New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 5, 1924, Page 12

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. WHAT’S GOING ON Atbani —Is Re orted [KLAN STATEMENT M ar | Wew vork vitualy forced e oro- | May VI]TE B[]N[] ISSUES | IN THE WORLD r\»‘mli::. ?:na}e;,,g?..f,é.l\!r.“ ‘,‘,I.“ DESMOC[E;fl'fiETCgfiequ‘}‘ONfJUHNSUN flEl‘EfiATES committse voted, 22 to 14, for ‘w“;‘c"‘l TOTALING $625,000 Finance Board Votes to Raise Only Money Needed Now Bonds in amounts sufficicnt to mect {he necds of the school, park, water and subway departments for the pres- ent fiscal year will be issued at once in accordance with a decision reached axation by the board of finance and 1 at a meeting last night The board voted to prepars for the fssuance of all bonds voted at the last session of the city meeting board, but only such amounts ved to be necessary this year will put out on the n Chai « F. King of the achool committe sld the finance board that $250,000 will he needed to carry out instaliments of the building program planned for is year. It was vote at amount out of the ue ap proved by the city meeting b Chairman William F. Brooks fa ored spending $20,000 instead of $10, 000 for roads in Willow Prook park but he was informed that a specific sciool to issne th appropriation of $10,000 had heen made and could not be exceeded. It will be possible to build the roads with this amount, but they will not be as substantial the park depart ment head desi o This appropriation was voted as was one of $65,000 for the North Jnd park. The work contemplated at that park includes grading and dredging the pond area, building'a road from the Blake road to the Stanley street entrance, around the pond, building the new culvert and dam, At the request of the public works department, it was voted to issue the full amount of subway bhonds, a 000 jasue, all of which wili he used this year. The sum of $100,000 was allotted for a new water distribution system, and $150,000 was voted to re. imburse the water department for moneys spent out of regular revenus in the construction of a new pumping station, Chairman Hall authorized to horrow $£150,000 in anticipation of taxes, this amount heing needed to meet payroll requirements up to July 1, This action is necessary each vear was since taxes do not beeome due untit July, whereas the fiscal year begins April 1, Mr. Hall was reclected chairman of the board last night and Mayor A, M Paonessa who has ma a practice of attending all mectings, special and regular, said he wished to zo on record as favoring the cholce although he does not have a vote on the hoard STRIKE OF LONDONS ELECTRIC R. R. WORKMEN Shillings Men Demand Ten Increase in Their Weekly Wage and In- chugion of War Bonns London, June AN unofficia strike broke out today among the shopmen at the London slectric rail- way work s and power stations and on the ( t Western rallway The men demand ten shillings in. crease in their weeckly wage with a minimum of {3, the inclusion of 16 shillings 6 pence bonus in their present wage, and one week's holiday yearly on full pay war The suddenncss of the steike which became effective ai midnight, caused considerable inconvenlence to wta- London affected thousands of workers tions in the north of using the by the strike, and this inconmvenicnce spread later in the morning to the underground system where only a skeleton service was being maintained this forenon Porty tube stations were closad | ause many of the em. ployes at the big Chelsen power sta tion nork in sympathy with | the strikers | The national U'nion of Railws has not strike and has appeaied to its mem bers to remain at work ceased ymen officially recognized the But thers I8 fear that the movement will spread AR & crisis has developed in connec tion with demands made hy the Ass ciated Eociet r amoti En gineers and fireme ich is holding the final s nnual conf ence 1o . this rociety ) Vews the railway compa classifica Shuns Clotixes | | By CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer It may look as if the republican con'vention this month will be pretty tame, bec e it's practically c ~hom the presidential nominee wil! be. But if the insurgents turn down the convention's choice it will be a history-making development. It wiil ¢ more important thai t Bull Moose movement in 1912, because a third ticket this time is liable to shake the old parties to picces. TWO NEW PARTIES? Politicians are wondering whether cy¥of La I"ollette or somc other insucgent would draw more feavily frdm the republicans or thc democrats. On the face of it, it looks 1s if the republicans would suffer most—so far as this next election is concerned, But the point is that such a development’s tendency, in the long run, to attract the progres- sive voters from both old parties into the new one. And then the tendency of the regulars in hoth old parties will bhe to combine Result: Two new par- ties e candic will be WHAT CAN THEY DO? Wil there be a third ticket? La Iollette’s recent announcement sounds like it. The insurgents don't lik: ny too well, but they prob. i male t of him—on platform. Heweyver, they'r rative one. With atisfactory nominee and an unsatisfactory platform, what is there left for them to do but name their own candidate? Well, they might indorse the democratic - ticket, but there isn't much chance they'll like it any better than the republican, the ta e KEEPING IT UP investigat- right om | last minute Daugherty is keeping The senate’s ing committee vith its work up to the before the econvention, Daugherty himself has been called for June 6, days before the Cleveland His tustimony prob- | only four gathering opens. ably will take several days. It may | wake him miss the convention. He's a delegate-at-large from Ohio ,mai wants to attend. But the radical in- vestigators don’t care anything about nience of politicians—either republican or democratic, IProm ail appearances they mean to continue their activities all through the cam- the co paign ANOTHER NUISANCE The radicals also want a committee to sit during the entire pre-election period 1o investigate campaign con- tributions, just as they come in, ‘l‘h"’ old party managers don’t like this, 1f rothing worse, it will be a bother. creing them to be extremely particu- | lar ahout every cent that goes into their treasuries, JAPAN Tokio's protest against the exclusion | of Japancse immigrants from Amer- ica is simply a way of keeping the record straight, Japan docsn’t expect | the Unit=d States to do anything about | it. Probably the first step the Japan- take toward “getting even will be in the direction of keeping American goods, as far as possible, ot only eut of Japan, but out of the I'ar East gener wher- cver it can be made effective, ese will | ly—a boycott, GOMPERS BEFORE G, 0. P, Cleveland, June b.--Samuel Gom pers and other officers of the Ameri- Federation of Labor will appear can hefore the republican national plat- form committee here nest week in the interest of organized labor, | Friends of Mr. Gompers say this 1s | v line with his non-partisan pian in | othier eampaign years and that he un- conbtidly also will appear hefore the denocratie platform committee, A machine parfected recently will measure the 500,000,000th part of an inel . | SUFFERED WITH ECZEMA 3 YEARS Itched and Burned So Could Not Sleep, Cuticura Healed, “1 suffered for three yoars with ma whieh broke out on my limbs, o mp me head. It itehed and 7 burned 9o that it was most impossible o #lespainiz at,and every tme [ » d i, it wou'd bleed Thre breai ng ent ca 1 éisf=vrement I “eezn ve . Oh Heniy! Thebiggest hit withthe g the first pomradour blosomed ©ver 3 male brew. And no wone . HC'II“"”" < #=4 e if YOU don's loc fa'l fo2 him, ¢ aber! ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1024, = B e rman e e e RS ——————————— eived here indicates a state of civil war in Albania and the movement i Former Minister Ninohitch of Slavia declares that while this cou A tentative plank agreed u try has firmly upheld the principle I'e resolutions committ wo Albanian Independence it could not remain indifferent in the event of external intervention, decicate the party to the broa ,ciples of religious frecdom enu lin the federal constitution, i ! ance was vigorously oppos th favored no dech Whitever on the subject and th Mothers and Daughters « i< i ) s of the Ku Klux Klan by name it You (Not _Feeling Lae e e T iy Wtk #t they would carry the foor, e who MILITA Hartford, June &, mendation of the comma of the 242nd coast artille: Walter G. Martin, he Upon litfe and vigor to their worn « fing wscles, Builds red blood. ol nerves and increases most vour power of endurance. to yoursel appointed staff trial. ‘It costs yeu nothing achment is benefited, It is pleasant ian). in adjutant gene you will o teel be ? 17 your ph absence state is aranted ( 169th to leave th Leslie 1. Picrce, Co. M. from J 6 to 14, try, Watches are sometimes affected by the und_ you ed. Tieco, all @ magnetism o when guRranteed and | [ Inhana Democrats Have Their Trou- | unqualified denunciation | their fight to TTIONS wdquarters e Bood appetit tachment, is appointced technical ser- | (1d party leaders had hoped fo Al i, nt (electrician), and Corporal Ar-fcliminate the Géorgia trouble by scat- thur E. Schnit headquarters de- ling the delegates opposed to Henry with permission eriously [ rected that steps be taken te undo f their{what had been done. Charles D, ’ [ Hilles, national committeeman from ARE AT LAST SEATED.: |I;"' uy The principal contest awaiting de- uld r on was that from Mississippi in 4 irin- | shich M. J. Mulvihill, the national nelated ] committceman, was contesting the Ut the fgoating of the faction under the A Both | jeagership of State Chairman Daily "y"" Perry W, Howard, of Jackson, a ose de-| headed the list of deleg: whose rights to seats was thus 5 | brought into dispute. groups The Scipio A. Jones faction in ceking to unseat the lelegates-at-large under H. 1. Rem- mell, the national committeeman, | but’in the contests from South Caro- [lina and Tennessce, only scattering X district seats were in controversy. Private | These cases were expected to con- sume little time, { Arkansas was recom officer Nt Lincoln Johnson, but their plans were s or- [ upset by the eleventh hour production a letter written by President Hard- ing to (. Bascom Slemp, national | iin { committecman, Virginia, in which the | infan- | former president expressed regret that | the J. L. Phillips organization in| Georgia had been recognized and di- Always use enough Rinso to get big lasting suds after the clothes are in Keep your energy and freshness the motiog that seated, W. H. Robertson Hurt in R. Anderson Is Playgrounds Director ("Dick”) Anderson, last super play- named superyisor delegates Johnson Sr i year assistant sor of has been grounds, said to be spreading throughout th | { Hi th e e | Bles With the Klan Forces and | . B o) {he comion SeRBN/ SUS S the tntire country. Placing o Various Disoutin By H. A. Molander’s Auto .y aypiication received by the pub Serious troubles are reported from the Anti-Klan Delegations, s 0 ariou pu W. H. Robertson of 75 Linden strect lic amusements commission. The fol- T e e s e | i vas painfully ixlmx:w d last night when lowing were selected as playground Gras R e =k | indianapolis, June 5.-A deciari- | D l t S " IT bl {he was struck by an automobile directors: Misses Catherine McGrath, hreatening the town of Eibasan. i concerning. the ku Kiux tian, | UCIGSALIONS SOUTCE 0 Troudle : ). A e e il Spedid e Gt eatening thetoroof X ! driven A. Molander of 314/ Winifred S Catherine Tormay Col. Redjeb Chali's northern in-'ing a stubborn fight among seven | y *Maple The accident oceured |Bella Le Witt, Margaret Connelly ,surgents are attacking Alessio where ;<,ants for the gubernatorial nom- | near garage on 4']\[“(1“]'\“(!‘ 14; ;m)fl n. ik fohn —lv row, according to the latest advices the i) aijon were chief among a long list| Cleveland, June 5.--With the most el Sl 1 P s BEAR S A BETON, . al forces ar it / street while Mr. Robertson was on his Thor Maloney, John Smithwick governmental forces are in a critical of troublesome party problems sent to | troublezome of the contests decided . < - Sosition ol Fiy pr « lecid ¥ home from work. He was taken | William Kenney, Harold Long ajpil " The Seu e B 1= floor of the democratic state, con- L,y seating the Henry Lincoln John- to the Britain Gehe hospital | Clarence Kenne he Scutari rebel who are march- ., ption today for settlement. ibicga . ce. by Trafiic Officer John C. Stadler and > i Lo ing on Tirana, the capital, have sent: % lnre wer contecis of loss ominous |20 delegates from Georgia, the re. by Ti f : . Stadicr and | — - mean : ) i | publican national committee went on'it Was found that he was suffering| A snake would starve to death 1 ultimatum to the government de-' [y partions over minor state offices | Mo , {sroniia. | aca)pi woundl Andlahiasionkleatiiee th hing but i manding its immediate resignation. |iiin the opposing elements seneraly |10 Wind up hearings today on the re- |f alp abrasions | rather than eat anything but living L mainder of the factiona! rows from about both legs. prey. Klan and anti-Klan fcrees, . southern states, | To make it clean and sanitary use 7 " for your children Washday need not tire you out + RINSO gives you the cleanest wash in the quickest, easiest way - No more hard rubbing THE end of washday—and yet you feel fresh and vigorous. Ready for any game active lit:lc brains suggest—cager to explore the cunning resources of the new doll house—glad to read over and over the adventures of Mother Goose to tiny listeners. You have kept your energy because you have been spared the hardest work of washday—the hard constant rubbing. ¢ v ¥ ONLY a new kind of soap and a really modern soap could do this for you— and this is just what Rinso is—the first laundry soap that meets the needs of the modermn housewife. Everything about Rinso is modern— even its form is new —fine, creamy-white granules that dissolve completely in hot water. You get a rich soapy solution with more cleansing power than bar soap— and so much quicker and easier to use. Your clothes are spotless, and you have helped prolong its wearing qualities— you have saved time, strength and labor. Rinso takes the place of any other laundry soaps or soap you may now be using. It is a complete soap in itself—it does the whole wash whatever your washing methods may be. You need no other soap with it. Use the rich Rinso solution in your tubs, boiler, washing-machine. The water gets soapy right through—an even rich soapiness that goes into every fibre of your clothes and gently soaks dirt out. Even ground-in dirt needs only a light rubbing. - And then the rinsing is so easy and so thorough—no bits of soap left to ruin clothes under the iron—no soil left to make them look dingy—and, of course, no harmful rubbing at any time. EVERYWHERE the progressive American woman is using this labor-saving soap. Already more than a million packages are used every week. Rinso is made by the makers of Lux. Everygrocer has it—in regular size and the big new package. Get it today for your next wash. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. “Rinso saves the clothes because it dissolves dirt, rinses easily, and there is no hard rubbing to wear out the fabric,” say 4 famous manufacturers— Makers of VAN HEUSEN COLLARS WAMSUTTA PERCALE SHEETS FRUIT OF THE LOOM FABRICS BOOTT TOWELING More than a million packages of Rinso used every week! e

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