New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 19, 1922, Page 10

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)

REVIEWS HARDING T s o e TP ¥ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1922 'PLAN SCHOOLING AGAINST FIRE LOSS nitural conditions, both in countries which import from us and In countries which compete with us, in order that we mauy be able to keep our own farm nated by President Harding. The campalgn of the assoclation this year will be actively supported by various Insurance activities and by the United States Chamber of Comme tion of the work Inurses have done for refugee crphans children located in the disteict. which the three The same in flavor ers informed on world production and and many local chambers, Railroad officers and employees have given nc- tive co-operation in the observance of fire prevention weelk, MONKS ARE GRATERUL Rule In Force For 'ten Centurics Bar- markets, We afded the mission of agricultural gnecinl investigations. We furnished fongressional committees statistical relating to the tariff, trans- farm credits, insurance, and future trading. We wir finance corporation cotton, grain and live an security for loans publie special studies on agricultural prices to commodities and farmers' purchasing this way helped to perilous condition of the need for relfef our work under the warehouse act, adding |greatly to the number of accredited | | warehouses which, could issue ware- the |house receipts acceptable as collater- attainment f,, - g6 particularly on cotton, (releht | heat and tobucco but he as-| w\ye gtrengthened our the farmer's | g igtical work. We modified the and that con- |05 for grading spring wheat, es- bound [tablished a special market news serv-| ice the @pring wheat region, and| have put on a ‘Know your wheat cam- | of. the last"congress -the speaker|DREN. to help the farmers of the| AR s A PR LK Northwest secure prices for their| 5 ' . %7 |wheat corresponding to its milling | jor importance the farming in-| o ‘“P;{"’ i “We have improved and expanded “The war fmhmer eorporation act, |NC NEWs service by leased wire, radio “Increased capital of the farm land and press to keep farmers posted on banl the markets and the changing condi- i MoAifed interest tate onbonda: of|tions Which aftect” prices. “We " have YBint stook: 1and banks done everything that we thought \grieultural representation on|MIENt help the farmers in meeting faderal: reserve board I hat has been the most general and y et and RieB VAT AL AL serious agricultural depression the L country has ever experienced. operative assoclations from improper % 1 LIS A Feaiesition [tion by congress and by the adminis- 4 Among the things which remain to trative agencies of the government, be accomplished, Mr. Wallace said, are |SuPPorted by consistently sympathetic a readjustment of freight rates and |PreSSUre fTomwineipresidant con r.|h- some é_rraxtgcmflnt by - which the uted a great deal toward the marked necessary industries will not be in-|*lYance in the prices of m‘:“ rahrm, terrupted by disputes between labor |PrOducts from the low {2 "'d ’“"’ mu:;rerfh}!m::;;i m:imif"m h’:,”’";j:ff_ work out of a period of infinite dis- twithout impairing in any way the ef.|couragement and disaster and into a ficlency of the transportation service. :::I"‘:d of"hopetilness and enicourages m‘“‘:‘o'fi 3‘;"‘_“;':‘5: ",':,'"fl‘u‘;"l" é“‘;’?}: “I would not he so foolish nor so o stop to these constantly recurring|Untruthful as to say that our troubles disputes between capital and labor|2T OVEr and that agriculture has which interfere with or suspend for a|lOV reached a period of prosperity. time the free functioning of necessary Quite the contrary. Prices .o ‘arn'x {ndustries, such as transportation and prodlicts; Are S“,H Mmgpme{ “’o‘ G“" cdil mining. Being both capitalists|TN€Y are below the actua Sopt e and laborers, farmers can understand |Production and far lower relatively and sympathize with the just and|Cen: the prices of ""5‘" ”':“’." '“Tmfi lawtul aspirations of both capital and |Modities. The farmer is getting tess fibori({Tha:xight lof dapitali-to ory|Dey f0r hishworis . than _aiy Sosier ganize has long been recognized as|EFOUP of Workers. He is getting i ecessary o the conduct of large|FEturns on his invested capital than business enterprises. The right of "“?fn':"th:"d‘:"\"fl’g“::::"'flm{’:‘rm” the laboring men to quit work is in- i alienable. The right to work is equai: | ‘CTY much better off today than he 1y sacred. ' ‘THe right of workingmen|"®8 in the winter of 10201921, -an %5 organize. and. Hght to quit work do|that his improved state is in substan- not carry, with' them. the right to in.|tial pert due to wise legislation and| terfers with ‘others who. want to|intelligent administration. ~We have work, nor do they include permission|it bottom and are on the upward to conspire, through organizations or[P3th otherwise, and tie up industries which are nec ry to the life of the people Interference with transportation is a attack upon the farmer and mily." Reminding his hearers that recom- | Sculptor Will Erect Figure to Depict mendations already had been made to| congress for solution of some of the remaining industrial and agricultural probiems, but not yet acted upon, the | secretary continued: Needs Have Been Considered “Take it all in all, I think it fair to say that during the past eigh- teen months the needs of agriculture, both fémporary and permanent, have had more sympathetic and intelligent | considération at the hands of con-| gress than during any other similar period in our entire history. The leg- islation has been constructive and will be enduring in its benefits. Nor can it be termed in any sense legis- | lation for the benefits of a class to the injury or at the expense of any other group. It will help all classes. “For the past eighteen months the resources of the department of agri- ) e J culture have been utilized to the full-| © hhl]\uuq\jn Institution, of which est possible extent to help relieve the|Arthur H. Bestor is president, has in- agricultural depression | itiated three movements in the edu- “Barly last year men twere sent|Cational world, it is pointed out—the overseas to seek larger outlets for our|SUMMer assembly, the summer school, grains, meats and cotton. Other|®N the home-reading circle. From trained men have been studying agrl. | the summer assembly have come the reading circle enrollment was 100,000 students, among them being! s daughter. originated by Keith Vawter, Cedar Rapids, Ia., in 1904, congressional com- Instruction in Preven- inquiry by ADMINISTRATION Wallace Tells What Has Been Done for Farming Industry UNDERWRITERS T0 MEET Meeting to Widespread yesterday and tomorrow - always - - ‘Good to the last drop" REG. U.S. PAT, OFPF, WELL HOU COFFEE Methods Suggested By tion Methods Suggested By Fifty-First Annual Be Amgeiation In OhenEs: Chicago Tomorrow and Held in | material {portation, |eold storage jassisted the by inspecting Istock offered YW relation of other the in Washington, 18,—Widespread instruction in fire prevention methods among the general public is the pur- pose of the convention here today of the annual three-day meeting of the Rallway I"ire Prevention association In the year 1021, fire in the United States caused.a property 1088 of $485,- 000,000, killed nearly 15,000 persons and injured more than 16,000 others.! Of these casualties, 83 par cent were suffered by mothers, children and in- valids These figures are published assoclation to show the need campaigns against ness where fire is possible, Nearly 90 per cent of these losses of life and property are due to carelessness and lack of proper education as to exlsting hazards, according to the as- soclation The meeting is the culmination ot fire prevention weck recently desig- ! Thursday. Chicago, Oct, 18.—The fifty-first annual meeting of the IFire Under- writers assoclation of the Northwest will be held here tomorrow and Thursday. Francis R. Stoddard, Jr., New York superintendent of insurance, John B. Morton of Philadelphia, president of the national board of fire underwrjt- ers; James L. Case of Norwich, Conn., president of the natlonal assoclation of jnsurance agents and Edgar A. Guest, Michigan poet, will address the nieeting. Major R. W. Schroeder of the rarmy air service, will speak on alti- tude flying. Washington Court House, Ohio, Oct 19.~—What the Harding tion and the republi done for the farme a speech here tonight by Wallace of the ture who declared t the | teen months the energles of eral govern as to give fu relief from agricultural Much remains to he retary said, of higher rates for serted that the worst of hour of trial was over ditions everywhere tinue looking up. Legislative Enactments Among the legislative enactments administra Lake Scyvan congress have madi ring Women From wn was reviewed in Monastery Grounds Ignored, rtary wrtment st eight- the fed- lirected of of of | BOBTRA At Erivan, Armenia, Oct. 10.—The fumous island monastery of Lake Se- van, near here, which for ten cen- turies has never permitted a woman to enter its gates, has ignorad thic time-honored regulation and extended the freedom of its grounds and build- ings to three American women. They are Miss Grace Blackwell, of Iamil- top Square, N. J., Miss Jean Van- coover, of Philadelphia, and Miss Margaret Rust, of Bowling Green, {y. The three nurses connected B L . f:;“h ;[h:,' \rnr: s FORMER ASSEMBLYMAN DIES The breaking of the thousand-ycar Ridgefield, Oct. 19.—John Brophy, rule of the monastery was in recogni- [a prominent resident of this town, AgTiC | power, and | make the wgriculture and We expanded |United States ment has measure period est the possible by the of In- careless- previous of depression done the 1 lower sec- | he was an inspector of customs at the port of New York. He came (o this country from Ireland at the age of 9. died at his home today at the age of 82. He represented this town in the general assembly in 1893 and 1903, was a county commissioner for Fair- field county for 12 years retiring two years ago and had served as a select- man for the town. IFor some years ineluding prices farm products, lHve-stock | Men of the British navy must en- list for a period of 12 vears. are to con for RO O - to } In Gulfstream Biue or Cuban Gray THE FIRST PHAETON RE is EerrYs — CHAUTAUQUA STATUE Wonderful Growth of Circuit En- tertainment Since Founding. Columbus, O., Oct. 19—Commemor- ating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the Chautauqua Institu-| tion in New York, Lerado Taft, Chi-| cago sculptor, has been authorized by the International Lyceum and Chau-| tauqua association to prepare a suit- | able statue depicting the cngin.j growth and purpose of the organiza-| tion. Supplementing this recognition of the movement founded in 1873 by Bishop John H. Vinecent of the Meth- odist church, and Lewis Miller, an| Ohio manufacturer, chautauqua lec- turers next season will unite in de- voting attention to observance of the | semi-centennial. is revelation of how much 1645 Dollars can achieve when they are made to do their best To delight the eyes, there are long low lines, —-and then these a body of shining Gulfstream Blue or quiet Cuban Gray, a newly created Reo top.gray interior trimmings and upholstery, fenders of black and steel wheels of gray. For protection against scar and mar, there are three-barred, full-nickeled bumpers front and rear — seven aluminum guard barson the back panel — and, on the running board, step-plates and kick-plates of heavy aluminum. To defy the weather, there are Reo-designed, clear-vision curtains — made to pack flat in a special compartment — a cleaner-equipped windshield with integral side-wirgs, and (fau 80 clear that there seems to be none. For light, there are nickel-bailed hudllhpl of new design, smallparkinglights near the wind- shield braces to conserve the batteries. s special stop-signal and parking light at the rear, and a tonneau light with concealed wire long enough to serve ar ap extension inspece tion lamp. A fully nickel-plated Moto-Meter keeps watch on the temperature of the motor. For crawls and spurts in heavy traffic, for mud and sand in detour lanes, for hills and stretches of open roads, there are six Reo cylinders, with remarkable giant intake valves. To defeat the shocks of a hundred thousand miles and more. there is the Reo double chassis, with its extra low-hung inner frame in which the power plant is suspended. more than 10,000 cireuit chautau- == | quas. FOOLISH TO LET At the end of the first fifteen years, | the late Elbert Hubbard and Thomas | [A. Edison. The latter, while study- | ing at Lake Chautauqua, met and married Mr. The madern circu jtauqua was RSty , 35¢“Danderine” Saves Your Hair—Ends Dandruff! Delightful Tonic MAY Among the minor conveniences, there are two curtained compartments, in the backs of the front seats, for wraps and packages —between the two there 1s a disappearing vanity case — and on the dash, in addition to the usual equip- ment.an electric lighter and an eight-day key- less clock. By providing these and many other things, we Bave striven to give the owners of the First Phaeton Reo, from the beginning.every desir- able thing that the experienced motorist wants. Japanese to Change Rules and Allow People to Look at Crown Heads. Tokio, Oct. 109.—Instead of 2,000 police being ordered out to line the streets and order people from upper windows whenever an important | member of the Royal family makes| an appearance, has been the cus- tem for centuries in Japan, the au-| thorities have decided that the num-| et | For the body's ease there are genuine Mar- Erioees. oo uptaire, - Ehoind & shall type springs, low seats with deep mier o the Revalty | F b cushions of genuine hand buffed leather, gray Dualtone finish, thick carpets fitted to the floors,and ample leg-room for six-foot men. he ueed By getting them all st once sad built in, he gets them at manufacturer's prices—so that even in little things every one of his dollars is enabled to do its very best. FIRST PHAETON REO F. O. B. Lansing, Michigan Plus Federal Tax drive across the city, a large force of police wag ordered out, street cars were stopped, traffic diverted, every person strictly scrutinized and upper windows ordered closed, no matter how hot it was. The patriotic Jap- | anese, however, considers it a grave | | offense to look down on his emperor { of divine origin Every essential of comfort and enduring worth is there in heaped-up Reo measure. KENNETH M. SEARLE & CO. REO MOTOR CARS and TRUCKS Corner Elm and Park Streets New Britain, Conn. Open Evenings This Weck. THE FIRST PHAETON REO | | - | FIND REBEL QUARTERS Cork, Oct. 19 (By Associated I’ress) The arrest of H. O'Mahoney a Cork republican led today to the discovery of an important republican base in this city. In a house on the ind 1o found evidence that the ing was nsed not only as hnmi-‘: the republican publicity campaign hut also as the center of | Cork Noone Ilanna (a mil | ganization named atfer Every bald just a few falling landruff—but soon scraggly, and It seems tolerate Quick! Don't wait! head started with hairs and a little the hair appeared thin then the dreaded bald spot. a sin to let hair fall out or destructive dandruft when you quickly correct all such hair troubie with a bottie of delightful Danderine Millions of men and women know the magic of Danderine; how it cor- rects oily, dandruffy, itching scalps Irish Fenian bodies). and helps the hair to grow long, Frec state troops under an inteili-| thick, strdhg and luxuriant. Dander- |gence officer seized a large amount of | ine is not sticky or greasy. It is the literature, tvnewritars, field dressings, | < ' Jargest =elling hair correctiy and aid antfts and provisions. It is { tonic in the world bacause it iz not a|thought the rald will prove a further ?- humbug! Get a bott\e at any drug-|blow against the republican cam- \ | paign. can anarters for Tel. 2110 the ancient IS NOW ON DISPLAY frst

Other pages from this issue: