New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 18, 1924, Page 6

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)

New Britain Herald| COMPANY “ Excepted) HERALD PUBLISHING Ispucd Dally (Sunoay At MHerald Bldg, 67 Church Street. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $8.00 a Yea $2.00 Thice Monthe T5¢ a Month. Entered at the Post Bfice ar New Britaln| TELEPHONE CALLS ness Officc orial Rooms 925 826 wedum ‘n il presa to adyertisers. Ass e publicati nat othetsw also local ted Press. usively ertitied v of al Memter of The Associated Pre o in 1d news pub- Mahod herein. on. ganization | adver- based upor \sures pro- newspaper dls- natior and Member Audit iwean of Cir B. C. Is national e ewsrepers and n both New Times Entrance A BOOST FOR THE CITY Every loyal Nev man ar woman, whether e knows a baseball bat, ought stick from g it i real boost for Con-| to been association June 23 nt ¥ necticut Gol innouncems 18 not have been urse of one of was not in have city s fine a cou as any would not lid the eity 1 ir it tract as It he AS to th is und it does, 8o there you | who will attend | the 1d spectators, the and t such bunch people all over golfers call players, such peop and somn state, ose think they are, ntative men, over the They bloated or any other sort o lders, it is true, but as| run they will be pretty sub- u general stantial people who have ance to sometimes strenuous open air Over two millions o findi not walks tonic sules, yOeurs pass g larity is extending, appreciation democratic game, employer g tremendous for the employe who can not afford all every time Le drives off u e mploye ¢ outdr Am it will i the years, As today the cagerly for t be the span o little ¢l are walting t wil ball around the able to Kkr « golf vacant lots, as well as enjoy at game base b %0 there waiting millions of aduits, play on public links and those members of vager time to « when they wil to get out into th me game And the ¢ r of this ci with adow club h the splendid professional, Valentine o6d is mainly respe more visitors to the ci rough the summer to practice upon the course i be just one mor A WORTHY OBSERVANCE rds nians ir y came or t came those g freedo land ¥ oyaity to the U found freedom proud of t f through its peoy women; cducating itse the schools that flourish Jage: through its ¢ sities, some thetn gimilar institutions in any other land; using its own money as ‘means of ex change which high of much older than commands a ‘ple of the eountry product in great Quantities, Lithuania, too, 1s not getful of its army, as yet necessary to every country, and its aviation fa fies are keepifig abreast of the To that o opes and another home of liberty, for- countr jent ' that | the | that may—note the use of the “may"” | of T.ondon and says that the price; exporting goods which the peo- with its | ¢ 5,000,600 ene million } people, tife in America who have reason to have ©owarm their hearts for s of their blood may | Lithuania be look with pride. Yes W lwas a| greut day for them and appropriate remembrance of it was calculated to inspire the Lithuanians in this land | f this countr d Lithu- good citizens of that, to be good citizens those who have remained in aniu are JUST THINK OF 1T cou know a'l about the ng that goes with a properly | somewhere, But outtitted cloud, It's there » tradition. it does it peeking out from We will may be smudge of the oil affair, that the silver lin in I subsequent clean politics in its relation to busi- W up of I that it will all be do it no such thing ma if, feel it} of this scanda worth whils wi hecause ever happens again, But, well—erooks are crooks and we not npmnim.-“ ¢ that the entirely ough, most of us, to beli world will ever be free of | crooks and in some way said persons will find their way to Washington now nd then, in spite of the developments | coming out, and in spite of s doubtful punishment are more or le —tollow. But just think of this: England be-| lieves the Teapot Dome investigation; and the manner it the | American people, good | Now what do you think of | and it is view by promises things, that? It may be remembered an unpleasant memory—that gentleman the island the America had| valuable | namely how to colonies. Quite | throwing Morning PPost agitation | is not aristocratic conservative little clared that the had, treat her some of across dec B she water taught most lesson properly