New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 25, 1924, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING Tssued D 4t Herald Bld, SUB RIPTION RAT $8.00 Three TELEPHONE Member of The Associnte: The Associated Pre to the use credited to nt lished Member The A Au fon against figures The Herald York at Ho Bquare; S8chu Grand Central A NEEDED REFORM A M known that at the next meeting of the he will Mayor Paonessa lets it be charter revision committee urge an amendment to eliminate the requirement of taxpayers to file new lists every year, saying that those who are found delinquent and assessed 10 per eent additional usually are those among the population pay the penalty. The mayor is right. The system of taxation assessment efficient that an annual listing Oetober is wasted efort and gives the city an epportunity to col- lect the extra tax. A penalty for tax delinquents is all right; but when those who are not delinquent find they are penalized for merely not having attended to unnec- essary red tape it is time the law Is changed least able to present is so ach merely SENATOR WALSH'S ADDRESS Senator Walsh of Montana, perr nent chairman of the Democratic na tional eonvention, today joined Senator Pat Harrison In indicating what the main contentions of the Demaocrats will be during the campaign, and upon what they base their hopes for a political overturn The issue that concentrating upon will be honesty in office. Walsh, In his address as per- manent chairman, most of his timp belaboring Republican offies holders for alleged derclictions and the fact that three members of the had to walk the the Democrats are spent president’'s cabinet plank. The President Coolidge joined in the hue and ery against the claim that tnvestigations and endeavored from the well recent “to shiald the delinquents publie odium,” is unfortunately taken. * This motif was touched upon by Senator Harrison the day before when he compared the method of complaisance with that of President Grant, who helped to throw out of office the men who had be smirched the good nams of his ad- ministration. And at the finish Président Coolidge got very little thanks for his pains to glve Daugherty a chance to weather the storm. THE KLAN 188U convention faces Coolldge The Democratic the hydra-headed monster of the Ku Kux Kian and doesn't want to offend thoss who belong nor those who op- pose it. Tt is in the same predicament as was the Republican convention It ean rightfully be said that a po- litleal party should not hesitate to de. elare itwelf agalnst a manifest injus- tice or a viclous movement. But theory and practice don't mix In politics. 8o long as there are states where klanism is rampant, and #tates the kianistic & goodly share of assured that the bandled in a gingerly manner. The kian reg %0 long as in such population wield otes, one can rest situation will be suiie 18 deeply imy the MeAdoo ttie in Bmith the Mc Bmith yrees are frankly ant Ad o6 forees are not mentic the wubje s deleg: eoming from The anti-kia ber enc the k NOT “KEAN INVASION VICTORY AND DEFIAT or, saiied through the swaia 1 mpt- e Atlantic the yiight an lusk, s the world's hig times they faile ounced justa ani Wl Irvine, t innumerabie times oxygen tanks, with addition of conquered extrem rari- the m in climbers, earth beneath them, many other peaks have heen or twice by hardy cath-defying mountain climbers makes his aid conquests that req the Modern man greatest sts with the of machinery. The lire the pitting of human be against the power far less f effort and South Poles were tempests and nature It the Nortl are frequent took a century q befor reache yet it is believed a modern dirigible could fly to either pole within a comparatively short time if'the at- tempt were made Maughan's feat will be but the fore- runner of other more notable air feats in the years to come. Within a genera- tion it will be common for an aviator to fly from New York to San Irancis- Pacific without co or other points stopping and in shorter time than Maughan took to do it. But to him goes the glory for having blazed the trail SOFT JUs A contemporary pause to what the “thinking” following the Suteliffe to inquire as will he ffect on the release from jail of George who former- ly practiced medicine in Unionville license from a fake Sutcliffe’s sentence was with a St Louts diploma mill. & outcome of th He having served the most conspicuo seandal, was