New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 20, 1922, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TARIFF REPRISALS together refuse together and staying New Britain Herald HERALD PURLISHING COMPANY (Issucd Daily, Bunday Excepted) At Herw)d Blag, 67 Church Btreoct, the former: now they to | duty of those who believe do the latter, “Coalition’ dive and Liberal in England simply | to Keep harping on the subject umn" While the wir was in |1t {8 universally recognized and men | the | are impelled to fall back upon their | the Innate honesty for their strength, ‘ SPIRIT RADIO, is a appeal to the imagination in the remarks, made to the conventlon of spiritualists being continued held, by John Slater, medium, “There from the Con- great hope for spiritualists,”” he As {he problems | says, “in the recent astounding devel- | opment of the radio the thing we are | doing now by means of the radio is| protesting what the spirits of the other side They will admit that | have been doing for long time. in | They have been broadcasting us for of Conserv- | I8 coming to accentuate could not last progress and since the war, in BURECRIPTION RATES: face coalition hus the time when the Conservatives to their principles, of perplexing problems, continued. Now Increased Duty on Cuban Prod-- ucts Stirs Up Sentiment i \ g | 1 ear, $200 Thres Months 78¢ & Motth. come Entercd at the Post OMea nt Now writain %9 Second Claes Mall Matter a e return There deeided ubide Liberal demand a failure to by a “dynamic force’ with tendencies Havana, Cuba, Oct, 20.-—Enactment of the Fordney tariff, with its in- creased duties on Cuban products, has served to unite the inchoate and dl-| vided sentiment in Cuban | et LM APHONY Garay There has heen protest Bditorial Roons [ . 028 under Lloyd George Is ——— element to fade today, servative e oniy profitable avertising mediom In A e e Cirewation bonke nd - piese room alway: open te sdvartisers. seemed away financial | and commercial circles for a revision | of the Cuban-American reciprocity | tregty. | Through Secretary of State de Ces- pedes, the enormously capitalized su-! gar and tobacco interests are present- ing their case. Deénouncement of the | present treaty, signed in 1902 and| granting Cuba a 20 per cent prefer-| ential, and the conclusion of a new commercial paet, with an im'reauedl preferential, 18 asked. Since assuming last July his dual role of Secretary of State and I\fln-i ister to the United States, Dr. de Ces-| pedes has made rapld progress in his| work of laying the ground work for| treaty revision. Data has been com- | piled showinp how the present recip- rocal arrangement, under which| American exporters virtually have u' monopoly in the Cuban market, is| claimed to confer more henefits on the United States than on Cuba. Confers With Crowder, | Coincidentally with his statistical endeavors, the secretary Is conferring| with Major General E. H. Crowde | personal representative of President| Harding, the members ot the cabinet, | congressional leaders, officials of the | princlpal commercial and industrial | organizations of the island, and is in| frequent communication with the| Washington satate department, | With the 1.76 Fordney sugar®duty | finally fixed, the campaign of the Cu- | ban sugar interests for more favor-| able treatment has been turned from || publicity to diplomatic channels through local manifestations, news- papers, committees of defense and| other unofficial means both in Cuba | and the United States, the cane forces did their utmost to secure a reduction in the emergency tariff rate. Their cfforts now are being directed to doc- | ument adequately the state depart- ment in its treaty revision negotia- tions. grew until feeling compara- tively ©, thos loudest Memaer of The Assccinted Pross 5 seociated Press ‘s cxclusively entitled “r: :n A for rrepublivation of Al yews creditoc to It or not otharwiey cradited fn this yapir ANG A% iockl News pubd- Vehed herain, their way orge But Those in this country have Lioyd wonderful was ages but most of us didn't know how to tune in.," The “medium" goes on to say we may hear concerts from heaven, but that the spirits won't talk to “ordinary folk." | All of which, of course. | the particular “medium" speaking| believes he not folks" | and that he and his ilk are not among the “most of us" { able to “tune in." But let us for the moment consider middle ourselves back in of the | belief in witcheraft. How long would & person have been able to go about in peace it that person were