New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 24, 1923, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

HORS 9°99. L DICXINSON WINTER NEEDS For Your AUTOMOBILE DENATURED ALCOHOL 75¢ Gallon Priming Ether 25¢ and 50c¢ can THE Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Horsf8ll Shoes Are Fine Shoes 2 s Blucher Oafords — 10,00, \ mported Scotch Grain O fords—s10 FALLS Isylum Street Havtford Brogue 1 Pays to Buy Our Kind SERGE SUITS Are Non Neasanahle suitahle {or Every Occasion Tailored To Meavure £45.00 and Up Ye London Shop Tallors 13 MAIN STREET Let Us Clothe You We Know How NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, \PRESIDENT GOMPLETES MBSSAGE 10 GONGRESS WEDDING NEXT WEDNESDAY |€* 2o » Fotne o Address, Which He Will Give PARIS SEES NEW CONCESSIONS MADE Thinks France Has Again Given in to Allies and the other heads of German in- dustries can easily provide the finan- |cing to keep things going eeverai| | months out funds deposited | abroad of Georgetown Expert Thinks Next Bad Earthquake Wil Occur tn Central or South America. _ Washington, Nov. 24.—A prediction In Person that the world’s next catastrophic Washington, Nov. 24. — President |®arthquake will occur in Central or in an ad- Widow of Enrico Caruso to Become | | Coolidge today began the final polish- | SOUth America was ma ing of his forthcoming message to | 1ress last night by FatMer Tondorf, congress, which many observers be—:”" seismologist at Georgetown uni- lieve will have an important bearing | ‘°rsity, whose observations gave the on his future political fortunes. He WOrld its first news of the violent dis- | completed the main part of his work fturbance that several hours later was on the document yesterday and all|found to have wrought vast destruc- that remains to be done, before it is |tion in Japan. sent to the printer is the ulnrlficutlon“ Father Tondorf declined to estimate of the language of several sections. |the probable time of the earthquake The message is expected to be brief, | he predicted, pointing out the diffi- White House officials having made it |culty of such an estimate and declar- known that the president intends to | ing that because of the range of years present his recommendations without’n would have to cover, it would be long argument or discussion but on |practieally valueless. The Japanese the basis of what he feels to be their \cnm‘muhe he recalled, was forecast intrinsic soundness. Little is known |in 1921, by the imperial seismologi- of the detailg of the message, but ftcal bureau, which fixed the tme is generally #Mought its principal sec- | within six years, and at the same time tions will deal with taxation, agricul-" predicted a second serious disturbance tural relief and transportation. No there between 1927 and 1953, BOOMING ROOSEVELT Bride of British Captain in London —R ming (o America, 1t that concession 1o the the con- with the istrialists. ed that London, Nov, Mrs. Enrico Caruso and Captain Ernest Ingram of London will be married next Wednes- morning in Brompton oratory, it was announced today, The Italian assador at Paris, Baron Romano Avezzano, will give away the bride. | e couple will leave for Americal soms time in 1 mber. Mrs. Caruso was formerly Miss Dorothy Park Ben-| #min of New York After the wedding ceremony, which performed by Father John there will be a reception at 2] attended by a few inti- The couple will spend fiest part of the honeymoon at hotel prior to their departure fo United States. Mrs. Caruso and Captain Ingram re first introduced in Paris by the aughter Ambassador Avezzano. tain ITngram, a member of an old Warwickshire family, studied en- gineering before the war. In Septem- 1914, was commissioned in a Yorkshire regiment, was wound- o4 on the Somme and was then inval- ~d home. At present he is not en-, in business offi- made is circles here I rance important Germany another s allies o 10 in tract Stinnes yesterday Buhe is stipy am of ind it kind eparation taxes collected ac- by . countries shall be paid ed “productive ' or a a wil the the ipying au- of the rights of commission. This is that VFrance and unabie to use the re- to pay the cir forees in the pay om this oo cc ation, subject to cpara this mea the taxes f maintaining tF uiless the inderstood t ommended it is said authoritativel but the executive is expected to su gest that congress make a start on a program for the better housing of government departments and bureaus in the diserict of Columbia. New York State, VESSEL GOES AGROUND | British Freighter in Trouble O Port Tribune today says Theodore Roose- Mouton Island—All on Board Are velt, assistant secretary of the navy, Taken Off Safely. lias quietly opened headquarters in Halifax, N. 8, Nov. 24.