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SQUIRE SPEAKS ON | ACHIEVEMENT GOA New Britain Directr Explains Purpose to Exchiange Clwb | | Problems and matters of interest | in connection with the Junior Achievement project were explained tc the Exchange club last evening by William W. T. Saquire, Achievement director. Mr. address was as follows “I have chosen to with | you this evening the need of leisure | time occupation for boys and girls| hecause Junior Achievement offers Just such a program. “Last year I heard a gentleman, one Joseph Lee over the radio. have thought of him since because he gave me a new idea in saying that a baby’s education is all leisure yet he learns more in four years than in all the rest of life. And what is more important, it is all | worth knowing. Surely there is some truth in this thought “During the same broadcast the meeting of two small boys was de- scribed. Ane said, ‘Let's hunt for some good wood to build a boat with? They did so. Discovery, ex- periment and creation were all in- | volved In this leisure time occupa- | tion. “Rushing here and there and get- | ting nowhere may be the result of the lack of leisure in present day child life, therefore it seems most important how such leisure time there may be is spent. Let us I'v\\l\x.‘ of leisure time as play time when | life is not being directed by some- one else and one can do he chooses. “I read somewhere that if play is controlled by a worthy purpose if work is seasoned with the spirii of play, whether the houys are filled with work or play they will build themselves into a well spent day and that seems reasonable. Principle of Achievement Work “The basic principle of Junior Achievement is to inject an incentive for self help into one's leisure time | occupations. “The Junior Achievement move- ment comes to us rather well recom- mended far former President Calyin Coolidge has called it, ‘A first class proposal—very much worth while Historically the Junior Achievement movement was organized in 1919 by three notables: Theodore N. Vail, Senator Murray Crane and Horace A. Moses, while today there are | many sponsors in Connecticut prom- inent among them the Edward Hazen foundation of Haddam. It is ot just another handcraft program Qut it does aim at something more, namely to develop team work, r sponsibility, character and ambition. Junior Achievement boys and girls are doers, they serve others, they train their hands to be useful, they | meet together, play together, cooper- ate and achieve. They earn money, acquire property in a small way and they learn to demonstrate to others what they have learned by doing themselves. So Junior Achievement club work has become a practical educational leisure time experience through which boys and girls be- come organized in production ente prises in industry and home making. They learn to produce a variety useful and salable articles and as 2| whatural result Achievement club | work suppliments the accomplish- | ments of the schools and other so-| cial agencies in the field of econom- ics. discuss | as and | Versatility Needed Today | “One must be versatile, able to turn his hand to the job opportu- nity offers today for a trade which seems to offer a good means of mak- ing a living at the moment may be- come obsolete tomorgow. Life is so short that we cannotfafford to wa Jeisure time without learning some- thing worth while during that leis- ure period. “However one cannot expect chil- dren to act like adults now. It is a curious fact that we think that in order for children to be correct they should be miniature copies of our- selves in thought and action and in every way take pattern from what we believe to be proper, but if we stop to think, we do not do as our grandfathers did, nor even as our fathers may do, and it may be well that we do not, otherwise would we ! not be riding horses bareback rather | thanin unholstered automobiles? | There would be no movies, no talk- ies, in fact perhaps no progre whatever. So it may be the wrong Stop PAIN in 1 Second You simply can't be at your best in work or play when a bothersome corn :iormen"kyw' Nothing worse. But on't seck temporary relief. Just appl: FRELZONE to thet 113 con oad oob, will stop instantly. Then this amazing liquid will soon make corn so loose you canllift it right out, core and all. FREEZONE is the safe, new- day way to remove for all time corns, calluses and disfiguring warts, Buy yourself a small bottle—today, I H. idea to make children do exactly as we do. It may hamper their initia- tive. It is possible that we ought to give them more freedom to think us they may. Junior Achievement tries to offer some freedom in this respect by directing attention, how- ever, into useful fields of endeavor. We do try to show a boy the best way we know of to hold a saw, but he may think of a better way. let him use that method. Al I wish to emphasize is that Junior Achievement wants to help children develop ideas in their leisure time, useful ideas and those ideas which may be for the common good.” - LEADERS OF 6. 