New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 2, 1929, Page 13

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)

¢ \ ‘ \ i . - NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1929. 'he fathers of the tian church found® themselves a consecutive biblical chron running from the creation of into the Christian era ew centuries the general Chicago Man Who Took Valuable PRIFST SFTS BACK Plaque For Prank, Held In Spanish e For Brank, HeldInSpnish | TR OF AN 00 years befor The man at about 6, birth of Christ. Admits Man’s Beginning Anie- . Adam had come on|the old chronologics COUNTRYMEN 5 the sixth day of Creation so Christ, | = s Paris, Aug. 2.—Why go to Paris| Myc Maryv Ry - 19 Thoanpis S s Dee Claims Few Drinks Made Him Feel That btunt dates 4004 B. C. sedochises gy SR bt | P e LR Murs. Mary Brague, 79, of 134 Francis Street, Expires Would Be Good Joke—Frightened By Search, 6,000 years later; six was regardel ersonals S(any Araricans whok iomalherch o As Daughter and Officers Attempt to Locate as something of a d number. have matrimonial bands red e 2 < A He Hid Art Treasure. Washington, Aug. 2—In the sev-|" Wayered Between Two Dates 7e allinEuireys fol Asmericant 1w Physician and Find Quest Unsuccessful. 3 |enteenth century 1 Eusebius figured out some chron ) i g vers and paying three or four times foot of Cambridge ological tables somewhat reduci oG andedirand s e what they should Only recently 9 (P— ® historli] oD 5 Al Al el s _ logical i« Ke ot 98 , o e shou 1 tl rs O'D. r started tc 2 (®—In the histori-| Then he became alarmed and|greatest theological the period, so that eventually the |} y of 22 Lincoln street a Paris court ordered W. H. Pay : reg al corial, Backey J. Dee [tried to hide the plaque when he|time, announced after profound |age of man came to be placed some-* SPend the next two weeks at e Rk sear or hysician of today was still confineq |53 guards considered his action a|and cxhaustive study of the where between 4000 and 6000 B, C.|Point, Mainc Mrs, Marjorle Corn, a cllent, ¢ s hon pld (it s i o ot e e i | serious offense. Within halt an hour |tures that “man was created s |though there were many bitter ar- | = o atorlo born, g CHienty, on. HutH ! . g {atter HhB ploque had been faken it | Trinite on (Ot 83, 4104 B, C guments over it Augustine de-| Mr. and Mis. I\ Borkowski o went there, they thoughtlc and ill-advisel | was found Ly guards and restored |o'clock in the morning clared b greater anti-| Overlook avenue entertained Jast e In the mg prank in taking from a wall of “The|to its place on the palace wall. | Archbishop Usher agreed that|quity to be a deadly hercsy. Isidor:|Night at their home, Miss Betty ¢ : £ 1 passed away Little Palace of the Prince.” a valu-| Dee was at first granted consider- 4004 B, C. was the very year and his o Sevill, the most important of |D'Alleso, Miss Margarct Werhein, .—Prof. Herman| pppy g oft able porcelain plaqu ncient de- able liberties in the orfal jail but |verdict was so generally accepted |seventh centu theologians, placed |and Lillian Elliot of Baltimore, Md - hi »k““ nothefin jaw M 1 no s i rt of ional | yesterday was placed incommuni- |that this and other of his dates|(he date somewhere between. who are spending the summer in | ' i L o o reasur orial. |cado. were inserted in the margins of | The Venerable Bede went int)|touring the nd states. S LI L L s s vomar h : Denfed Fhert Erobationii Suzze(cd the authorized English Bible, | the subject in the next century and | — [Faans hns Run s hsenen 89§ the v : o nt irred last W Authorities consider the matter | where they remain to this day put the figuure down close to 4094, [ Mr Mrs. J. A kowalcl (R YICeCAIE “;‘“”“ P "l o 1 d Ise0ey S when Dol and S s By witei serlouslyy but notibittenly St oweve Thus the theologians settled Four hundred years later Jewl er, Gloria, of IVAG [oyAllisieloliczancelitha uihegenasisLecniings nd wer B he home 1o arly of 25 tourists visitel |innocent the intentions they feel the |antiquity of man after scholars, including Rabbi Moses |er boulevard will leave tomorrow for :"‘{“_""‘“‘ 18 !