New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 27, 1924, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tsruefl Dally (Sundey Exoppted) At Herald Bldg. & Church Strest, BUBSCRIP] $5.90 a Tear, $2.00 RATES: Thiee Monthe 75¢ & Month Enteced at the Pom Offlee a1 Noew Hiitain as Becond Claxe Mall Matter PELEPIONE Rusiness Office Editorla) Roo; CALLS ceees 928 $26 medium The only profitable advertiaing room l’.’“r\]! open Memoer of The Assaciated Press. The Associated Press 1 o to the use for re-pualication of all nuws| credited to It o1 vot otheiwise crediten n this paper aud also local news bub- Mehed hereln. astvely evtitied | Member Audit Buiean of Circulution. The A, B. which ur orgumization and adver- aualysle of statistics are nsures pro- newspaper dls- national anu | 1 s oattona) €s newspapers tisers with e strictly honest circulation. Our circutatic based upon this audit. T tection against fraud 1o tribution figures to both local advertisers. sale @9liy New Stand, Times Eotrance | The Herald 1s on York at Hotaling's Square; Schultz N Grayd Central, 421 Los Augeles, Cal. i ews Stand, Street Arcade Station, | n EVENING SCHOLARS A class of fifty-three men and wom- 1 from the evening s to be held in the auditori- en will be grad schools at exerci Central Junior High school um next Tuesday evening. The event st who to those realize that and is of especial inter these men women “SUGGESTION” W pugilist to perhaps, stion as a means of furthe PUGILISTIC remained hurked frony 1he cur senseless as this young woman wus in the cuse that! 1t has of | Jas Just now brought out the serious- | make unconsciously ness of this menae anto-sugy In no way depre ing b ends, Suchgends, incidentally, | (i the youthtul are to win the pugilistic®heavyweght | pirits of the it ivls who lung for pleas ure, toi is the delighttul vight of | ehampionship of the world=—a praise- | youth Lo fong for excitement, one can | worthy ambition all will admit: an| not refram trom calling to their wt- pambition to which, will lend its aid | tention this tragic cuse, Where a young . with tremendous enthustasni, | womun hiumeless of any hint of for-] For you must know, gentle reader, | mether death because she that the great discovery of the power did the thing that scemed the obvious | of auto-suggestion hus been made. 'r..n; thit is " one to 8 in her temporarily un- | yourself you feel no pain, and pleasant predicament the pain is goud. Convinee yourselt | thut you are getting better every -h,\'[ 4 and every day you will be better, Mon- NO REAL UNCERTAINTY continuc who brought the| disclaimed any power in himsclf merely because e told ssuring selves of T | sicur Coue himselt Ti satisfactory, T1 hardwure ~ murket matter to our attention, | | | { indefinable element } of uneertainty” mentioned in reports | us to keep re our-| or the week on condition hardware situa- | our tion is shown only in the attitude of gois it himsell. buyers in the fact that orders continuc| gych eminent authoritics as Walter to be compuratively small althoush | camp, scizing upon the idea, declared enough to satisfy. more the BUBISLOUS | that one may achieve a desire The | readily it port is that the amount of construc- | ¢ne attempt. He says a ccrtain high inere: best feature of weekly ve- ane pictures the success of tion work underway is daily jumper, after two failurcs to clear the | ol 1!l Kinds of hard- | jar, gucceeded only on the third at-| him- ing the demands fc builders’ | | | serf ware products, particularly tempt after he had really scen h e cleared it. reasonuble that at a picture of 'uw-l.’ e just be- | winning a prize fight, and can actually d ot spring | gee his opponent stretched out at full and paragraphers were beginning '0! length, or doubled up as the case may get the gentle | pe upon the floor of the ring.at his scason, the snow storm struck us. And | fect, such fighter will undoubtedly be only a day or so ago there were whis- | fuspired to deliver a blow that will per the | bring these results so satisfactory to hardware tools as he approache: : bar, Jook- Again we ook (o the Weather | jne down upon it as disappointed | Thus it is twice within a short time. Along about | j¢ 4 man ga Sportsmen have been to say blizzard annive fore, the sun had spa in something about of bascball and golf, and paticat |, | | view will be obstructed by the box in ' | 3 |8 FOPPITITIII IR TTTPITIPIIT betore a législative committec today The biggest howl to “make it ex- clusive” 15 usually raised by the meni- ber who barely managed to slip in himself, WETHODISTS NEVER FORGET PATRIOTISH 'S0 Legion Delegation Is Told in' Allison Controversy Wi ¢ ‘- o~ ! C.a ‘ ko In the wet days a man could act as| Chicago, March 27.