New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 2, 1923, Page 6

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r disinteredness ¢ the ented in f The utt fentist trongest pl New Britain Herald l];‘”;," : HERALD PURLISIING COMPANY that may be pr wor \ (Tosued Dally, Sunday Pxcepted) erald Iildg,, 07 Church Strest | couraging them in thelr ungelfish | worl UCCess which would SURRCRIFTION RATER: mean o0 much to human race $2.00 & Year, #2,00 Three Month 8¢ highest the People who poss thelr material n Month, e inbitior to Fatered at the Post OMce #¢ a¢ Becond Clasa Mal wlil do we cumulation of New Tiritain Matter these comments of this selen tist when occasion arises for en TRLEPHONE CALLS: Pusiness OMes ..., Bditorial Roons ... .4 The only profitable advirt'sing medium in the Clry, Chiculatian tooks and press; room always open 1) Advertiscrs lscouragement 8| couragement or 23 students in their effort banish of the ills of man, COMPULSORY WORK from Stock- habitual Membere or Tre Sssorlnted Press The Aesceinted Prors 1a exclusively entitled | to the uso for rspublication of all news | credite) fo It or not ctherwiso crediten In thie puper aad also o put fAehad heretn, dispatches that r go to work or Ix holm, Sweden, say ho nl news boes will eafte P sont Membler Avdit Ymrean of Circulation The A. B, C ta a nattoral which furn‘ahes newspapirs (frers with a_strictly hew eireulition, Our cfircula based upon this nudic teetton ngalnst fraud tribat’an figures to b cal advertisers. need to enforeed lahor for two or three years, if certain recommenda- tions are there adopted, They hive by studying tramps, organized va- This b In news oth uatictal apd io- grants an over nd they PR, fweden have made up their | ' min ork is the hest cure for " - they encourage GOODWIN'S RI The retirement of the blow to the TTREMENT well, In this coun- Clayton Good- very : arve not accustomed to seeing i foom school committe ¢ > people of Sweden doing nothing. real 1 acquainted but very few Swedish vagrants Mr city el with Goodwin | gypsies or hoboes, us far as we pers pe hi neve ully 1 been able to discover. the those nothing of ave who kuow that board, Know, Our t activities on experience with natives of whose that rtheless, the sincerity of the man | country, or with and the earnestness with which came from Sweden, is would about work of this kind. retty hard-working race Those, labors g0 i however, who do know of his|of people. But while we are on the 1t committe nd who | subject we wonder what greater obli- gation there is for people who,choose hand to than there who are have heard him explain perplexing | t problems that confront the board con- to mouth,” to wor that cla funds through no efforts of their own. Hoboes are ly modest tent not somehow the live “from have admired unfail- is for to take what he believed at his stantly, well suppli W ing cour the 1 stand and was proper knowledge of his sub sfied with an extreme- Any body which is compelled to ask way of living. They are con- as those needed an- to plan for the morrow. But I standard for sums as lar nually to keep New ritain’s schools orrow’ seems to talke the gained such a fine rey which has | care of itself in their case. How about tion for this its in high up to the people who do not have to think their fathers of several Selieenl Cana | of the morrow because thankl severely or grandfathers thought Do members e a s task their able to put “morrows," ‘hoboes” owe do is a pleasure to be any- app 1's devotion to school serviee It thing more to society than expres ciation people who do not work because they inherited It that the owing to | their good to the | not had mor Goodwir use through the sentiment of the for Mr. have wea would eleven years the interests ? and to voice em latter clas: great number who will leagn of his resignation with of people of ortune, owe quite as much world as do those who have the good luck to inherit If we i are to pass laws com- THE FIVE-CENT IPPARE McGrath's | ed before the leg- | | pelling the poor to work under pre- scribed regulatio it would that there the seem Senator five-cent fare bill been discuss should be islative committee in that discussion the the bill accentuated the need Connecticut company to try to regain | the good will of the The | forced use of the automobile ferred to and the fact that ple, in locating new homes, no longer have confidence in the transportatic