New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 26, 1920, Page 7

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Want to Save Money Take advantage of these Specials {CARDINAL GIBBONS FIRM FOR LEAGUE Deiay Imposed Alone Will Reduce Wars to & Mintmum, He Says. QUOTES POPE BENEDIOT “I know We Will Accept Our Respon- sibilities in the World Situation,” He Declarcs. The Democratic National Commit- teo in a statement yesterday an- nounced that His Eminence James Cardinal Gibbons had added his name to the list of 15,909 American clergy- men who have taken a firm stand for the Lengue of Nations.” The state- ment declared that Cardinal Gibbons NEW BRIYAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, PUBLIC WORKS ACTIVITY City Commission Has Two Matters of Importance for Discussion at City Hall. Chief among the matters to be dis- cussed this evening at a meecting of the board of public works are the proposition te cut away Central Park to & point six feet on each side of the monument and a petition from the Western Union company for the priv lege of crossing several stfeets with subways for the company’s cables. The streets the company would cross are: Curtis, High, Washington, Main, Smal- ley, Elm, Stanley and East Main streets. It is probable that hearings will be ordered on the park matter while a tentative agreement will be made with the Telegraph company. Stnce the city has sewer, water and gas mains run- ning under the railroad crossings at present, the placing of telegraph Sub- ways would have to be made under - 1 | strict agreements to protect the city against losses. Those streets having no ubways may later result in heavier struction and it may result in heavier costs for the city, Mayor Orson F. Curtis believes. For that reason he is in favor of submitting an agreement whereby the city could collect a part of the expene of extra construction if the subway was interfered with. WIFE BEATER JAILED Basalcvicz Takes Day Off From Work to Help a Friend Move and Finds Himself in Trouble. Basalevicz was arrested at his home on Stanley street last night by Supernumerary Patrolman Albert Sharpe on a charge of as- saulting his wife and was before Judge John H. Kirkham in police court this morning. He “was sen- tenced to jail for a 10-day period The couple have bean marriéd more than four vear: They have three children. Yesterday \\'l'ullsla“ did not Wiadielaw | l J 1920. work, so when he returned to his home early his wife questioned him. He had taken three whiskies in a Hartford avenue saloon but a short time previously and was not in a mood for answering questions, so he struck his wife, knocking her to the floor. Other tenants came to her res- cue and called the policeman. The accused said he told his wife Sunday that he was going to help a friend in moving yesterday and would not work. When he came home she “crabbed” him, later taking a knife and cutting his finger, so he struck her, was the story told by Basalevicz to the court. POLICE CAPTAIN SUSPENDED Manchester Policeman in Trouble With Superior Officer and Near Fight is Result. Manchester, Oct. 28.—Following a hot verbal battle between himself and the chief, Captain W. R. Campbell of the police department was suspended last night by the pplice commissiohers. t The trouble, which is one of long standing, came to a head yesterday morning when Chief Samuel Gordon ordered Campbell from his office. | Campbell declined to go and Gordon tried to put him out. The captain, it is said, had criticized the chief for carry- ing around several warrants and was told that this was so becaue he, the captain, could not be trusted. The words used, it is said, are: “You are too crooked to be trusted” whereupon Campbell is said to have replied: “You lie.” The next statement, attributed to the chief, was: ““You call me a liar and I'l push your face in so there will be but one eyve where there weve’ two.” F PRACTICE FOR TOURNEY. West Baden, Ind., Oct. 26.-—001! players here for the tournament to be played Tuesday and Wednesday en- l gaged in practice matches vesterday despite a light fall of main. Jock Hutchinson and other stars will com- pete in the tourney. TRY IT. Expe demonstrated that knows no surer h for the inflamed mug ‘Dranes of nase, un7 passages. Useg by thousands ef p highly recomme physicians. TRY At your druggist’s (tH as above, on every bottl $1.20. y based his support chiefly upon the Encyclical of Pope Benedict, declaring that all States “should unite in one EIEIIEIIEIEIIIEEIEEIEI ) 5] ] ) 5 ) ) . i ] ' ] ) ) ) 5 5 5 T ] " The statement, based upon n an interview with Stephen Bonsal of # - the Baltimore Sun, published yes- torday, saye the Cardinal declined to discuss political conditions, but talked OUTING GOWNS freely about his earnest desire for > world peace. 4 $2.00 each. At the outset of the Interview Car- i dinal Gibbong asked Bofisal to read N Good s!yles, hcavy- aloud to tim, two paragraphs of the § : : £ Pope's Encyflical, as follows: i weight striped ' outing “Things béing thus restored, the ] order required by justice and charity t fla“nel- chullf 3298 n-“r biished and the nations recon- value. clled, it ls much to be desired, ven- 2 erable brethren that all States, putting aside mutual suspieions, should unite in one league, , At in a family PETTICOATS of the peoples, calculated both to maintain their own independence and $3.75 each. Heatherbloom tops,* deep flounces of change- able silks, safeguard the order of human society. “What especially, among other rea- sons, calls for such association of na- ‘tlons is tho need, generally recog- nized, of making every effort to abol- ish or reduce the enormeus burden of the military expenditure, which States ean no longer bear, in order to pre- vent these disastrous. wars, or, at least, to remove the danger of them as far as possible. So would each WOMEN’S ‘'WOOL * SWEATERS nation be assured not only of its in- dependence, but alsoof the integrity The populan tie-back J|of its territory within its just ber- modcl long sleeves. e Nobe Words” Says Cardinal, $4.49 each. Anor hearing these nnm. the (Black only). A Wonderful Offering in Dresses $19.98 them to the Everlasting Cfty and to each the 'nrll that s ia such grave h-- Materials: Tricotirie; f Serge, Jersey, Taffeta, nnd wl Satin, Georgette and vel- citizen and a8 & son of the Church— b as well nigh the eldest son of the vet. No two alike. Wom- en's and ‘Misses’ sizes. Chureh. “Yes, I am In favor of very differ- ont weorld unnnmum.- and of $24.98 to $35.00 are the regular prices. cheen .}-fl::l uu the thn. t‘-! from hap- pnoa nms ‘Re you r-un how it There were a {ow latters from 'arll.- Ministers, half published, or not at all. A few telegrams exchanged between Emperors and Kings, and then rivers of blood began to Méw to the Niagara of suffering at which we, dumfounded .n‘ almost heipless, still asaist. “What I most like and highly value abowt the proposed League is, firet, the delay which it imposes upon any and all nations—you must not rush headlong into this thing in which we all run the danger of belang involved. We say you must be frank, open and above board: you must place your plang befors the world and they must and shall be carefully weighed. Why, in my judgment, this single new world regulation will reduce wars to a min- imum. Secend thought and careful ecqnsideration of steps to be under- taken‘is imposed, and on second sober thought few will draw the sword. And then I Jike and value that phrase and declaration, “That it is the friendly right of each member of the League to bring to the attention of the Assembly or of the Council any circumstances whatever affecting in- ternational relations which threaten to disturb International peace or the ®ood understanding between nationg upon which peace depends.’ Hopes It Will Come Soon. “It shall be the friendly right—I like that immensely. In the next de- cade—better in the next ten months ~— hope it will become the friendly right and the inevitable duty for all nations to eombine for the preserva- tion of peace. How often would wars have been avolded if in the past we had acted in this way and under these preseriptions! “I Hke the plan for delay. T like the solemn agreement for the preven- tion of international war which the covenant stands for and of which, in the words you have just read, His Holiness the Pope expresses his warm approval. So with the great disas- ter behind us, although we still sit in its dark shadow, we should, and I belleve we are, determined to safe- guard the order of human society which is in danger, to maintain the independence of the peoples within their just borders, and to reduce, if we cannot wholly abolish, the burden of military expenditure. Sitting as a council of brethren, with the shadow of the great catastrophe still upon us, wg should, and I have no doubt we will, draw rer to one another and take up, in fraternal spirit, seria- tim, those vexed questions that still remain and which are a grave men. ace %o the fellowship of the forward- looking, God-fearing, God-loving na- tions. These questions still threaten the peace of the world—that peace whose Blessings we are fust beginning to enjoy again. “Delay is dangerous and it means continued ecumulative suffering. I know that we will, at an early day, accept our evident responsibilities in the world sitoation, and at the same time make perfectly clear what they are. Once our responsibility e clear- ly established and made unéaniably manifest, the American people will not sidestep. We will do our duty. LISTEN! THE SECRET OF OUR LOW PRICES ON FINE FURNITURE AND RUGS IS THAT WE DID NOT BUY ANY MERCHANDISE AT THE MANUFACTURERS’ TOP PRICES. WE KNEW THAT THE PRICES WERE GOING TO ADVANCE SO WE BOUGHT HEAVILY TWO YEARS AGO, AND PAID THE PRICES GF MAY 10TH, 1919. WE HAVE BEEN RECEIVING THIS FURNITURE FROM:GRAND RAPIDS RIGHT ALONG, BUT NOT AT THE “PRICES PREVAILING” BASIS. OUR CONTINUED LOW PRICES AND HIGH QUALITY ARE GAINING Us HUN- DREDS OF NEW CUSTOMERS. WE ARE DOING AN EVER INCREASING BUSINESS WITH THE NEW RESIDENT S AS WELL AS THOSE WHO HAVE KNOWN US FOR THE PAST 50 YEARS. ’ . EVERYONE IS DOING THEIR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY THlS YEAR- STEP IN AND SEE OUR WONDERFUL LINE OF LAMPS. B. C. PORTER SONS “CONNECTICUT’S BEST FURNITURE STORE” EEE]EIEEEEME@E@DE@E@EEEE@EHEE@EE@@ () ] ) ) ) ) ) ) o e e e WOMEN'’S SILK HOSE $1.69 a pair. Extra good quality, black only. R — SILK PONGEE WAISTS $3.29 each. Tailored model, high- low collar. Yy e S (S 8 )] ) ) ) ) [ SILK CAMISOLES $1.00 each, Worth $1.50 and $1.75. KNIT VESTS 3 for $1.00, Good styles for choosing, {Bonard and Herrmann Go. ] ] 5 5 ) ) ) 5 5 ) 5 5 ) ) ) ) o — A, G ]@ DD'

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