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LS E R NS i T " their _mever know it. . minmanagement —— :Now Britain Herald, BERALD PUBLASHING COMPANY Basved Daily (Bundar Bace A Hond Bldg. 1 Cuurch SUBSCRIPTION RATES e e Vs L3 Eaieie The Aweclaied ttied 19 1he ol news eredited 1 | Bewe P Member Audit Bureau of Circulation, Poe A B < . whish furnishes tisers with & et BUTLER AN A JOKER As ehalrman « Nati M wi publican committ belleves exactly what he belleve, doesn't see wish to see, and Is eordant sounda. Bome time the scandals in the administration did not linger in the dormant mi ‘the tongu Hardly had the political fili lumb to Harding-Coolidge is of voters and wore frozen about them. busters started gasping at tonishing optimism when Candidate Davis preaches a flery sermon on the scandals, This sad sophism now well In the past, along comes Brother T with another political pun, ¥ the Klan Is no issue In Maine! What a lot of breath, words and temper Daredevil when he lectured on and order in Augusta r All they've been this election is spelibind about the bedsheet situa- tion, but Signor Butler evidently hasn't heard the been reading the public prints, plain that he such as says wasted law Dawes Kiannish ntly! M argue doing in to talk, news nor has he 1t's has been too busy | - eourting Miss Winged Victory to pay much attention to the stormy weath- er. But we think he really ought to quit joy-riding with platitudes and |* While way they may hold the and Butler tend shop he is negiecting business tha election in Maine may BLAMING T MOCRATS | The Hartford Courant attempts to | sclous rea- follow up a bar of soning in an apparent of the New Haven's financial plight up- | on the Democrats rather than upon by its own former | ge | ort to hlame officials. i The Courant blames the Demo- | erats because during the first Wilson administration a suit dropped during the previous Taft administration wi revived and ult the “prin- cipal holdings” of the railroad taken away and the road forced to | pay “enormous salaries” to federal | trustees who were put in control of | the holdings. | What the “enormous salaries” to a | few trustees amounted to is not stated by the Courant; considering | that the railroad had paid enormous | amounts for various holdings, much more than they worth, cording to unbiased observers, it doubtful if these salarles enough to help materi ing the railroad. This trouble was only a minor incident. | As! everybody but apparently is aware, ven was wrecked exorbitant prices of other transpor- tation lines in an aftempt to mo- nopolize transportation in New land. “Perhaps it would necessary to taise the rates ® * * if the Democrats had not says the as a re ac- | s | were were ly in wre Courant New Ha- at the the hy purchases Eng- been commutation | have meddled with the railroad,” Courant, The eommutation increase, did not blame but railroad, in defending the their need upon the Democrals, alleged it had to receive the incr in order to sc Railroads elsc tempting to sccure ure more revenuc have been ate where increased com- them Long 1sland Pennsyl- and of 1. The mutation rate some have railroad suee operated by the vania, is 20 per cent in- erease at this writing, But the Long Mland cannot force utilities into | York increasc put the ind come before th commission later, as is under the Connecticut law. New Hay ite possible The n has been treated sto slders and the We mildly by Kk government ng memories can well remember the day when the Baltimore and Ohio was wrecked by un- et mor officials who did not wisely than the crstwhile officials of the New Haver stockholders, banlers politicians and party newspapers do- put instead of its subservient ¢ to uphold the Ing all oW officials and the in thetr § railroad, it was al- ) into the nands of hich time its present And s othet lowed to & re- eein pr y true were allowed to swim te eafety thel ers, from dates. the same of several tines whi | ment” conubsed with de | realize that they must continue to | made e way, But of SALES OF HARDWARE Wnils say western farin they b o hard 1" ses that & the furming nin time Ine ow Brituin farmers begin o make offect of industry, in 1he will b & the line ¥ well as in industri. il conters closer to the great furm- ing country e farmer i not super-economical, He | in & voraclous user of machinery and Contrary 1o general beflel, it is matter of general knowledge