Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\; Britain Herald HERALF (Tasued P WEIe RECRAS PUR SURSCRIPY] "o e §2.40 Phres Mont ™ Eatered &t 1he Pos #5 Becond Class ' Ma TELEPHONE Pusiness Offle: Editorsi Reoms iy A Ol DEATH? The only proftabie advertiss 4. 1 the City, Cireulation Feom always opem 1 ad N murdered his wife rece vears mitted people orward 1o happiness The tongue of ge mind suicide 18 the Member of The Assaciated Press Fhe Assaciated Pross is ox the use for respubiicat oredited 1o 1t o mat otherwis I8 1his paper and als Hehed herein, twe whe, ago, looked f " N have ended in tragedy » should be silent, as the \ging complete econtemplates this ok because human inte th which we know so little of e Member B Aud't Burean of Clreulation s navional hes newepapers tieers with & styietly | elreulateT. Our cireulation o Pased upen this sudit, This insures pr tortlon against fraud In newspaper dis tributlon fgures ta both national and Joeal adveriisers. A tion. ife teatl e wanization mysteries of Every man and every woman born world by his her lite, bring this change man and every inte the may, or conduet of Or WOmAN MAy about every do his or her happiness, accomplishment general, Universal comfort never can come until each man and each woman realizes his or her influ. ence, his or her hand in the welfare of the world, Buch an event makes one pause— should make every man and every woman pause and sk the personal question, “Am 1 living that my influence makes for peace, content. ment, joy and success for th about me, or am 1 throwing more inflam. mable material onto the funeral pile of all joy and happiness to make it blaze the more horribly when some awful catastrophe touches the match to it? part te make joy, more There is sending department heads to eonven. tions, when similar officials from all over the country gather to “talk shop"—discuss thelr own work, Sueh work, it must he remembered, is work for the people within their own jure. isdiction; it is work that makes for the greater comfort and safety and convenience and pecuniary advantage of all his people, That argument against sending & man to the conventions, such as allow- ing Polica Chlef Hart to attend the gathering ut Buffalo, is that it costs something—and he may get some pleasure out of it, too. Incidentally, many people object to allowing any- Each person old enough to think one to have pleasure at the financial | &t all, each son, duughter, sweet. expense of others, | heart, husband or wife should re- This argument against sending of- | Mmember that tragedy comes not ficlals to such conventions is about as Always through violence, As the pen good an f{llustration of “penny wise may be mightier than the sword, so and pound foolish” as one may find, the word, the small habits, may be If the polley of never sending rep. more terrible than the deed. Each resentatives from a city to such meet. fragedy as this double one ings wera to be adopted, such city should be a somber warning against would soon find itself practising Wwords, deeds, actions that may affect methods so far out of date that the ! harmfully the lives of others, Hu- cost of operating departments would ' mility is praiseworthy unless it is constantly increase, the efficiency of carried to the degree which makes a | the departments as ' person feel that what he does mat- compared with similar departments| ters little. Each life affects the life in other cities, and, in the case of Of the world, The prayer to make police matters, the city would find each life u good influence should be soon that it would become a mecca repeated with devout sincerity. for crooks of all kinds, said wise per- - sons knowing the antiquated methods employed. Once and for all would like to go ust one argument against %o such grow less CHILDREN AND LAW, “Thousands of little children are this newspaper | today being apprenticed by their | record to they| eager fathers in making of deadly effect that it is not only spirits right in the homes." | economical to send representatives of This is the statentent of the prosi.l the various departments: to such dent of the Connecticut Federation of | conventions, thus allowing them Labor at the 38th annual convention hear more practical ideas expressed|of that organization. Whatever oth- | by men who have tried them and|ers may think of the truth or falsity | found the good than they lof it, people in this section of the | could do in any other way. A man | country believe it to be true. And, who is considered wise enough and | believing in its truth, they are ap-| honest enough’and intelligent enough | palled at the realization—at the fact | to head any of our city departments, put thus bluntly. certainly may be trusted to go to such In urging a correction of this evil conventions and come back here in-|one need’not criticize the eighteenth finitely better fitted to work to the |amendment to the constitution. One | advantage of all the the |need not be a “"wet” 'There is a city than he was before such experi- | tendency to confuse the Volstead act | ence. And, added to this very with that amendment. In crm(-u,ingJ on wise but to or bad, | | people of prac- tical advantage to be gained, is the | the Volstead act there is no more an | ers, attempt to speak against the consti- | fine psychological effect it has on the an NEW _BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6 1023 is ne theught publieity has ean't haif the world 1 debtor and the tomer be trang 1nks of Germany as & other half & a eus advertising” was but a | stiek always to the As has prover awing The “& erowds. verti N P —————— |25 Years Ago Todey| @ - - ———— Willlam J. Farley was eleeted re. wding seeretary t Nutmeg So- vial elub last evening and Peter Cup. tin and Dennis Doy were elected members of the advisory hoard Miss Mamie We Nton street tertaining frie Windser Locks abs ith s honesty best poliey adreryuser hi talking reached a plane its value, so the has found truth 8 CERRTILCREERELERRRT R RERRERLS sdvertisements his point Advertising as high as were t the whe did se mue reputations of four-minute s+ fdn speakers” funds for prosecutiony of the ¥ The persenal integrity of those spe . h of & ers made their words impressive e Hg TEHIEREerER ey nowadays, the reputation of mers as s0ld a house and lol en dland and Fairview streets to a Hartford party A he I Michae! Woods became troubleson Myrtle street ing and by tearing the er all connees which it chants who advertise and the truth of their advertisements give authority to their announeements. The speaker referred upon the matter of advertising 1" hargain rse driven by to touched on yesterday mor harness munaged t with the had heen attached In an exciting b afternoon, the Dublin the Beaver streets 0 Smith and “Chippy” Eagan constis tuted the battery for the vietors, and Howe and McAloon were in the points for the Th team at the per 1o » has ehic sonal serviee. merchant special he the public by letting the public know of it man, doctor, & luwyer, a dentist offers his services there should be sound reason why he should let the people know of his qualifications for that service, We admit the prejudice against such advertising, But we be it, like other old things that are being abandoned in the progress world will be swept uside Said the speaker on this point: “In the sale of any service as inti- mate or personal as law or medicine, standards of ta might readily be involved but not of ethics and I am willing to venture the assertion that the day will come when advertising will be employed in the sale of per- sonal professional service," someo is favoring | game yesterday Hills walloped Bo if a professional i Willie “ no not oRers, New Britain High swamped the Mer annual fiald mer driving park Batu e of 77 to 43, Carlson & Torrefl have transferred land and bulldings on Church street to Ida M. and Charles O. Peterson, A cyelist in his inordinate haste to get to the fire this afternoon tried to jump the gates at the Main street railroad crossing. A scction of the gates was torn off and the wheelman took a precipitated header, achool track len athletes at Berlin ¥y by the leve last of the Observations on The Weather Cloudy weather | showers tonight tonight, moder- | These are the days when aristoc- | racy is less unpopular with the pe ple—espectally “coal barons.” | | | | { : For Connecticut: In golf it's annoying enough to with “local ‘thunder find any hole full of water—especially 5,4 Thursday; cooler the nineteenth. late southwest winds, Conditions: The pressure Texas northeastward and and high over the south At- > coast and the northwest, 8how- have occurred during the last 24 (hours in nearly all sections east of the Rocky Mountains. The tempera-| |ture is high in the central and east- | [ern aistricts, | Conditions favor for this vicinity | ungettled, showery weather followed ’m- lower temperature, ! low | to New ——— — is These days nothing with a kick is 'l["‘“' a drug on the market, 218 | When a cub reporter Becomes It's a very happy occasion— Unless he is told, And then the affair Produces a mental abrasion, a bear Title of new “best-seller” might be: | World War Vet Enters “From Pacifist to Politician.” But it . 4 would be the public, not the book, | meloy of Public Works ) Joseph Williams, a World War which would be “sold.” | | veteran, has entered the employ of s the board of public works under the F’actsafldf'anf.'les federal vocational training system, City Engineer Joseph D. Will said this morning. The new emy will be given instruction in the ments of engineering work and pub- lic works inspecting. Williams enter- After a month of consideration, ed the army under the selective gerv- Governor “Al” Smith has signed the fee system and served with the 76th hill repealing state prohibition, orig- division in Irance. He was the first inally passed to bring New York into drafted from ‘Britain to be re- legal conformity with the Volstead | ported on th ialty lists, act. This leaves New York still dry by federal but no longer by state enact- ment, In signing the repeal bill, Smith re- |pudiated the idea of *'nullification’— |deflance by a state of a federal law. | Repeal, he said, will not bring in |light wines or beer, nor will it bring WHAT'S GOING ON IN THE WORLD By Charles P. Stewart NEA Service Writer | BY ROBERT QUILLEN, Anybody who can frisk crowd for lecture Celehrity: American tickets, The Turk has one diplomatic ad- vantage. He has no friends to cramp his style. HADASSAH CHAPTER MEETING. | | The New Britain