New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 29, 1923, Page 6

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New Britain Herald e V fl'l‘?l':" Haoepied Chur b HERALD PURLISHY flesued Datly, Sunds " Bidg. & SUBSCRIPTION RATES B0 & Yoar 288 Thres Mont * Moath t the Post O e Clase Mall Matte TELEPHONE CALLS ness OMee .. \.0i000 ria! Roome ..., advertising medlum ir v, ulation basks and press room always oven te sdvertisers Britatn Mewher of The Assaclated Press The Asscls oly entitied 10 the use for re-publieat ot eredited to 1t or not otheiwier oredited n this paper and alse iafa) mews pub lished herein, Member Audit Parean of Clreniation The A, B, € 1o a natienal erganization which fumiishes newspepers and [l wiih & strietiy honest a: elieulation, Our etreuly A upen this audt, This ingeres pre- toetian awainet fread In newspaper die tribution Agures to both natienal and le- ade DAY Memoria past for eloquent paying glow- eopntry MEMORIAL will be 1 Day, Tomorrow the reminiscent signa! in the w of the to the it and whos A ing tribute mer who died for the privilege honor of the memory of who felt the significance of the talks or read VoR We of in The have lecorating them fow such to effusions, day listened were silent and nd then The gentle sentimental turned off not lasting. No foeling solemn for a time to brighter things of the ceremonies was emotion other than a passive | solemn day was ex- little of reverence for perienced, The meant ox- it day cept to those to whom brought a personal sense of loss, As speakers have turned away from | long, Involved periods to short, erisp | gentences earrying an emphatie point, | %0 writers have forsaken the habit of | expressing themselves in heautifully | flowing language. And this day, Me-| Day, is one when a speaker or a writer should try all his mot to put power into his words. Ior Memorial | Day ghould mean more than an hour | of sentiment. To give it the effect it | ghould have have the sacrifices it rep- | resents should be brought vividly be-| fore the mind. Memorial day When we decorate the graves of men who have given their lives for the country whose blessing we, you and I, are onjoying. Fach one of those who | died did a conmerete thing for us, for | you and for me, when he took un" arms to keep this country,of ours the | splendid, the wonderful country it is! We, you and J, owe a debt to each one | of the men whose hodles were placed | in the graves we will decorate tomor-| row. It is a personal debt; it is a na- | tional debt. Each individual should | join with the nation in showing our | appreciation of that debt; in acknowl- | edging that debt Tomeorrow, Memorial one when the memory of those who fought and died should grip our| hearts and bring a firm determination | to do our part in keeping this country as fine, as splendid as were the sac fices of the men who died for it. We Day, will be will renew and make more firm that determination as we stand with bared heads beside their graves FINE SENTIMENT Among the contributions fund which the American raising through this newspaper for the Graves' Decoration IPund appears one | from the Private Walter J. Smith Post Veterans of FForeign Wars, is im- poseible to refrain from commenting upen the fine sentiment practically displayed by this action of one former forget- | the is to Legion gorvice men's organization in ting the that it fostered by another, in the fact that the erans of aid the perpetually heautiful the fact is a movement | members of the post of the Vet-! Wars, to| that are eager keep Foreizn in movement will oil heneath the under their former com in which li€ There of every tlag fecling ig, deep down heart man who fought the United of the of States a sincere who that it brotherhood for all they had to the offered everything flag—to represents the id tandards Ti®y would join in all movements to fittingly show honor to the memory of lives for it, as they, those men who gave their now living were will to give their lives if nec-| When o3 ns sich as cssary idences such as these come— actic the joining of zation with another in such one orgat a cause re is ample proof that the former ready shou past un ler our flag. All ov men wil our country the has batt representing those tomorrow, And military mare living emerg memories ht and dicd thi whose all over country who once fought men, men under it, will paus move thelr hats hold them ove military method of ¢ xpressing the to our flag aity to country, the honor taught in the marine army. No former sailory or would fail to ob-| soldier OMve Lils celSmVI. For him 2: | swimming pool in | have flocked, sy mho their hats wing th will remove passes—their method of showing t leyalty to the eountry for muech bloed has twen s) the cause of right, humanity AT expeeted possible, for us to r¢ tribute 1o