company. The necessity of obtaining will of the people if the Connecticut company been pointed out in these colum times for instance, seemed as though that good will was merely waiti action by the | F!..m & company, to go to it. People had not given up hope, then, of such f ductions as would them look upon the company | as the means of transportation upon which they could rely and continu to rely. Then was the time for a sin- cere effort, even at some risk, on the | part of the to re-establish | itself with the people. Perhaps it is too late now. If a| real reduction in fa nd a real i provement in service was needed year ago to regain that good will, money drastic improvement in these matters | 1+ . St would be necessary now. The people The fa et have taken themselves, | United many cases, and placed themselves in | {411 (ipent positions to be almost independent of | the company through the purchase oI\ the cor automobiles or the location of homes |, where patronage of“the trolley will| o not be so necessary. It then that this would be today. It may be predicted now that rich also to add something to the tith railroads, and on proponent of | W of the world. The gaining enough food of the | tion people. of allowing an unproductive was re- | people to exist, igr e fact at they are, in fact, unproductive. the peo- HARVEY TELLS 'EM it Ambassador Harvey For once, least, Am the good | _, glad of tenden- cy to speak Pilgrin inly. At the was to prosper has " 4 linper in London he made it ve many it the popular English im- A year ago, pression that the United States played d to va without Bal- took ¢ its loans and looked for some Ht6 security The to which “the oundation. words in the L 3 United N our wote, enable to ception, were lines of the sisted in substance, that, the money, it was only on our (I that it” The truth only foundation for in 't form, though our allies were to spend e g- d land’s) security they were pared to lend 1pany Coa iy this is the las th refu our's statement of August United only the to us that she would not have the States 10 - finance Iingland said allies when al to bor- a row from America if the t the war cost the acti i 3 ction ge States practically as much as Britain, when everything is considered in t money tributions United States and the 1 effort from t! ited was predictec States, th ¢ condition brains. These Harvey it the told the welfare of the company will con-| o e facts, tinue to be endangered if a broad policy of seeking the good will of the BOURKLE COC Bouike ( RAN sekran tak people is not adopted speedily. » The from the death of world a artist—an ar. REWARD OF GE Occasion has been ment upon the fact accomplished great themselves the question “It while?” The practical rewards | small as a rule, and the gr | from ward must complishment commercial project, mess of work well done. on r his subject conceived ed talten tist of words, thoughttully that to com- who | clearly and musically to those presei and carrying convic He met mental attitude of ic who the things often ask n the | heard and gloried thos: is worth in est re- him and at his best come, unless the ac- e’ that those who list into a|views contrary to those upon which His 1bility to is transferred from conscious- | he based his arguments facility An of expression, his sthe his English arguments in the vitable knowledge of discases took phrases, tropical only the other day in | was excee by his extensive jects upon which addressing the British Science league #¥ou throw your géniues on the heap,” he declared. And “Walter Reid | the young American who discovered ! that yellow fever is carried by the mosquito, was given a menial medical job after his discovery . allowed to fall ill and die fecling the greatest apprehension as to the fu- ture livelihood of his wife and chil- dren.” The speaker concluded by say- | ing: "It has often been said that the man who could find the cure for tu- berculosis or who could discover the cause and cure for cancer would be- /”. a millionaire. On the contrary, | wonderful orator may n " it 18 more likely that he would die in | highest place this the workhouse.” nked wi " The worst of it is that all tpat is | cau ‘true, and yet scientists go on working | life, - ‘day and night to find the cure for|hecause ; berculosis, the zause and cure of which he was famous. dust | he might be ealled satility, occasionaliy called indepen- dence of , BAVC to him more the advocat that rey the of Ui 1 to # % % ho was|speak o (uestion because that ability of t tio poss while this to champion almost any canse created some skepticism concerning his sincerity, his personal charm skill often wort eve The as he w the most cynical career of Bourke Cockran great s, indicates the reason why in country unless are | 8 name great es to which he clings all through Bourke Cockfan was held back of the for very eloguence of there in | the laws to compel | group of i States in- | And |€ _{school and has entercd tite employ of than | er gain the | %Facts and Fancies (Y POUERT QUILIEN { | | free people 18 one that volun. pl itsell under the tyranny government | A | tarily | In this powder and rouge nge, @ | flower Isn't the only thing that is horn | { to blush unseen, BY JOUN N, GARNER U, 8 Bepresentative Fronr Texas, itteenth District HI cowboy come into town for a good time, He had $300 or #0, the fruit of many months' hard work on the range, 1t was in the days bk I hefore Volstead There's alwuys a @arker side, When | 4R - dope-i e the meels inherit the earth, they'll find | ek thb cathi It rather heavily mortgaged.’ puncher headed | for the nearest | g saloon It was a tough GARNE place, and into customer's very first drink bartender poured knockout drops. © next morning the cowboy awoke with a headache, sick, di and disgusted, He had no memory any tfun at all. » His money had been taken from him, his horse had been stolen and even his gun was | missing. Sore, sour and disgrautled, the un- fortunite individual started to walk 5 miles back to the ranch, cursing A little way out of town he aw another man on the trail, ahead A hick town is one where every-|of pim, The stranger bent down to body knows how much old Tightwad!jsce his shoe. Smith has deposited in the First Na-| with a growl, the cowboy kicked tional, him, snarling: “Damn you, you're always man spent an eve-|your shoe in front of me mind, and next| . P GIGGLES AT LOWE Furopean history is just u record of the times men marched cast and avest ueross the Rhine, had man who can 'l treat you so to cuss him, | A gentlemun s a mike you hate him, { nice you feel ashamed Oceaslonal news that fliters through indicates that Lenine is out to do his regulur spring dying. | his | N \‘fl b , [ the i 3 - When Greek meets Greek is i What we yearn to see s road hog meeting road hog. Nature ever tries to maintain a bal- | ance. When mother-in-law drops in, | hushand and wife usually fall out. tate, lacing Pable: Once a ning improving his weele could remember had read. A famous { works you may J1 remaining of trash. have free by paying| tallments on the set | The disgrace of having a husband in jail is neutralized in some cases by the satisfaction of knowing where he | - Campaign for Peace poverty isn't an | He may know human | 7 | Dublin, March, ommenting on | of hootch. | the mission of I'rancis J. Lowe, sec- | ey retary of the Friends of the Irish ! I‘'ree State, an American organization, 2 b4 | the IFreemans Journal, says today. | ; | “We are willing to make allow ances for ithe enthusiasts who mean 1l to Ireland, but the enthusiasm F. J. Lowe, is a little too,much, | | for u The short cuts whercby he| | proposes to achieve the regeneration | of Ipeland leave us we confess, dazed and breathl A clergyman aid to virtue. iture, but he doesn’t know the price i e | 9 Our official observers doubtless Ses Little Chance of Emissary’s § Fifty New Model Suits in the popular i At $32.50 VACCINATION BILL running a . national museum on the hilk of Tara, mem-| | bers of flying columns sorting them-| selves into collége classes, the desert| biossoming like the rose at the be-| hest of American millionaires are all cminently desirable things. Accord-| g to Mr. Lowe, We can get them soon as we like after making| ce. “We fear that his proposals on this | head will not commend themselves to our die-hards. While it may be pleasant to contemplate an Ireland lin which she should pay taxes on tea | or tobacco because American syndi- cates are pining, in Mr. Lowe' words, “to shoe, feed and smoke the people of Ireland,” we have our| doubts if these philanthropists «re $cally going to change Ireland in Kie near future.” v to hypnotize a husband, | | the ceremony. oo oo a» ) | feit that other time in process of being how N was know h gtimate the of a man f§ ve Row flat- tered feels wh wed to intro- | duce the speaker. girl who didn't | .P* hich suitor to take now has a r who doesn’t know which one > first. ishioned Correct this santence: “You Dad go to the movies algne,” said Bobby, “and I'll stay and finish writhmetic it might be worse, Tt i | reasonable to suppose that the popu- ar songs the publishers reject are even more idiotic. | An, wel; It s the | | | | oo e (Taken from Heraid of that date) 0 e < e Since Back in 1920 | Clayton Parker has bought two! o { building lots at the corner of East and | Belden strec . The High school seniors decided at 1 meeting yesterday to give a farce comedy in the near future. The com- mittee to arran the affair is as |tollows: W. 8, .§ ens, A, B, Gris- wold and Fred C. Costello, | Arthur Middlema s Jeft the High The RReserv monthly Banks Boston, March review of the Federal of Boston, issued last night, lay stress on the statement that “it is now of paramount importance to study relationship between the trend of commodity prices and of production.” “If prices continue to increase,” it ! adds, “while production does not, it is evident that a new phase of the bu ness situation has been reached. Un- der these circumstances the influence of money rates upon the situation is likely to be most important.” The review comments on the busi- tivity in New England, say- | | | for ders, Frary, and Clark Co, The owners of the clubs in the Con- Inceticut Baseball league met today a Hotel Russwin and decided to an eight club league this sca- w Britain will be represented mg team, according to an ment of Manager Gilbert., M. T. A, & B. society to present the play “His Chance,” at the New Britain House soon, The decide Last e “Concerns England good for doing business in New that do not find trade very this time of the year are exceptions to the rule, the exceptions | usually being those which have suf- fered from the interference to traffic | s i caused by the excesslve snowfall, The MAY HAVE SURPLUS volume of manufaciuring during the Washington, March' 2,~Heavy in-| P few weeks not only In New es in postadereceipts leads Post- |1:ngland but generally throughout the | er General Work to feel the pos- | COUNtry, has been larger that at any service may ciose the present fis time since the boom of 1920, . ... . the end of June with a sur.| Throughout Iingland there are comp with o deficit of| YerY few industrics not running on $60,800,000 last year. Sales of postage | Ul time at preseat, while many are ! stamps for the first six months of the | “t[tiNE on overtime ‘here probabl s bee tiscal year were $30,000,000 more than |, I” st w?' Ry '[”‘ : ":'_", it the same period last year and re-| | UI'dINE up of manufacturers’ stocks ceints.for Janiary St Atty . selected |\ New zlu gland in ("."‘ux' weeks In postofic 1 ncrease of almont b " e T e ’r;; J $4,000,000 over Januasy o with a falling off in : shipments, as represented by car| Ujeraiis eoshoIEtE B loadings. While car loadings the | master General Work are counted on i Mo 04| ‘ country over are ger than they to help prevent a deficit, T 4 were a year ago, those for New Eng- land fel] below those of the previous | UILT. | yeur shortly after Christmas, on ac- of congestion caused by heavy jowfall, and remained below for some of w of 10w BURNT SHRINE TO Bl RU 2.—Rebuilding of 2. count of Bt. Anne de Quebee, March th famous chrine Beaupre, destroyed by fire last year, four weeks,” | was announced. The| Discusking the upward trend of cost of ng the sanctuary is es- commodity prices in February the re- [ timated at §16,000,000. Plans for the view says: { | new chureh, which will be larger than | “There are some instances of premi- its predecessor, have been completed. | ums over the regular prices heing paid for quicik deliveries. This may AYWARD" SISTER. |be a temporary condition caused by March 2.