Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ew Britain Herald PUBLISHING COMPANY - clal hole frem which cated 1o this day the inneration. Bu mi idea finally In the state and » helped to this vietory rather SUBSCRIPTION RATES il .?&A“m Month The, & Menih. —_— A1 the Post Office at New Bio 46 Becond Clase Mall Matie hindered the rallroad ¢ that by pposition Citlgens the! * A pan what the railvoad eamp s0 ardently fought must be a § thing Whatever fears the raflroad had as 10 the eperation of the eommis: Under « hody as appointed in sion have not been justified the of 1t ogis oaly itable advertising mediun .I' The City, Cireulation ™oks and JJPO TOAm Alware open to @\ eitivein e Wyes 1 excrusively en re-publication of or mot atherwise also local Connecticut the rallroad and trolley % interests have lost us rales they have gained ty consiste abiliae n H relations with the terest of the vompanies. me rule of cities in thel | utitities peared little if concerns has largely disap. The belief is general that any harm can come to the transportation monopolies so long as the commission members pointed are ap The powers of the commission interest of the com- law [ are curtailed in the panies. The panies to make a ralse in rates and then argue it before the commission (m-mn.h The commission in Con- | necticut has no power to prevent a | dally In New . Fime permits the coms 4+ KLETT DIDN'T WANT IT ' Senator George P. McLean hus let e known that his action In recom. | "4 Increase until there fa a hearing jending that Major John Buckley of | 414 the hearing may be long de- be appointed U, 8. ltlornu" layed, Casale wants an amendment | ifor the Connecticut district came |10 tho 1AW permitting the commission | ftor he had recelved the assurance |0 Mo an injunction aguinst a rate | ‘2t George W. Kiett of New Britain | N¢rease until aftera hearing decides ‘that he was not a candldate for the | its justification. Connecticut is nearly | position and “had not been a candi- | UNiaue among states in permitting a ‘date for more than a year. | rate increase hefore a hearing takes | L Prom this it is clear that Kiett | Place With no injunction powers to | _@idn't want the position he once was | Prevent it, according to Casale, serediting with desiring and it "‘""i Nothing has done so much to dis- | “fore went to Buckley, it belng assum- | ntegrate confidence in the function- | tent. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1024, ° KLAN IN G " Dawes in ~ Waison in Indiana and the re ! his ¢ party The result is that Genera! O T, ATATLS oulspoken remarks of Gen Mane have caused | o §0 down the apine of Senas horts in N Dawes will not be asked to make ny sp sad nes in the Kiag elate Jomi Housler Davae has announced that he will | speak 1o these places lo which the bureau of the Itepublican national committee sends him, The speakers’ buseau sent him 1o Maine with isgivings; are sorry for having done ) 15 not made publie. The kers' buveau asked him At he would say in Indiana if sent ere, “U'll say what 1 think,"” Dawes is rgported 1o have said, By he won"t assigned to Indiana | With Texas Democrats giving the | a black eye by nominating Mrs. | Ferguson, it appears that the Kian | is much more entrenched in the Re. publican organization than in the | opposition, It is still & faetor in the Maine election, where Brewster, the Republican candldate, remaina th Kian cundidate despite the Dawes remarks; and it is a tremendoun fac- | tor in Indiana, where it controls the entire Republican organization, | Dawes's remarks at Augusia are not interpreted as being a whole- hearted smash at the Klan, He is churged by his opponents with straddling the issue to a certain ex- What he apparently succeeded in emphasizing was that the Klan gained members in the weat on a platform of law enforcement. He | gave It as his opinion that lawless- ness in order to enforce law bred | lawlessness in return, and from this speakers some whether or not they Klan ."" that the latter will bs confirmed | ing of the Connecticut commission as by the president. ‘Buckley's public life dates from 2909, when he was elected to the ‘Bouse of representatives and wai .the youngest member in it. He be. ‘gan “rising” in influence and prestige . sad became a protege of J. Henry ‘Roraback, organization leader. He ‘gvas chalrman of the house judiciary _Atommittee in the last session of the Jegislature, this being regarded as embodying the leadership of the _house. .3 Klett, a member of the Republican tate committee, lives in a city that “formerly was regarded as safely Re- Publican by 2 to 1; but twice in suc- Jeepsion it has elected Mayor Paon- “essa, running on the Democratic tic- “ket. This was no fault of Klett's and 40 spite of the turn of the poiitical “yheel it 1s gated in organization cir- clés that he could have obtained the ‘sppointment as federal attorney had Jhe wished it, and had he not been ‘opposed by Alcorn: 1 "Being federal attorney in the state 1 an honor, but private law practice :‘ ppears to be more important even | %40 those who are thus singled out. Major Buekley states that he will |comtinue his private law practice; 34 a mode of bringing home the “bacon it's more reliable than depend- '}f‘. Lpon a political appointment. L ! QUIGLEY DROPS HOT TRON. Former Mayor Quigley, anti-or- | nization leader in the New Brltaln: blican ranks, and Aldcrman P.| . Pajewaki have quit attempting to yme members of the delegation “ta the Republican state convention. Probably they do this in the interest ‘6t party harmony, or perhaps it is/ [Bacauss of a realization that their | ‘gafiuence in the convention would | | amount to a cipher with the rim 3 ng. The convention will be | {what 15 known as “boss controlled” | and so far as results are concerned, | fln are pretty well guessed at the prasent moment, J. Henry Rora- | Back is going to nominate Hiram %:hum for governor and the bad boys in the ranks might as well play | | the use of statistics | visional head ‘-lrblu on another lot. % It s a serious condition in the ‘state when the dominant party 1% _able, through its local ramifications. | ‘g6 control the nomination of dele- | “gates so thoroughly and to squelch | evidences of independent thought| among its partisans. Maxwell 8. Porter, a former coun- | @il member with pronounced inde- | “pendence of G. 0. P. domination and | . popular resident of the third ward, continues to hold the fort on the bal-| Jot. He and Councilman Hellbers \femain & power for independent | thought and action in the third ward "and can afford to defy the organiza- ftion at every turn in the foad and | Llikewise on the straight stretches. s ——— CASALE'S PLATFORM | . The pelitical platform of 8. zerald “Casale, who aspires to represefit New | '(L!mnn in the state senate, appar-| ntly does not pussyfoot upon state {ssues, or matters that more proper- “Jy should become state issues. . Rieation of the members of }ubuc Utilities Commission by popti- | Jar vote, instead of through the ap- | Spointive power, has been bruited “pither . -1 yon as an effective mean 46 bend such bodies more firmly to he will of the public they are sup- Posed to serve, But so far as Ca- _male is aware, Do state has adopted Llhc plan, although this is not tded as an adequate reason Why| {he reform should not be attempted. When agitation for the commis- wap under way in Connecticut. New Haven railroad, then under | wostul demination 74 @§p man- t that ditehed it 653 4 finan- the re- - | come to make s |8l ilhl‘ recent increase in commutation | ra In the view of citizens of all shades of political opinion, the in- creases were unjust and were finally permitted by the commission upon the assumption that the raifiroad needed the money. Why it needed the money so0 badly was not stresse: the mere need, shown to railroad attorneys who are experts in and ' specious argumentation, was enough for the commission. The same system un- fortunately holds good in other New England states, only last fall the commission in Massachusetts grant- | ing commutation increases to the New Haven and Boston & Maine because they ‘“needed the money,” at the same time denying increases to the Boston & Albany, which oper- ated by the eflicient New York Cen- tral, because it didn't need the money. Commutation rates on the B. & A. arethe lowest in New Eng- land and far lower than on the New Haven. In other words, the commissions expect the public financially to re- habilitate the formerly mismanaged | companies, It is just as if a merchant who mismanaged his business and piled up heavy indebtedness were to make increased charges for his goods and thus expect the public to make up his losses for him; only in the case of a merchant it cannot be done on account of competitive conditions, whereas a transportation monopoly makes such a method possible. SR AN THE THIRD TICKET The La Follette-Wheeler party will not have a complete state ticket in Connecticut, it fs to be judged from the result of a convention held by the third party in New Haven, which was attended by 300 leaders in the third party movement of the state, including Gilbert H. Roe, di- of the party in this section of the country. Seven state electors, campaign committee and the plans to have Senator Burton K. Wheeler speech in - New a complete a Haven on September 6 resulted from convention. Lack of a state ticket will place ¢ at a di but it will than is the the La Follette par a d- vantage in Connecticut; be no more disadvantageous | the case in the many other !U‘(u.!