able to call from out of the air the sound of beautiful music, as almost ordinary person possessing a broadcasting instrument is able to do today? The path of such a person to emergency. they will have no more of him welfare believe England a great not of the “mid- sigh of relief in their estimation, England England, without eager for gland's Member Aadit Barenu of Circalntion The A, R, C. s a natlona| otganization which furnisher newspapess and advers tisers with a striotly houest aralvels of cieculation Our circulat/on stat'stics are tased upon thle 4odit. This lneures pro- tection agalnst fraud A nowapaper dls- tribution figures to both maticual and lo oal wdvertisers, the break will cost Englishmen, he feal, dl hes a means that ause, will again be any is “ordinary “coalition”, Lloyd middle classes George's the who have not heen His brains and ability above the ; strength is in POWERS OF SCHOOL BOARD. The of the school boar importance by those “middle cla The great class of that country still believes in | The not belleve in him because they feel they can get along without him. Lloyd George has That is the formality in He even suggests to the for its IMPOT- | 1ing whom to call to form a new government, But Lloyd George has not retired to private life. His “res- the village pond or the stake would no more than the |DNave been swift and sure—the witch's means, It {s|fte would have awaited him or her. | i s i Yet those people ducked the | means not that he washes his hands | Vitches” or who solemnly approved Yl atfairs DU Bhat ha the punishment of “witches” were, 111; will pian to retain power fn his own | their day, conslfiered intelligent and | His plans will probably be NIgh-minded. known tomorrow when he speaks ‘°ligent, e the majority ot Mt the thingssugeested by “mediums”, are intensely :mo people of this country compliment L UIRESD 0, OUD saolting aReetb e | him #osetme: Ntand e 45k Aekinatigie degree to which guch mediums carry that school hoards are not &bOVE muis which aided in his downfall, | Noif Deliefs, and the vulgar way in which they sometimes express them- selves. Our wisdom is wonderful as are our achievements, but the limits of our wisdom will not be reached until we recognize fully how far short of perfection it is and how super- ficially it has scratched the surface of achievement's possibilities. were utilized char- city, or school “committee” as it the days acterized 1 of the 1 hy the state- Ka may he properly gauge it expends about half the the does have him. others ment tha money o The fact over sted by city annually clear that such a o it control | upogigned". is not the | England amount any chief reason, however, That reason is the necessity of a tance. taking the greatest tions that the will receive the under the possible precau- the city educa- childr of ignation™ legal “general denial” means adva 3 of tion best possible circum- and resignation who stances. The powers of the school commit- | any of country’'s than those of Supervision over its ex- tee greater other hoard penditures are We are considered in- way. perhaps, and yet we scoff Usually its Tts members interested in proverbially is lacking. personnel is anwhile school is true “politics”. Not in the ordinary Sense. unq for the wopderful work he did in England goes through the form of getting rid of Lloyd George loes politics interefere with but privilege perhaps proper patronage a important parts in its afiairs On the other hand a body like the common council, large and composed the war. matters of might play action, petty Tobacco and Sugar. | The Cuban tobacco interests, less! aggressive and more deliberate in | their campaign, have finally joined forces with the sugar men and Cnbw diplomacy. In a long exposition of | the decline of the Cuban tobacco in-| dustry, the Unfon of Cigar and Cigar- ette Manufacturers of the Island of | Cuba has just presented formally its case to the state department. ‘While admitting that every nation | has taken caré to hit tobacco imports | with heavy fmposts as an article of | luxury, the cigar makers tatke par-| ‘mular exception to the American | | duties because of the alleged insuf-| in | ficlent preference given Cuba in view | silent. | of the virtual monopoly enjoyed by American exporters in supplying Cuba's imports. The decline in ex- a|ports to the United States from 101 659,660 cigars in 1880 to 20,36 " o - in 1921 is outlined and the claim What did primitive hunters use|made that, even if a revision of the for target practioe before guides were reciprocity