-Because |[the traflic delays mentioned above and complained his sister Mary, fifteen, | under those circumstances would be | was wayward and had driven his|merely another indication of a high | mother to distraction, Gabriel Rocko, | rate of business activity | eighteen, accosied the girl on the - e is!rm( night and fired two| A little mustard rubbed Into the bullets into her body. Her conrlitmnitmuis after peeling onions will re- is critical, move the odor, assured, it SHOOTS « Ithaca, N. Y | he 125 Vears Ago Today! oW England Production Heavist the | s HEARING MARCH 13 Continuance Granted as All Did Not Speak on Thursday Hartford, March A further hear- ing will be given to the proponents and opponents to the bills before the legislative committee on public health and safety because all who desired to speak yesterday did not have full op- portunity. The desire of those favor- ing moderate changes in the law, so| as to give a parent the right to say whether his child should or should not be vaccinated as a requisite for school attendance, was overshadowed late in the day by the attitude of those anti-vaccinationists who de- manded repeal of the present vaccin- ation law: The latter were led by Miss Sara 1. Boudren, daughter of late Major Thomas Boudren of Bridgeport, who tor years regularly appeared at hear- ings to fight all vaccination legisla- tion. Miss Boudren took charge of e anti-vaccinationists who were not only opposed to the moderate bills, but to the present laws, and declared | that Dr. Eddy of Canton, house chair- | man of the committee, was not fair in trying to bring the hearing to a close. She declared that if the state demands vaccination it should requfre that all members of the general as- mbly first be vaccinated and that it was not right to “pick on the chil- dren.” Because the opposition to the bills was growing in intensity and so many wanted to be heard, Senator Beisi gel, the chairmam, promised another hearing March 1 the first one this session in which there was anything like excitement and except the general hearing on an cducatiol policy, was the only one which drew an audience of large num- bers, SAYS RAILROADS ARE NOW OVERBURDENED WITH TAXES Western Committee Chaiman of Shows Increase of 10 1-2 Per Cent in 1022 Over 1021 Chicago, March 2.—Taxes charged the nation's railroads for 1922 in- creaged 10 1-2 per cent over 1921, and amounted to $304,855,158, the largest sum ever pald by the carriers, Hale Holden, chairman of the western rail- way committee on public relations and president of the Chicago, Burl- ington and Quincy railroad announced today. Comparing the 1922 taxes with those of other years Mr. Holden as- serted that 1022 taxes were 94 per cent greater than thosé of 1916, an increase of 178 1-2 per cent over the amount paid in 1912 and exceeded cash dividends paid by the carriers in any year except 1917. The 1922 taxes, he said, amounted to 26 per cent of the railroad’s net earningse as com- pared with 13 per cent in 1917, I” Frank E. Goodwin Eyesight Specialist 827 MAIN ST. TEL. 19056 Made to Retail This Spring This hearing was | —HARTFORD— FIRST SPECIAL SPRING SUIT OFFERING - of Polaire and Camelaire Cloth tan and rookie shades SPECIAL SATURDAY 25 FIRST SPECIAL SPRING ‘COAT OFFERING Fifty New Model Spring Coats of Polaire and Camelaire Cloth in new shades of tan and rookie, Made to Retail This Spring At $25.00 Although the railroads reduced rates and cut expenses by efficient operation, notwithstanding the shops | cifftts strike Mr. Holden said, the benefits. “that might have been de- | rived from these changes both by the | railways and the public were . seri- ously reduced by the fact'that taxes were highly increased.” Both Boston Teams Start ‘Today for Training Trip | Boston, March 2.—Players and ransl‘ | were yoptimistic today as the two Bos- ton ruajor league baseball teams packed their kits for their trip to i southern training grounds. The Red Soas decgation was ready to leave {his afteinoon for Hot Springs, Ark., | aid the Braves will depart tonight for | St. Terersburg, Florida. 2 Presented by St. 'EVERETT TRUE v ) (e bR THIS I3 A BUSINESY BUSINGSS IS BL3ING ENTERTAINMENT A Wonderful Photo-Drama Classic in Nine Acts THE TRANSGRESSOR Produced by Catholic Art As:ociation SPECIAL SATURDAY Dartmouth Honors Star Athlete, Now in Hospital Haaover, N. H,, Mareh 2.—Thonias H. Culien, Jr., of Brooklyn, N, Y. rihmcuth’s basketba.l captain who ed in a game with the 3 of Pennsyl/anm jast Sat- urday and who is still in a hospital here, has been elected {o the execu- ive committee of the senior clasg by,/ \rgest vote ever polied in the' SRR By —— LYCEUM — “OH U. BABY” All New EXTRACRDINARY Andrew’s Church At LYCEUM THEATER—NEW BRITAIN SUNDAY, MARCH 4TH, at 2P. M Tickets—Adults 50c—Tax EFree HERE COMGES THAT JANE THAT BLOWS N HERG ) GVERY DAY To CHIN WITH MY LADY OrFICE CLERKS DURING BUSINESTS G ' /o - T, THAT'S THE TROUBLE WITR WOMEN — CAN'T DO ANYTHING BT INSUCT TweMm |

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