, to: making lvers and fish-heaters. They are distributed to certain tea-shops which resell them to tourists, = BERLINI =5 Political Gossipers in Germany Now Are Rumoring' Hints That Hindenburg Plans to Resign Office Hindenburg Resignation 1s Rumored Berlin, July 23 P—Will President Von Hindenburg on the occasion of his eightieth birthday on Oct. 2nd announce to the world that he feels he has done his bit for Germany and resign from the presidency? Those intimately acquainted with him poohpooh the idea. They say that the soldier-president, used all his life to obey the call of duty, will also remain at his presidential pest until his term fs up. Among Ger- man politicians, however, the mor persists that the resignation is impending. Five names crop up as possible successors to Ebert and Hindenburg: Forelgn Minister Gustav Strese- mann; Hans Luther, president of the Reichsbank; Hjalmar Schacht, former chief of the army; General Hans Von Seeckt; and the chief jus- tice of the supreme court, Walter Simons. ru- Berliners Debate smoking in Theaters A movement to lift the ban on smoking in music halls, cinemas and kindred theaters, in emulation of the London example, has been started by the National-Zeitung and hailed with frantic enthusiasm by “the numerous Berliners of both sexes. The police, responsible for the smoke restriction in all theaters, have assumed a diplomatic attitude. They maintain that no 'aw forbld- ding smoking in theaters of the above description reall; s, and that a police ordinance to that ef- fect could not be enforced *f all building regulations for thesters were properly complicd with. They refer to wider spaces between seats, a greater number of fire exits, ade- quate means of ventilation, ete. As to the movie houses, the authorities | further contend, a continuance of the prohibition against smoking wiil be necessary until noninflammable films are manufactured. Rerlin Has Hotel For Children Only The City of Berlih claims to have the first hotel for children only. This hotel was erected by the city’s juvenile welfare organization in one of the quict districts of Ber- Mn. It accommodates children sent to recreation places, who have to make a stop-over in Berlin. The hotel has room for 350 youngsters. —_— Prices are very low. For a night's lodging ten cents is charged. Break- fast is 3% cents, and lunch or sup- per 7 cents. Good care is taken in handling the baggage of the young- sters, and insurance to the amount of $35.00 against fire and theft, is provided at a charge of half a cent. Cologne Cathedral Is Scene Of Suicide For the first time in its history, the venerable Cologne Cathedral, whose foundations were laid in 1248, has been the scene of a sui- cide. A young man of twenty-five self in the famous house of ship. The incident carries with reaching consequences. to the regulations of the Catholle church, an ecclesiastical edifice is considered polluted by an act of suicide, and the whole cere- mony of consecration must he gone through anew. The consecration will be in charge of the Archhishop of Cologne, Cardinal Karl Joseph Schulte. wor- it far According Berlin Restanrant Serves More Milk The consumption of milk in the restaurant of the German Reichstag has increased 60 to 70 per cent, ac- cording to Wilhelm Sollman, social- |ist deputy and former minister of [the interior. Herr Sollmann, leader in the German “dry” movement, points to these figures as hopeful signs that the use of intoxicating liquors, even by logi wane in Germany. Restaurant keepers in Berlin say that there is not as much drinking While before the war a “kellner” took it almost as a person- al insult if a guest did not order wine or heer, many proprietors now instruct their waiters not fo suggest drinks unless the patron asks for 'hEHL eon hou Accused Of Tavit; In Enforcing Vacclnation Tecause of failure to enforce the ti-smallpox \m’(nuflorg law as rigidly as before the war, officials of the Prussian board of health have come in for a reprimand by the Minister of Public Welfare. In an edict the minister criticized the extraordinary number of cases of evasion of the law that had come to girl's parents were | away | ways | the | ting forks, jardinieres, fire dogs, | | from Stettin on the Baltic shot him- | Roman || tors, is on the | as formerly, especially during lunch- | his notice, and the disproportionate number of cases