—The Brit- the Waldorf-Astoria where his friends sh freighter River Wye, losing her‘ar'- directing a drive for his nomina- way in a dense fog last night, pited!tion as New York republican guber- up on the rocks off Port Mouton Is-/natorial candidate next year. and at & o'clock this morn The! It has been an open secret in poli- crew was taken off in small boats dis- tical circles for more than a year I from the shore that Colonel Roosevelt's friends were broadcast by Jing their best to make him the next i cernor,” the newspaper says. ‘“They gone all over the state telling «ders that his popularity would in. even of n do so is per to repa commission by of this prudence industrial- the ation has 1mportance concession 1 in the the accord with the unon in Poimncare nrcessity St he commented in Opinion Premier the points press e SPOKE ON LEADERSHIP College is that to gniz ting some way for rent that the chamber the Rritain Ger repara sue of deputics vpare 1 set and bringii up) Great Instructor from Springficld ssion made to drafting the ilitary contro Ve « recent in Talks to 200 Foremen of Industrial to ma or g s m greater Iutit n dealing Coundcil at Y. M. €. A, Last Evening ched w S8 messages she \ e Attende Hearing Unimportant " ground N te assistance and it vices, was pounding however, was in no immediate government steamer indi tional and state, carrying New York next year. These advocates of Roose- was sent to her aid. velt for governor have been active at W of 2,258 net lonl.‘\\'aahlngtnn. and the opening of Nov, 6, with coal for|headquarters here in the last two weeks is only preliminary formal an- nouncement that his hat is in the Boston, Nov. 24.—A radio message | ring. received here today by the agents of | The newspaper quotes friends of the stean River Wye said that she | Roosevelt to the effect that he will was ashore off the Nova Scotla coast make no official announcement of his and that a Canadian government|candidacy at present, essel was proceeding to her assist- | — The veasel was due here to- morrow from Swansea with 5,000 tons BADK FIBON SCE. Weleh anthracite, A message to the coast guard gave the location of the wreck as latitude 44 north, long- titude 64:20 west, which would place hetween Halifax and Cape Sable, and sald the steamers Matirar and Ripple were going to her aid SUIT FOR 82,500 FILED, sub, be given the The New Britain Lumber Co,, mployed boys of the Y, M. ", A be. through Kirkham, Cooper, Hunger. ping next Tuéaday evening tord & Camp, has brought suit for $2,. talk on Tuesday 600 against John E. Meakill. Money trician from the Stanley In the hands of Ike and M. Feigen- meetings will be ad- baum has been garnisheed by Con. trade oxporta on tosl stable Fred Winkle, who served the repairing, papers. The twrit {8 returnable in the sther subjects to ety court an the third Monday in De. rember, e t ¢ probler ierman oo ¢he s Rths The Lady Laurier, Fhe River Bwansea nore the ¥ s rnished by estra ning was Spring- Dawson spoke on of Leadership.” He various qualifications leadership A bhuffet iriegnion bard, a4 proiessional enter tai with sem: and tricks. Music Larker's Alpha string orcl The speaker Ceorge F Dawson of the hology mphasized the ed 10 GIVE SHOP TALKS Factories tail, with s ting stics, 5 5 d new left Roston irguments Dr rea f e mude suc? the amilinr ne- untram the of ti was wonld repara- ey on itic de ontent arguments whicl mands on the commission ing themselves with ARS SO see) of proo anes to pay anything King and Queen of Spain Return After Pleasant Visit, Florence, Ttaly, Nov, 24.—King Al- fonso and Queen Victoria of Spain ar- rived from Romé at 9:80 o'clock this morning for their promised visit to Florence, They were met at the rail. way station by Luigi Federzoni, min. {ister of the colonies, the local offfciais and other prominent residents Notwithstanding the bad weather which prevalled a great crowd assem- bled and gave an ovation to the Spanish monarche as they drove | through the strests to the DPitt] pal- ace, The town is gally decorated and tfumphal arches have been aracted At various prominent intersections. they i two ot vears ] agendu Trade Faperts trom Local reparation o hey tnvited 1o Give Addresses on Voea. nake ne tonal Subjects o Fmployed Boys ular shop talke on different vo \ cots wil e first will be Puture frossed by ather making making and auto Guide Posts of Business REECHAKS PI for Constipation C. W. VIVIAN, D. D. S, Tooth Fatractio s Ml il P A PN N-Raye Nitrons Ovide and Oxygen 205 WEST MAIN STREET E YOUR EYES EXAVINED AND GLASSES TITTED BY A. PINKUS Vyesight Specintist 300 MAIN &7 Pritain HA N RS Engraved Greeting Cards sved Greetin at o anti the last minute. Ok of bes wiful and mas and New nowcompcte, and there isample time for ve to give you our most careful attention and ADKINS o8 CHIL RCH <7, avsortr it Christ: eat's cards is crrice. R R R e e . | IDING along an unfamiliar road, you depend upon sign posts to guide you. Whether you're hitting he thank-you-mams in a flivver or soaring along in a costly car, they do their work equally well., ' Today, as you spend your money to fill your needs, arvertisements are waiting to direct you. They are the guide posts of business. They point the short, straight road to satisfaetion in buying. They will serve you well, whether yvou spend much or little, Do rou stop to read the advertiscements? They are published to tell you exactly where to go for what you want They lead you to values of which yoy would never lenow were they not there to guide vou. And remember that advertising always points out @ande of unquestioned value. When a store or manufac- tuwiing concern puts its name on goods and tells you about them, you may be sure that they are worth con- sideration. It does not pay to advertise unworthy mer- chandise. { Published hy the New Britain Herald in co-operation | with the American Association of Advertising Agencies 10,000 DISTRIBUTED DAILY THE HERALD HAS BY FAR THE LARGEST CIRCULA- TiON OF ANY PAPER PUBLISHED IN NEW BRITAIN - It is the Only Local Newspaper With An Audited Cirenlation { | Friends Reported To Be Starting Cam- paign To Make Him Govemor of sure the entire republican ticket, na- | FANCY BASKETS Made in China and Japan for Thanksgiving or Xmas—Select Yours Now 75¢ to HARDWARE The Herald today publishes the last (Copyright by Calvin Coolidge. Published Civilisation depends net only upoen the knowledge of the people, but | upen the use they make of it. If knowladge be wrongfully umed, civil- lzation commite sulcide. . The Individual may be ignorant and vicious. If soclety have learning and virtue that will sustain him. If so- olety lacks learning and virtue, it perishes. Education must give not only power but direction. It must minister to the whole man or it fails. Such an education considered from the position of society does not come from sclence, That provides power alone but not direction. Give a sav age tribe firearms and a distillery, and their members will exterminnate each other. They have sclenc I right, but misuse it. They lack ideals. These young men that we welcome back with so much pride did not go forth to demonstrate their faith in science. They did not offer their lives because of their bellef in any rule of mathematics or any principle of physiea or chemistry, The laws of the patural world weuld be unaffected by their defeat or vies No; they were defending their ide and those ideals came from the classics. This I8 pre-eminently culture of Oreces and Rome, Pas triotism with them was predomi- nant. Their heroes were thowe whe sacrificed themselves for thelr eoun- try, from the three hundred at Ther- mopyine to Horatius at the bride Their poete sang of the glory of d ing for one's native land, The or tions of Demosthenes and Cicero are pitched in the same high strain. The philosophy of Plato and Aristotie and the Greek and Latin classics true of the were the foundation of the Renals- | sance, The revival of learning Wwas the revival of Athens and Sparta and of the Imperial City. Modern sci- ence i their product. To be includ- ed with the classics are modern his. tory and litemature, the philosophers, the orators, the statesmen, and poets “Miiton and Shakespeare, Lowell and Whittier,—the Farewell Address the Reply to Hayne, the Speech a Gettysburg,—it is all these and more that 1 mean by the classics. They £1® not only power to the intellect, byt direct ita course of action. The classic of all classics Bible 1 do not underestimate schools of science and technical arts. They have a high and noble calling in min- istering to mankind. They arc im- portant and necessary. 1 am point. ing out that in my opinion they do not provide a eivilization that can stand without the support of the ideals that come from the classics. The conclusion to be derived from this position is that a vocational or technical sducation is not enough We must have every American citi- zen well grounded in the classical ideals. Such an education will not unfit him for the work of the world Did those men in the trenches fight any less valiantly, did they shrink any more from the hardships of war, when a liberal culture had given vision of what the great The discontent in i® the result of & A more liberal importance is the a broader confilet meant® modern Industry tao narrow outlook culture will reveal the and nobility of ' the work of the world, whether in war or peace. It is far from enough to teach our eiti- | zons a voeation. Our industrial sys- tem wiil break down unless it is hu- manized. There is gremter need for & liberal cuiture that will develop the whole man in the whole body of our citizenship. The day when & college ecucation will be the poftion of ail may not be so far distant as it e cms. We live in a republic. Our govern- ment i exercised through represen- Thelr course of reflection tatives |very accurate of public opinian and directed uniess from the | Auences, direct and indirect rom our institutions of learn- The laws of & public represent it 1d They are founded wupon pubiie opinton, and public opinion present time from in- come ne. has America up to the the drawn its inepiration classics. * ¢ Amherst, June 18, 1919 A Telegram Tloston, Muss., Sept Mr Samuel Gompers, President American Labor, New York City, N. ¥ Pepiying to your telegram, | have aiready refused 16 remove the police commisstoner of Boston. 1 did aot ppoint Wim. 110 can assume 50 Po. ‘sition which the courts would up- 14, 1919, 1 a i | action i= a | Where shall that be formed | that | in Vederation of | $6.00 Herbert L. Mills 336 MAIN ST. BACKGROUND OF CLASSICAL IDEALS CIVILIZATION'S NEED — COOLIDGE of a series of extracts from speeches and addresses by Calvin Coolidge which reflect his opinions on Labor, Capital, Politics, Law and Order, Peace, Business and Government. They were made while he was President of the Senate of Massachusetts and Governor of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. They were compiled with his permission and published under his personal copyright. BY CALVIN COOLIDGE by arrangement with Johm F. Dills Ce.) people have with their of hold except what the in him. He speaks only volce. The right of the police Boston to affiliate has always bheen questioned, never granted, is now prohibited. The suggestion of Prea- ident Wilson to Washington does not apply to Boston. There the po- lice have remained on duty, Here the Policemen’'s TUnion left their duty, an action which President Wil- son characterized as a crime against civillzation. Your assertion that the commissioner was wrong cannot Justity the wrong of leaving the city unguarded. That furnished the opportunity, the criminal- element furnished the action. There iIs no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any- time. You ask that the public safe- ty again be placed in the hands of these same policemen while they con- tinue In disobedience to the laws of Massachusetts and in their refusal to obey the orders of the police de- partment, Nineteen men have been tried and removed. Others having abandoned their duty, their places have, undér the law, been declared vacant on the opinion of the Attor- ney-General. T can suggest no au- fhority outside the courts to take further action. 1 wish to join and assist in taking a brodd view of every situation. A grave responsibility rests on all of us, You can depend on e to support you in every legal tion and sound poliey. I am equally determined to defend the seversignty of Massachusetts and to maintain the |authority and jurisdiction over her | publie officers where it has besn placed by the Constitution and law of her people, CALVIN COOLIDGE, Governor of Massachusetts, Support of Government 1 propose to support all those who are supporting their own gov. ernment with every power which the people have intrusted to me, There Is an obligation, inescapable, po less solemn, to resist all those Who do not support the government, The authority of the commonwealth can- not be intimidated or coerced. It | cannot be compromised. To place the maintenance of the public seeurity in the hands of a body of men who have attempted to destroy it would be to | flout the sovereignty of t laws the people have made, It s my duty ot | resist any such proposal. Those who would counsel it join hands with those whose acts have threatened to destroy the government. There I8 no middle ground. Every attempt to pre- vent the formation of a new police [force s a blow at the government. That way treason lies. No man has a right to place his own ease or con- venience or the opportunity of mak- ing money above his duty te the | state, This is the cause of all the peo- ple. 1 call on every citizsen to stand by me in executing the oath of my office by supporting the authority eof the government and resisting all as- sauits upon it. A proclamation, 1919, | ! In between the times they dine Children say our milk » “fine.” ~The Farmer Boy. There’s nothing that will assist more in keeping them in sturdy health than plenty of rich, nourishin wholesome milk — United Milk Co’s milk. Try our Grade A (nursery milk) for your baby. MILK I8 YOUR BEST FOOD United Milk Co. 49 Woodland St. New Britain | | | | i |

Other pages from this issue: