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6 [ New Britain Herald! HERALD PUBI 1 Daily (Sanaay Blag., 6 )MPANY Exoept b St HING O Tssue At Tierald Chu: arn $8.00 a Yeu! [H TION RATES Posr 0o | Mase Aail Matter JFPHONE CALLS medum ‘n pross Jter of The Ascocinted Press, e-publ Member Audit Feoean of Cirenlation, ures to both naticnal ang sers, New Times itrance Hotaling's Niws ade Station This w CITY MEETING BOARD cek the mayor will probably on of the city nd 2dopt- council without 4 red the xation, be Tt will be the board-— the nd that the import- by wil rd-—that there- don't ust one mor: sourd some- in the 1 { the city, The com- session will one oppor- ty for members of the board to to make e esture of interest to take care of their aifairs, that budget ind passed almost There raised, But even tho sueh ity the possil ity mecting. hoard end, even they may it but mentary toward thosc hos d city mecti ored them by their ve g boar amount anything. beginning should by made now; interest shonld he shown in its sexsions and out of that evidenes of interest would grow wise, intelligent fon, The eity meeti | would become what it was intended to be—a group o ron the wate people of the eity, 1o « actions o mmon POLITICS, NOT POLICY Added evid would be sacrifice political expedic 1geous 1o were be Dome reserce tion existed whea Dobe men reser ™ #criousness of th age. Bot the weight i that Would quickly empts The ground area ma i, but the oil will Bow o an o re is sot associatior e msm——— rin the_ vicinity one pointed ont that under contr. t loss transport the oil and f government tanks The crnment’s shave in ich the. lesse¥would wuild, ‘rovidlence Journal says, further siderations ' To Sinclgir nd Doheny government reserves ground turned d royalty. pri in the 1 xpli 150 Were on over It har- is that a bad the govern- con- d that specially trary, it course, imp gement party W vantuge one hinted tha Teapot if Co. However that may be, ing to e said for those whg arguc at a naval basc ul for in the ground, sourd of no nt need of fuel oil might not day drill- tractor in the Dome field 11d not s can- celied his. there ti ntention « t il in t arieve is somet is abviously use geney while oil fa from the sc use to ships in urg What is more, the be found there if some ed for. an cmer- Intention to defend the leases there is none, of course—or to defend any- | who had with regarding one anything to de underhand The nature of the ever, and thesimportance secret, tion ases, how- fact the nt's having heen injured by asized as a matter the party them of the there is a about questio governme them, is again emp been s has in to which en- vor to purge a political of “let the chips—or heads— they may.” suspicion, fall where IVE NAME James M the presidency, A SUC The mention ¢ possible Cox, as a contender for democratic nomination for the ght of the present attitude sug- sts tiou, the of this country toward of people socintion between nations of d, the avowed intention nent lasting, w that | The and this is no boost- world, with sccuring perm and an expression, by the become 80 stereotyy ve to Abandoned, stunds for one thing the . hoom in the minds of yeople—a closer of ng At the time he conerete To it there And 1920 there the ran in was a ob. ised n, also, the adow of nt Wilson dimming, in idea The | light more the late ¥ I many eyes, the splendor of the There is no such shadow today come @ of it perhaps the ow has be ¥ which, although ft brings out its of hint hair's the plan he stood for without a willingness to vary onc breadth the same n, makes all the ym it, nevertheless and by more broad features impressive Former Governor Cox has remained to the L people who were for it ir But M itive man than wa Nations ldea 1920 are Cox, the would not stand oyal Ag U The r it today James a Jona ¥ President Wilson the v nations merely bec Ay of any assoclation with planned in exactly ed 1t should be ar- on was hot Har nations’ 1920 candidate g was for ‘association of 10 be pre- a careful ch to appro nations, a feeling of the way resuit that would United States uation surre ering any Later develop- | power. v incident, in- didate ief in this ited that the w dead eguntry " ? ves | ment can get along all right even if | | to make | probably most of us will do that littie | have gone to some trouble to become {a greater appreciation of our duty as work. are | .of Think “scofflaw’ will careful pedestrians * was invented, not a course how “jaywalker’ rted that this is new con sion, but it is dead certain that few motorits knews of it Scerctary | 5I¢€ A he-man is one who leaves home against his will merely fo show ‘his | wife that she ean't boss him. Automobile Club of New that Adam, of the Haven, is reported to have sdid he did not know of this allowance, all of us are thankful to him and to motor vehicle department for the to the Connecticut | the revenue department for | that the information and office of us know, “upon inquiry, such is the case the dark sce that this state were as- Now if we want ot look { the motor vehicles in side o matter we can Schla mtisver 358000000 15t pantin : ° t) Mere coal has fewer heat upits than' and i the adjectives that sizzle up through tion and license fees paid |the radiators when dad . finds the than $4,000,- | furnace fire out. town where the owners lived, that regist to the state were more and so the difference in the fed- | Let us not take it too seriously. official has even the tax concession. eral tax collected in this state as of | 4 March 15 « quarter of a million dollars if all the | o owners availed themselves of their| We are afraid Butier knows little right to deduct the town taxes and | of physiology. He tells cops to use s paid-on account of their | their heads in making a pinch. probably would be at least fo as the report has it. But we'll | ate, | will try to bear up under it in the et i A A government of checks and bal- ances is all right, except that nobody We | knows who will get the checks. belief that the state and the govern- | —— | Even when thé meek inherit the do avail ourselves of this chance |€arth, some will be too proud to get we And | between the plow handles. our income tax smaller. thing. Year after ye: notice the news y that many have ap- | papers. Next|’ month, some eighty are | seeking to be naturalized. We are apt to glance at the news item and pass| .., cat without bribing somebody to | it by \\-114) little thought. It does not|give back your hat, impressms having anything to do with | us personally, nor does it suggest an thing in regard to these people who | rowe coming regula; plied for citizenship for instance A hick town is a place where you| | Science explains everything except | why a cop will pass a man going forty miles an hour to arrest onc going | thirty. cogs in the machine which is our| country | But the fact that such do regularly, in great numbers, 1o What we can't understand is how | wives got the heavy work about the Vi housce done before flattery was invent- b |ed, take out citizenship papers should in- | terest us in more than a casual way, and the fact does show something in regard to many at least, of those who not born citizens of the United With the knowledge of these born outside of should come to us people Doubtless th were high-fiyers in | Newton's day who never quite forgave | him for inventing the law of gravity. \ R S The smaller the town the greater the conviction that righteousness con- sists in doing stupid things you don't wish to do. Correct this T;tvm'v: “This is a 44,” sald she, “but the lines. of it are | very clever and” will make you look | | slender.” were States. applications by people thé United State citizens, since this privilege came to us without effort on our since we, primarily, should therefore be the energetic guardians of the privileges of citizenship, We should realize that these pros- peetive citizens may have had to work to us €\ LTTIVPPIVIIVVIIIIIPTOW Michael Lynch, a young man ém- yed by P, & F. Corbin, met with and painful accident this |morning. His right hand became caught in a gear and the thumb and forefinger wi crushed. Twenty "young friends of Harry | Needham gathered at his home at 64 | Lincoln street last night in honor ‘of his birthda After supper was serve ed, the evening was spent in playing | games, The young folks report a first | class time. Harry received many |beautiful presents, [ The Adirondack Bear and Gun club of Hartford held a banquet in the | And if this thing called citizenship | Russwin last evening. After the feast | be jealbusly | the members took possession of the prominent men part and most ULLHL8880888808888890088 0 '3 25 Years Ago Today hard for something that came ken irom flerald of that date wllhl-uL'v‘Norl. Often the evidence of appreciation by others of the value of something we not herctofore valued highly, emphasizes that value in our own eyes—and citizenthip in the United States is a privilege the v of which is not always appre- until it is lost, except by who have The that many seek this privi- have a ue clated fully those to work for it knowledge 1 gdining 1t only after considerable year after year, in some cascs ef- fort, should %o Increase our apprecia- tion to our birthright it The the is of value should | card room and played whist until mid- | night. It was confidently expected that an elevator would be installed in the hos- pital the past week, but the work for | looked at some unexplained reason has been - ag ¢ o postponed, Those interested hope to Pomething that should inpire this improvement in the near fue up to the citizenship. | they take that privilege as H. Mertiman, one of the largest | a matter of course. But if all citizens | peach growers in the vieinity of Shut- " tle Meadow, stated that the pessimis of e (e s us ttle the United States thought as little | £9 S E8OR, BT UM L1 ot thel of the honor of citizenship as do they, country woyld not hold good in ”1‘5‘ then indeed would citizenship section. Hd aid that the crops prom ittle—it would b2 a thing of no value, now the is not guarded, figuring in publie, are citizens the slightest andals before Jut there that they ever posscssing them to evidence themselves as live ideals of Probably mean | dreamed of selling | 'Says It Always Was a Means, and \removed from thoughts of aggression JO MILLERAND DEFENDS RUHR OCEUPATION “Not an Aim : Paris, Speaking at the inauguration of the new building of the Paris chamber of commerce today President Millerand said that “the oc- cupation of the Ruhr always was for us merely & means of obtaining pay- ment and never an aim in itself,” Continuing the president said: “We carnestly desire the coming of the hour when the negotiations devised to fix simultaneous dates for the pay- ment of our claims and the evacua- tion of the Ruhr shall have succeed- ed. If France is the furthest possible und conquest nevertheless she intends to claim what is due her and has de- cided to obtain it." President Millerand told Dbusiness men that they were the best qualified to repulse the economic offensive which has succeeded the military one. ‘Balancing expenditures and receipts by a safe and sanc public economy is the remedy for the present situation, There must be no new expense which is not covered by ¥rench recelpts, The needs of the treasury necessitated the ereation of a floating debt which must be reduced as soon as possible, first by regular and steady reimbursements to the bank of France by the state of those funds advanced, and second by the consolidation of the greater part of the floating debt itself. “We may face the battle engaged against our currency without anxicty as to the result. Reduce, save—these two words contain our entire econom- fe policy. It is neither in Paris nor Brusscls that the printing press will | be called to the rescue as an instru- ment of liberation. We expect our salvation from our.labor and savings alone. In an economic war as in any other war morale is the main weapon and we shall mot prove inferior to our destiny.” ise to be the best this year that they But the ideals of citizénship are not |have ever been about here. left in the hands of such men to be red at as they sneer at the eredu- __————'i et preserces m e gt || ObS€rOations on s The Weather their 26,~~The weather the fololwing | lous * mass of born in this coun- American ideals and Were it not for coming to try—in American standards the Ieb, issued this citizenry stranger Washington, here and rec chance ive, ¥ iving the storm w‘?‘ would - 1 warning of the Amer warning: south ordered on Flori- Jacksonville and m., and northeast i Virginia to Boston 10 a. m., of intensity central immediately Algbama coast, will move northeastward with a further increase in intensity, This will probably be & severe storm along the entire Atlane aboard mass s confiden hosta o storm scoffers, and 1 soulh of the Am pow om the Itis u rican peaple to ir citizenship does me Plue » 18 native bor 1 all ULy southern “New Eng- | tonight and Wednesday, heavy; not much temperature, Increasing winds, reaching | and Wednesday of us who ar Forecast for citizens of | land now who have become probably becoming ange t and northeast tonight p high the ideal of rican citizens fir a ip, that it may Facts and Fancies HY ROBERT Gt LEN vgr- nd asing | Wing gale foree coust Snow tonight and ¥ becoming heavy ot much change in tem- asing northeast winds ing gale force tonight morning The southern distubs oped in intensity duf- ours and is now cen= Alabama. It has rainy weather from ard to New York eontinned in the the Lake The tem- in ail the Wednesday ere e peratur t 24 Eves Vabie: ighted to st and unwashed ing tistricts, slowly for this vicinity, rising tem- snow or rain. litions faver owed by od Associated Publications:- Delineator, Designer, Everybody’s, Adventure, ; L 4 What The Hardware Dealer Reads GOOD' HARDWARE coriteins no market re- ports, no convention notfes, no write-ups, no empty theories, no windy advice, no dreams, no hokum, What it does contain is honest prac- tical selling talk on how to move the goods from the back room out through the front door at a profit, Your advertisement in GOOD HARDWARE " full page space will reach every dealer and every jobber in the country every month for less than }4c¢ each.’ L With 45,000 Circulation Reaches Them All l.’mge-beOmei: Do YOU. DRIVE A CAR BEARING ' THE W 1713232 AND WHENIYOU: PARK THE CAR THE CURB Do You LEAVE A BIQ'wHOUN ON THE!SEAT TO| o GQUARD ; THE ;0UTEIT £(® ———— BECALSE YESTERDAY,AS T AA338D CLHIE TO YouR CAR, THIS HOUND, WITH A BLOOD* CURDLING - BARK" MADE A LGUN\IJGE AT MZ":PQCG QNOD’ RIGHTENED FIVE YCARS OF UrE ouv ;E 1 MY FIRST [MPULSE WAS+TO BRAIN HIM, BUT ON SECOND THOUGNHT I’ REFLSETED THAT THIS WORLD SUFFERS FROM A SHORTAGE " or BRAINS So X .DECIDED ™ HUNT UP Tha: OWNER. It The World At Its WOrstf Hot Potatoes! ~Tile ) GETS A NICE LARGE SuCe CULENT MOUTHTUL Alle READY ON HI5 TURK ONGLE RAPIDLY ACROSS THE OPENING PECIDES ANVTHING 15 BET* TER THAN THIS AND SWALLOWS BITE SHIFTS BITE BACK POPS T IN AND AT ONCE GUICKLY TROM ONE CREEM DRAWS N 15 BREATH SHARP LY WITH A WHISTUNG SOUND L3 CLADs NAPKIN TO MOU™M © GLARES AT WIFE Who AND GROANS HEAVILY JUST REMARKED THAT Se WARNED HiM THE POTETOLS WERE AWFULLY MY &S FOR A MINUTE ThefS A LONG COOL DRV COOLING HIS TONGUE WATER. , WAITS TOR TEN MINUTES TOR © McClure Newspaper Syndicate