s takes vory poor care of ex- pe appliunces, Valuable 15, tractors and power-driven polws bind- are left standing unpro- city 1o reque tected ty | clements, A | would attempt of what costs much | from man by instinet take better care money 15 cureful huying of small things | that has sometimes caused the farm or to regarded as “tight” In veality, he is the reverse when he has Consider his outlays for | the machinery, automobiles and his wil- mon lingness to be taxed for the construc- | tion of great stretches of good roads, | and he appears as a progressive and | public-spirited citizen. NATIONALIST BLOCS The world has the spectacle of two Lurope at- toward blocks in halt prace nationalist 58 return to tempting to stability chaos, The and the Nationalis ths bloes. The French parliament rati- fied the London agreement regarding s plan, former Prog and and alists in Germany in IFrance are Natio | the application of the Daw | but not with the help of the premier, Poincare. The latter in veighed against it, subtly posing as a “friend"” of the plan but opposing | the procedure involved. He opined | French should stay in the Ruhr. | and his rule or | rded nowadays the How small Poincars ruin policies are re was shown in the vote in the French nate; tor | treignt or express ride, and “west- | | inferior, 151 the plan and 37 against, | In Germany a bloc of Nationalists | has been attempting to obstruct the | plan; this bloc consists of the rem- | nants of the old-fire-cating militar- | ists who knocked from their pedestal when the “imperial govern- were both 1 and | more The masses in ance Germany rattling, impi sabre- They | want no alistic designs. live on the same planet and in close and might as well be de- \h other | arievances proximit disposed toward that long-standing cently now have been settled. | The blocs are rem- nants of an old order, nationalist STOPPING AT CORNERS A western city considerably small- | er than New Britain has inaugurated a new method of regulating auto- | mobile traffic along the main streets. | | on the | films, Facts and Fancies BY BOBENT QUILAEN Plalosephy e well a0 any ¥ The adoplion how i he Paciile saten £ westers Mot hods, ver s must be spray st e enniched st be oul 50 Lhat the the fruit and Appive e market odi The » sary. 1 branches i sun van ol tor must for gihe it sorted for 1) ers al retail insist apon size and Gualing Distrtbhuton is T A ther mportant fuetor, In brief old way of neglecting or chards and offering Whatever to grow dis Hastern orchardists must Ve buy S R [ youisell alone of that fri " ut the only is love you for 1he empty cellar One thing you van't agminst i the ieh 10 happens must be Aas #el carded some thinking inated othws Well, » re think sl Piog mj ssing wor New Eng Advantage nd farers huve the of vast market reseryoirs up mory easl T New 10 their doors. greatest England g centers in re Boston and the vastaern bay Hay and Provi denee, Yot it s in hoth vities that western fruit comes from and the rightfu reporied e mites distant ousts When the big boss keeps looking his watch, he may be worrying about output, but it is mere probus ble he is thinki out golf. Appearance counts for much with 1y The western fruit generally rked, with sluring colored puper hrands on the that California s woll g In neat boxes, Wo slill have people who “can afford it," but that docsn't secm to with cramp their style the fruit boxes, information some Oregon ot .. That Ieishman who says American testh are wonderful hasn't examined some of our luws, ga T There Is a lat of Americanism in districts where they don't think sundwich a square meal, fruit association guarantees the fruit contuined thercin to be the “finest world" ote. I'he New England product comes to the wholesaler and fruit stores in hoxes and generally showing in neat- in the barrels and makes no happy It America produces no more genius, who writes the ads for sma tracts in distant states? noan, In the matter of eggs, however, New Englind has much the advan- tage in the home markoet, Nature s a valuable aid in ecompetition um‘:;’:"“""::"""""““’;"_';“‘r;’y'""'m° they fin. western eggs. 1t is impossible for | Pt western ahippers to Keep their eggs| Tt Is very refreshing at times to in high olass condition during a long | ind children who don't correct their | nts 1 public, | 1t would be w nice custom for erns” in New England are distinctly and no of fancy branding