r after diploma mill leased from jail only half his term, Suteliffte admitted ke under a license fraudulently It 4 that was practiced medidine he remember to him and died while Ruteliffe main- obtained. Tt will a man hrought for an emergency operation being operated upon tained that he had war veteran had been gassed overseas not heen told the cirenme- dled established and that under the same stances the patient even had a surgeon reputation performed the might have of operation. sentenced for practie- Ruteliffe w ing with a fake license, He was no His term ample and & warning by er other fake diploma mill doctor, in jail was an ex- the state to e “gradu- tes." «But carritd out half the t of being 3 is served the o8 seot instead sentence free when he again em. rm phasizing conditions in Connecticut that it e for convicted per- #ons to gain their freedom earlier than specified by their sentences. Pardone a regular oc- make A8y ing of lifers seems 1o be and fruits board; first cupation of the pardon here an alleged surgeon, of a cleaning-up process to protect the medical at- up supinencss of Connecti publie from improper tendance, i able to laugh his sleeve at the cut justice, 1 county ree Three years agn Fairfie ed idents bheseed the legislature pass a hill to establish a state ¢ wlary modelled after the plan of Pennaylvania. They pro tected from thugs southwestern part bill was not olice was made into a capat nut Al o ok 1 asking wha conviet criminals if the ato ex eeds griminals L} RAILROAD CoMP Yor New ord ralire TIoN H its stations, and ham advertised of the money New Haven At Pay the freight’ and pert! EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 25, 1924, | , i ceptably in dividend payments. Some | is as | railroads that are scarcely known passunger carriers are uniformly good | divide payers because the rry | New than their share of freight. The Jersey Central, the § the & Penns ding, the Virginian Norfolk Western, | which the Ivania is attempting to lease, and numerous other heavy carriers, warm the ‘hearts of wners, while some passenger trouble ¥ to circumvent this hot r is not to wait until Saturday bath night te take a iters on the Haven noticed t the w have at the higher service, wecticut tohacco must he the kind being used in the manufacture of five-cent Havana oigars. Three girls who couidn’t swim were drowned in Springfield; a fourth saved her life Know- an ac- by swimming ashore ing how to swim i8 more th complishment; it is a duty. Indiana Democratic and Smith are =0 Tom Taggart, es Me. nearly boss, figu Adoo dead™ either already far as the omination of is concerned. Tom seems to think the west is going the east gets through talking. The New York' by ruefully makes to do the nominating after Times goes a bit further remarking that nd the east pays the taxes. Sec- tlonalism appears to be far feom dead. the west the nws ! Political parties may consider it ex- the Klan by the free and untrammeled not to but press is not so particular, pedient mention name is no sinecure, vouch. Tt far easicr to talk about how it should Collecting garbage as those doing it can is be done than to do it Plainville residents who are ‘“en- | joying"” a New Britain are not comforted by the once-a-day malil service to | fact that an aviator can fly from New York letter 1o traverse to Frisco quicker than it takes few miles be- And if a few | more “efficient experts” get to working | table there | a the | tween the two cities. on the New Haven time may be no railroad mail service at all A Boston music student, after mar- rying another music student, refused | 1o live with her husband because she | did not want to experience the “sordid pe rried if. it appears, was to slug about it but not | rt of m. " Her idea of love, | | to play at the game. In this beautiful | of there are June, however, sing a love and who don't e anything sor- month others who cannot note ahout did about honeymooning. If the Democratic platform, like the Republican, fails to take a crack at the Ku Klux Klan, then it can be re- | garded as a slashing victory for the | nightshirt tribe. The ernment” that MeAdoo talks about will “invisible gove | be proven to exist, but not the kind of invisibility he referred to. Observations On The Weather Forecast for Eastern New Falr tonight and Thursday thunder showers this early tonight in southeast portion; cooler tonight, moderate fresh shifting winds, becoming northwest Forecast ithern Ne and: Thund orms this afte or carly tonig cooler tonight, Thursday fair rate temperature fresh southw northwest winds, Conditions: everal gmall disturb- moving rapidly across the and are ausing unsettled Yy weather in ¥ distric Mississippl river. Severa reported y than an inch of favor York preceded by ernoon or to for 8 w 2~ rnoon mo: st to ances are country #ir st o near the hea showers with rain this more weather tly cooler Conditions ttied showe rand slig MRS. SHAW RALLIES T0 EX-HUSBAND'S DEFENSE Follies ry Testifies That Former Girl Knew Defendant Was a Married Man Testifying t breach against Philip broker Follies ently 1 that in a telephone Miss Dever's mother st livorced « made this st Miss Tre shotited Miss De contends here and her s relations with was paying and her da admitted that Auring cight months that ahg ter staved at the hotel §h them the and they nds theaters meet any of we ! gh Shaw took to occasionally. street, Meeting Mrs. Griswold, whom he knew, he was delighted when she gave him some candy. Now Frank, what do you say 'Got any more ?” was the immediate ’ —Esther Wagner. The man who boasts that he has | this or that to fall back on, often fa | much harder than he expects. ‘ Where the Guilt Belongs We mortals have to swat and shoo The flies from dawn to dark *Cause Noah didn't swat the two That roosted in the Ark. The Spiteful Thing! 'm supposed to play ti part of an old lady in an amate theatrical, and I'm just wondering | how I'm to make up. Donna:—"“Why not | of your make-up off, dearic aul S THE JINGLE-JANGLH COUNTER Winter's cold and summer's hot, Some can peaches, some cannot. | —Walter Stenning. Girls dances, pretty clothes, A fat man never sees his toe -Patricia Lowdermilk. . Bell, ipa's whiskers reach his knees pple gently with each sneeze. —Hal Gratton. t leave some 9 8. Powers. The Sex Complex they're babies, they wiggle— years later, My shiny shoes are dull—Oh patent” has expired, When coo and Our Own A few they chew and HOROSCOF Department ylvia B. Friedman. None But the Brave— He looked at her compellingly, but ! she seemed totally unaware of his presence. He realized she was preoccupied, | but he refused to excuse her on that scor were 2 live Mr. Barney Foster: If ¥y born on June 25, Barney, you a ing under the influence of Grouchissi- mo, the sign of the Crab. That is to say you will astigmatism looking for lining in any cloud What you don't know about the cus- | #edness of human nature could be printed on the back postage stamp and sealed in a quinine capsule. You would find siceess in laundry work, specializing in wet blankets, Your favorite pastime is writing letters to this newspaper, signed Pro Bono Publico. prophesying the down- fall of civilization, the present ad-| ministration, and the younger genera- tion. You will live to be a hundred years old, probably, since old Grouchissimo people are famed for their longevity. never the silver get started to speak and then he tated. It was a delicate matter, Yet there was need for beldhess. He ap- proached her. His words cut sword: “Madame, your fare. wike a not pay the silence you did The Last Word Kriss:—"Did you ever have the | word with your wife?” Kross:—"Oh yes, once when the telephone operator cut us off! When man loses his appetite temporarily, he in lowe. When he loses it permanently, he is married. 24. Reproduction idden). st a In a Modern Flat Wifie (looking at fashion “Do you think the hoop skir ever come {n again, dearie?" Hubby: “Not in this spartment, my love."” o | e He tried to bhe an actor, | But the buskin he must doff; His friends had egzed him onward, But the public egged him off ~—Herblock page): | will (Copyright 1 for ~—Christian D. BY ROBERT QU LEN Marry in haste and pay alimony at leisure When a man' hates to work and it | bores him to loaf, what's the answer? | - A man really ne |the strain of deciding where {on it ds a vacation after to go A good neighhorhood i one where | you can wear phony jewelry and get away with it Jearn | golfer, man who would lead must first to follow-—through Ark any Cain credit for one thing He produeed the world's first page | Give any- how front story £ Popular Songs Hlustrated 100Kk for the Silver Lining The woman who marries for a home j¢ seldom capable of making one, dequate technical criticism of verage novel of today: “It has Pretty But Practical Farmer Simmons had gone to town | the for Before he started he | pice covers. bad promised to bring his daughter a ' present, he went into a jeweler's| “RBroaks All Ten Commandments in shop and said 1o the clerk: “I want a Qne Night" is a headline that we are pair of earrings, cheap but purty.” momentarily expecting to read “Yes, sir,” sald the clerk, “You want p something a trifle Joud, T suppose?” “Well, I don't mind if one of them is loud,” replied the farmer, “my gal ts deaf in one " An a few days, 50 80 perfectly maners as to make they used to be Rome sed wor people in table er whether geem e ear waiters, ck's Treatment for Sleeping Sickness had been talking steadily in the for three hours, when I oA, The great ex- plorer leaped from chair, threw up his arm as if to ward off a blow and Don't.’ “Don’t what Cast your paragraphs upon the wa ind they shall return to you after lays, credited to somebody else ters H doctor's etudy many A headline says: “Speeding Tourist \shes Through Billboard.” His only ce 1o get a glimpse of the scenery involuntarily his 1 asked. He appeared Speaking of telephanes, as nabody here's something else “Why wrong numbers busy ? embarrassed was, to wonder n that upset me. £ sickness in ad dis sald, “it was your | ahout are the er since 1 had Uganda * ¢ * ase is spread never the sleeping you know that through yawning “I caught t s from an audi- ence to whom 1 was lecturing. Having up to me to find r that time the 110 treat sleeping sick- -clocks, but this was well members of the about symptoms contracted it, it w enre, 1 thod had bee the to m pess with alarm annoying community to the 1 immediately an story of the and quickly decided that the germ was isolated in the yawn. Moreover 1 found that th ady was not confined to human but extended to the and that the lion, the greatest suf- to the roars were merely he as can estimate the rents charg the neighborhood by the number that contain golf bags set n of p intensive swehes get much thicker each will have to spend his life on of the street that he happened me ¢ taxic being man Kkingdom king of beasts about he side be anima was the born on most of the village rerer puzzled to un- for looking for a rage citizen hy instead card jions yawntng 1 an anti-toxin from the sils of on in the act of yawning. ore in three well—" interrfupted, “do actually from the distend- How in the a man will run of oy marvellou s popular conception, the “hicks” and yokels higher in cities than ntage y much yo 1 was pere of i probal n the country Pardon n 1 I me you rum which now con- ople: Whether to stay home question American pe movies or do it aned bac and he said, “1 1 mee. 1 will at sher “Forgive me a towch the radio. this sent ms s not fiances really NAMED AS RECEIVER June ndge superior court B. Clark of permanent receiver w Mfg Co. of Stratford, wi 1o the Jol today ona) 1mst) this of " e ow by newspape tributions ding they are origin and poses sumrcient [ 200 . at rates vary . from $1.60 to $10.00. Write on the 1 + side of the paper only and eend Mr. Clark swcceeded Robbing B our contributions (8 the “Fus Shop Stoeckel, stat oner of mo- Editor.” care of the Herald, who Stoeckel, state commmisson ' T torward them to New York vebicies, as temporary receiver for Saccopted montecrIpts Wil S ©o tnor . et Commissioner o1 was appointed by Judge God- oned dard of the federal court confirmed George y per- iphea. operation of 1l be patd for continue ent for one month. the of the| AUNT SARAH PEABODY , At the Convention _MAD |WEAT RIGHT BACK To MY HOTEL To PREPARE ANCTHER PLANK *~ SramEy BY AUNT SARAH PEABODY New York City, June 25.—I was all tired out last night from walking up and down the hotel stairs so I fol- lowed a lot of other delegates into a small cage that slid up and down. It took my breath away when it started and the first thing I knew I | was right down in the cellar of t |hotel. And it was full of streect cs Many of the folks who had “dele- gate” badges on got on one of the cars 8o I followed them. Pretty soon they all got off and I got off too, We went up an iron stairway and T was glad to get out of that cellar. Still following the crowd, I found my- self inside a big hall. | Frankly, I was dis had expected to sec around and a great swarm of dele- gates. But the hall was just plain and there were only ahout a hundred folks with “delegate” badges on. And instead of getting right down to business most of them were eyeing women delegates who paraded up and down on a little platform. The gowns they wore were shocking. | I heard one of the men dels 8 (remark that certain dress wasn't con- ppointed. T flags hanging HELEN WILLS WINS, S0 DOFS LENGLEN Mrs. Mallory Eliminated From ; British Play Today The Associated Press June By The Miss Helen champior Wimbledon, Wills, American woman defeated Miss P. H. Dransfie in the ond round of the women's sin of the Wimbledon lawn tennis tour ment this afternoon, 6.0, At Stamford Hill early Miss Dransfield defeated Mallory , 8.8, 8 Miss Eleanor Goss, Iminated by Mrs, | England, 6-4, 6.4 Others Defeated In the women's doubles the Ameri [can pailr, Miss Edith Rigourney and [ Miss Lillian Scharman deteated by Mrs, Macready and Bou man, England, Mile. Suzanne Leng world's champion, defe Clarke, England, 8.0, 6. Mrs. Molla Mallory former Ameri- 6-2 this month Mrs. Molla America Satterth eae were Miss K. n, womar ted Miss E. I, | ventional. T didn't think so, either. I'm for plain clothes at conventions. One delegate announced he was for a new style of women's dress for every month, That's a platform idea 1 hadn't heard of, but I was against it right away for that would mean a new dress too often and I can't af- ford it. Then someone else suggested that the meeting adjourn until the next day so the delegates could go over to the hig convention. That’s how I came to discover that I was at the wrong meeting. It was conveniion of the International s Reform Association. I was so mad I went right back to my hotel to prepare another plank for my list of suggestions for the democratic platform. This plank, which I have just writ. ten, reads “It shall be against the rules for the democratic convention to ba held er convention D in any city where anot is on at the same time I'll take this suggestion up tomors with the democratic resolutions ro committee 1 | was eliminated from [the women's singles of the Wimbles 1‘\my tournament today by Miss Kathe | can champion the 1 the ranking RBritish defeated the in straight sets 6.1, n MecKane, woman played, who Americ sily 6-0 Carl Wi eliminated Wimbledon her of Philadelphia was from the men's singles of tournament today by o Bnglish internatione Washhurn, America, de. Leighton Crawford, Enge 4.8, €.2 Marion Z. Jessup, Mrs. Barrett, M eated de. America Engiand, 6 6, 6—4 Mre. G (L feated Mrs, J Williams Feret, Fra W, .6 America, -4, 4—8, L Wightman, Saunders America, Taylor, of of Norman E. Brookes, defeated D, R. Rutnam §—2, 6 2--6, 61 Mrs, Edgington, Fn Mre, Jackson Fielding, | =1 Australia, Ceylon, wland, defeated England, §—3, CALLED TO LITCHRIELD Torrington. 25, == The Rev, Michael of Massachue has been called to the pastorate of the Kirst Congregational church | Litehfield, to the Rev, Dr. Frank J. Goodwin, June Carl Sangree sotts, succeed | Chicago boy scouts ave pres phant. The beast will veplace tl in Lincoln Park Zoo. | “shares” at 50 cents each. | Scouts Buy Elephant The scouts are ra enting their city with a new ele- 1e deceased “Duchess,” for years ing the money by selling e e ey FRANK CRANE is ical iow slightty, and A lig ke zht now tn 1 tr tists tel 14 is deat) his fathe the scler s nr r ittle boy nestling in pa “Oh, 1 just the: thought is What is the sou It a tr and fir mor, but the & with joy or with circles of waves to the outer world Love a tremor. | motion Life them of the sur i An er The Al whe ing thir de of tremor. mobile, only source lancy is a y are is 1 rabur ath oce motion ntr of life to ¢ s without its ¢ hist gine history is necle of mankind ascends and descen When the vi Tife no vibrations. ati epochs of histors trembling waves 1 the eart | A {aroun of a great w Dante and § &t in pearance n Homer kesr motion ided by his o at can perpet Copyright, 1 your the of life, the waters are always moving, moon path e waters, 1s a tremor. ¥'s arms = What made you shud- ht of something,” ds its way 1o the body f tremors e it extends its vib 1 souls of a kindred mo i at life is in sti it takes either the lack call we urs they ar for somehow & as the peoples that we have thé ory tio lent re is po hi on is sharp and - A then sets the whole world eare, who shall count the inunmerable Have their lines not gone out o ali n to =t in motion those who are ht, it i& of #o value uniess #t its vibrations ” ability uate 4, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate,

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