the oUqUELS NOW comes the ever along same lines of in this country over the Teapot Dome | “a healthy | of the the United | by inslsting investigation is the Ameriean people to make for democracy oil sign of determination States safe its rulers have perfectly an * Mort 5 on to eriticize over the same newspaper hands, its own people by | gland cannot of go¢ ing similar scandals in 1 saying that the paper p contrasting the cagernvss prominent Americans to investigate the support they | nd the | | supine | the issues, and receiving from the publi pathy fight for ration w whieh the a0 government wus received in thisf gland) country Now tha B indeed, and| s that's very nice Morning promincat Ameri- | the Post for nent to the comp nxious to make this And ns" who ar country wi teunt ¢ them in hi t please, oh, | the i« tongue if you plgas compliment there carty sup- s, not in| But ¢ way port not coms Ay pletely the “eagers Americ investigas | and tory | mueh | Rea- well vdvertised product e A VOTES ON BOK PLAN Bok n cast up to the Over 500,000 yotes on t peace e middle play 0 cent Eighty-se per In this Febru favored tat plar s i whic favor owed the smallest majori s Wisconsin President nunciation s, but also people ing to do that other na- ference then it cam- party na- 1ent s League appeal to n hey ow, short- sighted people, do not see that, words Amer- necossarily or no words, the longing of the jen for pea n people under- | and has stronerr as the| Europe’s siruggle since burned their coming through internations standing, was alive in 1920 grown and stronger spectaele « war has bes nto cugteract the effect this overwhéim- ' good, { to the level of this argument it would | Marks the Fall of the opposition. |Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN. ing vote In favor of some peace pian, wmedioere or faulty has as evi- dence of the desire of the people, by resorting to the childish argument | that probably peopte favoring Bok' plan voted more than once. “It is quite many the Uneasy lies the fist that holds a they say in ef-| bribe. feet, “that advocates the t ble League of Nations voted morn‘ wi And so, of course, the vote | Were one to descend possible,” Sara 3 s | i 0F Apparently a party can be in power | thout being in eclover, | than once. —_— means nothing.” The democratic view is that X he ¥ to recall the flash in the eves| o0 womon peither love nor fear of Senator Medill MeCormick, ror in- | their husbands, and others dress sen- stance, as he spoke oné day in the | sibly. privacy of his oflice to a personai| R g As a term of reproach, “scofflaw” friend, and denounced the League of riond, and denounced the Leagye Of}) o rrusti“on “grabfunds.” Nations. It would be casy to imagine that violent opponents of the associa- with many times -and yet, out d or not, Ah, well; the republicans didn't gm‘ tion of league id flashing, @ fair crack at the war profiteering. angry ¢ voted man against any of all the votes cast, duplica 13 per cent opposed the plan. Those who long for peace are not| good haters; they are not the dishon-| est of the world. The violent are chief- | Iy to be found among men who allow clouds of prejudice, partisanship and hatred to obscure the glorious goal of | visioned, such plan has its little avhen three of ¢ in smoking. “Close-car comfort drawbacks, however, f the occupants pers peace for which all clear right thinking men and women long. - B Self-made,men are yet in an imper- | feet state. They haven't eliminated | the nol | DENBY RESIGNS oil investigating com- ble: He was rich and one of the| mittee took a recess for ten days. To- | gocjal elect, but he was full of race day comes the resignation of Seeretary | prejudice, Navy Denby. Conneet the two | — 5 o is!| The church row is petering out, no- acts if you like; declare that there is ; out, fnets 4 “"‘_ s " JOGHK 5 5 | body having been able to think up a no connection if that 18 your inclina-| g4, slogan. : The fact remains that with the P s [ business by the| And so we become what we cat.| ce for in-| Well, daughter is pure in heart if | eats onions. Last week the of the tion. halting of committee came the chan formal, man-to-man talks; the chance to decide what was best for the party | the republican and the| chance to gentlc persuasion to| ve President Coolidge and candidate nomination Cool- ssing position. | routine when a| to forget Heroism is ppens man gets exeited enough that he is afr party use sts it- | other | The germ of war first manif self as a convietion that the fellow is up to something, the idge from a ve It will be interesting to other developments come the will be attitude when it resumes its work, | Grant that President Coolidge took! - { when, quoting the - for republtran what | note in the recess as it! the be of investigation committed what will intercsting to note of that committee the proper course precedent previously laid down and President Cleves | dictated to by sce in Hint to girls: So live that you never will feel constrained to assure the re- | porters that the brute told you he wasn't married, o . Let him think women silly, if hel will. He isn’'t the Kind they are trying to please, anyway, followed by former land, he senate and refused to ac Secretary refused to be the ita prejudgment by resolution, Grant guarding the president prompted his refusal to re- immediately, as the official to President | of Denby that u jealous of prerogatives of a You can spell labor without a capi- tal, but you can't run a labor govern- ment without it When officials discover scandal they usually say but this time it sounds more Ha, ha!” move the ! ATy well as a desire to grant bis day in court. Give ! Coolldge the highest act, And having done this consider | the man, Denby, his popularity, his| reputation for heing a man of integri- | motives for his| | like live that you need never tell b your friends that you expect to come ! : papy | DACK to Amerlea a8 soon as your| Coolldge knew Secreldry | po. i bermits, He that a personally was the predicament so Denby thoroughly know LS Correct this sentence It's a thrill. ing said “but 1 haven't turned to the back to sce how it comes out man so well tked popular because hd was not sort hook," she, of a mah to place in a who had stood by him. had by him, President Coolidge man of whom all his os speak well when dis- Could President What expeet one Coolldge stood of would { 25 Years Ago Today § Faken irom fleraid of that date o338 II0TTNIsIIIILIIIILIIININILILILILILLILILL,, While working at Rhodes ice house | yesterday, Frank Fagan had & finger | caught between two cakes of ice and | smashed it badly, | The work of equipping John Boyle's new block with electric wires, lights | and other elecirical apparatus, h.mi cn given to the New Bngland En- gineering Co. Goal Tender John Burgess was standing in fromt of the Russwin this morning when a mass of snow weigh- such a man official associ cussing hig personal gualities? clse ex President Coolldge or anyon pect that such a man ‘would return Would the president he had to against him Secretary for good? cxpect that, take action Denby would remain stubborn in the pproval and fall to | evil after refused race of general dis do the thing which and done, returns the nt did him? Hardl Denby's when all is sald favor the presi- ae Secretary action is abso- his 1t reputation for being a utely sharacter. sustaing 1tely in chara toof and landed within a few inches | { ol him, | James Talcott of York is the | And that what ticians, keen guest of his brother, John Talcott, of this city, expocied he would de. Premdent| "o, ook iayere and plasterers held a smoker la evehing at which there was plenty singing and speech- | making w. H the horse did crous attempt Joseph M. Halloran anger of Court Charted Oak, } A., was presented with a jewel of that office at exercises in Hanna's armory « fast Main street last night good fellow. wise poli- human is exactly o students of na- Coolidge is a keen politician Hoover Aidito Talk on “Simplified Practice” Britain Industrial council Arthur E. Wasl! sak to the at the next Wednesday at 5 subjeet simplified Hoover Ce of but | vig- | thrown Main make out street very Emilcy Wes not 1o The New a is to have ington to Foote of run away 4 foremer past chief | A A is Practice Proposal of operation Mr. Foote working tary Herbert Hoover on a simplify industrial and practice. As a result of & survey by thie division of the U. 8. department of commerce it i# found that the pro posed system will decrease stocks production costs, selling expenses, ar misunderstandings. At the same tim: it will increase the turnover, employ ment gtability, prompiness of deliver foreign commevres, production quality 16 distributor plar commercis Secr: P e | Observations on The Weather Feig Fore England— somewhat cold i north shington, 1. C it New Tuesday; fre s n fair and ght; profit producer, and veed #uch an idea has but a hieh ¢ nd northeast practical me function had Hoov business New York Fair tonight and somewhat colder tonight and northeast winds e Conmecti Fair tonight and somewhat eolder tonight d northeast winds Jitions An area of W pre the Guif coast musing i rainy weather as far north An area of high over upper Michigan pleasant weather in and New England, through i e found stch t retary agency through his implified Practice atready working isios Leen created lepartmer Seventy groups are this plan under the super government cy. Any_ind equipped either in material or p nel for this system of simplified prac tice may have the foll backing of sev. | © national organizatio through | * coop: of the divisior s simplified practice, In addition to the above Mr. Foote the program music, boxing, gymnastic specialties and refreshments. The sales units of the local factories are invited to this mecting, as well as the foremen, this subject will be of especia . to them. sday ort Jay notth a Vg stry not esh ondy a Tennesses contral pres- i the The eral the A producing jon o taik by | Lake jor Inciudes | 1 v states but continues low in the north- or Conditions for this vicinity, | fair and continued cold followed by | C'oudiness and slowly rising tempera- ture on Tuesday. favor MRS, ROOSEVELT IN MOSCOW Moscow, Feb. 18—Mrs. Roosevelt, | widow of the late president, and Ker- | mit Roospvelt have arrived here from ¢ the Trans-Siberian rail- | weste it Americans fiest generation wiil continue eide the leag issne yogre—~Tiinidad (Cor) Picke of the to de- One wonders e for days. e advt hd | Kendrick were being MAYOR DISPLEASED BY NEW SALARY DISCUSSION | Finance Board Has Already Complet- ed Work On Budget, Paoneséa Points Out, Chairman A, F. Eichstaedt of the common council committee on sal- aries has called a meeting of the com- mittee for tomorrow evening at 8 o'clock to considér the wisdom of presenting an entire new set of salary recommendations at Wednesday eve- ning’s council meeting, The chairman explains that gencral displeasure has been expressed at the council’s action on salaries this year. Mayor Paonessa expressed surprise and disapproval when he was inform- ed that such a meeting has been called. The finance board has already settled upon the amount to be spent on salaries this year and if increases are voted an overdraft cannot be avoided ‘unless the budget is gone over or some jobs are done away with, Last year a similar condition arose. The council voted an increase to the clerk of courts and the mayor dis- missed a male clerk in the office of the board of assessors to make up the money necessary to pay the increase. BUTLER ADMITS HE IS BEING CLOSELY WATCHED Drinl Sa; “One And I'm a Goner,” He , Commenting On Being Shadowed Philadelphia, Pa., Feb., 18, — Di- rector of Public Safety Butler would not elaborate today upon assertions he made yesterday that he and Mayor shadowed by operatives of a private detective agency in an effort to “‘get something™ on the administration, “If T ever take one drink, I'm a goner!” the general declared, “And if the mayor ever touches a drop, he's a goner, too, and the whole adminis- tration. Whenever I leave the office, a man picks up my trail ‘When Mayor Kendrick went to Pittsburgh, he was shadowed every step of the way there and back. “The me people this, I have learned, sent word arvound the day I took office that $100,000 would be paid the man or woman who would furnish condlusive proof of a lapse on my part from the straight and narrow path.” The general added that “one would be surprised to know the sources of the matter, They are respected in this city,” he asserted, *“and whose business we are daily interfer. ing. They are the men who thought the police never could touch them,"” URGES CO-OPERATION responsible fer Haynes Calls Upon Well-to-do People | To Observe Dry Laws And Thus et Good Example, Chicago, IPeb. 18,~~A plea for great. or coope ion of law enforcement agencies in admimstering the Volstead act and for strict observance on the part of the people, especially the well-to-do and influential citizens” as an example to the others and to aliens was made by Prohibition Commis. sioner Haynes in an address today be- tore the citizenship conferenco, Mr. Haynes referred to the action of Mayor Dever in cleaning up the “wel” spots in Chicago as a demon- stration of the “efffcacy of proper atlon of local and federal offi 8" and declared the work done in Chicago and Philadelphia *is but an illustration of what can be done in the most difficult sections when an honest, sincere cooperative effort at enforce. ment is made “It is beginning to be realized,” he declar “that the responsibiljty for enforcement is a joint respon: Mr. Haynes characterized “the well- {to-do and influential” citizens us n.«»; EVERETT TRUE “more dangerous” of mnon-observers, and he was not so much concerned, he maid, about the problem of liquor 8 | consumption among the other classes, | g a hundred pounds fell from the |gince “the bootieggers boast that their | clientele is from among the elite,” If the: “so-called leaders” feel them- selves above the law, he added, “they become just as dangerous to the life of the nation as the most undesirable types which burrow from beneath and seck to undermine it from below.” EIGHT ARE HONORED Honorary Degrecs Are ferred by University of Pennsylva- nin on Febroary 22, delphia, Feb, 1% Honorary s will be conferred upon eights distinguished members of widely di verse profesgions by the University of Pennsylvania at special university day exercises in the Academy of Musie, February 22. John Bassett Moore, # only American on the permanent court of international justice of the Jeague of nations, is scheduled to deliver the principal address The recipients of the honorary de- grees will be Richard Beatty Mellon, president of a Pittsburgh bank, and director of the federal bank of Cleveland; Cyrus H. K. Curtis, pub- isher Charles Merrill Hough, judge of the United States eircuit court in New York city; John Bassett Moore, Frank Aydelotte, president of Swarthmore college: John Henry MeCracken, president of Lafayette college; Clar- Stanley Fisher, ®urator of the Kgyptian section of the wuniversity muse hers, and James Taggart Priestley, medical practitioner. The degree of doctor of laws will be Eonferred on the first four; that of doctor of letters on Dr. Aydelotte and Dr. McCracken, and that of doctor of reserve enee Best butter 6le 1b. Russell Bros.— advt. PALACE—Starting with | T NSO A T O G Let the THOR Itself - Convince You ‘W hat Thor is doing for the three-quarter million Thor homes is of more impor- tance, and sells more machines, than anything we can say. : . Ask your Thor neighbor what Thor means to her — then come in to try the Thor yourself. Thor could not have ac- quired its dominant leadership if it did not solve the laundry problem in the best way possible. You'll be surprised how much it will save you in money, clothes and work Come in for the facts today. $5.00 Down—Balance in Easy Payments THE Spring & Buckley ELECTRIC (0, ————toe aboard the steamer Cleoncan by use of a breeches huoy and a line, off inciuding two women and eight of the Mantla, Feb. genlo Mendes | opew, It is regapded unlikely that and eight eonstabulary soldiers under | o vessel omn be saved. She appears hisreommand and 35 religious fana- | frnly grounded on the rock and mud. ties, including two of their leaders, | he Columbia struck yesterday while vere killed in a fight at Balete, AgU- | trving to enter this harbor. She was san province, according to a consta- | ound trom San Irancisco for Port- bLulary report received here today, . eral other fanaties were wounded, - e GOING TO BOSTON? Stop nt HOTEL HUNTINGTON 07 Huntington Av just o few minutes from downtown theaters and stores cines wecommodations Jor moderate rates, Single rooms with bath $2.50 and §3.00, Double rooms with bath, £3, 81 and 5500 vesterday after illed on Both Sides In New Filipino Fight | 44 K . a took 30 passcngers, |Trying to Take Off Crew { | From Stranded Steamship 1. Marshfield, Ove., 1"eh, 18,—Prepara- [tlons are under way to attempt the | 1temoval from the steamer Columbia, | ashore on Coos Bay Jettics, of 25 of- | ficers and members of the crew left BY CONDO OH, Jackson! HERE You are | MErs'sS A PLUMBING BiLl FOR You IN | THIS MORNING'S MAl L tlity.” | WHY, THIS Bilee IS MADE QUT TO You, MR, TRy, = YES, IT'S MADE ouT To M BuUT I'S CoOMnG )y c, U OUT OF You Il YOURE TME ONG THAT PERSISTS N THROWING. CIGARET BUTTS INTO is rising in the southern |science on Drs. Fisher and Priestley. | | Next Sunday MABEL NORMAND in “THE EXTRA GIRL” One of the Best This Year!

Other pages from this issue: