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New Pritain Herald | HIRALD PURLIAMING © i y 3 ssued Daily, Sunday At Herald Didg, 67 Church Street, nATES SURRCRIPTION #8.00 & Year, 2,00 Three Months, 760 A Month, Entered at the Post Ofive at. New Britain a8 Socond Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS: Nusiness Ofce i Vditorial Room | The mly piofitable advertising medium in the ‘.tv, Clreulation books press room always open to advertise Mamher of The Associated Press | The A -acinted Press Is exclusively entitled to tha use for re-publicntion of all news credited to It or not otherwise credited ir this papor and also loeal news pub- lished herein, | Membee Audit Bureau of Circulntion “The A, B. C. 1s n natlonal organization which firnishes newspapers and adver- tiwers with a_strictly honest analysin of alation, Our circulation statistics are | based upon this audit, This insures pro- tection aguln aud in newspaper dis- tribution figu th national and lo- cal advertie £ E—————————— THIL PRIMARIES New Britain continued in its regu- lar, conservative, | politically last night in the republican | littl was frown mechanical way it continued a primaries, only more so. Independence down upen by those who voted, many of whom probably did not know they were damning all independence, If all the republicans who were nominate -and nomination in at practically assures fieult to not meeting the machine. That machine was so qmntly{ that it smiled | | are clected least election—it put the thorough two cases will be more ¢ through a measure approval of local confident of its success about it long before all the votes were in. Evidently the character of the voters who turned out told the politi-| cal experts the story. In the First W regular Cornelius J. the Dehm, | some- staunchly won quite handily over times independently thinking cilman C. Morey, handily over Councilman Henry in the contest for the derman. Neither Mr. Morey could be counted upon by the | all circumstances. In am H. Judd, banking business has influential Coun- Burton and very tice, Al- Mr. | office of Rice nor machine under the Third Ward W whose record in the is estimable and who friends, defeated Councilman Maxwell Porter by one-fifth of the votes cast. Mr. Porter has stood on 211 presently unpopular platform of vot-| ing as he thought he should vote re- 8. gardless of the intricacies of machin- ery. His carnest work in his s as councilman did him no good. In the Fourth Ward a little private or- ganization the machine helped John A. Larson and Lawrence A. Stanley. Probably the gentlemen carry the yoke are bright, worthy and efficient and the machine will run along more gracefully than ever, But Jast night's primaries not courage independence in thought or in if the republican ticket is and local who will will en- voting, elected. GOOD FRIDAY. To all men and women having the slightest respect for life's ideals there comes a time, recurring with more or less frequency, when the glory of sac- rifice, unselfishness, thought of others, impresses itself upon their hearts. They realize that the happiness, the comfort they enjoy, is due in a great measure to those qualities in others. They realize, in order to ‘“play the game fairly,” they themselves should make sacrifices, be unselfish and think of others. And so th whatever their belief in a religious sense, may well join with the rest of the world to which a special significance is at- tached to this day, determining to make these characteristics promi- nent in their lives, To men and women who feel deeper significance in this d. sacred meaning becomes an inspir tion to even greater effort. To Chris tian men and women who believe in the Jesus Christ, it is the anniversary of the day upon Wwhich for In the churches and in the homes where He moments in a its divine character of He died others, is worshipped there will be of devout pray tude to Him for His example, but of secking after strength to follow that example, No man will dispute the spiritual practical of fol- lowing the way He pointed out. No man or should fail to giv: to that example at least a few min- utes of honest, devotion to the truth and right as it is given human beings to see and know truth and right. r, and value woman sincere inspiration of ZONING. The only possible plishing anything that lukewarm until its advantages are and someone, or some body, in a po- gition to do so, takes it up. We have often mentioned the advantages that would come to this city were a sy tem of zoning to be adopted, It is a matter that will not help the sel- fish program of any individual or group, but it will aid everyone alike, none to the advantage of anyone else. It is probably for this reason that it has not been taken up before in this city. Were it to bring special ad- vantages to any group of people that lfiup would have pressed it to its inevitable establishment. On this subject the Trenton Times- way of accom- meets with it recognized approval is to keep at | eral good | OWC | eity | imprisonment for the thing | Conservatism may be believed to hold , for instance, the | setting his clock to show the people rvice | not only of grati-| thought—of | - [ing keeps his promise to reduce that | This is true from the fact that the | tarift alone is not to blame, Imme- dlate Investigation by the Department Justice and action by it to stop speenlations and to investigate any arrangements between finaneial Interesta and sugar interests to limit the crop, should come, An increase Advertiser editorlally in thut the RAyE tmoning movement for It it to the ton makes slowly, moves | atall * v Wiy * it looks only gonw | of Zoning, however, 15 bound in time, Tac- | in thes ton will feel the u tories and stores are welcome every progressive city, but their activ. ities may be had without spoiling the cents in beaty " not be explained by the tarift alone, It and those who object to the tarlil do New not elaim that reduction of the many of tariff by 60 per cent—the limit al- the lowed the President-—would put the thelr There are two or three this is a It has brought their owners the | to build and beautify those | homes, DBut New Britain must be Lkept as beautiful as it is and not al- in artistry by | Zoning is the ! of some 0 sugar price can of residential sections might added that many Britain's beautiful homes the be of and a more modest though utiful in their way, to the fact that manufacturing none less bed price back, cents of able to the sugar speculators, That not await the results by the Tariff existence prosperous matter should of the investigation Commission, The President's action in ordering this "shows considerable Republican concern that the tariff, in this regard, has come It is sin- cerely to be hoped, however, that this annoyance does not completely put the President “off his game,” means prompt investigation lowed deteriorate indeseriminate growth, answer, INCONCEIVABLE It scarcely seems possible that judiciary committee ghould forget the rights of individuals as to submit to the house of | s of this state a bill which would make it an offense to display a clock any time other than Stan- dard time. Yet this is what it is re-| tuo have done, Any p(»rson,‘ firm or corporation guilty of wilfully displayig a clock showing “daylight aving time" is liable to a fine and to the bill under suspicion so soon, the | so far| representa- Facts and Fancies showing BY ROBERT QUILLEN, And those who live by the sword shall perish while trying to collect the indemnity, ported A hick town is a place where there isn't much of anything to do between stamps as an “offense, lodge nights. 1t is conceivable .that the learned judiciary committee would approve of | forbidding the display of a daylight saving time clock in any public office the the state. Digging for mummies must be a delightful profession. You don't have to begin at the bottom, Getting up in the world is just a delightful business of getting up a lit- | tle later in the morning. under jurisdiction of minds to this extent. But for it to stamp with its approval a bill which would prevent a storekeeper from ¥t may have been a divinity that shaped our ends in the old days, but now it's vanity and shoe styles. Country folk visiti you if you have a case of sickness; but city folk wait until you have a case of hootch. going to work an hour earlier than usual in the summer, what time it| was according to their summer plans, seems such an invasion of the right of | the storekeeper that one may hardly believe it possible. So startling is this news that one| hesitates to comment upon it the news is allowed to grow as cold as such news ever can. It makes one believe that the days of solemn judg- | ment of persons as being engaged in | witcheraft have not pas It this | bill is not killed the moment it sticks its head up for a breath of the air believed to he free electricity of | i until Skt watch- ing the other fellow's property burn. That auto tourist who used his jack to fell a policeman found later that the judge wouldn't fall for jack. A critic asks how long chorus girls remain young. Perhaps age doesn't tell on them as it does on the short ones. which have and charged with the liberty, we will begin to wonder there is any right at all that is sacred. we THE BRIDGEPORT FARE Reading the account of the hearing | given on the trolley in | Bridgeport, onc might be surprised to | find that the return to the 10 cent | fare, or two fares for fifteen cents if with The ion A partisan says Germany is reveal- ing unsuspected will power, also, tor that matter, unsuspected won't pow- er. fare matter The wicked provide their own punishment, and no doubt the bhoot- legger longs in vain for something fit !'to drink. s popular | those who appear testify. | decision the u comn: | to return to the higher fare and to | revoke the flat five-cent fare without transfers, was probably popular with those who appeared. This would | seem to justify President Storrs' statement that such would prove to be and that the two-for-fifteen | s, with transfers, would be | W 1 to lities tokens are used, of that monu- husbands of It isn't probable, however, civilization ever will erect a ment to the unknown famous women, Adverse crticism crushes a man, but longer skirts seldom cramp the style of the girl who knows she has pretty ones, the ca J('(‘nt fa | more popular with the people. It was | | plainly stated that the lower fare, | bringing in a good revenue, might not be popular with pcople coming from | the suburbs of Bridgeport for shop- | ping or errands of more or less fre- | auency, but it would be popular with !tlmsc who used the trolley only twice |a day—to go to return from and You can't tel! by the sweetness of a woman's smile how badly her pet corn is hurting. No doubt that laundry worker who went mad and ran amuck had tried work. | The seemingly popular approval of | | the abolishment of the five-cent fare | | came almost entirely from suburban- | not lites, living in communities ab- | solutely a part of Bridgeport. The rea- ‘ long and vainly to put a saw edge on | son for the doing away with the lower & Soft collar. fare there does not obtain in this city. cars have warning of | horns is ause you can't always | that same five cent fare here, in ad- | have your wife along to squeal at i Jmmn to the fact that here, as it did | Psychological moment. | There would be general approval The reason bachelors live longer is because no gentle tyrant them to take something when they feel a litfle out of sorts, |in Dridgeport, the lower fare brought | {in more The here over the short routes radiating revenue, lower fare | | from the center would be | popular. As our thought, which should gener: another has emphased the be Still, i peaceful, famous | and have South America what will become of line: ‘The Marines landed, the situation in hand?” matter remaing 1 according farc is one arrar | to the situation in each community No arbitrary rule should | through the state, and evidence taken in regard to one locality should not be applied to another until after a trial | evidence taken prevail all D L Se—— Y 325 Years Ago Today% of the lower fare. The s o € G0 A Curtis street woman did some washing for a family vesterday and, s the weather was wet, she allowed | the clothes to remain on the line un- til after dark last night. When she went to take in the pieces, she dis- covercd that, with the exception of a few aprons, the washing had been olen. This happened before o'clock last night. ford to buy a loaf of bread sold here| John B. Wiard, a student at s ; | Worcester Polytechnic Institute, is at the same price, would not increase | visiting at. bl home West Main the price of that loaf of bread. The | gtreot, | tnereased the Fordney Charles 1. Suneson has decided to enter race for city auditor. He will have the support of the Swedish Republican club. The meeting of the held last evening w lin the Bridgeport case has nothing to New Britain o do with the case of SUGAR. is as useless to try to convince | e the people that the increased tariff on sugar has nothing to do with its ad- | in price as it would be to argue that taking a car and going to Hart- vanee on under tarift the MeCumber bill does increase the price of sugar here, and if President Hard- | street commit- attended by Curtis and Councilmen Landers and Parker. Many matters of importance were acted upon. A number of young men and their sweethearts from Plainville attended ¢ at the Opera House here last