} where no state ticket is being placed in the field. The La Follette plan is to inculcate scratching of tickets in order to vote for the third ticket and desirable. candidates deemed To a certain extent state {his works, but by political of recognized the it is a fact wiseacres that amount scratching indulged in at elections is not yet enormously estensive, al though much years than in the days when almost the other more recent 50 in everybody voted one or ticket “straight.” To a great many persons t label is something difficuit to avoid when voting. It is’so much easier to vote the ticket be more discerning and sels candidates from the tickets pear worthy. The third tick: necticut will induce shing” however, and it is a fair he party straight” than to such A8 ap- tuation in Con- some additional will injure the assumption that this Republican ticket more than it will Davis: There ve gome normal Republicans who may Follette, and in order to do so will at the same tion as to the may vote for La time exercise more cau- state candidates and therby are given an opportunity to + and vote for Democrats for How consid state offices. conditior. will body cal Farm much effect this coural, e have, of exist by | standpoint the Klan as & perniclous | | institution. He could have sald | more, but said enough for & starter. The general's claim that the Klan | often is jolaed in some states in order | 1o effect AW enforcement appea s | to be a fact frequently overlooked. It has come to the attention of news- paper readers that bootleggers and other law breakers have been almost | the prime object of the “Indiana | horse thicves' association,” the an-| clent and honorable organization which the Klan members joined in order to enforce the liquor law when public officials in sympathy with| | Niquor refused to yield adequate en- forcement, The Indiana Klan, it is stated, has been doing a deal of en- | forcing where sherifts, police ehjefs | and mayors failed to make good, and in all probability young adventurers | have joined the movement in search | | of excitement. | With the defeat of the Kiam in | Texas and a strong anti-Klan plank | adopted by the Demoeratic organi- | zation in Ohlo, ft is falr to assume that the Klan will be on the down grade henceforth in such other| | states where it retains political in-| | Auence. | | MARS ATMOSPHERE 1S NUCH LIGHTER Could Not Support Such Life as 4 We Have | By The Associated Press, | Bourges, ¥France, Aug. | air of Mars Is altogether too light | dnd too rare to support such animal life as we have on the earth, the | | Rev. Thomas Moreux, director of the | Bourges Observatory, declared to- | | day, reporting on obsersations of the | | planet he had made on Saturday | | through his telescope of 825 diume- IKL‘I o | Conditions for his observation were | he said, and his view | | ratrly good, | was better than any attained during | {he recent observations " by British astronomers, It also was apparent- 1y more satisfactory than the report ed observations of other Fgench as- | tronomers who had been watching | | the planet during the period of its relative nearness to the earth. Marvelous Visfon Obtained | | Rev. Moreus asserted that his vis- | fon of Mars on Saturday had been | marvelous but added that r,||ma(|(:1 conditions on the planet produced a | « which had obscured many well | known topographical features al-| though in general permitting a good | sight of the planet's outline as it had already been reported by previ- | ous ohservers, | “What the eye can affirm as a re- «ult of the ohservations” the as tronomer continued, “is that the layer of air surrounding the planet f¢ highly rarefied and that it could not support highly organized ani- mal life such as dogs or even mice. “If there are animals there, they must be a very low state of lite. The vegetation there must resem our moss and lichen." Rev. Moreux said the weather on Mars, where spring fs now at its height, is as bad as that on earth and that the Martions if they exist | will have the same cold and nasty | summer which the inhabitants of the | earth have endured this year. (This obviously refers to this summer in | France.) Temperature 65 or 70 Above e added that he wanted to cor- rect some erroneous comments on | the probable temperature there for | atmospheric conditions, declaring: | “Although the thermometer on | Mars might register about 5 degrees above zero Fahrenheit in the shade, yeot fully exposed to the sun it prob- | ably would show something