Chapter of Ha- dassah wiil hold a meeting tonight at the Talmud Torah at 8 o'clock to hear the report of Miss Lena Abra- hamson, who w a delegate to the conference of The New ILngland \. | | The third party seems to have too many leaders and not enough follow- The Klan as an invisible govern- there, treated it as none of their af- falr. extremes they helped the local author- ities to put it cown. - — The Favored Furniture of Three Generations Since 1826, Heywood-Wakefield Furniture has been noted for its artistic design, painstaking workmanship and longserving quality. Beautiful recd and fibre suites and ceparate picces offer desks, tables, chairs, davenports, lamps, ferneries and many other charming models. See them at your dealer’s—he confidently recommends Heywood-Wakefield Reed and Fibre, Heywood-Wakefield Reed and Fibre Baby Carriages, "'built to fit the Bab: re idene titied by the red *Qu Seal on Every Wheel". Look for this quality mark. PAT. OFF. > T o o o o A QR A 1015)SS | deducing that he shares the Klan's rel with Kuesia. anti-Jewish, anti-Catholic, anti-negro,| London newspapers say Lord Cur. anti-foreign views. zt;n.';,ng'lanr:;f fahrelilgn 1mln:;&er. utl.v;t; b & oSl e trouble, believing the soviel KU KLUX KLAN |regime verged on overthrow. A court order at Atianta has tied| Most good judges consider the soviet up the Ku Klux Klan's money tem-|government stronger than ever, with porarily. June 9 was set for hearing |Russia's economic condition improv- a receivership petition. ing and her foreign trade on the in- Complainants cl:orge Imperial Wiz- |crease, ard FEvans with risusing the Klan's| i fundg, and accuse I'vans ahd Emyperor TLBKS YIELD A POINT Simnions of turmmg the Klan into a| The Near Eastern situation is better, machine for personal “enrichment und | Turkey has waived her war damage aggrandizement.” claims against the vanquished Greeks, | Turkey and Greece ‘“got together” POLITICS IN GERMANY | without consulting the bigger powers The “red” outbreak in the Ruhr| . % S e . land they're considerably miffed in has heen suppressed, at least for the [ consequence, e present. Furthermore Turkey still b1l the T a5l refuses For a while the French, in w"‘r”‘pre{eremial treatment to the bigger powers' subjects in Turkish courts, | BANDIT CAPTIVES FREED The Chinese bandits who kidnaped When it thireatened to go to made on seem- | is The prediction ingly good authority that Chancellor Cuno of Germany will resign soon, be |succeeded by Dr, Stresemann and that Stresemann will come to terms with IFrance, OUTLOOK IN RUSSIA Stanley Baldwin, new English pre- | mier, quickly ended the British quar- [they'll get soldiers' pay. EVERETT TRUE By Condo — AND IN THC PIRST PLACE THERE'S ™ME OVERHEATD GXPENSES. m™Hev've '’ QOT TO BE MET. THAT REDUCES THE EUNDS RAPIDWY o head of a department to represent!tution than there would be in criti- this city at a gathering of representa- | cizing any other act of Congress. No | tives of other cities. He gains new |charge of disloyalty was made against | inspiration to excel others; the fool- | persons who blamed the Senate (or‘ ishnes of old methods appears clear ! refusing to ratify the treaty of Ver-| to him, and he regarding his|saflles. It was the Senate's act.| ‘department and possible improve-| There is no disloyalty asserting | ments, that ‘‘he's the hoy that Congress has misinterpreted the do it.” intention of the people who put the Ejghteenth amendment into the Con- stitution, by the passage of the Vol- It is a law and it should | But its existence has} condition where ‘“thou- little children™ are Dbeing| time) and the taught disobey this law—where the | “thousands of little The | learning that their parents, to whom editorial suggests that there is a great | they look for inspiration to do right, difference of opinfon regarding day-| want them to break this law and, by light saving, and the people of the analogy, are learning that “the law" | is not a sacred thing in the opinion of men and women. L EAE RIS It isn't certain that the next war caused by the legal necessity of mak- | of the men and women of the World— | w{l] cost as much. There may not be ing public clocks conform with stand- | will help form public sentiment.|any dollar-a-year men. 1 ard while moves along on They are growing up with a fe daylight saving | that they may disobey the law But the editorial misses the point are being taught to disobey this law, | we have and they will have no special rever- It say: able to make almost mechanically the little themselves right ning on tronted at standa The clocks they daylight whether back the saloon. He pointed out that | |state officials still are bound to en- force the Volstead act, though prose- cution must be in the federal, not state, courts. Of President Harding's hint that |state and federal conflict may occur, | Smith said: “It would be a calamity to permit such a fundamental misconception of the reiations between the states and ‘thp federal government to pass un- challenged."” Also: 5 | *This is not a question of prohi- | bition, but a question whether all |vestige of the rights of the states, guaranteed by the federal constitu- tion, is to be driven from our theory (of government."” And further: “The definition of an intoxicating | beverage contained in the Volstead | act is not an honest or a common | |sense one.” | As a ‘“constructive suggestion,” | Smith urged an ‘honest,” "common sense” amendment of the federal | law, | “CAPTIVES' RELEASE ASKED | A formidable petition has been iaid before President Harding for release | the 52 wartime political captives | |8till in federal prisons. | The signers include: | Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, Mon- and Oklahoma, governors, presi- s of the Catholic University of America, Temple University, St. Ste- phen's College, Vassar, Mount Hol- | yoke, Smith, Oberlin, Trinity, Bryn | Mawr and Swarthmore; Editors Frank | of the Century, Swope of the. New | York World, Garnett of the Nation, | Croley of the New KRepublic, William | Allen White of the Emporia (sz,)l Gazette, Also Woodrow Wilson's son- | in-law, Francis B. Sayre. | Lending his voice, Governor Dona- | Jhey, Ohio, Harding's state, says, “The animosities born of a war-in- Amorica’s beloved [spired public mind should die away But her beauty lives rapidly as possible.”” Alfred Bett- looking all the world \man of the government's wartime le- | Murray, winner of gal staff adds that while these prison | Des Moines. sentences “may have had some ,iusn-J e fication during the war, they cease to have any now." HENRY FORD'S BOOM Henry Ford's presidential boom continues to develop. William Randolph Hearst announces he will support Ford on an independ- ent ticket. On the other hand, the B'rith Abra- im grand lodgé accuses Tord acking the Ku Kiuf) Kian financtafly, | Hadassah chapters, which was held recently in Boston. The final report | on the resiilt of the card party which When money talks about America’s | Was held last week will also be heard. duty, it seems to have a slight foreign | accent, | a party of foreigners frem the Shang- hai-Peking express bhuve freed all’ [these prisoners or are abqut to do so. |No runsoms were exacted, but the out. |laws have the government's promise of immunity from punishment and are being mustered into the army, where | =il they have extraordinary luck— ment has one good feature. It can't levy taxes. Lillian's Beauty Where the south left off as boss of the country, that'’s where the We begins in that can GIVE THEM THE COMFORT. We agree thoroughly with the stead act. Waterbury American when it be obeyed. editorially: “If it is comfort to! brought a anyone to think the of (in showing standard to (in making says any clocks are right | sands world wrong use of children® are daylight) let g And what is it the height of when | a policeman parks his car in front of | a fire plug? them have it | The objection to a closed that there isn't room enough for a wasp and a driver, car is inside a cities "who enjoy and value it are for the most go along with such is part content to petty discomfort as will be some Don't overdo your bluff. The larger the diamond, the greater the proba- bility that it is glass. time life e ~— AND THATS NOT Ale — THERS!S THE QUTITANDING BONDS. IF THESE =---- K. K. is no more an- | ad man who spells it Klothes endeavored to make clear. 8till, the K | noying than the Klassy Kollege ‘"They ence for any law. And this law, this Volstead acty is this (daylight savers) are . calculation necessary to set the measure that is plunging when they country into “foreign entanglements” and timetable perfect small to them, and are run- Some parents have children who never lic some are not so gullibic which 0 much feared by some great men who, themselves, may broken smiling and a conscience untouched, daylight time are con- are L or get have d time this law with faces et O not that but that The remarkabie thing is the hootleggers Kkeep it up, the patrons keep it down. trouble is that ng at some we might not know whether Know andarc 1 PEACE BY PUBLICITY. Sald a speaker at the vention of advertising men at Atlan- “As the issues of the war to advertising, were runnir or time; we might not annual con- | any “calculating” wers Russel Tead Our wat might have tic woere ALl RIGHT, aiow YouU CaW RO ANCGAD WTH THE ARGUMENT. 1 C4N Now KEEP MY MIND OFF YOoUR HANDS AND ON THs"3uaJeeT /| necessary. city: men's souls , s might through | stopped it brought stir pocket sion could not be to figure whether was a “publicly displayed clock,” if it were, ot wag obeying the It is to The Herald dom of advocating on time his enthusiasm R v 5 himself 0| coprect this sentence: “Some pub- @ay's labors. If we knew that l;terma more optimistic than were Jul-;u\, officers are so incignificant lhat‘l or migl be in son's on. This girl Bonni st in at the Confu- 50 the clock inspected or through 13 awvoided if one issucs of peace be brought medium to guide the a b conte the the same way ) acquain fashion if you traveler says you can scrape an in ten miny any resort. You can, perhaps, to a solution a men and anc at e are a barber., hethe its owner Granted that the wags ade ¢ speaker to , this germ of g who are cag wee avoid that 1 of advertising increa the presents. the but | apply You can raise a on love, there are times when you must it to the seat of his pant has ted wis- | fact does not destroy boy $ be run|the new idea he And standard regardless of the | granted, too, that in g0 to wo cease our|he may have expressed | b