treaty, as the tobacco men invented ? requesp increases the preferential | rate from 20 to 50 per cent. and! If there is anything in this pro- brings Cuban cigar imports back to tection theory, let us hy all means the 1889 figure, this would be only have a high tariff on marks. drop in the bucket compared to the S ‘present annual manufacture of 8,000,- 000,000 cigars yeady in the United States. While the state department s pulling the diplomatic strings, con- |gress is considering more direct meas- because of its prejudice against coali- tion. England still faces acute prob- lems in the Near East situation, to say nothing of the Trish treaty, ahout to be passed upon Treland s deep thought is not & | projang. England is in a predica- | | ment. of many who have not given educa- i o tional matte body qualified to interfere too minute- the school Facts and Fancies (BY ROLERT QUILIEN). ly in the action taken by While the common coun- s to the | committee cil might well advise wisely AN OLD SUBJECT. Tt may seem useless to keep dwell- practical : a point that is obvious to matters, such as By the way, what is peace? 1 ing upon 3 ing, ete., it might be : . ; | A radical is one who hasn't yet anq | A1 Continual complaining of & itu- | reached the feed trough, ation may become tiresome when the | rectifving of it appears hopele But it is not hopeless. Constant agi- £ tation is bhound to bring resuits. a smalier | ¢ | Those results may not come imme- diatel few signs that the continual harping on a matter has accomplished But upon foundations are built the most material matters of buil loss to fully comprehend decide matters of a cultural or edu- matters, in matters at a As 2 rule, prople who suffer silence suffer hecause they are The office cynic says is anybody who gets Turk. cational School other words which should be handled by body of persons selected with especial regard to their famillarity with ters of the type. are essentially a Christian licked by mat- mind anything may he seen. Thus there is a situation demand- 5 : such ing, pernaps., more supervision by the solid institutions. Without long, ein- common council over school affairs as by school committee that such supervision shouid not handicap the which expert fairs knows to cere preparatory agitation few great handled the all-powerful accomplishments have been achieved. So the “continual harping” is worth | while | and yet demanding matters af- any school committee in community—almost o community—often wonder why ur R B alk RL Guld b AR {He tha most intelligent men, the most schools.should he progressive, as they pHas: Y honest men, interested in all about be under the management of them, nevertheless keep out of active educational experts; our schools | 4 s g | politics. The word ‘‘reform" {s ah- should be built and conducted eco- 3 3 horrent of them, involving nomically practically the. “Y|as it does the idea of a parading of would be were the sympathetic advice moral rectitude—although such inten- | of the common council sought and It is difficult situation to epig? meet, but the suggestion noted in the news columns of The Herald of yes terday contains a germ of truth : It might possible to form a committee within the council, made up of men carefully chosen with a view to their fitness in this particular line, which could ceive reports of the school committee and discuss its the matters were submitted to the super- visory larger body. councll committee would be ahle to get the viewpoint of the school hoard, at the same time knowing the of the common council. be a “bridge” between the at present separated from that body by a wide chasm, and the common council. The school hoard, meeting with such council committee, £ fron out problems and place them in ther is talking.” form to he presented to the council o o clearly. Whatever arrangement (3 ) a5 VRIS tions™ in He he O mittee there should be no backward | may make “mental reservations” in step in providing for the progressive A - his promises as they are made to him. education of the children and young R ot Bl Discuss in eople of New ritain. peop . hall politiciank gather. | why this man or ~In either The conversation that it man Strangers to a one in cducational - in be elemental, o Is against countrieh discrimi- nating against Cuban projects aroused a sentiment strong enough to | result in a determination by the| house of representatives to open hear- | The honeymoon s over when he ings on a revision of the tariff to| would rather read the sporting page protect Cuban industries. than listen to a description of her requested by President a headache, sage to congress on July to many and as tion may be absent from the “reform- The reason such “reformers”, but who have standards as to honesty, given, a : mind men, 1981 ) not men It's naughty to marry for money, but the female of the species is more attractive with the kale. " WASHINGTON WATCHFUL Eye certain frain from entering politics, running for office or actively supporting can- didates for office, is they At any rate, longer skirts on the realize that activity in politics in that | street should mean a return of pros- community involves certain compro- Perity to the musical comedies, one's conscience and {in- ting men upon not can re- should be considered. he on because Government Keeping Close re- e Americanism is merely an under- standing of the relative importance of a European crisis and a world series, Universal peace must wait upon a &pirit of brotherly love or a confirmed stubbornness in cannon fodder. happens saves enough out buy a car with mises with of Debt Payments. the they volves of whom rely New Britain or no better than other communities in this regard. The men in politics here are no better or no worse. They conditions b Washington, Oct. 20—Developments in the British political situation fol-| lowing the fall of Lloyd George's government continued to hold close attentlon in bhoth governmental and diplomatic circles here today. Outside of the immediate effect already feit in Washington by the postponement of the coming to this country of the British debt comiission, however, the any further result as concerning the relations of the two governments it was said, was to be gauged only in the light of develop- ments and the success of Premier- designate Bonar Law's efforts to form cabinet, | Although it appeared doubtful to offielals today when the political sit- uation in London would be sufficient- | Iy clarified to permit the sending of British commission to this country discuigs the problem of refunding that country's war debt to the United States there was little doubt that the negotiations ultimately would be car- e s e ried out practically on the basis al- As a symbol of authority, there is | roady mapped out nothing quite so distinctively Amer- ‘s fcan as the swivel chair. affairs hefore are sure they This Y % probably is no worse sentiment It frequently bankrupt wreck to cylinders. or o A Dbachelor never realizes how im- portant a man can feel when the wife says “Be quiet, children; your fa- that of two the the mor¢ It school would focl to ha have they one himself demand that truth and in all that with should they meet bourd, | qp do. feel No believes ve to do as others possibility of Is strong cnough, enough, ordinary be done in strong to ; the rules of could 5 honesty shall observed and He “mental is said con- fed) reserva- a new | nection him does not is ; he forbid revision com- promises, feels that to politics with men city when Ask N that man nominated if the party—was ENGLAND'S PREDICAME The situation T. which | Will invariably be, reply F . in England = has brought ahout the resignation of Lioyd George is mefely an example of | Pedient, that the Ordering school teachers not to Englishmen running true to form. |‘otes, that he had done something to | dress extravagantly is on a par with Imagine “Conservative” Americans | deserve recognition or that he is a|urging the beggar not to spend the and “Liberal” men the “good Plots counter- | ickel for drink. States getting together and working together The getting together and the working to- ether may be conceived here, under | Sranted stress of war, for instance, or under | $atisfactory pressure of other great Qm,.r,,‘,,,y,‘ Practically never is it sald that such But it would be difficult to think of conservative “staying” together. [t might be done as is a confidential one ARSI 25 Years Ago <oday (Taken from Herald of that date) was ex- could poll of United fellow."” and And now when a woman smells The water commissioners today | something burning she can't tell opened bids for hauling 7,000 tons of | politician taking it !'n‘iwhnhr‘r it's the roust in the oven or pipe and casting to Roaring Brook his explanations are [ her cigarette on the buffet for the new waterway. The contract e was awarded to P. H. Condon of Bris- When a man longs to move to an- tol other town where people are not The directors of the New Britain | narrow-minded, you may assume that General Hospital met last night and | his conscience is bothering him voted to open the bullding facing | i Hart street and build an additional | Even if the industrial injunction room there®in case of emergency. and it is done because the actors are | "n° b lpmw.« unconstitutional, Mr. l"Jnrvl un; W. H ;l“at:rv]vr)l arrived home today | Americans, and for that reason only, | 44¥ in local politics and in national | 4jways threaten to shut down and | after a two weeks' hunting trip in the How much more difficult it politics wiien men will be placed in|bring the country to its senses, e (e S minye imagine Englishmen, far more settled positions hecause they de- | e The closing of White Oak in thelr ways, far less open to sug- | SerVe them on account of ability, | planned soon and the booths n'nvl gested changes than people in this| honesty, desire to serve their locality S L B soon as the cold weather is keeping country, getting together, working | their country and the peéople ot their | the crowds away now. plots will b he explained—and it will and staying together. all done in a spirit of perfect | frankness, the that 50 A4 man was given a place fitted f this there because he is man best As fine and or that place. the will come a lberal Americans surely country is country it is is to important -- & Correct this sentence: “It is a wonderfully efficient and comfortable car,” said the agent, “but you mustn't expeéct over ten miles to the gallon” | Co-lids at Indiana University Pur- | sity ] |42 1ong, fleece-lined “sheepskin {he varsity foothall squad it was an- I houneed here today. worn \indison, Numerous projects for tariff | Wiscor have | on Satur This was | near the Adee in & mes- |crows lat Derby Wednesday afternoon indica- | tive of the interest in rowing at Yale | under Ed more undergraduates are rowing than ever tion British Situation, Having Thought ber 74 i HARTFORD . Free Souvenirs ZSth ANNIVERSARY Souf:::iro Ask For Free Souvenir Coupons— They Are Valuable Here’s a Remarkable Anniversary Tailored Suit Offer $25.00 RIGAT UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEW MODELS $37.50 TO $42.50 woM S and MISSES' TAILORED SUITS—Only forty in all—One and two of a kind, some plain tailored others fur trimmed, Poiret Twill and Tricotine—Choice of the lot Saturday at 'he Annivcisary Sale $25.00. Normandy and other materials, several models are 'smartly Fur collared models of | $39.00, shown in a number of soft shades of brown., Saturday sp WOMEN'S STYLISH COATS Bolivia, Suedine, velones,. and = other fine materfals in the new wrappy models, coats that were de- $45 and $50 Graceful New Coats, Saturday at the Anniversary, $39 embroidered B and $39. $29 ’ Saturday GRACEFUL NEW SILK LACE FROCKS ’ ! s HANDSOME NEW COATS Such as ordinar- 11y sell at 859, and even more, of Ger- ona, velverette and Normandy materials with fur collars and cuffs. S e . $49 TAILORED STREET DRESSES Made of fine wool poiret twill. New strajzht line models with that touch of color: which the present season demands offered in navy blue, $19 98 black and hrown. Anniversary Special ! TAILORED WOMEN'S DRESS! Of fine poiret twill; sizes 36 to 46 a particularly attractive model with four long panels developed in Dresses of black silk canton crepe that .feature poiret twills of unusual guality in navy blue, brown | luce panels and drapes in numerous new models that and black, $29 00 cannot fail to Anniversary Special ... ° charm . ... Y J In the newest mode, handsome lace dresses that portray the best of the present fashion in draped and paneled models ¥ SSES OF SILK CANTON CREPE APPRECIATE THE BOYS chase Flecce-Lined Sheepskins For | 20. — To| The Varsity Football Team. Bloomington, Ind., Oct. | show their appreciation and support| of athletics, co-eds of Indiana univer- and ordered for have raised a fund ed < hoped to have the order fill ‘ be for the heav coats to the northern invasion to when Indiana will meet 1sin in the gecond western con- the season It wa time on rence football game of MUCH ROWING AT YALE. | New Haven, Oct ~-A total of crews were on New Haven harbor | hoathous and five the Housatonic river | 20,— e, were on Leader, the new coach. It | Rt You've heard lots about Japan’s geisha girl beauties—now s pointed out at Yale today _ |take a look at the genuine article. They’re preparing bamboo before. The fall regatta climina- | events will be held on Novem-|eaoeg filled with small singing birds for a Tokyo festival. and the finals on the 10th. JACOBSON ADAMSON'S ADVENTURES BY O. Many Happy Returns

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