of vaccination on record compared to the total num- ber of inhabitants. The edict enjoins all officials charged with the enactment of the regulations in question henceforth to enforce the prescribed compul- sory vaccination law to the very letter. Capital Now is | Paris Wants Airfield Near Business Center. Paris, July 23 (®—To save still 1 more travel by air, Paris has a pro- | posal for an acrodrome nearer the center of the city than Le Bourget. | It has been suggested that the land outside the city walls at Issy-les- Moulineaux, not from from the Bois de Boulogne, be converted into d& supplementary landing field. Pas- engers from other capitals could then reach the heart of Paris 15 minutes after stepping out of their planes. It now requires more than three- quarters of an hour to motor from ! the Place de 'Opera to Le Bourget. | Because of the time spent in going | from landing fields, into the city, the irplane is little faster than the train on such short hops as Paris to Brussels. On the Paris-London { trip, which the planes make in two | hours, almost the same time is spent |in going from Paris to Le Bourget Croydon airdrome to |and from | London | — | French Motorcycles Cross The Sahara | Motorcylcles have competed suc- | cesstully with camels in crossing the | Sahara. Three Frenchmen—Brune- | teau, Weerens and Gemie—have been given all the honors due pio- | | necrs und explorers for their 5,000- ; | mile trip from Casablanca south to | ! Oran and on to Dakar, through | Timbuctoo, over the sands previous- ly traversed by the camel alone. The sand tourists were a montl. making the whole trip, in 26 stages. They rode into Paris on the ma- chines they rede out. Paristans Collect African Art | Enthusiasts are combing the auc- | tion Tooms here for objects of prim- | itive African art. Such objects, par- ticularly African musical instru- { ments, brought record prices at a | recent sale in the Druot auction | rooms. The fad for negro art fs growing rapidly. | | | France Still Collects | 'rom War Profiteers “War profits” are still furnishing | France with a steady ncome, nearly | nine years after the war. Nearly 2,000,000 francs a pour into the coffers of Premier and Minister of France Raymond Poicare. This is money the govern- ment is recovering from contractors who “salted” their bills for muni- tions, as the French say, and also the taxes the various get-rich- quick merchants failed to pay. Ever since the armistice parlia- mentary commissions, courts and special tribunals and accountants have been going over every war contract and the books of many business firms. SERIES OF STILS IN EXPLOSION ' At Least One Death Caused by ! Stamiord Blasts day Stamford, July 23 (A—One un- identified man is believed to have been burned to death and another was seriously injured in a series of | explosions in which six or seven | stills blew up one after another late ast night, causing a fire which de- !stroyed two buildings. Both men are believed to have been New Haven residents, but their names | could not be learned. | The first explosion was from a | still ten feet high, and six feet in diameter, thought to have been worth about $25,000. It was in a { building attached to a cider mill on | stillman avenue, owned by Charles | Lupinaci. In the succeeding fire the other | stills were exploded and the flames, | scattering, destroyed a neighboring | bungalow. The ~ loss, exclusive of | the cider mill, is estimated at $10,- | 000, Police searched the ruins but had not found the body of the missing | man up to a late hour. The injured | man is believed to be an Italian, {Woman Operated Still | To Keep Husband Home | New York, July 23 (A—Mrs Eva v, who admitted operating a | still in her home so her husband {“wouldn't have to go to speak- asies,” was let off with a $20 fine | vesterday after bringing her eight | weeks old baby into court to show | that she was needed at home. The :l’mo was paid by her son, Edward, 21, the eldest of her seven children. The still in the Zalisky home was }Aiscm-,-rm by a prohibition agent | who gained entrance by posing as a i carpenter. | Photographs now can be satisfac- { torily developed on a fabric which German Prima Donna Stages Strauss Opera Frau Professor Marie Gutheil- Schoder, the famous German prima donna, is the first woman to offici- ate as stage manager on the opera. tic stage in Germany. Her stagisg of Richard Strauss’ “Electra” at the Dresden State Opera was acclaimed by the public and press as an un- precedented success. PARIS New and Spacious Aviation Field Near Center of French | Being Agitated French Have New Fuel To Replace Hard Coal “Anthracoke” is a new fuel much loke coke, promised the Freuch by Andre Tardieu, Minister of Public ‘Works. It is to be made from the mod- crately soft French coal, normally too fast-hurning and too smoky for the small, bard-coal base-burner generally used in France. Foreign hard coal and coke are the stand- ard fuels for these heaters. Americans Wear Cancs On Paris Boulevards Business picks up in the walking stick line in Paris when summer brings to France hundreds of thous- ands of American tourists, most of whom come from towns where to carry a cane is to risk derisory re- marks from one's neighbors. & College bovs from the United States are the biggest buyers of walking sticks in Europe. Most of them do without spats and gloves, which the well-dressed Frenchman is in the habit of wearing through- out the summer, whatever the tem- perature. More Clothes Worn On Paris Stage More clothes are being worn en the stage this year. The far-famed Folies-Bergere and other music halls still save a lot of cloth on the costumes of their prize heauties, but they no longer boycott the textile mills entirely, as they aid a few years ago. It isn't a vir- tuous streak that has cropped o6ut in the show business, but rather a swing from the extreme of naked- ness. There was such 2 sameness about the many show girls and the many shows, all after foreign money that the excitement began to wear off. The police also suggested some months ago that if the theaters went any further some of the blue laws would be dusted off and put to work. Consequently heautiful costumes and startling scenery and stage me- chanics were tried and have proved popular. Office Lunch Clubs Numerous In Paris The niounting cost of living and growing efficiency of Freneh offic management are said to be respons ible for the increasing number of office lunch clubs in Paris. The clubs, made up of members of office staffs who do not go home for lunch, have hot food sent in to an improvised office lunch room. Members say that they can thus lunch far more cheaply than they could in restaurants or at home, al- lowing for transportation costs. Most French offices close at the lunch hour. This permits the clubs to lunch undisturbed by business callers. Story Tellers Organize Against Radio Progress Constantinople, July 23 UP)— Story-tellers in Asia Minor are band- ing themselves into a trade union to | protect their interest against radio broadcasting. The story-tellers arc urging the government to impose a heavy fine on coffee-shops, Turkish baths and harems where the installation of radio sets has supplanted the ancient profession of telling tales. They hope Ly making listening-in such an ex- pensive luxury that they will be able to continue with their work; but they are fighting a losing battle with great broadcasting stations here and another huge one at Angora. Already the women of the harems | have shown a decided preference for the jazz music, the Anatolian melo- dles and peasant songs which are broadcast. The popularity of moving pictures and the rapid decline in have also reduced the demand for the story-tellers, and many of those once nationally famous for their flights of fancy have been compelled to compete with the humble mem- bers of their craft who amuse the crowds for a few plasters on sum- mer evenings and feast days. SPEND HOURS AT DUMP Co. No. 6 of the fire department | was called to the Vega strect dump- | ing grounds shortly after 1 o'clock this morning and did not return un- til 4:14. partment. BLACK IN BAVARIA. Nuremberg, Bavaria, July 23 (UP)—Van Lear Black, publisher of the Baltimore Sun, arrived here last night in his Fokker air yacht from Aleppo, Asiatic Turkey. He is re- turning to Amsterdam from Batavia, Dutch East Indies. GAS TANK EXPLODES Tuckerton, N. J., July 22 (UP)— A gasoline tank on the U. 8. coast guard C. G. 316 exploded today. Petty Officer Ernest Leary, 28, was thrown overboard by the explosion. He was rescued by other guardsmen, but was said to be in a serious con- dition from burns and other injuries. Two other guardsmen were slightly J‘;u‘rmils washing and ironing. injured. illiteracy | Sergeant Feeney notified police headquarters of the fire and | Lieutenant Rival notified the fire de- | 'WORLD I BUZZING | WITH AIR PLANS, iSeveral Flights and Experiments | ; Are Pending | Boston today played host to eight | |aviators who had dared the Atlantic land Pacific in record non-stop | flights, the interest of two hemis- | pheres was focused on other pro. |Jects designed to add new chapters |to aerial history. At Calshot Field, England, Cap- ltnin F. T. Courtney awaited favor- able weather as he completed final | adjustments of his nt Dornier whale flying boat fn which he hopes | /to make the first non-stop trip to New York. Little hope was held out for clear skies before Monda | In the FokKer airplane works at | Hasbrouck Meights, N. J., workmen | | were rapidly completing the mono- | | plane Ola Glory, in which Lloyd W. | | Bertaud and James D. Hill, air mail | | fliers, will attempt to reach Rome in | a single hop. Bernt Balchen, who | safely landed Commander Richard | E. Byrd’'s America off the French | coast, plans to take the plane up on | |1ts Initial factory test Monda | At Detroit, Paul R. tedfern |awaited installation of special in- struments and completion of tests on | ;lhn Stinson-Detroit monoplane in | which he will try to jump the 4,300 {mile gap from Brunswick, Ga., to| | Rio De Janeiro, Brazil, about August 5. He plans to hop off early for | Brunswick. | | Hint of an attempt at a non-stop flight from Germany to America was |seen in a statement fssued at the Junkers airplane works at Dessau | Germany, in connection with the en- | durancs flight of Friedrich Loose and {Joann Risticz, which began early vesterday morning. | “If the flight succeeds both pilots | as well as the machine and motor | | Will have brought proof of their fit- | |ness for crossing the ocean,” ment. The plane carried gas | | the state | sufficient for a 60-hour flight. Clarence D. Chamberlin, who flew from New York to Germany, has ac- | | cepted an invitation from Chairman | | 0'Connor of the Shipping Roard, to | |hop off from the liner Leviathan | | with a view to testing the feasibility | |of speeding transatlantic mail and | emergency passenger service by air- | plane. He said he hoped to look over | {th Leviathan, which is at Boston, land see whether a suitable airplane | take-off could he erected above the «hip's bridge. A trial launching might | |be made after the liner leaves Bos- ton Tuesday for New York, he in- dicated. | Fraulein Thea Rasche, German | !stunt flier, who hopes to attempt a | | flight to Germany next goring, made ler initial American flight at Roose- | velt Field yesterday. Army pilots, sceing her loop and “barrel roll” in her little Flamingo plane, called her ‘a skillful and graceful flier.”” i RS = CnE “THAT GUILTY LOOK 9AYS CONTRABAND Inspectors at Canadian Border Learn to Read Faces 1 | | “We can usually tell by looking {in their faces whether or not they | ! are trying to put something over on | | us,” said a customs house official on | {the Cauadian border line in reply | to a questiod relative to their ac- | | tions in giving some cars a more | thorough search than others. Usually the person carrying liquor | or other contraband fails to show an | |air of nonchalance and when the | | customs officer beging the search | he gives himself away. Many times |in a party of four or five probably all but one will be good actors but the fifth will appear nervous and | unconsciously give the officer a tip i that it would be necessary to give |the car a complete looking-over. Nothing is allowed across, not {even an empty bottle, the officials | have decided. A person trying tc |take a bottle of whiskey into the | U. 8. is liable to a fine of $5 for | each bottle found. He would be fined $2.50 for cach bottle of beer and in both cases the beverage will be selzed by the officlals. A person | will not be fined if he tries to take an empty bottle across but he will lose the bottle. Tourists from “the states” are not troubled much upon entering Can- | ada but on leaving that country they are watched closely to prevent any | violation of the law. First they must enter the Canadian customs house and declare for everything in the car. They receive a slip of | paper which among other things tells United States government of- ficials of the number riding in the | car to prevent one of the number from