like 65 or 10 Aegrees above zero And would e favorable 16 A vegetation which Aréw its moisiE® only from the at- mosphere.” y | \ One reason why people don’t go|Democratic club. | sacts make a beaten path | indifferent to our | Like the boles of forest monarchs | serving the shop arenas | Thousands of pulleys revolving | Cities will thrive and expand, | ¥orge them to shape in ydur fires; | Nor is the final word spoken, | | Greater thy future shall be. Appiest praple ar wh Facts and Fancies DEMOCRATS SEE NO e CONTESTS ANEAD o 0t v Gagale 15 Only C;udidale for | Nomination as State Senator o8 Was Iy as Car Ne w the faet really | just that Y You are getting onn clase when & down irink There will no contest in democritic parly for state senator, the town commities announcing last night that Atterney B Gerand Vasale has 4 ¢lear feld for the nomination, land defogation to the state, probate and congressionsl convention will be named without contest, The 1own eommittee had 10 118 hunds lust night fower petitions of candidacy than there are places to by filled and the committes exercised its power of appointing delegates. wtes 1o the congressionul vention will Mayor Puonsssn, Counciliman Thomas Fay, James P Murphy, Rob Kerrigan, Richard Schaefter, Thoms- as J. Hmith, Miss Agnes C. Vance, James I, Kiniry, Edward A, McCar- thy, Dr."A. L. Avitable, Frank L. Conlon, James T, O'Connor, Charles P, Wainwright, Councilman James J. Dunn, John ¥, Callahan, A, 8. An- drulewles, The delegates to the state eonvon- 9.9 tion will be William Sikora, Joseph The best thing you can for | 1, Halloran, Constable B. J. Dough- increase of population is that curi-| erty, John R, Keevers, John osity grows less. | Walsh, John J. Kiniry, James D. Mc- o Kenna, James A, Coyle, Councilman Just at present, however, we can’t | john J. O'Brien, Mrs. Minnie Hag- remember America's champlon fancy | old Josephs, Mrs, Mary T, handler of the hoe. stman Michael 1, Kerwin, e Judge W. F. Mangan, Edward Dona- woman | hue, John L. Magan. have | The delegates to the probate dis- trict convention will be Councilman Elias T. Ringrose, David L. Dunn, where they | Lawrence P, Mangan, I>. I, McDon- ter is free ™ handy little triek i can afford A jitney 18 a If the neighbors know ¥ A big car old-fashioned welter At bathing looked & than the modern ones. any rate Nits lot A philosepher Is one wha can be proud of his tummy instead of his vanished walstline ‘The honeymeon is expensive, of course, but think of the hotel towels you can accumulate, . sy . How unfortunate that a with & beautiful face should that kind of chassis, A metropolis is a pl | must find something to do until bed- | ough and Edward O, Kilbourne. | Wiliam P: Sikora and John F. | Baldyga filed petitions as candidates We have reached the point in life | for representative and it is expected where a walk is no less tiresome if | that there will be other candidates. you call it a hike. | Sikora was one of the organizers and . |is an officer of the Hardware City He was at one fo ehureh is because they no longer | time a candidate for councilman in believe hell is that hot. the fifth ward. Baldyga is a mem- ber of the board of selectmen, elect- ed Iast ring. The town committee voted last night to ask the Hardware City Democratic elub ot name a commit- tee of 12 members to work with the town committee on plans for the election. 25 Years Ago Today From Paper of That Date time after the party lets out, The man who has no acquaintance | with the great open spaces has no idea how wonderful nature is or hew many insects there are. | ke | TMev. Martin Gaudian of St. John's The modern thinks he is practicing | Lutheran church has received word renunciation when he cuts down his[that the semi-annual conference of cigarettes from 20 to 18. the New York district synod of the « e | German Lutheran ehurches will be Every woman who hasn't the price Iheld at Meriden, Tuesday and knows she wouldn't employ such | Wednesda; September 26 and 27. atrocious taste as Mrs. Blank it she| A new desk for the use of the had. |lobhy this morning. The improve [ ments at the office can now be saic to be finished and the new plan meets with general favor. The first trolley made its trial trip over the extension between South- and makes a better mouse trap, in- | Ington and Plainville today. Aboard %o his | the trolley was a Southington wom- BBy |an who was 99 years old and yho T | was a guest of the company. Gorrect this sentence: “They seem | Andrew Robb, representing Clan advance: said | Pouglas team of this city, took third she, “but I adore them.” place in the 100 yard dash at the . Scottish games held at Savin Rock yesterday. There were six marriage licenses issued and eight deaths recorded during the week. This is the last Saturday after- noon for the local lawyers to keep their offices closed. 1t has been learned that the labor situation on the railroad which has been quite tense lately has passed the critical stage and is expected to simmer out. Rev. H. I. Bodley, rector of St | Marks, came to New Britain today [to make this city his permanent hom time next week. .« . We convert savages, but we can't teach them anything about making their hair stick out that w: . 1t one has a cabin in the woods WALNUT HILL (Contributed) Standing upon the hilltop | When the sun’s red disk appeared | Above the dim horizon Vhere the mists hung, weird Tike tattered somber curtaing That slowly swayed in the breeze. Though, at times, they scemed like phantom_ships, And at times the ghosts of trees. pale and | Nearer the roots were jumbled, lLeaves on a forest floor, Countlees and gray they away To the verge of the misty shore; stretched Observations On The Weather Rain this after- tonight Rose chimneys here and there, Smoke wreaths lazily drifting Frem their summits high in ai For Connecticut: noon; generally fair Fitted for constant endeavor, | e daendey axcane i Leaping to life in a moment 0 | Massachusetts tonight; somewhat Roused st the touch of & leveri |orrer Wainesday, strong shitting | gales becoming north and northwest Belts to their surfaces clinging | ynis afternoon and diminishing to- Thousands or spindles and arbors | o, Whirring and droning and singing. | \v.inings for high winds are dis- | played coast. Thousands of trained operators “:;‘ d on the;conat A L ODEALOLS | Conditions: The Pending the complex machines, Women and men, old in service, i ing off I Maidens and youths in their teens. | \BE ::w::‘nl Shops are the bones and the sincws, ' ames on which cities are built, When they decline and go under Cities will lanquish and wilt. tropical storm North Carolina northward and this morning is central off the Jerscy coast and will probubly pass out to Jate this alternoon or tonight. |1t is causing high winds and heavy rain along the coast from Virginia to Massachusetts. The greatest amount of rain during the last 24 | hours was 3.40 inches at New York. Pleasant weather with —moderate cost of is When the great factories prosper Jach on the other dependent Moving along hand in hand. ‘orces impressive, titanic, Harnessed and shrewdly direct Jorces, as yet, in the making Engines not fully perfected. | western districts. Conditions favor for this vicinity, rain followed by fair weather and slightly lower temperature. Great, but still greater to follow, Onward the thought that inspires Delve for the secrets of nature, Two in Hospital After | Free For All Battle Put them to manifold uses Not even dreamed of before, New Haven, Aug. 26.—Two men are in New Haven hospitals, one serious! hurt, and seven under arrest as the result of a fight in a restaurant at last night. The seven men arrested Nature has others in store, Life is a constant unfolding. Thought the endogenous seed, Great possibilities holding When it shall ripen in deed— Glancing about me fair city, This dawning but typifies thee, Great as thou art in the rising Lewis Field. Nardi of North Bran- hospital with of Coroner Bruno De ford is in $t, Raphac cit on one side of his face. He wi hit over the head with a bottle, a cording scious when taken to the hospital. Rodgers, Mayview. William Gillen DUBLINS WANT GAMES, 'he Dubling of New Britain would like to arrange games with any fast teams in state inc! #alcons Jr., and ¥ Pasqi the restaurant, is in For games | right arm and cuts about the face address George Kelly, 163 Clark land body. sireet, New Dritain, or telephone The fight followed 1744-4 between 6 and 5 p. m. overgfood, it is said. | public was placed in the post office | His family will come some | and | northeastern | | which was central yesterday morn- | temperature, prevails in central and | | men are | 720 Broad street| a fracture of the skull and a deép 1o the police and was uncon- | The meloncholy days have come, the Nigretti, proprictor of | My summer suit is all worn out, and New Haven sding Pirates Jr., | hospital with a long wound in his an argument Moving vans have 10ads to carry. I | | | BOOGER ROOK (By Daisy Baker Hay) | One't when 1 wuz a little boy | An' uster run away When my ma wus busy | An' sent me out to piay, Bhe always told me to be An' min' what I's about Or else & Booger Hoo might ‘An' cut my eyesballs out! 1t uster keep me acared to .mvn.‘ An' ahways mindin' ma, An' kep' me bringin' in the weod, An' doing ehores for pa, ‘Cause every time my thoughts wus biad, | 1 never had a But that the e m cut my ¢ good, come doubt | Booger-Boos might An' balls out, 1 heered my pa, the other night, When I'z behind the door, | Say he wuz skeered as anything, | An' likewise mighty sore, That queer things was a-happenin’ In this country round about, That Bogus Boose had just about Cut his high-balls out! | Good - Shape Income tax collector (to theater owner):—"1 believe your statement, but 1 must see your figures' Theater owner: — “Then you should have gone to the dressing rooms—next to the box office.” | ~—Mrs. Bernard Hahn. | A Probable Exception “A scientist says, here in the paper,” remarked Mrs. Iumblegate, in the midst of her reading, “that in five years more we'll all be flying.” faybe some folks wil be, but not my hired man," responded FFumblegate, “He'll do well to crawl, let alone fly." [ | | Etiquette For Eaters i o | Folks at table are not lonely— Park your legs on your side omly. e One's appetite one loses,— One's heart-beats start to miss When somcone near one uses His knife for emphasis. | | .o | | | Some table cut-ups are all right, If they are clever and polite; But 1 am apt to get the fits When someone cuts his meat in bits. —Edmund J. Kiefer. You Never Can Tell Man:—"Now I don't know much ahout you flappers, hut when I was your age—’ |7 Flapper:—"You were never my age. 1'm fifty-seven, and a grand- | mother! + —Ralph Roberts. | Air mail aviator (to pilot “Slow down over there, Jim. My girl lives on that farm, and I want to | drop her a line." i he one-piece bathing suit the| girls are wearing may have no hooks, but they certainly don't lack for! eyes! | | . The Fun Shop Hall of Fame ‘ We nominate for the Hall of Fame | Mrs, Rosalie Barker because she has attonded thirty-five wedding recep- | tions in her life, and never once has she lifted up a piece of silver to see how heavy it wa; | S | John Martin Cowley because | though he has been an after-dinner | speaker for eighteen years he has never once begun his speech by re- marking that the previous spuech has reminded aim of the story uf the two Irishmen. Walter Torrey because when, on June 28, 1024, his wife departed for the country, he remembered to sce {hat all the electric lights were turn- ed off, the telephone discontinued, the milkman notified to stop bring- ing milk, the windows all locked, the || icem ordered to bring no more ice, | | the cereals and other | perishable | food taken over to “mother’s and the | neighbors' children bribed not to mark up the fence during the sum- mer. | A Matter of Degrees | A friend was congratulating Farm- | er Diggs upen his son's graduation | from college. “So Krank has come out a Ph. D., | has he “Mebbe 8o, replied the fond par- | ent, “but, ye know, things sometimes | -ts turned around. Sems to me like he's come out D-Ph.” Alice A, dmith. | The meaning of | cursion hoat:—Save Our Seats. | C——— | Along Came Ruth! | “What will my litle Ruthie Jo| when grandma is very old and .is| taken away by the angels?" “1 won't let the angels take )nu.’ granny,” replied five-year old Ruth, | “I'll tell dad to have you stuffed.” —Vera Friedlander. O, & on an ex- The Gabber | “Half of the pleasure of a vacation is.in telling about it afterwards,” said | Tarkington, who had just got back from a jaunt. | oaeee returned J. Fuller Gleom. | “You appear to be a regular glutten | for fun.” ¢ The Jingle-dangle Counter | Youth is bound to have its fling; ate held without bond upon orders| Shutters have a wicked swing | | Siste Furness. | Ships their harbors try to win; ‘I ighters spar and sail right in. | Gertrude Heller. | { | saddest of the year, winter isn't he | eil Nelson. | Worries hurt and vex and harry; —Doris Kremer. HE difference be- tween good coal and poor coal is summed up in one word —HEAT. Heat spells the difference between our good OLD COMPANY'’S anthracite and that less. poor, low-grade coal sometimes sells' for The economical use of our hard OLD COMPANY'S COAL is a decided saving over low-grade coal price. that is expensive at any We have never had any better, cleaner coal in our yard. Everything to gain and nothing to lose in buy- ing your winter’s coal from us RIGHT NOW. | You never sausage cutting up! | graphed photograph of Governor Al- | given him by love The Citizens Coal Co. Yord and Main Office Berlin Xurd Uptown Wilice 24 Dwight Court. opp._Berlin station 104 Arch St Tel. 2308, Tel. 2635-5. Tel. 3268, Into the grinder fell our pup; —I'red Cruse. Rings of Smoke Anna:—"What sore of a smoke SWEDISH SINGERS rivee e R o awaen. oW Britain Chorus to Have I Do 2at Place on State Program Helen:—"Do you believe in mar- | rying for money i Jane:—"No—it's bad business.” —Norma Talmadge. is Bridgeport, Aug. ~—The annual | convention and field day of the Con- necticut Union of Swedish Singers will be hetd Sunday, August 31 at | the “Farm.” ———————————————1| Swedish singing socicties from all | over the state are coming to I3 port on that day to enjoy the | pitality of the city of Bridgeport and | to participate in an elabor music- |l and sports program (hat has been arranged There will be mass chorus sinzing | ot popular ‘Swedish and Americ songs by a combined chorus of voices under the leadership of Prof Orvar Rosengren of New Haven, Individual cheruses from Hai |New Britain, Waterbury, New ven, Bridgeport, Springtic | Brooklyn, N. Y., and N | will have places on the prog give expression of and (Copyright 1924, Reproduction forbidden). The Fun Shop {s a national fusti- tution conducted by newspapers of the country. Contributions from re providing they are original, unpublish- od, and possess sufricient merit, will be paid_for at varying from §1.00 to $10.00, Write on ona side of the paper only and send your contributions ||| to the “Fun Shop Editor,” care of the ||| Herald, who will forward them to New York. Unaccepted manuscripts will not e returned. hos- Ha- \lass, York eity m to mausie MacLaren and Martin Exchange Sympathy Vancouver, B. C., Aug. —Two | to the public of Bridsepor! airmen, one British the other Ameri- | 1% W. Behrens, Jr., mayor of can, each of whose attempts to fly | Bridgeport, will open the convention around the world recently ended in with an address of welcome and has a crash, stood face to face here and | promised that the city officials quar smiled over their mistortune. They | tct, of whieh he is a menmber, wil were Squadron Leader Stuart Mac- fill a number on the program. Laren of Great Britain and Major The feature of the sports pro- L. Martin of the United States. gram will be a tug-o-war contest The latter had motored up from ' consisting of man teams from Bellingham, Washington, to attend the visiting societics, A loving cujp , luncheon given in honor of the has been set up the sh fly winning team “1 was awfully Much enthusiasm has heen shown your crashing.” and elaborate plans ave heing made he shook Martin's 1 y the Swedish-American eitizens of “Well” the latter to entertain all visitors same to you!" song six A prize for fo hear about TacLaren, as “the on that da laughed PONED — Pittsfi rain. Autographed Photo of Smith Brings $725 Luzerne, N. Y., Aug. 26—An auto- | Aug, me or, Worcester postponed; NO BALL GAME. Waterbury, Aug. ~New Haven Waterbury game postponed: rain. The brain of an ant is size of a darning needle’s head | was sold at auction 25 to 1red Beck of at a festivai last ferd Smith, was sold for §7 Ne City, ni about the o ork DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL | e - Falling In Love By DR. FRANK CRANE 1alling in love is one of the unaccountable phenomena of the humar race he Orientals explain it by claiming that we have had a previon existence and that those in the present existcnce touch us who have somt hold on us due to a life that is past. \Whether we accept this explanation or not there is no dou falling in love is one of the inexplicable pecullarities of our race Tt is connected also wita the creative instinct and it is safe to tay tha those who are not capable of falling in love wigh anything are not capa ble of creative work either in the liberal arts or elsswhere. 1t §s a well known fact that many famous men have been reputec famous lovers; this has been set down in their disfavor as proving that they were loose morally when, as a matter of fact, morals had nothing to do with it. Love was simply an essential demand of their nature. They had to be in love with something In order to do their best work. Much of the vagaries of those who have achieved fame can be thus explained, 1t is not that they lack a sense of the responsibilities of life, or that (hey are not willing to undertake them, but that they necd for their sus. tenance an enthusiasm that is only bred in them by the presence of affection. It is a mistake to think that any While there is life there is love, It i well for those who are supremely endowed with the capacity for aftection, If they are endowed also with those moral inhibitions which preveny, them from Indulging their capacity in forbidden directions. 1t Would be well also for the friends ot great men to remember this need of their nature and to feed it properly. No one can exist v a con- wtant atmosphere of nesation, and fire that is suppressed in one dir¢ction bt thal person is too old (o need the fire or should be. ' Will break out in another. Copyright, 1924, by The McCluré’s Newspaper Syndicate.