They became so interested in tee Alderman affects the will tarift if it | price in this The will “in any way" country, he act at once, trouble is that “acting at the | Tariff Commission has spent consid- | once” mean acting after | erabie time in conducting its investi- | ation and i ga ¥ N the play that they falled to consult other red tipe. Meanwhile the price | their watches*and when they came will probably continue high and the|out, they found that the last trolley sugar speculatprs will go on incr r had gone. There was a great deal ling the price still more as they reap | " “k':"v'"z in ‘lem n;w hml the # young swains artere u o [ thelr Barvest, | n ains chartered a number of I buggies and took their girls home. time has been spent that 6 cent increase blames | ‘| Mrs. Michael J. Kenney of requires | | (Taken from Heraid of that date) § | the | M 2 i City Items Open alleys at the Casino tonight ~advt, (OLD ROMANCE LIVES THROUGH 62 YEARS 3 . romes. r re | | [ and famtly are leaving today for Tam- S pa, Plorida, Mr, Holmes is still con- ‘!we"_Known New B"[am Couple nected with the Home Banking and Celebrate Wedding Anniversary Realty company, Open alleys at the Casino tonight =advt, Waldo E, Gilbert will be the guest | of his son, Harry W, Gllbert, of North Brookfeld, Mass,, over Easter, “That Da-Da Strain," fox trot re. cord, C, I, Plerce & Co.—advt, Peter Palitsky of 198 Beaver street reported to the police last night that his wife who had left his home is now reslding at 223 Beaver street, He claims she has some clothes that be- long to him, Victrolas, Planos. Co,~advt, Miss Mamie Johnson of Vine street and Carl J. Johnson of 40 Main strect were marrled yesterday at the I'irst Rev, Dr, Abel Ahl- Walking sturdily down to work | each morning about 6:30 there comes ! & robust-appearing pung” chap of | 84 years, quite ready to pause a | moment in the cold and discuss some | pressing topin of the day. In the home he has just left an energetic, efficient “young” lady of some 81 | summers is clearing away the break- fast dishes used at the meal she pre- pared an hour or so before, | Today they are together, for it is| an anniversary which they do not | care to fm-vm.y | Lutheran church, It is the 62nd anni-| versary of their marriage in Cheshire, [AUist officlated, | Connecticut, The young chap 18| V,Vomlvrful‘ One," waltz by White- celebrating the day clad in rich|man's orch. C. L. Plerce & Co.—advt, raiment, wearing a glowing diamond| A son, John, Jr, was born yester- pin, and joining his child of a wife|day at the Court street sanitarium to in greeting cheerily many of their old | Mr. and Mrs, John O'Dell of 408 East friends. ltree&. That is what Mr. and Mrs, William| ‘“Waltzing the Blues"” Phil Ohman Trewhella are doing today--and a|fecord. C. L. Plerce & Co.—advt, happy day it is for them, Jvery- | .l‘h\non, Victrolos, C. L. Plerce & body knows ‘“rewhella,” and every- Co.—advt. body &nd everybody's friends know | disons and Sonoras. | his charming wife. 4&nd, in know-|& Co—advt. 'lng them, everybody @nd everybody's Edison and Sonoras, friends are fortunate. The spirit of [CO-—advt. optimism, helpfulness and cheer as| Pr. Marion G. Mouradian of New | the years pass, surrounds them and |Dritain, a graduate of the Women's | touches gently all with whom ‘hey\.\lmllml college of Philadelphia, has come in contact. applied for membership in the Hart. | When “Little Billy” Trewhella was | ford County Medical association which a child of four years he “sailed the|Will hold its 131st annual meeting ocean blue” in a sailing vessel, com- |1ext Tuesday. ing from Cornwall, England, where; Jaster Victor Records at Morans', he was born. It took him four|—advt. weeks to get here and a little less! A. T. Bonefant, yardmaster of the | than that to go from New York to|N. Y. N. H. and H. railroad, is re- | Cheshire to his father's Barytia |COVEring from an attack of grip. | mines. A sturdy boy, he worked in| W. H. Rattenbury was added to the |those mines until, one spring, his|Poard of directors and E. M. Wight- | young man’'s fancy turned to the|Man, I.J. Skinner and Attorney Mor- | thoughts to which a young man's|timer H. Camp were re-elected direc- | fancy, lightly turns in the spring, and | tors of the Y. M. C. A. at a member- | he married a vivacious young woman |Ship meeting last evening. | by the name of Jane Eustice—the William F. Curtin, a student at Yale | present Mrs. Trewhclla. She, too,|l@W School, is home to spend the | had been born in Cornwall, Englana, |Easter vacation with his parents, Mr. ‘hut as he left there when he was|@nd Mrs. J. M. Curtin of West Main but four, and she when she was|Street. cight, their love affair had not begun | to bloom at that time. It took Mis- tress Jane four wecks and five days| to cross the ocean, and she did not | come to this part of the country until she was 14 years old. She came then | wtih her father to Isristol where he| | was to take charge of the copper! mines. There she stayed and was The happy and thence she went, 62 years | the ago last St. Patrick’s day, to New |yps Haven to buy.her wedding trouseau, | street turning from that thi at/the '\.\Sltt"thilnl i'lllnlllw (;Erl:"x[:<]£0:l“::i fn;)d-‘n»m this morning at 11 o'clock from Bkt n(-ro;‘vliy{g !-0 tl‘\‘ 1S the Tarrant & Hafiey undertaking R o e Ollelrnurlqrs on Myrt‘m street. Interment Thirty years ago Mr. Trewhella cs. | " St Mary's cemetery. tablished a meat market here in ad- dition to others he was interested in | in other places, and 20 years ago he| came to New Britain to make his home. A large family has come and gone out into the world to make their successes and to found other homes, while arby and Joan” remain in their att tive home at 70 Walnut islrrr‘f. an inspiration to those who | Would drop in to see peace and happi- *Ss continuing to the day when the is white. The groom of 62 years ings as he attends to the fur- nace in the dark hours of the winter mornings; the bride of 62 years ago smil e speaks a kind word or! |#ives a helping hand to those who {ieed it. May they sing and smile for | many years to come. CARD OF THANKS We desire to express our heartfelt | thanks for the sympathy and kindness us in the bereavement and th of our little son. We wish to all for the beautiful floral tri- | C. L. Plerce & C. L. Pierce C. L. Pierce Funerals Josephine Marchi, funeral of Josephine Marchi, two year old daughter of Mr. and Salvatore Marchi of 66 Smith who died yesterday afternoon George D. Deducka The funeral of George D. Reducka will be held this afternoon at 3 o'clack from his late hoine at 294 North Bur- ritt street and at 3:30 o’clock from St. Matthew's German Lutheran church. Rev. A. C. T. Steege will officiate and interment will be in Fairview ceme- tery. Breaths Robert S. Sammond Robert S. Sammond of Milwaukee, the younger brother of Mrs. Maurice Stanley of this city, died in Boston of pneumonia after a brief illness. Mr. Sammond was in his 24th year and was a student at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Thomas Martin Thomas Martin, Jr., the six months son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Martin |of 24 Tairview street died last night tat the Hartford hospital. The funcral | will be held tomorrow afternoon from the home of his parents at 2 o'clock be in Fairview Mr. and Mrs, Fred Fleischauer, son of Mr. and Stanley s home from Fordham college and interment will ter. | cemetery. William Kenne |street, |for EVERETT TRUE By Condo | TS5 FINALLY CI1TY HALW To A ENT OVER 1@ T HE ANK, AND FRA ) | b that | I e 8 WHAT DID FRANK Savy 2! | t the Hartford isolation hospital, was || | | | | MRS. BERGDOLL ASKS THAT MAN BE SENT T0 PRISON Mother of Slacker Who Dodged Bars Scored fiy Tawyer Defending Accused Swindler, Philadelphia, March 30,—Mrs, Em- ma C, Bergdoll, who fought hard to keep her draft-dodging sons out of prison, alded yeserday in sonding an alleged petty swindler to the county prison for elght mopthu. FOX’S NEXT MON, Maurice Rappart, accused of fleec- « ing different persons out of small amounts obtained $170 from Mrs, Bergdoll to use his influence with in- fluential persons in Washington to gain the relcase of her son, Erwin Bergdoll, from the federal prison at Fort Leavenworth, Counsel for the prisoner asked Mrs, Bergdoll what she wanted done with Rappart, and she replied: “He should go behind the bars! “Do you want him shot at sun. rise?" queried the lawyer, “No, no shooting,” replied Mrs, Bergdoll, “Just behind the bars where he belongs. = With DOROTHY L GISH The Big 9 Reel Drama of the Seas IN ONE for the NO ALIBIS LOOK AT IT NOW ! Watch It— A Wonder Show Featuring 200 Exhibits of Products for the Home by America's Leading Manufacturers. Complete Brick Dwelling Fully equipped and fur- nished, built inside the Armory. The Music Mirror A Film Fantasy with Music, Presenting PESETSKI On The DUO-ART Scores of Features for Your Entertainment and Instruetion. ADMISSION 50 CENTS HARTFORD - APRIL 27°14-1923- “WHERE ENTER NMENT MEANS EDUCATION?%