can change the facts, Na- tive eggs, brought to murket within | 24 hours after the hens have done their duty, command a considerable kigher prices than the westerns, and l‘flfl' the extra price and appre- the higher product always prefor the native eggs. amount There is little difference. In cheap hotels you lis to the soup and in | the swell ones you listen to the | celery. such parts of the population afford ciate | P | | A “center of cultur is a place do the necessary lawn | At ey : | wnero one can do't ) | ding reprints of what the | pgwing with the scissors. | candidates in Texas said about each AL | other in the run-oft primary, said| Touring fs a pleasure If there is| “literure" appearing in yesterday's | @ 4itch handy when you meet onc Herald, have concluded that|©f these houses on wheols, Dawes' “Hell and Maria” perslifiage is milk and water diet. 1f Dawes| wants do any campaigning in Texas he had better roughen his vo- | cabulary. we most important while answering a | ¢ stranger'’s questions grumpily t to P 1 that it doesn't seem able to keep a conviction from slipplng out. A New, York authority says, “Mod- eed ern dancing is Killing.” To the terpsechorean trippers of New Britain might say, O death, where sentence: his spouse; % ) | f | Correct this | Mike,” said he to | 1ocked every window |25 Ye; Ago—Today re- | which is thy sting.” That eloud that astronomers ported seeing on Mars probably was | smoke from the chimneys in the hardware city of that planet. Y¥wom Paper of That Date f I'he present August’ will go down In history as the dryest August in| forly years unless tomorrow saves| it by bringing rain. The month closest approaching the rccord in forty years was that of August, 1876 which was a very dry month. total rainfall for the month up to| Batteries for s game: For the Machinists, Roraback and Bing- ham; for the Anti-Machinists, Ull- man and King. Hartford Times. Umpire, t ferank Olcott is the guest of rela- tives in Tarifiville where he will | spend the next few days. ¥ P, C. Meintyre, Herbert L. Mills, and John 1%, Storey have been select- ed to do jury duty during the coming Ex-Mayor Quigley, who recently | was inclined to be slightly pro-Bing- ham, will take heart from the situ- ation in Bridgeport and New Haven. A year. N At a meeting of the h Gilpatric | ilpatric | G held last night it v business has been letting go its hold |, vy over a list of the numes of first pages of the state news- | property owners who have as vet failed to connect their premises with o the scwers to the prosccuting at-# o ¢ t Slowly but su ool : as voted It papers, Mr. deMille moving fame has written an article about the He pans censorship and in- against high brow criticism. of picture elephone men have been in town |/ for the last few days rigging up three large wires which will conneet velgles | the local exchange with Boston an-’:‘ » says 1e would ot | New York. A new switch board wil He says just what one would expect| % .10 and the service will be complete. meeting of the dircctors of a film magnate to say. 1 An ordinance passed making it autoists to come wded | before compulsory for all to a complete stop when he from intersccting streets crossing or entering are to be place nd itop signs Afected intersections violation of the rules will he punish This fs a semblance of the new rules and regulations continually ero up to combat traffic evils. | In the highways will course of time trafie on the (s carefully rogu- Jated as railrond trains, NATIVE PRODUCTS freguel he remark grow sime re- New One s the that fruit The in Connecticut ing “does not pay mark is heard in other of how is it that fruit ngland. Y growing pays in th t from wherc quantities of product ar shipped to sucd ompetit Providence dournal out, with apples scll each in Noew to any adianiages metaed® not inley Rule & Level Co, a new | utilities commission it aurer of the concern will be elect- Happily, the hias nothing to do with the commut- | ing rates from Mars. ithe -electric contract for thel® | lighting of the New Britain institute | building has been awarded to the| yor docsn’t think a fireman New Britain Electrical and Construc- The ought to he a supernumerary a _\(‘Al'i 4 He evidently | tion Co. upon fact I | 8 ruck by Autoist Who | Leaves Man in Roadway | waterbury, Aug. 20.—George Walid | Angle, 54 of 1093 Cooke strect sus- tatned a compound fracture of the ; | skull_and mcompound fracture of |/ | the right Teg last night when he was | struck on Thomaston avenue by an automobile. The driver of the ma- (¢ |chine did not stop. Angle, a sales-| heing qualified deduction « man doesn’t need to be a su before | hases his the that pernmerary fit for mayor a year being the job. Qbservations On The Weather N ing to his home when the accident For ‘Connc cticut: Fair tonlght and | o yi little change in temper- | moderate shifting winds, Conditions: The pressure is high over the tern and low over the | storn districts of the country this temperature is rising the Rocky Moun- tains and the Mississippi river, Pleasant weather in all northern sections. | — | Conditions favor for this vicinity | | e et en change | Seven Persons Killed ; ir ather and not much change | { in Another Grade Crash | Toledo, Ohio, Aug 29 even pers | T |sons were killed and one child seri- injured last night when a curred, |t | Three men past lautomobile saw and hat in the road. st they heard | behind bushes on the side | road and discovered Angle. He was| rughed to the Waterbury hospital I whe it was ed that he has little chance for recovery. | ng the seene inan | Angle's brief case | | Stopping to in-| groans from of the | Saturd ature; morning. Tel slowly hetween continues temperature, ORDERED TO BE POLITE Berlin, Avg, 20—Cabmen and auto | ously chauffeurs should be politc toward | Baltimore & Ohio railway train each other ys the chief of Police|struck an automobile on a grade | of Rerlin i w ordet to men en-|crossing at the southern limits of | Rage His | Perryebn willaga in Wood eounty order also of | tw miles south of this city on the proper benavim® ov | Dixie high in the livery businese the subject 4 passéngers. M M While dise | ) \ | This bread sternly, “Ma durn’ old fashioned that h skeer An American is a man who feels| officer of the hoat, "we've been cap- | The objection to an open mind 18 | wary othe minutes | sta The | Astonishient of the Amerie | ple whenever today is about one-half inch. 9 strange prospecting. sertedp frightened idols which we we covering. But the gold, man! V | | of pure ore stood out like those on on, alone, torne; 1e plumb into the midst of the Maya camp. have color, wearing only a walst which plements would put an lowa farmer | went | loading their creeses with raw ante- | mouths with the blunt backs of the | honor of the Sun, 1 stole weapons, and men drawing the blades across their man for a roofing congern, was walk and hundreds of forms writhed on with playing opera. There must be an unwritten law Againet the wretch STORE CLOSED ALL DAY LABOR DAY HHEAD Edgar Daniel K HARTFORD While digaiag in (he ruing DAYS ALL DAY HEREAFTER arthed 4 loaf .;' hread . S Vi Aud brought it from the g handied it with tender And breathed, “It's elear to this came from the oven fhesis B C m; bout wrapped the precious loaf. be had just found, the others dropped thelr tools And crowded close around, he broke his knife on it 1, "For Heaven's sake! exaetly wr used 10 make That He sigh is just Like W hat mot Naving His Breath The Judge eyed the prisoners you anything to say we sentence is passed upon you demnded Whut's th udge?" the euls it asked, “You won't take my word them twe guys wot found George Levis There Are a Vew Left “What sort of & feller is Bam Bus. slons “Good enough.” replied old 'Bquire m of Petunia, “but »so lorses Ramshott at automobiles.” Sa'e of New Fall Coats Saturday NEW FALL POLO NEW FALL PILE [ NEW FALL COATS COATS . T (0 | In a variety of new and Fully Lined FABRIC,COAT } novel fabrics,® Specially ety $16.98 e .. $25.00 i priced ... priced . ATTRACTIVE TAILORED JERSEY DRESSES For early fall wear, unsurpassed for s chool wear. These pleasing dresses are shown in many pretty shades including rust, brown, navy, copen $ wnd green : e .o 1 1 '98 " A NEW ARRIVAL FOR THE MISS OR YOUNG WOMAN Is made of heavy satin canton straight line pleated model and is tric- med with a lace and seif materiai from neck to hem. $ 1 8 .98 priced moderately ...... © SUMMER DRESSES | r SUMMER DRESSES For final clearance, were | For final clearance, were § e priced up to $25. Saturday $5 )OO | priced up to $15.98. Suturdny$4 00 the m e S BB S | of antomobHe operators licensed. What 1s home without some kiddies z | In 1920, the number of automobile U operators dropped to 128,161, from " a total of 168,057 the previous year. 5 | Automobile registrations, however, A CHARMING MODEL OF CANTON CREPE For the conservative woman has four wide pleated panels trimmed with self buttons, a wide girdle and three-quarter Priced at only ... in a Chivalry “What's the matter, cay Jied an excited passenger. hip in dunger? “In danger?” shouted the chiet | forces, there has been a steady se sinee 1907 in the number ured | | inc o m 2un below pirates and they are going | e all of us walk the plank. | quicle, man—and | Double Exposure | case for that 101,630 in 1919 to passengers | Mrs. De Stuyvesant:—“How much | The man rushed below, and a few | will the portrait cos And how ll|g‘ later the captain was| will it be?" tled to hear him ghoutin, | Artist:— 00, for lifs 6., Women and children first!” he| Mrs. De Stuyvesant:—S$5,000 for year 18 screaming, “women and children | six feet of picture! Why man do | but there was a irst!" | you know: that I can get the best | registrations in country entered 47 antomobiles [ were registered, as against 76,794 in 1916, A peculiar fact is that the numl of motoreycle operators R | Back in 1807 Only 8,901 Were ::: tered increased in 1920 but de- ed in the two succeeding years; A Remen ce me for t tha | | “Did you bring any souvenirs back —Bertram Bloch. showed a slight increase last Motoreycle operators licensed last calendar year numbered ol | did not show a de going from 99 in 1920, in automobile 1917, the year thi the war, when 7 of 29 —An idea affic is inere; Hartford, Aug. |the rate of which t rom New York?" “Yeg, an empty pockethook.” —K I, E o jand | year. in the 1,937, Motor vehicle department receipts | | We'll Take a Chance : { Bill: “Why don't you submit sev- ing on the highways of Connecticut eral of your jokes to The lun|[is given by statistics of®tho stute | shop? motor vehicle depaftment showing Tl ey that times many people arc sdlions |now licensed to operate motor ve- Billi—"How do you mean in Connecticut as there were : : S o e years ago, and that o 31 by law turned over to the state Ja B 5 highway departmetn for road work. himsell | to death.” as many motor vehicles o - i T % ' Klan, But With No Hoods. | Meet in Naugatuck —Louis Hammons. . | In 1907, there were vehieles In Cannecticut prope: ugatuck, Aug —A meeting of the Ku Klux Klan, with the Among the Anci Yueat (A Traprock Adventure) “I have to smile when 1 feel too sorry for the | some scientist reports y of relics of the ancient civilization In Central Ameri- | 1 am the only living white who | s ever lived with a tribe of these | folk who actually exist in | he mountains of Yucatan, “Lam in the province of Azatlan, | My natibe escort de- | by the hideous o constantly dis- ins | 7,505 motor reg- At year, he discove Kid!" chuckled | operitor, othing doing, the pretty telephone the youth in the sporty tried to flirt with her, “I've number.” I hear that women in banks us tellors istered, and 8,991 operator: got your |y S nd 207,846 operators liconsed, | Members minus hoods, was held last show & corresponding increase, | 1ess meeting of the hooded order b DalloF [eHanE theT remnib faliori| i A0 e 0TISDAnTIIE: Uie d K | 0 I e pas ale roadstor | the end of the past calendar | 6 motor vehicles were regi land, the figures for 1924, when Nigth in Pythian hall. Members ad- | compiled at the end of this year, | Mitted that th ssion was a busi- (tion receipts leaped from |bnt refused to give information re- in 1907 to $3,25 garding officers elected and other for the past year. {husiness transacted. The session Txeept for one of the years when |lasted three hours and only an oc- the United in the World | casional hand clapping and rising of X y || zar, and thousands of Conneeticut | a voice, disturbed the 1t's nothing to speak |1,6vg were oversens with the mili- | peace, What do you think book everybody s Paul: Miss of that talking about? Miss r of.! he brow of an angry man, I pushed At the end of the fourth | fter T had staked out a limit- | s fortune in claims, T was caught | n a land slide which carried me speaker's —XK. clusions “They were the wildest people 1) Cd would you do it I ever seen, canary yellow in| Ralphi—"Wh; Siring | Kimed vou ||DR. FRANK CRANE’S DAILY EDITORIAL Rosalind:—"Boy, T was just won- | (== - rom which hung a long, cruel knife, - was their only implement. | dering what 1'd do if you dom’t.” | . —Mus, Bessie Blaisdell, C”rne D]em By DR. FRANK CRAN heir skill in eating with these im-| 3 —— | manager's perpetual and Cream, ‘ (Copyright 1924, Reproduction forbidden)., age Peaches The o shame. At their banquets they through a curious cercnmony, The ancients had a motio, “Carpe Diem” which literally translated means, “Seize today.” It was generally supposed to be the motto of reck- | 1o¢a people and of those who sicrificed the present fo the future thought- —— | lesely. There 18 something fo be suid, however, i favor ot it for more [ thoughtful people, Man is a peentiar animal in that Jives not in the present but ai < in the future or past. We draw our satisfactions not from the only time which is ours, the present, but from the time which we do not know whether it he ours or not, the future We live in the future. Part of anticipation of evil, the rest of the | pectations of good. And yet we da not know whether it will come or not. All that we ype and drawing them through their Jlade pressed against their jaws. 1| aw my chance of escape “On a night before The Kun Shop 1s a & tution conducted by newspapors of the 4 country, Contributions from teaders, providing they are original, unpublish- ed, and possess eufficient merit, will he paid for at rates varying $1.00 to $10.00, Write on one side the paper only and send your contributions to the “Iun Shop Bditor,” care of the Herald, who will v them to New York, U manuseripts festival in mong the rriors, collected all their | carefnlly sharpened | backs to razor keen-ness. The | cast was scheduled to begin with he first rays of the sun. I shall never orget (he scene; two hundred tribes. leping W are distresced over fits delighted over its ex- from we are the time he time we cortain of is the present here are some natures wh | wife, are forever looking back. | in atification over what has fact that nothing can change i aces as the first ray plerced the val- [ arc Cries of anguish filled the | livg al in the past and, like Lot's They consume themselves in remorse or alrendy tuken place notwithstanding the What is past is past, Those wiio get the most out of life indubitably are those present, who understand how to enjoy what pleasures are theirs now eho willingly undergo the pains that may be theirs his doed not imply that one ghonld be blind or reckless as to the future nor indifterent as to the past. The tigge will never come when man, who is essentially a time-binding nimal, can live wholly in either one of ctions. The present s be bound up with the past ey! he sandy floor. 1 stole away in the confusion and | New Haven Youth Is | \aturally 1 have never prospected in Killed i Elevator! the hat direction since.” Aug. —Paul A, |and S—— w Haven, Hardly Worth Talking About Janti, the 14 year old son of Mr. | Husband: W nother hat!" | and Mrs, Charles Benanti of 2356 Da- Wit s, but it's an awfully | venport avenue, was killed instantly | ittle on late yesterday when he was caught|the three between the second and third floors |dnd futur - |of the elevator shaft of a six story But we will get much more out of life if we l€arn to seck our Amateurs [butiding at Wooster and Wallace | factions and to appreciate’ them in the present und nelther cohsuie ours everal children playing | sireets, The hody was discovered by for the past nor absurd hopes for that which is to Suddenly her mother | pora Carbone, a girl employed in y shrieks and wails, and {he shop of Fegeirt Halever, v room exclaimed: | where the bay was also Betty?” 115 minutes after the accident. | we're just| piremen cut out the floor of the| | elevator and released the body —Ann Roe Anderson.| Just how the aceldent occurred is| not known. eir,| Besides his parents, the boy nis | survived by two brothers and three eisters, | who live in will alw Lorraine Stryk is- 1 The ed, | Diem, an intcil | respounsibilities ot the past and of the ful Betty h¥d her. ard wild rushing to the play “What's the trouble, othing, mother, jdes a4 henthen and foolish meaning to this motto Carpe Christian meaning, wholly consistent with our ire. We should undoubtedly get more out of life if we learned simply and naturally 1o take things as they come It was not intended by wheever creited the human race that we know the future definitely It was manifestly intended that we one day at a time and those who best conform to this rule of and is, hes employ nt and shontd 18 | €houtd live life get the most out of it Copyright, 1924, by The McClure's Newspaper Syndicate, who tips saucer o