each flag that will fly marrow, from housetops, from Jows—and may there be many of then it we are expeeted 1 " the flag as it passes, offieia I In parade or ceremoni vhen th tions of those whe carry it or t words of these who speak are inspired by & reverence for that flag of ours As this expression of 1o the oyilty ntey 1o P United flag 15 made all over this cc it is hoped that the Hritain, Conneetieut Ameriea, will Just recognize the glory of the 1 Bteipes by saluting it as It in the core. morrow aple New Ntates of of prompt t Btars ar passes or us it is unfurled monies of the day. Tomorrow let no man, ehild forget to salute the woman or flag of our countr | SUNDAY DANCES Let it granted that there been far too great a tendency to eriti- cize the younger generation and to compare it unfavorably with the youth of the past. Comments written fifty and more years ago telfing of | the terrible trend of youth of those days, might seem to have been writ- | ten today, The same arguments are stated in those old articles, the same tendencies deplored, Let it be assum- ed, for the sake of argument which ! has at least some justification, that| youth of today is not one bit less thoughtful, less moral, if you will, than the youth of half a century ago. Let this be granted. Still one may ¥ quite seriously “there is a limit."” Sunday is a day that we call sacred, This is a Christian community; it is permeated by the belief that most of the higher ideald of life a%e inspirad by a Divine Being, working in various ways, but still Divine, The great mass of the people, high and low, wise and simple, live under that belief. They | reverence the Sabbath day; to them it means the leavening of life——the day! and what it stands for. Dancing is of- | fensive to many of these people, Even | leaving out of the question those who ! are violently opposed to dancing at| not discussing the merits of dancing, it certainly must be | admitted that it is a form of recre tion not caleulated to fit in well with | our idea of Sunday. Add to this the| fact that it has been done in public, | and the propriety of the ment of Chief of Police Hart tha will not be permitted in public pli becomes apparent. This view is had| ly denouncing public | be has any time, and - announce- | it ces, without necessa n any way, or without | 3 sion of Chief rt will meet with general approval | because of the appreciation of the ! people for others and the things held sacred by others, if not their own feeling in the matter, because of THE SWIMMING POOL It last night at the meetipg held to discuss the proposed the North End park, that theré is strong opposition | to it among the residents of that sec- | tion. This, it would seem, should settle | wus evident the matter, There should be no swim- ming pool located in a section which has grown so rapidly, to which people they have ting that it growth— pool it in which bought or built homes expe: locality would is remain as such except for natural, there should there if those people object Those who discuss the matter without kn'owing from personal experience, from information ebtained from those exporis usual be no swimming to or who do know from personal ence the practical facts in the matter, judge fairly. End Their greatest in a position to the North concerned the arc not The the residents of are chiefly should ones words have weight. Mayor Paonessa is too fair- minded a man to refuse to bow to wishes once those wishes are their known. But consideration not eliminate from idea of People who remember the the places of their youth brought to them, are eager to have such a place provid- does the this the swim- ming pool. are able to joys swimming | especially. A ations and ed for the young people thorough canvass of possibic loc for such a pool should be made earnestly that a found Hving it is to be hoped which the place may be not offend thost and whieh would make it pos Rritain proper would n locality New the of held to the sible for people through the this form who are city ong, hot months, to have recreation, Various centrally | lo- suggested We do 1 places have heen vhe homes do not abound. re not want to seem to favor any special of carn- nade no canvass ut swimming pool project | Wity, having ion we do hope be abandoned, just as we ope that the wisies of the people of | be slighted when and | for the pool ocality wi a location is ot i} NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, e 25 Vears Ago Today| (Taken from Herald of that date) A PERSONAL VIEW rest here in the e eifect that D have written e “republl Ne Nhe from the differs there t that a Fred A Dental this eity red Whittlesey epending a few days and New York Mrs. P, R Main street is entertai friends trom New York Mr. and Mrs, L. Hoyt Court street are entertaiy rand Mrs, H. The eandidaey of | the vacaney