0. P. STUDY DRY STAND Rnti-Salooh League Issues State- ment on Tuttle Candidacy Albany, N, Y., Sept. 24 (P —With trouble threatened ®no matter what they decide, were struggling today with problem whether to go wet, dry or moist in the convention opening here tomorrow. | The extreme wets, led by Dr.| Nicholas Murray Butler and former Senator James W. Wadsworth, mained uncomprising in their de- mand for a wet candidate and a plank asking repeal of the 18th mendment, and the Women's Christian Temperance Union had not softened its threat to put a dry third party ticket in the field if the republican ernatorial candidage and the platform were not dry in every sense of the word. And to add to the troubles of the leade there was a that Ur Tuttle, believed voters to be in the race for the nom ination for governor, wouid not ac: ept the nomination unless the plat- form coincided with his demand for | repeal of the 18th amendment. One development, however, was a real comfort to the leaders. Fred A. Victor, state superintendlent of the | Anti-Saloon League, surprised cverybody by a statement that Mr. Tuttle deserved the ‘*enthusiastic support of all right minded citizens” if he would agree to * cnforce and defend the constitu tion.” This was taken to mean the Anti-! oon league would support the wet Mr. Tuttle if he would pledge to enforce the dry law so long as it books. Whether the dry organization would agree to a .repeal plank in the platform was not made known. The Anti-Saloon League stat ment was believed in some quarters | to minimize the danger of a strong dry bolt. While Mr. Tuttle continued to be the leading candidate.for the head of the ticket the name of Attorney General Hamilton Ward was men- tioned more and more as a possible compromise candidate. Mr. Ward has not committed himself on the | prohibition question. He has been | pledged the support of the wet Erie County delegation to the last ditch because he is an Erie County man | Then | ate republican leaders | the | re- | general belief | ited States Attorney Charles | first by many | ‘respect, obey, | remained on the statute | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1930. and in spite of his silence on the foremost question facing the con- vention it was believed. WACHINES RUN - OVER TELEPHONE New Device Wil Tell Operator Instructions Followed 24 (P— tele- Schenectad; Y., Sept Operation of machines by phonic device is the most recent an- nouncement of the General Electric | Company. It is now possible, accord- | ing to the announcement, to “tele- | phone” to a machipe and have the | machine inform you it is following your instructions. Moreover, this particular machine will respond to its own “telephone” number. Tech- mcally, the device is known as| “audible selector type supervisory equipment.” The operator, who may be many miles distant from the machine, operates a dial similar to that on | dial telephones, using a code num- | ber. The electrical impulses are | transmitted over wires to electric switches, known as selector switch- | es, in the distant sub-stations. These switches correspond to the code numbers on the dial, and they | will control only the particular unit | that the operator has in mind At the same time the switches start | sending back automatically to the operator by means of a device called a “howler,” the code number a Is Your Rest Disrbed? | | | | Deal Promptl{ With Kidney Irregularities. ‘When' bladder irritations, getting up at nightsand con- stant backache keepyou miser- | able, don’t take chances! Help your kidneys at the first sifl of disorder. Use Doan’s Pi Successful for more than 50 years.” Endorsed by hundreds of thousands of grateful users. Sold by dealers everywhere. S PERRY & PORK CHOPS Pork Chops to be at theit beat must bie fresh—Sperry & Barnes Pork Chops are the freshest you ca lected loins of New England Dressed Fresh Pork, caretully trimmed, wrapped in cellophane and all, Strictly Fresh. . Remember—"Noth of Fresh.” Sperry & Barnes Ham provides you with ham of an unusually mild swegt Aavor. Speny & Barnes is always uniform in quality, ewing to special selection and our private process of curing and smoking. MADE NEW ENGLAND DR dealer within twenty-four. hours. Sperry & Barnes Pork Chops are uniform in size, tender, sweet, lean and best of THE SPERRY & BARNES CO. NEW HAVEN. CONN. Makers of SPERRY & BARNES HAMS BACON, and FRA. BARNES n buy. Cut from se- received by your ing takes the place FROM ESSED FRESH PORK 8y dialed. By this means, the operator knows that the machine is ready to work. He dials to start the machine, and receives automatic notification informed back that the machine has ceased operating. Notification of starting and stopping come through the “howler” in tones of different pitch. i e Flashes of Life | By the Assoclated Press. Philadelphia — Carefully counted and pinned together by himself, seven new one dollar bills are in a pigeon hole in a desk of Andrew W. Mellon in Washington. They =are some of Uncle Sam’'s money, 4il of which is in charge of Mr. Meltou, and they are for carfaré to Phila- delphia. They were handed to him by a marshal with a subpoena to testify in a prohibition case in Phil- adelphia, but later it developed that the department of justice had the information desired and the $7 must l{e returned. New York — Her preference for NKFORTS Since 1869 r that the machipe is running. When | he dfals to stop the machine, he is| { for him. married life to a career is causing Mrs. Ruth Elder Camp to be in liti- gation. She is being sued for $150.- 000 by T. H. McArdle, a promoter, who claims he has a contract to manage her for ten years. Rome — Mussolini has a new bit of ribbon, the grand cordon o7 Solo- | | mon, conferred on him by the.cm- peror of Abyssinia, the highest Ethi- | opian honor. New York — From a fellow back from abroad who went over on the same ship as Henry -Ford has come revelation as to drinking by Henry on the voyage. He drank nothing but water and always plain water, not charged or otherwise fancy. North Chelmsfordy Mass. — John J. Raskob, Jr., is® experimenting here (with artificial linen. And he has a new automobile, that is, new He has bought a second of somewhat 1t is five years hand flivver, vintage as cars go. old. New York — Dr. Thomas Darling- ton, a sachem of Tammany, who is 72 years old today, expects to live to be 120. Here is how: “If people want to live to be 120, as I plan to do, they must brush their teeth seven times a’day, wear loose col- lars or none at all, take air and sun baths and go to church. . They “EASY TO LISTEN TO'"—CAMEL PLEASURE HOUR Wednesday evenings on N, B. associated stations. Consult your local radio time table. C. network, WIZ and antique | should not worry. Worry has killed more men than whiskey ever will.” Ardmore, Pa. — There's plenty of chance left for the fellows who fail- ed to qualify at Merion. The Have- aeyer cup, for which survivors in the national amateur golf are con- tending, and on which one name is engraved annually, has room enough | to last until 2076 A. D. New York — Mayor Reuben Sal- ter of Bostom~England, who is on the way home- from Boston, Mass., opines that American girls are more athletic than English girls, but not so pretty. New Haven — Maybe there @ill be some x\ifl)‘ s!\‘lff in the way of placements or service aces or some- thing when Yale and Harvard play | football in the Yale Bowl in Novem- |ber. Sandy Wiener, Tilden’s pro- | tege, is out for quarterback at Yale. | Barry Wood, also a tennis star, is| Harvard's field general. New York — Summer has gone, | but summer time linge The | autumnal equinox has’ arrived, but daylight saving will continue till Sunday, when folks will have stan- dard time instead of watches and clocks an hour fast. The official time for turning the hands back an hour is 2 a. m. ey AVENUE OF DEAD " MAY BE DU UP %&: I%or Archagological Work Mexico City, Sept. 24 (® — If means are found within the govern- ment’s economy program, work of unearthing the “Avenue of _the Dead™ in the Teotihuacan archeolo- gical zone will be begun soon with the ‘object of bringing to light what it is believed will prove one of the most interesting monuments of an- tiquity in Mexico. The avenue extends from the an- cient pre-Aztec citadel to the pyra- mid of the moon andJa believed to be lined on both sides with build- ings. The Citadel_was uncovered some years ago, but the pyramid of the moon,like the avenue, still re- mains mostly beneath ground. The archeological zone is an hour's drive from Mexico City and’ IT’s As EASY and natural to enjoy the fragrant mildness of a Camel Cigarette as it is to admire beauty when you see it. Camels are made, and always have been made, for discriminating smokers — the people whose keen judgment unerringly selects the best. But that doesn’t mean you have to be an expert to enjoy Camels! The delicate, mellow fragrance of those choice sun-ripened tobaccos is some« thing that anybody can appreciate, Camels are naturally smooth and mild—never parched nor insipid. Why is there such a swing to Camels? Because more and more smokers are learning the difference between true mildness and mere flatness. Give yourself the luxury of a cigarette that’s always pleasant smoking. Government - Seeking | | the citadel dates hack to an unknown era, even < the Aztecs who dwelt near the zone at the time of the Spanish conquest having been ignorant of its origin. The pyramid of the sun, larger in mass thaw the Igyptiam pyramids although not so high, stands at the entrance to fhe zone. It was uncov- ered long’ ago and tourists who mount to its top can look down over and several other re- trieved monuments, | while within view are numerous ‘mounds which archeologists believe cover buried edifices. ‘Work of uncevering the relics has not proceeded in recent years for lack of money, but the government hopes to find sufficlent funds at hand soon to continue fit. A right angle electric drive that can be used as drill, saw or polisher is now on the market. 'SKIN TROUBLES often healed quiskly by Resinol Sample free. Dept. 38, Resinol, Balto., Md. © 1930, R. J. Reynoldg Tobacco Co., Winston-Salens, N. G,