—The precedents host without keeping @ nupkin over |Of the past show that Methodists are his arm to wipe off the living room | peace-loving and peace |)|'qlnoling but tuble. | have never failed to come’ to the de- ! fense of flag and of civilization in time | of need, and there is no indication | that they will act differently in the | future, Bishop Thomas Nicholson of [the Methodist Episcopal church told la delegation of American Legion members calling on him. The Legion delegation came to dis- | cuss with the bishop the appearance | ot Brent Dow Allinson, a pacifist, be- fore an Epworth league meeting at The Legion protested al- to speak. Bishop Nicholson said he had been out of the city and had not investigated this | matter. |~ Replying to the guestion as to what “The box-of-| his oW attitude and the attitude of {the Mecthodist Lpiscopal church | Bishop Nicholson said that personally | he was not a pacifist and had never | had any sympathy with the sluckers | or with the draft-dod s. When our nation was in the war, he said, he | had done his utmost to help win it and had uniformly spoken words of encouragement for the soldiers. The bishop said that he was devot- ing his time and expected to give the very best of his influence to making future wars impossible ,and that the | prime business of the Christian church should be to make it impossible for is the jilted lover successful candi- sound like he The pri who cun p date and make means it the it recom- iyidimethyl- as a medicine. One syllable after cach meal and at bedtime, Speaking of polite the troubled ¢ thgt has lost i sofething now troubled oil. , “pouring oil on is a metaphor meanipg. We need to pour on the Correet this senteyee fice mun said, 'l feel it my duty to tell you that this is a side seat and your front'."” $890888808855808888888558 25 Years Ago Today g (Taken i{rom Herald of that date, Town Attorney Gaffney appeared AGAIN 27.—Syracuse PEACH CROP INSURE YALE LOSES Hartford, March 27.—Confirmatioh| ~New Haven, Murch was given today from the office here| defeated Yale two out of three gamfs of an insurance company whigh issue in the telegraphic bowling match last automobile insurance of reports from | night: The figures: the south that it had iInsured the| 842 901 peach crop of growers represented in| Yale (., . 843 878 the Georgia peach growers exchange. e e Weather, crop transportation and fire is four hazards are covered. The moon's surface times |the arva of Europe. QUALITY This is an- establishment where FIRST QUALITY MUST BE CONSIDERED SUPREME. In every piece of Jewelry offered by us there is charming beauty and quality combined. We sell the BEST at LOWEST PRICES. Or We DON'T Sell at all. z B. GEORGES & CO. in opposition to the bill to saddle the have done their work by devoting to self-development the hours which are to and little life—al- amusement in is no intention ordinarily that though there given thing mean to sug- gest that amusement has not its pro- vather drab existence the time per place in the the nes for it i The point to be to these of hard worker when cmphasized is that and who will be graduates some day, it has | | those undergraduates, of to do little il the and no woman should, of course, for- | all the the day | mental or physical, The body | seemed prime importance in orvder | extra work now | life just a to and | No man | better themselves for work in days to come, ever devote hours of to werk mind demand and should be relaxation, But theregre period in the Yives of all of us when it for that we erave pleasure, and to devote practically all our time to fitting our- | selves for later work, to the end that and che given some little while is wise to forget a may be bet- W pier in our work, because of the fact in that when the time comes we ter workers, more eflicient o hap- that we have labored hard, period now past, to make work « which, that would to be Especial praise is due the men and be graduated schools of the city, of self-denial and honest disclosed by their =8 in such schools, They are the men and | women who will succeed in life—a life | without difficult | never cease women who will from | the the Purpose evening tor evidence Buc which will be far happier and more because of the hours spent productive in our cvening schools, THAT INVITATION Reforving reluctantly the | to ong of horrible, but instructive, items of the a may ally blipd the ¥'8 news, only the. men fail by denger a person places himself or her- | to be Ampressed \nd this is especially true of she | women and girls—when he or invifation to get in and | tuke invites t pts that a little ride with the man who| em 1o as he passes in his motor (4 fay car. Herald « arrded the te o entirely | finding in the mud, accepted tractive oung who, woman her car the apparently proper offer of a to take her to a 1 te strar con ephone for aceounts of the tragedy tel woman by have been more na- to aceept this ine made in pees alimost any predicament in which she Almost any woman would Yot here, ed to go g sspect of he eagerness s . own on t sing girls to 1t Siliam. And e same cusen Loy | grea | keep prepuration, le est “bug™ of them all, the fisher- man was looking forward to next Tuesday with those far-sceing eyes that ¢ and sec the exact spot in the brook where he will be able to fill his baskct which perceive through underbrush nd growth and forest trecs probably he has forgotten in his haste. | | "I'hen yesterday the second disappoint- ment came, each small flake of snow anotlier tear in the fisherman’s, the goHer's and the baschallist's eyes, But -the uncertainty of weather, as will pass the uncertainty of the buyer in'the hardware market, As long as the plans for construction resujtant twill pass growing, with the | demands, and as long as the orders The weather will settle into spring and the are numerous we should weo hardware market will begin to justify all the splendid predictions made for it WHAT MOTIVES? When a person takes a step which will have an important bearing upon his life, the nutural question is why docs he do this, If it is an action men are accustomed to take, such as scek- ing an education or a better job, the answer obvious that few con- sider it Bergdoll is reported to have declded United States, properly despised as far as one-ds uble to judge, inquiry as to His motive'is interesting purely as an academic matter, The action are is s0 But when Grover Cleveland back to come to the where he s cordially and most compelling motives for love, hate, u sensc of jus- ti venged of to reward, patriotism, lust, fear—and perhaps the most comnpell- ing of all is fear which makes men afraid not only of physical pain and combat, but afraid to take chances in lite, afraid they will be ill, afrald they will lose for hose they love, 1ear dominates every- their positions, afraid to u greater or less extent, “motives” one Glancing through these for action, and remembering Bergdoll out as as we know of him, we strike impossible inspirers of a decision to the land to which he hate, love, justice, patriotism, lust come back has been distoyal rosity, revenge, and we find remaining as possible mo- tives for his act only three, a hope of 1, 4 and c may him re feree rtainly b of re- there in a hope ward—the hope that by returning niene will be rewarded with | ¥i ed=the regaining wealth, And certainly there is fear For, lopkifg at Bergdoll's past, we e that Germany | not helleve a fecling of love.-or patriotism for spi Jraft evasion, 11 it w And one ma rler emotion nore closely knit into his any other unless, possibly ness whi to con Iriving T isloyal to Amer is country he has flaunted, would be more gafe fr personal in- he . n any other n 1. Bergdoll decided to come back. F he is afrald of t wor has it is becaus ay happen to him the | greed, generosity, desire to be re- | | to may | t angwhere | | $he puncher. | So, then, to return to this pugilist ‘\\ho wishes to be champion of the What has he done? He has upon "y | world. thad pictured his breast | sketch of my last knockout,” done in | turid colors so that they cannot es- e the attention of any man he ¢ | fights, This is" the ring—and the | the fallen foe! | Picture this pugilist in | Tmagine the man opposed to him, gazing in awe upon this brightly colored picture of a fight—upon the apparently lifeless form in the pic- ture—-the vietim of the prowess of the | man against who he is even now | pitted, Tmagine him “getting the goat” of Jack Demps by hissing in Juck's “Seo dat Pictur? Dat's wot 1 done to de last guy dat stood where youse is standin'. Dat's wot's goin' to hap- is goin’ to e 18 the riug. for instance, ( ear: i ¢ pen o youse, sce. Youse Le down derc on de t carpet in de next round, see?” And imagine that picture, Bypnotized by it, and involun- tarily tefling himself that perhaps he, too, will become a model for another Well, they say that if Juck would keep making that sugges- | e would be ft—down two, three and see Jack gazing on | sueh ploture. | i tion to himself there, " one, ni | | “out theory, might de- | | The only trouble with the however, i8 that Jack's blows bring blood the pugllistic votee of art so that the pieture would | be blotted out, Then, of course, noth- ing would remain for Jack to do hut| sture and attend to the | matter in hand., One rather thinks| he'd do it fairly thoroughly--still you jever can tell, from | forget the p Hoard in parked five miles of New Britain for my vaccination.” [ auto® within | “Look out any Facts and Fancies| " ROBERT | | | | QUILLEN | “The way of the transgressor is | hard—to follow. Ask any policeman | Buggested slogan for | “I'hey nlso serve who only | debate” congress: | stand and | | | | Add Dic wry of Similes | uscless as gestures by tor. A tadio o modern 0 A the ently promiscd and obey impulses, have of ppars A 1ot of henpecked pushands will that and lost" s 1nd hoss “loved in tell you edded ) front o man is nly time the average nquering-hero fecling ges 1o get 1wo gobd scats Situation offhand jat they are ' and srgued ut up 1y tinalty ¢ his w is bt possible o ur glasees ay to Dietionary of as an obser- train.” | Another | Simdles: * vation « addition —as use a subw ° o o1 i ~ata-tine Wife w nife ill the general rule on this side Movemant One- Spreads . expense of the Enfield bridge matter on the towns in this county, birthday at his home on Kensington strect { ing by ente young fri Oldershaw siderable experience, committtce mation relative to changing the fines of the firemen from $1, $2 and 36 to | the stock in the furnitu Giddings Bros. on They will continue the business under [the name of Ande stroets, | western disturbance | continues low any great war to pccur again, adding he belicved it to be the duty of every citizen and particularly of every Christian to work to this end and to do more than register a protest, ““l“i"g a number of his! “As for the attitude of the Metho- nas, | dist l‘}pis;‘npnl clhl)“::h." he knalld. "]'m: gt A £ ...+ | one man has a right to speak for tha ,L“U",’(;’r‘ l"";v'I”y',‘,f.'I,‘,'_fr“‘,:‘"“““:‘r‘in;“‘\‘:‘r'1 body, but all the precedents of the kR ’; Al-:m‘luulr Gt ‘ u' | past show that the Methodist church anliihas Had oon. | ek been unalterably loyal; that it has e i, been foremost in the defense of the flag on every necded occasion, and T have no reason to believe that it would act otherwise in the future,” MAPLE HILL NEWS “Guest Night” of the Woman's club of Maple Hill will be held at the home of Mrs, A, 8. Grant on Golf street Wednesday evening, April 2, at § o'clock. Dr. A, B, Meredith of Hart- ford, will be the speaker of the eve- ning and a short musical program will be rendered by the club trio and | Waliter Occupin, "cellist. Aaron Cohen celebrated his ninth esterday aiternoon and even- | Sheft, el of A fire joint meeting of the hoard of commissioners and the ordinance was held Jast night to draft an ordinance containing infor- $2, $3 and $4, A transfer was made ygsterday of | ‘(Urc of the Church street to ‘harles Anderson and John Andrews, n & Andrews, An elevated spur track will be put n by the Consolidated railroad at the corner of North Stanley and Dwight This is 1he only eleva- ed spur in the city. Albert Nordstrom of Bangor, Maine, is spending the week with his moth- er, Mrs, N, Nordstrom on Robbins avenue, The Maple Hill Bridge club will meet Tuesday afternoon, April 1, at the home of Mrs, . B. Olmstead on Johnson strect, Observations on The*Weather i | Miss Bertha Francis of Newington Center is home from Cushing academy for the spring tion. Donald Proudman will return home York, | tomorrow from Dartmouth college for % | the #pring recess, Washington, March for Southern New England)—F cloudy tonight and Fri ; warmer I'riday; fresh northerly winds, shift-| ing to southwest IPriday, I"orecast for eastern New Partly cloudy tonight and Friday ex- cept light rain or snow in extreme north portion; slightly rising temperae. ture; moderate northwest winds shift- ing to southwest late tonight. I"or Connecticut: Partly cloud: night and Friday; warmer I'rid: Miss Harrict Wells has returned to New York after spending the week- end with her mother, Mrs, William % ;\\'clls. of Newington Center. Charles I, Hare of Pittsfield, Mass, tresh northerly winds shifting souths| yoc"co1a” s building lot on Golf el | street to Willlam Middlemas of Conditions: The arcas of high and | Britain, low pressure aro moving across the | country mmd causing frequent amlfuh,lhplace of ['ope Pius sudden changes in the weather, The | is now central " over Minnesota and s cuneing wect-| Blevated to City’s Rank tled weather in the upper .\|l,~~ls~i|ml[ e fied . Dsio, Ttaly, Marcl <A solemn T MR I Drrien w118 SANE | oeiibvation marki) \(hr— levation to O 1 the outieaiure o T8 | the dignity of a city of this place, the slowly i the southern scctions but| \id \Foe R Lo hiue, was held yes. ot fadle e ”"" NOTNETN | o dny, During the ceremony a copy Order from Mohiann ty Maine, | of the pontifical arms was presented Conditions favor for this vicinity |5 ype city by a croup of citizens, fair weather with slightly higher | ysomio 1atti, brother of the pontiff, temperature followed by increasing| go1ed as godfather of the ceremony. cloudiness on Vriday. | Al<o Yale Pacifist Gronp Promises Support 1o Garratt Institute Theologians ‘ to March 27 participate cigged icago, Pledges never warfare | fifty stn- dents of Garrett s Institute, a theological affiliateq with Northwestern University, at a meeting of 150 students wl passed resolg. tions demanding abolition the | navy and reserve officers train- act of tere ast night il school Amy. hile the executive committes Northwestorn col- lege, German Metho school at Napiorville, 1i1s, not connected with | Northwestern University, decided to liscontinue the R. O. T. C. there on | ounds that the students are op- 1 to military serviee pledges taken by the lo not represent teachings | fnstitution, C, M. Stuart, | nt, said freedom of belier s of the tenets of the institutio: | und it wus permissible « meet, The Garrett held under the ausp rett Lo for Pence trustees of a students | arrett r, he the for | T CET THAT - STEADY FLOW OF ¥ 58 INTELLISBLY . meet was the r| resolution | pressing cat appre- | the cowrageons stand of | pacifiet group of Nowthwestern ersity.” who were central figures | mecting Sunday ad- | Brent Dow Allinson, war A telegram was read from gronp at Yale university promising co-operation in the “world ement for peace student A vas passed ¢ ciation the ur n a Ares pacifist d by obirclor a ifist mo FLIER OFF YOR ROME (Spectal to The Herald), France, March 27.—Stuart REALIZES THAT VOICE 15 Ex- PECTING AM ANSWER. AND Pritish aviator, took off SHOOTS A'VES, CERTAINLY® the second stage of his| AT RAN: fight at 11:30| ot o'clock this morning. 1 Macl s Tome o round-the-world % 5 VERY SRRy 8uT ICE ORDS AND WANTS TD KN THAN © McCiure Newspapes Syndicate ew Britain’s Most Progressive Jewelers 436 MAIN ST. — OPP. E. MAIN ST. THE NEXT BOAT FoR CAKLAND PIER. CONNECTS s VERY PLAIN, MISTER, THAT THE MAN SITTING OPPOSITE HAS LOST AN ARM, AND 'S PLAIN ALSO THAT YOUR STARING A WRHY NOT OGLE ME ¥ — F MY TEMPER LU The Poor Connection. REPORTS THAT IT SOUNDS UIKE MRS BUNSEN BUT HE ISNT SURE AND BLSIDES HE CANT MAKE OUT A WORD SHE'S SAVING TURKS ON FAMILY WHO MAVE BEBM CLAMPS HAND OVER EAR STANDING ROUND IN RIGID SLENCE CROUCHES OVER PHONE AND By W HOW THEY TERRIMIC CONCENTRATION MAN- ;Aguw AL AGES T CATCH EVERY S AT TIRST BREAK INQUIRES WHO DID SHE SAY 1T WAS SPLAKING PLEASE EXPECT THEM TOF THIS RACKLT €0 N 7 & & 2 REPORTS THAT MRS. BUNSEN, IPIT MRS BUKSEN WANTS THEM TO COME ™ DINNER HE COULDWT MAKE OUT WHAT NIGHT AND E(THER BRING THE GHLDREN OR NOT ANVWAY HE AC GETS ALL SET TO ASK HER T GO OVER m‘[ AGNN WHEN REALIZES THAT SHE HAS HUNG uP

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