on the are glad indeed poacring with quite of peace about the eity ugls A. H, Hine member And Of the senior class of the Yale Medic hool, has reeeived a hospital ap AN nointment at Centerville, N, ¥ Harry €, Brown of the post offics fores leaves this evening for a few lays' stay in Brookiyn whers wil! be the guest of his brother, Dr, Thom- Brown Corporal pany D, w comes former Bonaat of ey ege is visitiy of | resldent of this ecity, Patriek Ke eal ufter and eclared that there returning here an absence 1608 Are ingt after v L tWenty-one years was gens the Treland of Chamberiain of South ng & party AC eountry eptance the Free Btate—that of ns there are not as bad as many be Pease ng Ireland-—and that Sawyer of New ) regarded Y Americans who have ne Irish Those whe love country is affection Vihherts for hoard 18 approval A sewer Vitele even by blood in their veius to k that the and happiness the tators would yet ow re 18 more of this elty, & than vielent them overs of ideals that to protest e have believe those same Ireland see the lofty may have inspired %0 many ugainst any form of government that did not Irish he give complete freedom to the people would happy to see every nation free in fact as well as in theory. But lovers of Ire "m\:luw Julin Bowen is holding u sale land who recognize that the present|,c mitinery at greatly reduced prices. | state of affairs s vastly better than William Middlemas, the well known that which had torn the land for so | Main street tellor and n‘mrn‘.-qu. 1y known as a famous trout fisherman y ¥ s sed! so many years, sec in this supposedly | L g ) "o avious records when he authentic leter of DeValera's a bright |brought inta town this morning & prospect that will bring once again heauty without speckivs, It measured something of the happiness, the light- three feet four inches in and heartednes, the cheer which we are “4‘_3‘:‘\""';" tow. ounces il accustomed to assoclate ith b White @Ik will be thrown open to thought of those lovable people Edward Bheehy of Com. Lovers of liharty & up from Niantic Inst eve. length n over the the publig for another season, Decora- | |tion Day. Leader Lynch of the Phil- harmonic Band has arranged an at-| tractive program for e concert in| afternoon. | the | Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN, Observations on The Weather ¥or Connecticut: Fair tonight and Wednesday; moderate to | fresh north and northeast winds. | Conditions: The pressure continues "l low over the western and southern| | districts and high over the lake re-| | glon and New England. Rain has oc- | | curred during the last 24 hours over| a'belt about 500 miles wide extending from Montana southeastward to Flor lida. The front edge of the rain belt | this morning is as far east as 1lli-| nois. Conditions favor for this fair weather with moderate tempera- ture, followed by Increasing eloudiness jon Wednesda Crisis: The deadlock that ensues when two diplomats grab for the same plum. i A man never knows what real hap- | piness is until he falls in love and then it s too late, and cooler Philosophy, as a general thing, just the smug complacency of the man whose nest is feathered. The danger is buying spring chick- en already dressed is that you can't tell which spring is meant, Allies are nations that are very friendly at intervals as they need one| another to grind axes, vicinity, | There are more opportunities in a great city, but you have to lick more men in order to get at them. COMMUNICATED Commends Chicf Hart. | : Britain, May 29, 1923, | THIS THING'S | Editor | Dear Sir:- I would like to express through the Herald my appreciation of the stand | which Chief Hart has taken in regard | to Sunday dancing. We ought all to An automobile show s a be thankful for any influence that where yvou go to get discontented with your present car. And yet men who attend to their own business never are hoisted to the | the shoulders of a cheering multitude, Uphe | like every other day. Dr. Hillis, one of our greatest preachers, says that| American Sabbath ought to lm‘ Id, and T am sure all, who have SR | our country's hest interests at heart| The more humble grocers still are| fe€l the same way. willing to sell you a nickel's worth of | Those peoplc who sugar it your furnish your own hag. | With band concerts Auisk] enjoyments on Sunday ought to de-;| part to other lands where there are | restrictions. 1 HERALD atisfied Of each one thousand people who | ask their friends for criticism exactly | "° one thousand are fishing for praise, | JADER. | 3 nearly atways right,| Ex-Empress Zita Offered Use of Hunting Estate New York, May 28,—J. G. von Her- | - - berg, Seattle theatrical man, has of- The sun may be growing cold. And|fered former Empress Zita of. Aus-| when we see a mouthy youngster of 18| tria the use of the 60,000 acre hunt- who thinks he understands women, we | {ng reserve of the late Emperor I'ranz don't care if it do | Jaset, according to an announcement - in the New York World, Mr. von| Herberg leased the preserve from | the trian government last year.| [n a letter to the World he said the| | former empress would be allowed its| | use gratis until such time as tha,Aus- trian government arranged for ! maintenance of the former royal fam: ily. Reformers are The chief cause of their unpopularity is their assumption of superior r\ghtu-i ousness | | | The differcnce between the price ot products at the farm and in the city indicates that the railroads are mak- ing expenses now. TRIAL DATES ASSIGNMENT The following trial dates were as-| signed at the short calendar session of the city court held yesterday after- | ay, Mayll, at 9 ¢ | Zucker against Carl ¢ W. M. Greenstein for . Attorney David 1. Nair for Monday, June 4, at 1 Gordan et al. against Citron for the When tails went out of fashion, no lonbt the old-timers wagged theirs in anger and cursed the bobbing craze. ham Attorn plainti 7 the defendant; In 4 J ile 1 b i 1w little while now the chvo who | PPy 0 scoffs at women's styles Wi ve Won- ot Niueen Attorney dering why he hasn't nerve enough to iaintir, Attorney liyan for the de take off his coat. | fendant; Stanislaw Synolon against 55 divorces in Cni. | WAlenty Murzyn, Attorney Henry No- | S = A= Twieki for the plaintiff, Judge W. I cago in 1922 and our guess Is that not | Mangang for the defendant; A. M| of the women copcerned made| Welinsk? against John I Maguire | good lemon pie. | Construction Co., Attorney W. M — Greenstein for the plaintiff, Judge W wve found a petrified | 1, Mangan for the defendant; Wed- | mau who has sat with his feet elevat- | pesday, June 6, at 1 p. m., bert | ed for thousands of years. Probably a | Erickson against John W. be, | primitive job-holder. Attorney M. A. Sexton for th in tff, Judge W. I, Mangan_for the de. fendant; Oswald Zaehler against Nicholas Nesta, Attorney J. G. Woods or the plaintiff, Attorney Alfred Le- | | Witt for the gefendant | b ¥y, June 7, at § a. m,, iglaw Muter against Lawrence Muter, et al. Attorney Henry Nowicki for the | plaintifi, Attorney M. A. Sexton for the defendant; Heyman Weiner against senholtz, Attorney W.' M. enstein for the plaintiff, Attorney \fred LeWitt for defendant: at p. m, M Ponticello against Wedman, Judge 1% 13 the plaintiff, Attorney J. G. the defendant: Benfamin Solomon < Greenberg, Judge I oy There were 7,2 one Scientists Met | Correct this sentence: "It was all my fauit” said the woman in the jit- ind I'll be glad to pay for the damage to your fenders.” CONTRIBUTED MEMORIAL ne; Stan- | T | e . : B — . z Meyer | THE LIVING TO THE DEAD Gre. Here wreaths for your o And 8. Prayers Thanks for wi for your against Sam: shall always remember B. Hunge or the plaintiff, i by 1 for the defendan THE DEAD TO THE LIVING day, Ju at 1 p.om, J. G for the plaintiff, Attorneys M. 1. Sas¢ i fand 1. 1. Rachlin for the defendants; | Glackston against Leroy F.| Attorney M. A. Sexton for the | laintifi, Kirkham, Hunger- | |ford & Camp for the it | graves, | sighs, tears, vou have heroism Woods fo done, ise We Woods Grateful And of Glad we And are we rings, were to dic for you for your prayers for our country Cooper, defen 15 are Jitle known in Italy, | Byzantine enamels ar¢ On gold. you never forg:t —EiLVia Pro-Ying a | ro | tion, | conferences in will keep our Sabbath from becoming| ., | months | The cage already has been heard | Louis W. Stoteshu Hungerford for ]‘ | Brownsville, Tenn. MAY 29, 1023, INPROVED ATMOSPHERE IN NEGOTIATIONS IN CHINA Dispatches Prom China Today Indi- ate That Some Sort of settle ment May He Near. Tien Tsin, May 29.—Dispatehes Psanchwang doday strengthened of an improved atmes in the negotiations for the re- of the 14 fareigners held in the strongholds Paotsuku froam the im phere a8 handit moyntair Chin P on idently are mak- flort ta placate the bandita, and the bandits have been auick 1o acknowledge this After parieya with the bandits, the gentry pledged property as a guaran- tee that an agrosmient would he eob. served, The deputy to the tuehun of Shantung provinee sent in eounter proposals, which reeeived prompt at» tention When the bandits' secre- taries reached the relief eamp at Tsaochwang, the tuehun's deputy in« stantly reassured them regarding their safety and emphasized that it was not i question of loss of faee, 1 have lost u lot of ,face” plained the official o have and so has China” What the deputy told the handits in the conferepce that followed evi. dently was »;‘mm, sinee the ban- dits decided not to return immedinte. Iy to Paotsuku as they had intended, but to remain overnight, BRINDELL TRANSFERED e offie more sineere oxe you Metropoliten Trades' Union the Forn Czar is O for Dannemora, “Siberia of America,” N. Y., May Ossining, 20.—Robert ! P. Brindell, former dictator of metro-' buflding trade unions, ia en ¢ today with a bateh of convicts to Clinton prison at Dannemora, N, Y. Brindell, who has served 25 months w sentence of five years for extor- was caught by Warden Lawes of Sing Sing prison on Bunday ufter- noon reeeiving a visit from his wife and two children outside the prison walls, Brindell's keeper, Andrew Carlson, was suspended and the for- mer labor leader placed in isolation. Brindell handeuffed and leg shackled to 456 men classed as desper- ate criminals and placed aboard a train last night, bound for Danne- mora—Kknown to prisoners as the iberia of America. Those’ famillar with prison proced- ure attribute the sudden transfer of Brindell and the apparent refusal to give him a hearing to substantlation of reports that he has met his wife many times, and in addition has held a secluded shack un- der watch of a guard outslde, with men who have succeeded him among | the builders' unions. HEADED ROBBER BAND politan of Escaped Conviet, Just Recaptured, Was Brains Behind the Daring Denver Mint Hold Up Last Fall, Leavenworth, Kas., May 20 Sherrill, notorious bandit and ped conviet who was apprehended at McAlester, OKla., yesterday, was declared today by officials of the fed- eral prison here to have heen the brains of the bandit gang which staged the daring robbery a few, ago of a federal reserve in front of the govern- at Denver. i according to prison offi- cials, confessed when arrosted by a posse following & train robbery in 1918, that he and fellow gangsters had plans for the robbery of the Den- ver mint. His statements at the time were regarded by officials as “‘too fanciful to be believable.’ Sherrill escaped June 22, 1921, He was serving 40 years for train rob- bery. D, hank truck ment mint Sherrill, | | | Step-Mother Who Married Her Step- | se | Son Now Alleges That He Has Been a2 5 ti OU can always offer the happy drink of the little Eskimo to all vour guests —men, women, young: sters, Its tang and freshness ap- peal to them, and they all like it, : And you couldn't give them a Birch Beer purer drink, Root Beer Onder by the case from your grocer or druggiot The Clicquot Slub Company, Millis, Mass,, U. S, A, ‘ \ o Reenownced GINGER Ginger Ale Sarsaparilla ALE Signorina “Black Shirt” Signorina Giovanna, a little Ttalian Leauty who is to be pre- nted to the king and queen of England at Rome as a representa- ve of the Fascisti, She is a relative of Premier Mussolini, Naughty Boy. New York, May 20.—John M. Van- dergrift, grandson of the founder the Standard Oil Co.,, who married his step-mother after his father died, eight years ago, has been made a de- fendant in a suit for divorce filed here. he plaintiff, Mrs, Syhil M, Vander- grift, asks an abeolute divoree, mak- ing specific allegations of misconduct. by v, a referee, whose report has been submitted to the su- preme court. Vandergrift a member of the T.ambg cluh, {s deseribed as “of the theatrical profession.” He is a grand. son of Jacoh Vandergrift, forme of Pittsburgh. When his father died at Pittshurgh in 1915 he married his step-mother, who was 12 vears his conjor. Sinee then a suit, still pend- ing. was brought by Vandergrift over $125,000 alleges he had turned over to his wife from his grandfath- or's estate, and a referee was appointe led to administer the fund while the case was in the courts. Belgium Has Cwn Plan For Making Germany Pay May 20.—Belgium’s plan to rmany pay, according to Le Matin, suggests the formation in the Reich of monopolies in such com- modities as alcohol, sugar and tobac- ther with the cxploitation of < and state property. The proposed monopolies would be man- aged by international syndicates on which the allies would be well repre- The newspaper says Premier Theunis estimates that this plan would furnish a minimum of 2,400, 600,000 gold marks annually. Paris, make co, tog the railro; ented FOLK FUNERAL TOMORROW New York, May 20.—~The funeral of Joseph Wingate Ifofk, governor of Missouri from 1905 to 1909, who died | here yesterday at the home of his| sister, Mrs, James Webb, will be| held tomorrow at his birthplace, Mrs. Folk will ae- company the body here tonight g EVERETT TRUE !, WALT A MINUTE, Now ! THERES!S L SOMETHING. ELSE., WHILE \YYoU'RG IN AT THE ARCHITECT'S I WANT You To TELL MM TO WORK A BREAKFAST NOOK INTO THG PLAN , TOO, A BREAKFAST WHY, WOMAN, WHAT'S THE SENSE OF A BREAKFAST NOOK wWHEN THERE!S GTING TO0 BE A B DINING RooMm % BREAKFEAST NOOK | ONE orF “THOSE LITTLE CunEy HOLES . WHY, & COULBN'T ¥ - de Y o — > 1 NEUER SAw ANY PLACE YYou COULDNIT GET INTO |F THERE WAS SOMETHING TO EAT !! AND IF You CAN'T GET INTO THIS ONE You CaN GO WITHOUT BREAKEASTS TILw You'RE THINNGER LI

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