disappearing through the woods with the smuggled goods | after the Canadian obstacle Is | passed. | Upon reaching the United States, | | government otficials about four | mijes down the road meet the car | |on the curb and a thorough search | |is usually given. | One car bearing three young men | and about two tons of camping ma- | terial including. a tent, 10 blanket | cooking utensils. a fishing basket and other materfal was stopped and | | everything taken out and = laid on ! the sidewalk. | When the inspector {turned on his heel and over his| shoulder, said, “Now put them | back."For the rest of the trip the | boys satistied themselves with re- | imurku such as “what I felt like finished he | cases of whiske | tween Greenland | Barrow fs nearly the same, | haps | striking peculiarity, | ning that Stella Orlando, saying to that guy w 1t s necessary that the autoist show his rezistration card upon entering and leaving the country and also a let- ter provinz that he is zon of the United States which may be got- ten from a city offici “They use every pos to fool us with liquor,” an inspector said. He told of special hottoms built under cars which often contain Some put the ma- shoe While others or in the up- ible method terial in the spar employ side poc ! holstery of the c: One automobile three quarts of whiskey in a tire tube, had the tube patched, and blown up and put in the rear shoc. A nurse was caught carrying a large quantity of liguor across and when she was fined according to the amount she admitted it was her 24th trip across the border with whiskey. The driver of one makes of cars which with the huge round bumpers on front was stopped and after a search of the car, the official ran an iron rod through the bumper. Contrary to popular opinion the of- party placed of the larger are equipped | ficials have the right to search the (ay at 7: person, but at many of the outlets from the upper country they do not always exercise this right. Massachusetts ca especially suspected by the officials because of the attitude of some of the drivers who last year “put one over” and told everyone along the line of their success. It Is sai give these car over, Elderly pecple often go through without being searched but young people are always under suspicon. There are some who object 1o be searched and voice their objection: with verbal shots at the officials, a thorough going | but the inspectors go through with their battle of wits and their study | of human nature and accept the bit- | ter words as part of the day's work. UNEXPLORED LAND STILL IS LIKELY Scientists Not Satistied About Arctic London, July 23. (UP)—Possibil- ity of existing unknown and unex- plored lands jn the Arctic is being studied by British scientists. Various computations of Arctic Ocean tides which have been made from time to time are being com- piled with a view to aiding any fu- ture exploring parties which might enter the frozen North in search of] unknown reaches of land. Despite the varying theories from Harris' hypothetical Teach of land somewhere within the Arctic regions to Nansen's declaration that from his observaticns in the Fram tween 1893 and 1896 there only ex- isted a deep Folar basin, science is still desirous of determining some- ning definite regarding the pos: tence of land hetween the Tai mir Peninsular of Northern Sibe and Barrow Point in laska, It has already been determined that the tidal lines between these two points indicate that the pro- gressive tidal wave from the North Aflantic enters the opening be and Spitzbergen and crosscs the Arctic without reaches De Long's Isla tude 140 East, Latitude five hours hefore nd (at Longi- North) it reaches Point Barrow, Alaska, although the direct | distance from the Spitzenbergen opening to the Tsland and to Point suggesting a shallow sea in the in- explored reglon north of Wrangel Tsland and FPoint Barrow, with per- | islands in places. It is said that the tida met with are of the usual in open ocean areas, hut it is declared that they present a Below the ice 1o the depth of some 20 fathoms, water of the same density is pres- ent, while below this there is a snd- den increase in density and later a slow increase in approaching the hottom. In e water layer of equal density, it b been found that the tidal streams run slowly, while deeper down where the denst in- creases the tidal streams g a stream: rotary a | maximum, dying away toward the bottom. Some scivntists contend that this | action of the tides indicates the absence of any great masses of land within the unexplored reaches. AIDS JAPANESE LIBRARY Moscow, July (U'P)—Soviet Russia fs helping to rebuild and re- cquip the Japanse State Library at Tokyo, wrecked by earthquake fn 1923, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., (approximately, $2,000,000) to the building fund. The Soviet Academy has sent recent scientific publications, Soviet State Printing Trust forwarded 5,000 hooks and the Cen- tral Soviet Library has dispatched one copy of every magazine and pamphlct published in the of Sclence to Japan copies of all its Union since 1817, The Tokyo library | { now complete file and literary pub- po! a every sclentific lication of the Bolshevik Revolution, MISSING GIRL RETURNS The police were notified last eve- aged 11 years, of 20 Orange street, who was reported missing from home, had re- turned. Tt was feared the child boarded the wrong trolley on her way to visit a relative in Southing- ton. d that the officials | be- | ble | Northern | thus type, | al- | ready has contributed 4,000,000 yen, | the | has | Union Service The union service of the South Congregational, First Congrega- tional, First Baptist and Trinity M church will be held at 10:45 o'clock tomorrow morning at the Trinity Methodist church. The speaker will be Rev. Foster Perry | of Winsted. Trinity Methodist Episcopal | The | South, Center, Baptist anl Meth- | { odist churches will be held tomorrow | in the Trinity Methodist church at 10:45 a. m. Foster Perry of | Winsted will be the speaker. Mrs, | Ruth Goodrich Horton will render 1wo solos, *“Gloria” by A. Buzzi- Peccia and “Just As T Am.” by Haw- Loy Other services for the week to be held in Trinity Methodist church jar s meeting on Tuesday at 45 p. m. Prayer service on Thurs- p. m. Miss Cora B. Graulich, director of religious education at Trinity Meth- [odist church, will leave New Brit- | ay of this week for West- Conn., where she will spend two weeks with her sister, Mrs. George Rogers, Flim (Swedish) Baptise Sunda 10:30 a. m., sermon by ev. John A. Smedberg of Stock- holm, Sweden. Thursday, $ p. m., praver service. Mr. Smedburg is v ing in ntry as a delegate from »dish Baptists of Sweden to | 25th anniversary convention held in Chicago next month. this | the the to he | International | Sunda | subject P [ Bible Students’ As<n. Bible study, tion. At 8 Bible study at the hom~ dwight and testimony servies |m., Bible study, fext J liverance.” Frida hook Full Gospel Asscrubly Sunday school at 19 a. m. costal mectirg at 11 a. m ! People’s meeting at 7 p. m preaching at 7:30 p. m Pen Yourg Gosnal | | } Second Advent | | sunday school at 10 a. m. day morning service with sermon hy the pastor at 11 o'clock, subject: | “The Basket of Tigs: A Parabla and |a Prophecy.” Evening service with sermon at 7:15 o'clock, suhicct: Mire.”” Thursda 9 p. . pro- | phetic conference echors San- | St.John's (German) Yautheran | Sunday. 8:30 a. m., English serv- icc 0 a. m. Sunday school; 5 a. m. German service. Tues- | union summer service of the |G day, 8§ p. m., the Friendship league will meet. Stanley Memorial Sunday, 9:45 a&. m., morning wor- ship amd church school. Thursday, 0 p. m., costume party of the Young Pcople’s society. St. Matthew’s, Lutheran Service in English at 9 a. m.; in i at 10:45 a. m. On Wed- 5 and Thursday afternoons and cvenings, the pastor will recefve members announcing for holy com- munion. Union A. M. E. Zion Church school at 9:30 a. m. Preaching services 10:45 a. m., and 45 p. m. Varick Christian deavor soclety at 6:30 p. m., topic: What Are Causes and Curses of Unrest?” Prayer and praise ser:- ice Tuesday evening. Christian Science Sunday service at 11 a. m., sub :ct: “Truth, Sunday school, 9:45 4. m. Wednesday evening meetinz at § o'clock. People's Morning prayer service at 1 o'clock. Morning worship at 10:47 o'clock, theme: “The Dedicated school at 12:15 p. m Evening service at § o'clock, theme The Attendant Upon Christ's Com- ing.” Tuesday, 3 p. m., Women's r band in the pas- At S p. m., Bible class: Law—Our Schoolmaster U Christ” This class and the on: August 2 will be the last until aftcs por Day. Thursday, 7:45 p. m weekly church prayer meeting: cos- cnant mesing. Emmanucl Gospel Sunday, 10 a. m.. prayer service 10:45 a. m., services conducted by 20 young people from the You People’s Evangelistic association of springfield, Mass. At 12:15 p. m Bible hour: 3 p. m., open air meet- ing at Walnut Hill park led by th: voung people from Springfield; 6 p m. Young People’s service at th church: 7 p. m., the Young Peo vle's Evangelistic association will have charge of the service. Wednesday, 7:45 p. m. eeting af the home of Mrs, Newton 313 Fast Main street. Thursday 15 p. m., midweek praver service. cottage Pentecostal Assembly Sunday school 10:30 a. m. ning worship 11 o'clock folks gathering 7 p. m. tic service 7:30 p. m. Wednesday evening prayer and praise 7:30 p. m. Friday evening tarrying servics 7:30 p. m. Morn- Young Evangelis- [Cuts Circles in Street, | Six Months, $100 Fine Stanley of this city Ik the straight and narrow i path in the New Haven county jail | for the next months. All he- ause he insisted in traveling in | circles in Naugatuck whither he | went with his automobile to visit | friends. Frankowski attracted pub- lic attention by giving a three ring | circus in the public square and folks who wateched his convolutions couldn’t be sure that he was travel- Frankowski il wi cast or west because he versed his course so often. When he faced Judge Harry H. Schofield in the borough court, the judge heard the testimony of Policeman Vincent Skelly and imposed the jail term, also taxing Frankowski $100 and costs of $10.25. By the way, it was alleged that Frankowski had been drinking and driving, or try- ing to drive. ing re- Certain street cars Vienna now serve beer wiches to passengers. running in and sand- Readers of The Watch Tower and The Golden Age, as well as {| their neighbors ana friends, are I| notifiea in this man- | ner of the ‘opportun- ity which is theirs 1o | near an adaress by | Judge J. F. Ruther- ford, president of the International Bible [| sStudents’ association, to be delivered by him on the seventh day of the interna- tional convention of pible Students in Toronto, Can. Through the gra- cious providence of Jehovah, an offer of the facilities of the National Broadeasting company of New York was extended by its vresident on June 13 i1 to Judge Rutherford. io broadcast his ad- dress, without charg 1o him or to the peo- ble. The offer was ac- cepted for Sun.. July . 1927, | Simultan cously, || therefore, among the | people of the entire nation (and also among many in lands heyond the seas®) New York New York Boston Worcester Springiield Providence Hartford Schenectad Buffalo Philadelph W Plttsburgh Pittsburgh Cleveland Detroit Cineinnatt Loutsvilla Nashv Mermphis enport Minneapoli | Dallas Denver salt Lake land n Franci Seattle Spokane ritish Isles, *Listeners in the curope will b and Continental gram brondeast Portland, Me. ington Fort Worth and others RADIO ANNOUNCEMENT there will be distributed a mes- sage of comfort and good cheer; a message which vitally con- cerns every thinking man, woman and child of today, regard- less of his or her sta- tion in life; a message of not only national, but international in- terest and importance ~—It will be an ad- dress entirely non- political and unsec- tarian, as well as non- religious in nature: and, of course, non- commercial. The speaker's voice will be conveyed di- rect from the -plat- form of the Coliseum. Toronto, by telephone wire to New York city. Entering at that point upon the net- work of interconnect- od radio stations, it will be broadcast si- multaneously by the stations listed on this card. A select musi- cal program preced- ing and following the address will be pro- vided by the courtesy of the Broadcasting Company. W w WBZA WOsH WrAG Wz WIAR WITIC v WGk 5 ia WRC WCAE SKDKA WTAM WIK WSAT WHAS WsM WEBH WORD WOC s Weeo WFAA WPAP KOA City ) KFI KGO sco Australia, South America, Africa ve opportunity to hear this pro- ations KDKA and WGY on short waves. —_— Thin program will be broadcast Sunday afternoon. July 24, nning promptly and continuing until 4 TERNATIONAL at 3 o'clock BIBLE STUDENTS’ Eastern Daylight Baving 30. Tell your friends, ASS'N. Brookiyn, N. Y. | the Soviet Unfon since | —_—_—m B ———— ] PEOPLE’S CHURCH OF CHRIST Morning Prayer—10:15 A. M. Morning Worship—10:45 Theme—"The Dedicated 100 P, | Theme—"“The Events At | Evening Service—' AL M. Life.” . M. tendant Upon Clrist's Coming. FAMOUS FOR QUALITY \ ]

Other pages from this issue: