New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 13, 1921, Page 6

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Britain Hernld ALD PUBLISHING COMPANT, Prepietors aniy xoepted) at 4 t Mo Building, <! Church ot 00 a Yoar Three Months. e & Month Post OMce at Now Britais Mall Matter. CALL at_the Second Class 3 Trl,rrmwx. Ofce .. Roume profitable advertising medlum in Circulation books and press ways open 1o adverth Preos. . veoly entitied @ use for repuslication of all news b It o1 not otherwiso credited nd also local news pubs ntlon waniation owspnpurs wnd advers tly ho.est 1y ¢ cireulutio tiatics upon this auwdic This insures WUION WNRINSL (raud I RewspADer Mouiion Bxures to both nadons wad aaverteer ——— PrREST 5 MESSAGE. “words N wordy, words,” and and names dent Harding, in his first mes- clam- ot the howed to the Conxress, Bue that of opponents of and In words stated Butos sting no part in hav But could Leng his whole rus not in the words lizing what must eventu- Ime before there is stability in rid conditions may be the hefore makes of country, he gnificant statement his ad- He maid would of the und inter- o wiser course seem the acceptance con tlon of our rights as alrendy provided and to o under the existing treaty, ning of course that this can tistactorily omplished by explicit reservations und fications ax will secure our ute freedom from inadvi lcommitments and safeg r essential interests he under the treaty wonld “engage nt Harding does not say eaty of Versailles But with respect to the President of the States uting to hing that ne help i address he did the of calling proper thiit he the use 8o t it follow duy, to Int. ay and with no thought him any desire to may be miscon- may not but gret not get things tenr names of language gen- whose conditions from what takes one business world understand just President appr engAging that his rejolce has indicated “the he existing treaty” and of thus into its proper necessity of our country former tentative peside our assoclates doprecate the way In e expressed himself, and the phrases which muy cloud his ubtedly before him loomed ot those i hate the members of the Sen- thought of the He very he must not offend them ped League he other hand d the ot the came to of who there wise councils of many men of this country the the t Marding st ho Aid only folly of our present but peril in it th him- possible ds with not so declare message was one which, in re our foreign relations, must be th ke n betwéen those things Aw n wateh for the lines. far dared he warned those who p good word to say of an ad- little hat was done by the last itlon. But he dared say at he s was in terms uld did expre ruffle too roughly the of in the of such friends his, t Is belleved that mind erystallized belle there President more any will is the Leaguo of Nations, on that the perhaps but upon the flen as that which permeates I8 the only salvation for this \falrs there and for the mrd to domestic that i In most optimistic new In the message puident He times through the from the This will ring hetter f the of taxation Until people heavy not be wagen are normal ofits to producers are 111 still be Lower normal, ms that v will proble will o not do ork essage will he characterized lood message’” by staunch It will be cnlled quite or- by Demoerat There will be am over it + timid ttar how almos t Huarding's suggestion wary to “engage un- treaty’’ wo not @t this g the may conclusion, words im ! l l l I | sorry the “peace resolution” advocated will be a resolution recognizing in fact, if vital association of the President not in words, our with world. We would the other that gone farther for fates— nations Harding did believe have than he in declaring a unity mer as and who ar our still ‘expedient.” We ther HENOC had he de believe * the United President Ha will go the belleve, States, wh later, under ding or whole distance, and wo as we have believed al- ways, that this big step will bring the greatest good ourselves but to all other the not only to nations and people of vorid, PRACTICAL GOLDEN RULLE. No r the ly an expeets another to live by Golden R interpreted literal- would they for have your ‘Do should dc Into others ax you you,” calls too like to the much You would his ¢ No that neighbor loan use of days a would you three week, for instance. man expect to do of the car. you thing were you the owne There are other like to many things neighbor you do not obl, vou would have your which, quite rightly, wid yourself under any to do for him Perhups the Golden Rule might be expressed in more practicul terms without altering its spirit Have the same consideration others as you would hav to you,” is not impossible. And in this sense “consideration” should cover business, professional, spiritual and social re lons. It though we might all seems as live a creed as broad as that the ation™ must not be allowed to becomw too elastic The lead one development of this rule would Lo hesitute before criticizing another. You have dealings with some person. You feel at fairly of you once that he has not gets tell the he Then, think the whole Were and were ‘What would 1 » conditions?™ it is quite of him not treated the first pe you Your temper better and you what rson you meet of has done. You denounce him quite possibly, as you matter over, you are you to put yourself in his place self, the you have done under sy safe to say your criticism would [ been before it Put alongside of the spirit able with we would fair truthfulness tempered if hushed was spoken his yoursell in pluce” of the Golden runs Rule If-we act in are necordance the of our find that consideration, common sense, our reputation for honesty and kindliness would take a big jump in the community in which And result? we live. who Is not “NOT SO BAD.” There is nothing that makes a sick man 1 than the so worse him on ‘Don’t feel right to slap back and say cheerily: badly You'll be all to- morrow." Nevertheless a feel sick better if the man may slap not be de to the too hard, words do im- that he is lucky feel much ply to be alive, Ho we about New Britain talk of “hard country. New subject have There has been times" all remurks on the over Britain's beén but a whisper in rison AN adopted com sorts of expedients have to give of the been been clsev here employ- ment to the army unemployed The situation has terrib! in some places. No so he Now we planning Arrange- whereby men temporarily out of work v b to do some needed work. ments are being made em- ployed becuuse Britain 1 that upon it. , It is is such a good live We to we are taking these steps want things to begin We o not to “go bad are merely taking precau- tions. The ble ment in some here is the unemployment with other sections negligi- as compared unemploy- of the country. There is nothing to Britain has cause alarm. New passed through uncomfortable times and has always come up smiling So she do now It 18 me ely because “good we are cus- tomed to such time that the slightest in- New Brit- stead and We nt to is to it we are so Ilmpressed by dication of the growth contrary. ain's has been men have grown with it to keep it up and we want energetic—that ix all there MARRIED A woman WOMAN WORK the IRS. of “‘a hus- holding jobs and mercantile estab- urges passage law’’ to prohibit women, whose bands are working, from in factories She for positions. lishments #ays such cases make it impossible many bread winners to secure This ployers t is essentially ook matter I'he well for em- into, injustice in some cases may be understood, where a husband is working and where | with our for- real i med it! do con- | for | them show ! consider- | | vital to ask your- to do that and | dictates | dealing, | ! by desirous of such a | | from working unl | try isn't ' New | | pays twice a ! imposed will keep | | the | body in NEW BRlTAlN DAlLY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL THE McMILLAN STORE, “IJEST RUMI (Robert Russ ATIN.” 1) 1 wonders if that pipe o' mine is cra with the heat, a-secin’ things, a-dreamin’ dreams wherc sensc an’ nonsenze me The line is mighty thin between a thought that’s sound an' truc, uand onc that’ spotted over by insanity’s weird hue. *‘That fel- ler is a genius,” some folks say, while others cry: ‘‘He's crazy with talkin what do his words signify?” Some peoy stion, hidden meanin an’ @ ; an’ like have a thought as plain o' hat. But “hidden me ix the rule; few folks have ey to sec, nor ears to hear life teachin’s in their great comple ity. An’ once in every while it's good to study out the mysteries that seem at first enshrouded all in doubt. Is there a secret hid in that short epigram plain? Are them few words o' some g 1 man worth lin° o'er again? Why did that ol philosopher sy somethin’ so blame clear if there ain’t somethin® in the words that don’'t at first appe 7 Let's not reach the conclusion that he’'s cruzy with the heat because a man dreams in that land where sense an’ nonsense meet, his others =0 of things might keep “‘bread winners' out of work But a women from earning money merclk be- their husbands are doing the question. It would law to prohibit married cause so, is out of be wise, perhaps, for em- ployers to investigate conditions in ard to the married women they employ but for them alone. The ¢ law re- that is a matter mplexity t a against the working by married women wohse hus- bands are employed, would bring might te a state of affairs almost impossi- of settlement. this its own The larity of the hus In a matter such as each case should be governcd by law. No general rule will of a family; band’s and the amount of the apply. size the regu- his use money he earns; and hundreds of other utions would enter work ; ssity, consid into a just decision of each case. in hibiting women in states there is a law the of some pro- married teachers. women with employment schools that them public fact and Aside from the children under: nd better teachers in many ins ted t injustice in many instances be- women, there was found to cause of this law. By marrying both voluntarily womun and man surrendes No fusther and of necessity mauny rights and privileges. strictions should be pluced upon either | suggbsted, sense of that would seem that such a law as although it one's duty to one's neighbor would pre- vent & woman, under ‘such conditions, it were necessary. impress a man’s brain his stomach. If you can't If you want to know what a per- son thinks most deeply about, note that of which he refrains from speak- ing. No man matter how many mistakes a makes give him dit for what he has accomplished. “straight and narrow” may be hard to follow, but how keen is one's eyesight, how sure the The one’s step when end is reached! Some people fail to realize the dan- ger in which they are placing them- selves until knowledge of that dan- " has no effect upon its cause. 25 YEARS AGO (From The Herald of That Date.) Howard Humphrey of Yale Is visit- ing at his home for a few days. The closing session of the common council will be held this evening. The mail carriers and postal clerks at the post office will receive their month hereafter instead of one a month as had been the rule. The Normal school reopened yester- day after short vacation. Dog taxes are due and the selectmen have posted notices that fines will be they are not licensed be- for May 1. SAVES BOY Gives Its Life For ated Mother Beckley, West 4-year-old-son Shady, five hove day an g Was Killing.", Va., April ¥3.- of Clyde Scott of mileés south of here, is life and death to- of being attacked by brood sow. The animal broke out in"search of one of her that had squeezed through a hole on fence and seeing the boy nearby attacked him. tearing his legs and several places with her A pet collie dog hearing the ams came to_ the rescue, the pig and holding on boy's mother rushed into and carried him out of infuris of her pen little ones teeth. child's s attacking until the the field danger. The collie unwilling to give up the fight. and the sow wild with rage, fought on until the dog was killed. The sow was badly mangled. The collie was the pet and mate of the child, who but for play- its become | i ances than ~The | ;REPIJB[II]ANS GAIN IN CITY ELECTION, Only Sixth Ward Is Now Held by Democrats first five repubhicar in but wards of the vesterday's elections, the democrats carried [ the sixth ward by a scant majority. was but little interest in the The make-up of the new as determined by yesterday's 25 republi:a democrats The republi- is further increased by the election of alderman and two councilmen in the fifth ward. The wards, in the cil membership lows: First ward, H. Wells* (rep.), 522; Hinchliffe (dem.), 154; men, Howard S. Hart* (rep.), 543; Burton C. Morey* (rep.), 547; Wil- liam 1. Mangan (dem.) 133; Richard Schaefer (dem.) 131. Second ward, for councilmen: thur G. Crusberg*®* (rep.), 251; bert I°. Eichstaedt* (rep.), 251; Leo Contois (dem.) 54; James Coyle (dem.) 54, Third ward, for alderman: | Gilpatric* (rep.), 516; William lin (dem.) 49; for councilmen, well 8. Porter*®* (rep.) 515; Howard A. Timbrell* (rep.) 515; rle (dem.), 51; John W. (dem.), 51. Fourth Ward, Frank ©O. Carlson* ward W. Peterson® (rep.) 201; Nor- man J. McKirdy* (rep.) 202; James Murphy (dem.) 58; James Mahan (dem.) 59. Fifth Ward, for alderman: Pajewski* (rep.) 425; Vincent (dem.)" 1 for councilmen, Herbert P. Knowles* (rep.) 402; Frank Kory- tka* (rep.) 420; Andrew Bobrowski (dem,) 172; C. W. Andruss (dem.) 157. ixth Ward, for councilm Mich- ael ¥. King® (dem.) ¢04; James Dunn® (dem,) 405;: Roderick J. Dix- on (rep.) 309; Martin H. Horwitz (rep.) 309. *Elected. Total vote in all wards for mem- bers of the board of selectmen was as follows: Arvid H. Nero (rep.) 2,- 242: Lowis W. Lawycr (rep.) 2,248; Charles P. Wainwright (dem.) Patrick J. Murray (dem.) 848. Mr. Nero, Mr. Lawyer and Mr. Wainwright, present members are re- elected. The total vote in all wards for con- stables was as follows: John A. Abra- hamson (rep.) 2,257; Albert' P. March (rep.) George A. Stark (rep.) 2/247: ¥Fred- Winkle = (rep.) 2,235; James Manning (dem.) 843; John L. Ross (dem.) 847;: James F. (dem.) 8$51. All are elected. As only seven can be elected the democrats of late years have nominated only three in order to prevent contests ‘ The went There | election. council, Vel will cormprise and five can strength an results by coun- voting, are as fol- for alderman: George Thomas W. for council- McCabe for councilmen: (rep.) 202; Ed- Peter J. 52; among the nominees. after they are ! only three are nominated, all are cer- tain of election. Clayton Goodwin received 2,237 votes, and Mrs. Arthur. G. Kimball 2,206 for the school board on.the re- publican ticket. Judge B. F. Gaffney received 870 and E. O. Kilbourne 865 for the school board on the democra- | tic ticket. AlMare clected. the three men being pYenl members of the i | ’plnred on the ticket, because. when i board. city oy Luty | 854; ' Farrell , 13, 1921. ALWAYS RELIABLE FOR THE 2nd DAY OF OUR —THURSDAY ONLY— PEQUOT PILLOW CASES, All Sizes for ......... BEST GRADE PERCALE Sale Price 2 yards for 25¢ A regular 25c quality. GREAT 25 CENT SALE 35C each SUMMER VESTS FOR WOMEN Sleeveless -and bodice tops. All sizes, reg. 39c, for 25¢ each. SKINNER’S ALL SILK SATIN, regular $2.95 yard, for ........ $2.50 yard You will rarely see Skinner’s at as low.a price as this. Ar- | Al i BUENOS AIRES MAY LO_SE U. S. BUSINESS | William | Steamer. Martha W-shlnglon Will Cut Thla Port If Labor Boycott Is Not Lifted. ! Buenos Aires, April 13.—Argentine ! government officials are considering the questions involved by the demand |from U. 8. Consul .Gen. Robertson | yesterday that non-union men be pro- vided to unload*the steamer Martha | Washington. The Martha Washington, in spite of a protest from agents of the Mun- son line managing operators of = the ivessel, has been moved out of her | dock and is lying idle in the harbor. In case the government refuses to grant protection to the men employed in unloading the steamer, it is ex- pected the ‘Martha Washington will return to New York with the steamer | Huron now in the harbor of Monte- ' video. In such case Buenos Aires would be eliminated from the ports of call of these vessels. Officials of the port workers union express confidence that the govern- ment will refuse to interfere in the situation, fearing such action wquld | precipitate a general port strike. SO NEAR, YET SO FAR. Liguor-Carrying Man Evades Police = for Mile, Then Falls for Traftic Cop New York, April 13.—Losing his way after he had ~walked through more - than a nrile of liquor hunting policemen with six bottles of whiskey under hi1'arim, Rcmeo Gaetano, sail- or, sought assistance of a 42nd street traffic policeman last night. He was held today, charged with violating the new state prohibition law. Gaetano said a man had hired hlm to carry the whiskey from a steamer to “Forty-second and the Park” where he was to be relieved of it. He told the police he had crowds of people on his walk but that he could understand but little Eng- lish, knew nothing avout the prohibi- tion law and did not pay any attention to them. 7 | FACTS AND FANCIES i;l — BY ROBERT QUILLEN i (S A soft answer turneth away in- demnities. The portion of @ law usually found unconstitutional is the teeth. Hollapd's neutrality ist’'t the unl\') thing violated by Wilhelm’s new book.+ Vamps may be unfaithful and mer- cenary, but at that they usually outlast the soles. - R ® he chief objection to Pnuls plan being all things to all men is that Lgnine has adopted it. Child That Infui- ' A #an never gets 100 -olfjto.enid )\clrl‘ his mother bhmag nboul him. Let's sce, what was it lawyers did Jor a livéhg beore they were employed by the heirs of J. B. Corn? rason . the wages of sin been reduced is. because- de- for the product hasn't fallen The haven't lnnnd The world has become so sophis- ticated that it merely yawns when some statesman takes a crisis from the hat. The Englisl' may not know how to appreciate a joke, but in the framing of diplomaiic agreements they show a I comprehensive knowledge of the value of jokers. Much-divoreed lad¥ to her taid in Milk without cows, perhaps; never politics without bull. When financiers pool their interests, ; the subsequent issuye of stock has some qualities that suggest pools. but At this season one.shouldn’t waste much apathy on the man with the hoe. He is probably.digging worms for bait. The common itch: is confined to the lower classes in Europe; among the upper class it is usually confined to the palms. We have a suspicion that when they desire a movie, star to weep real tears, the director mentions her income One suspecis at; thmes that when hootch is sold for non-bLeverage pur- poses, the ‘“non” is an abhreWation for nondescript. —_— Justice is blind, but seldom too blind to distinguish between the de- fendant who has a roll and the one who is dead broke. Harding's administration will be an annual success if his critics can't find anything to criticise except his grammar. Our opinion of “experts’” hasn’t been changed by thje fact that Germany wishes to. submit the matter of in- demnity payments to. them. When we ‘ean no longer blame | | | | been followed by | LIGH TS AND SHADO A By John J. Daly IN THE TOUT-SEFIE BYE-AND-BYE The President of the International Bible " Students’ Associatio! clares the age foretold by the prophets is at hand and that many of people now living will never die. Here's hoping you and T may never die! Here's Hoping we're among the lucky ones Who, with saint and shimmy shaker, Dodge the unctuous undertaker. Here's hoping we out-live a million suns! It always seemed an ipane thing to me thyu the ryve, meet a maiden coming laden That just so soon as, comi Some young man shou And, their hearts With love, they some day then should go and die. It's rough when lovers true hgve gone amd wed And each has given each each other's heart That the years must grow in number Till old Death calls into slumber All his subjects—and she m must then depart.- If it's true the day is really on the way When folks may rest assured they will not die, If from here there’s no hereafter, Then, cut loose wlth Jazz and Laughter; g 'be P-rtr bye-and-! hu- Tell Us Your Corset Troubles OUR LINE OF pjarner s @br._sfg'?é—- v will solve them. There is a model which will fit S 230 fore. C sy Ztivc smarter than you ever lookmj be- LEONARD AND HERRMANN co. New ‘Britain

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