\“_;'-”'Lv'wh’r‘r‘ for ! room | onsciou: of N pr I'heodore & Dee at first would say |American must be punished in or-|of argument. Before lon INMaimontdeat studicd Ltho L ELabrew | Ash Park and Long Brancn, | % 'n”f‘y““f \7,‘“ “'Mm" Solent In ter sl I o tis all a ake, T jder to teach a lesson. Some legal |ever, scientists were at work pro-|chronology closely and corroborat- N. J. “"‘"I"‘I‘“:":y'“"“‘ S hanieane “y‘”jflf % Gre 298 ; pream g done nothi |authoriti ggest that “pro- |ducing proof that men had lived|ed him and Vincent of Beauvais = ansport p < h San Aoy ot helofic . Later he said that after some |visional relea Dee might be al-|long before 4004 B. C. They|later plac P te at'about 4009 | Mrs. Albert Weiant of Murra TR T £ 2 4 . = | 3 1 \ placed the date at about 4 ' ! an Murr ] Nl 5 % drinking he visited the palace with {lowed to leave Spain on the condi- |hoosted the date farther and far-| B, C, street has returned home after M”]r‘p“'\‘)"”" : n"‘ e CRRMAN I L C 12y WORRIED t zroup of friends and thought it|tion that he report once a month t|ther back into prehistoric myths. Martin Luther said: “We know |spending the past two weeks in Now | g 0n000 S 0% e 5 - would he a joke to prete=d to take the Spanish consul in \\lm:mcxi A Cathol Discovery that longer ago than 6,000 vears|York state whe she attended “M‘]‘”\ ,O‘r A It ““_m» 5 # . 4s a souvenir one of the porcelain |country he resides, so that any time| Now the final knockout to the|the world did not exist” and the|funeral of her father T e et ";,d AR 4 plaques. He said he did not realize |in the future he could if desired be |4004 B. C. theory appears to h savant Melanchthon fixed creation | o iahed \(‘r\‘" Lend A\mflx:%' im 12} fosr Helbere. & L s ey the value of the piece. summoned back to § for trial. |been delivered by Father Stephen|of man at exactly 3063 B. C Mrs. H. B. Olmstead and daugh-| made practically nothing When they rez 07~ | noties orchestras that thei e ‘_ _____ i Richarz, who. in a zeogolical [argument continucd, however, Gladys, are spending the weel | {his work. for he gave aw e ol L Lo Dl e o study announced by the Catholiz |in 1738 a scholar was able to h Mrs. Olmstead's brother, Win- | copyright to his publishers success. Of- | ¢ ollow aBaas the present price Anthropological ~Conference hera. |that he had in 40 years studied Ay, | & i ) : g ba would receive the same 20 |has concluded that the human race |computations based on Scripture, of | per cent preferential under the slid- |18 30.000 years old by the most con- |which no two were alike. servative estimate. boldly asserts that the question is one of geology rather than of the- ology. vis Father Richarz| In the Roman Martyrology shed by Pope Gregory XIII 0. and in Pope Url on of 1640, the creation of COULDN'T LEAVE 1T | He has counted glacial layers and |is placed at 5199 B. ¢ S t S t 0 t Th | London, Aug. 2.—DBeer was the| what not and admits that there are Archbishop however, lHOO flggflSS l]e 0 I‘ee_mw thing which Alexander Macau- |indications tending to put the birth- |responsible for acceptance by : ley, 64, liked nothing clse but, and a |day of the human race back several [the Christian world of the date 4094 (ents Varyll]g Dmy | cask of it probably saved his life |hundred thousand years, though he|B. C., which he cited in his Annals when he fell off a dock at Hull re-|does not regard these indications— |of the Ancient and New Testaments cently. Tt had enough liquid oyt|such as flints dating from the fir Pew Dared to Dissent Washington, Aug. 2 (#—A sliding | of it to make an air compartment. (ice age period—as indisputable r Walter Raleigh had cautious- | scale sugar taviff plan, ranging from | When Macauley fell into the water, | Proof sted a greater antiquity | one cent a pound at the time market | he retained his b in the cask| Scientists of the Smithsonian Tn- was commonly supposed, but | prices are high to three cents ajand was buoyec until help |stitution, including such famous were few others, and any ra- pound when the market is depressed | reached him " |savants as Dr. Ales Hrdlicka, the| viewpoints on cosmic chron- was m: public today by Chair-| e o thropolo and Dr. James W.| v were likely to result in prison | man Smoot of the senate finance | FLOOR OI' GOLD dley, the paleontologist, do not| orse for the holder. ‘Toward | committec | ¥ Budanest; Aus e :m‘;: sitate to estimate that mankina 1 of the nth century | Rl ol ihalntoroaa as {has been on earth for at least 500,- hrough the v a floor of her Simon home here Sichelmann recently. unearthed | 000 years. that is a substitute British scholar the for the flat rate of 3 correct t se s he accepted vie as late as Sl B o b it seems to De wccepted view, ¢ 3 M’ S & v‘“}gl\ gold dust. She is a widow |a remarkable fact that this human |1 one of the eminent of STk ) i while her husband was living |ra until the last hundred yi | ng e hel e ce. until the las ed years | Egyptologists was announcing in e esarian “""" held mext week | {he was a goldsmith. He gathered |or so, has been misguessing one of t he had, 1f,,“\',),'1’.1,‘:‘:";,]; v(l‘\',“ :ny‘l:l:!;l‘f‘f‘ will be | (he dust during his life and led |age by from 492,000 to 494,000 |modified the results he had oh[am(\ St fed e L |it under the floor. She had vears. For the wildest venture of |from Egyptian monuments so that | - Saderiihe Alaing scalethe mieslsuit with o ovderijor e the old theologians, who used to|his chronology might not conflict| & a ,"' on ar would ap- | over the own » of the gold, and |control both education and the de-|with the accepted date of Noah Pl when suzar is selling in {the court 1 le possession to |velopment of science, never gave the | Flood | York at 6 cents a pound, which her race an age beyond S.000 yoar | Finally, how 1o archacolo- ® One of New England’s Most Skillful Batter: ’ “RUDY" URBAN Prop. Rudy's Battery Station ool Plte Approved by Thousands of Motorists ... and by Skilled Battery Men Everywhere jal used i the constr tion of the jceted to numerous and physical 1 plates is chemic process in form parts is controll- ulators (o pre- . T R Reliable Port Oxford Cedar Separators Local Servic: and a ry Hartford e cers and oh o treat the separators as 1o give your Hartford bhattery maxi- A A A Battery the action of id Hartford bat- tery manufacturers ar leaders n using Port Oxford Cedar Separa- for Every Car Your Rubber Insulator Over the ed, vubber shoe each plate is a insulator. This insu- tor, a patent of Hartford battery. ninates every possibility of a plate aring through the separator and Protection Hartford Batteries of e T Cost Less! 35 Years Experiencs Plus A Life Long Guarantee for positive pro- Against Imperfection udy’s Battery Service “One of the Fastest Growing Service Stations in New England” BATTERY RECHARGING—TIRE VULCANIZING—AUTO ELECTRICIANS East Main St. Telephone 708 “Make Our Battery Station Your Battery Station” Vulcanized Rubber Case fir Don’t Take a Chance Buy a Hartford Hood rubbér cases ob- vd to contain Hartford Iy constr and ction, Speedy Service early Chris-| Ior the fir estimate of students placed the creation of reasoned that an VIIT' agai i 100 BT il Bty Lffffif”f,?; . Woman Dies While Police Search i B i Bt el In Vain For Doctor; Becomes Il of Father Church auspi ments the agreement of scien religion as to the worthles: Goodale George W. Austir e the On Return From Automobile Ride FELLOW pub. ah NSNS TOMORROW--SATURDAY man | FOR$2, )( These Are Not House Dresses They are — Silks, Crepes, Chiffens, Prints, Dots, Georgettes and other materials. Sleeved and sleeveless, For Street, Dance and Evening Wear. There are hundreds to pick from. Attend early! Sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48 and 50, with dozens of each size in your choice of material. MANY STYLES SHOWN FOR THE FIRST TIME. CROWDS WILL ATTEND. AND NO WONDER WITH SUCH HUGE VALUES. NOT A NEW STYLE, COLOR OR MATERIAL IS OMITTED. THE SAVI WILL SURPRISE. BE HERE The Buyer Winsl/ A stock as complete as ours during all seasons AT 8 A M of the year often means a late season sacrifice pE— of dresses. We've done our summer volume. - Your friends have been here—and now for the loss. Aren't we giving them away? We will if you can Can you resist this price? duplicate this value. Plenty of girls to show / you around and answer questions. Be your own saleslady, make your own selections || without being urged to buy. Come early! JAY-COBBS 168 Main Street “On the Square”

Other pages from this issue: