New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 7, 1924, Page 6

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New Britain Herald’ HERALD PUBLISH COMPANY Tssued Dally (Sunday Except At Herald Bldg., 61 Church § SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Yenr )0 Three Muath, a Month, Entered at the Post Office at New Br a8 Bocond Class Mall Matter, tan TELEPHONE: CALLS Rusiness Office 5 Editorial Rooms ...... The only n th P profitable ndvert City, Circulat) room’ always open Meniber of (he Associated Press, The Associated Press Is exclu titled to the use for re- all news credited to it or Member Audit Burean of The A. B which fu tisers with a circulation. Our are based upon t protection dlstribution local adv irculatibn, The Hernld York at Hota 8quare; Schultz Grand Central, AN UNEARNED SLAP 37T THE HARDWARE TRADL Among the businesses scored the federal trade commissior latest report was that of the hard- ware trade, especially retailers who are charged thel with compétitors, inclu ufacturers direct ‘¢ so-called irregular It would take Philadelphla lawyers to Wwhere that is deavor, opposing s by man ners an gitimate ‘Why should retail ware dealers, or dealers in any o commodity, assist competitors? Groups of hardware charged with h g which price heen discu any particu to discuss the games? dealers are meetings . at are supposed to have . Why should men in ar business meet solely What else more likely to discuss than prices, base ould they the business o pertaining to t The federal ment s farmers’ of which obtain highest prices. Hardwar their hea mer some in attempt not s $has sion’s report sion goes men for “some one cas panse the frequently” © higher—an er The Herald ge they are y irely ers becau hardware trade beca and | happens to be hardwar or ha o the word, Npither dealer a hardware city, 1t any other rdware manufactu any other kind of manufactur- laws of fuir dealing paper will ot t of & S Or man- 1 to otlier Viihe foolishly, ing terost but mirror of 1ggestion, on Her nd it, whether " reason, 10 will ardware trade usefn undertaker, MLULLON AND ALUMINUM n ng good int did of 1 m to t rade commission aluminum o Indic hat st of the ity in America ve helped it monopoly. asury Mellon ¢d in the com- Me nerely he lon prompts ng in- concern to public policy. h e he efor, treasury and it is acet vestment hig ha 1 it ex- ities rboard when he became a mem- of the t exp n's W to con in the —an_ err Harding. 3 on of t to wi as it is c Mel & appoi It o t o ma . R o1l certainly Mellon mal h may tincture his ministe he commendations ich presides, is 1ime on t bi possible been foreseen ointed to the was the on and » charge it cannot as he ed im what was offer n f the administration he . late estir like many ation of many Mellon, nter- n Mr, ave been \sury SUPPLIES r|industrial cent o his| s sacrifice. | ring the de- | 1 was the | But that | ment was unwise, | President | oll From Our Children’s Garden of Curses Little Harry went to the muslc store' to buy a string for his violin, “Do you want a steel one?" asked the clerk, “No, of course not,"” answered the | bog Indignantly, “I wanta buy one,” ~—Mrs. I, B. Putnam, \ and the prico probably will pise, And in the ceurse of a few more years the entive “avflable supply" may dwindle, Nothing s, belng uscd D S0 swiftly The omtlook is that 40 years from oW automobiles Wil be propelied by “substitutes for gasoline, DOOM OF THE BIG CITY The Telling Him Clarence (ardently):—"I'd gladly g0 to the devil for just one of your smiles, dear!" | Winnio (bored):—*Please He docsn't mean, of course, [ “Yes'm I'm comin'. Oh, my gosh, | Make me laugh!” Here T got ' git up 'n’ wash! tl —Florence Beuhler. Ho-oh-Hum! When I'm a man T won't git up at all—lay an’ | Let 'em holler! Ho-0-0-hum! [T guess * * * mayhe s o she won't * *% come— THE. EARLY-ROUSER (By R, Alexander) big city is doomed, according | to no less a nersonuge than Henry ‘ don't | Fora | that the large citles will disintegrate | §nd lose their populations, but he Hoca One Lialf of the world is boginning to find out how the other half can | ride around in motor cars. mean that they have nearly | reached the end { their power as (Copyright 1924, Reproduction forbidden). In Industries.” t {1 an terview in - “Automotive e “All right—All right! I'm up! T totd | Rl Y I was comin'! Water's cold, | ing obscrvation T bet. Ho-o-o-hum! I washed my | hands j las done | Last nigh K and a change is coming | city hus tuught us much, ¢ overhead expense of liv- 1 motor “The its wor I'he but t modern city 1 Il have t' do—My Facts and Fancies 1T can't be washin' all th® {ime— BY ROBERT QUILLEN got ' B Gee, eat—tntiwin e ing such places is becoming unhearahle The cost of main- ilning interest debts, of Piig up water-supply, sewer- and sanitary systems, the st of traflic control and of Git up—she policing greit masses of people, It's colder t] | at as 1o offsct the bene- I wonder f the city. The cities are b | | ing too her and are about | doon | “Industry of the'tuture will be J organized on a big but competition will force it to move country where and overhead I'm— Women wonder why single; men wonder how it, | Wales s | on managed s'm—TI'm com 1t else ¢ Ho-hum! Mayhe 1 Right away! a feller say? better had might holler 'r dad. last night, T know-- what's ® ® & fp s o o * % * Ho— schodl zone; drive slow™ Is a falr ng. You might meet an ad- 58 — ot ¥ tives think “radical Synonymous, are and people who hat? “discontented” now! | My goodness, but T don't see how A hoy gits any sleep at all— e - oA wintaltisriooze Rty 1 I SHICHENRA TS 83 vraclical Wik, { They make fewer records and more planes. Yes'm, I'm comin’ scale, | to parts of the J labor is steady | costs low. cauld * ¢ * slcop ¢ * ¢ 3 | “The, farm has.its dull season, when the farmer can come into the factory. and the factory has its dull season when the work- men can get out on the land and help produce food very man is better off for eriod of work under the open sky, and while we cannot afford flie time to go off for three or four months the year to dawdle around some fancy sum- mer resort, vet we can cscape the routine of the fattory and the monotony of the farm by an ange of labor during the slack seasons.” * o year— The three curses of our genera- tion: Loose tongues, loose morals, loose brakes. sed! I'm Intensive Work | —"Your foothall game Is| Improvir season.” Van Goal:—"Look at the constant | pract felow gets nowadays in The millennium will begin soon | after patriotiem is purged of appetite and envy. every of —Johnstone Vance. Aha! Do you believ | | Ros fivst Mary:—"Where did you met him | lear " | e in love at | —Mrs. Morris Pranklin, | There is some confl % things one stands for are ed convictions; the' things one had in considering condi X falls for are called flappers A Bargain4 He had just proposed and the dear girl was keeping him in suspense for lier answer | “I really don't know how 1o take you, Gerald," she | Why not tak ies buy relatively’less comfort than | them' he replied; et ; 4 “"l could do mu smalier salari n smaller citie i arlotte Manufacturing costs as a result must the “products thus | manufactured must face made | cconomic eonditions. | York eity. Transportation greatly behind the public needs, despi® |a Psychology: The rich man grew | thin and smiled; the poor man grew thin and ours w ful system of subways | already exist Living expenses are | nghed. me for “you kno enormously high, so that high sal Dau | to tell mothers if * mothers tell daughters more. iters wouldn't have so much L would Jaeger. . o Parlor Etiquette | (to her It's queer the authorities can't) discover fake stocks, when the suck- | er finds them so ea | be higher, yet the compe-| Girl gentleman caller) :— “I hope my smoking docsn't bother tition of goods under more | oo 1OP® MY L L ling the senators = ’ States enjoy ridic Mary Had— It helps them to | Mary had a Jitt | from other states Mary had a ittle pus . e VAT T G o AV forget thelr own, | 1t grew into a Maltese cat calities where strap-hanging and |5c,0 e —~7J. P Other large cities are in Millions of people compara \ tively the same f | in them are eager to change | ‘ The truth is, you don't particular- » for the darned thing unlcss he inconveniences of modern cave ; the incon | n't afford it. and will 1»ax-c“ Can Happen | opportunities| “How.” argued the man on the outside, “could any one write a story | ustng for a locale the battle flelds of wor than decreased, | prance, unlcss that person had at least been over there and had seen| those fields?” | b the man on the | [1ie are elimi o And so there is a new demand for | travel Nterature? And the Couzens committee has only begun. { them as rapidly offer. In the last decade urban life Jum swings the s expected to do| | Editor of the Herald: Had an Idea Prince to his army and brought symbolic of modern business. oo entailing unusual discounts—he steps talk thh his madtager, 2 Here in Connnecticut the telephone of the nation. the"greatest use of his telephone. TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM COMMUNICATED Recal Work of Preacher. LONDON SEEKS TO RESTORE BOWLERS Derby May Be Restored to Favor I read the article on your editoring page entitled “modern preaching,” and while T agrec with most of it, yet I think the writer loses sight of the rea! work of the preacher which is the saving of souls and the culture ho share the views| m | | § ven swing far. 0 stanton.! Old Stuft Connell:—"As you're getting home | 0 late why don't you invent an ex- cuse to tell your wife? He 1 Observations On The Weather ast for Mostly Wednesday, | moderate | 'l honorable pend on v ’ | Whatever 1| e rrer| A hick town is a place where Con- | : , ' 5 ra) can tell you which member of ind had & pa band had @ the doctor was called to the family 7.—Forgc Mayer. | (he Not His e oy say Gr Hi t he dull newspaper is one in which 't recognize the names of any A of the casua wife says you promises.” is a man of her w — P, rn New York i t and probably Wed- rains in southeast in extreme ! to | The scars of war heal, and none t one another now exc s and Mr. Troteky. mad e Hughe Mr. ng | getting To Him On (ret ntie Kriss fis —“I had an this fish.” Mrs® Kriss (syec rs ah requires you to help . but you can rum flect. Toverny is high awful time southward to Geor- m Montana south- showers | last 24| astward to | her con- | The geason ts east of support the rum chase 8o | avold suppor Local many custor ) | 7 will be ed’ is a good Bisbee. in t ] & the | “Youtt saving. But to cheek criminalayouth | e “Time will be served. ! | His Opinion xas north ant need another W r the e ; this sente “She had { Rumpus Ridge. “W tedly f norating round r hat,’ the friend, it new A made-ove nd I though Dublin Restoring ‘,\iqn.\: Devastated Buildings Oct —~The Free Btate nt has at last starfed in post offics s now commence met cller much ¢ d by incred shoot you at sigh ST AVIATRIX Japa re- JAPANS FI (& de- | Miss Shiger lion e o 0. Work I within & An Acrobat e tradition and character of ke part this | : o orlginal buflding intact competition to ng with 1 - L al Aviation t 2 420 according to red into, i oin th Chang Tso- Manchuria contractor, to the Manchu- &S The Editor's Gossip Shop Tokio B 15 to t 4 beautiful Courts s de- in the fighting of July, 19 parts of the ruins > he ed and the walls considered good enough to jus- fify the rebuilding of the ole edi- The restorations so far de- 1 are in keoping with the treat- | t of the original eighteenth cen- t, James Gandon, and rou Marshi o m the tires8 staid. fary governor of Free {r lbe's father is a : fou Gutsiies will enjoy this pplies A fene m isn't high iy architec a ar to that in the original » is being used WINNING FIGHT ON MALARIA 3 Oct. 7.—The inter faill ommission of league which has been visiting nvestigate the malaria as completed its work | generally the cfforts to combat the ou wil and last unusual goc future Hague Court in Favor Of Albania in Dispute Hague,, Oct. 7.—The perma- court of iInternational justice given a decisionw by Which the between Albania and Jugo- | the ownership of the jnastery of Salnt-Naoum has been 1 In favor of Albania. The dis- | as originally placed before of ambassadors on mber, 1922, which alloted the aid X monastery to Albania, but allowed | bl 3 1 to dissent. The ambas- ’ ol ble o effect a set- o b dispute on to the phpAhcshas e gue of mnations. The question Tou templa was ng a legal one, the court of jus- e e rendered the verdict for the | s ot This constitutes the ninth advisory o= SERE Mpiea of opinion given by the court since fts | s e first session in July 1922, Only is Pregent and past. i fit Fugitives From Justice e commissioners said re- -— epidemic scems to 1 most of the affected a number of ere it still prevails due age of quinine 1 pver some flair RIS ike~with a ventu Took a fisherman’s When his friends Asked yrm a loss, on a there are the conference Dec 10RET being ur most | Have you heard clumsy ! landiubber, The lobster, who loves o to rubber, Sat up the whole night, With a star fish for While he waitedto hear the —Otto Freund. tlement passed t = ight as whale | up of | fied in the teachings of Jesus. A min- | age to point out the | “The one thing that impresses me as | ent Danes church, the familiar Wren 1 th low | on. K hef to commercialize the Sabbath. Held Before the War ister in these times must have cour- | London, Oct. 7.—A quest for a ils of the day, |holy well, which- dates back to the! Paul's advice to Timothy as a | very beginning of Christianity, is preacher was—'Preach the word, be Shortly to be undertaken in the mid- instant in season, out of season re- dle of the famous Strand, the thor- | ve, exhort with all long suffering | oughfare which unites ~Charing ad doctrine.” | Cross to the ancient city of London. | Ir This holy well of St. Clement was Work closed over many years ago, but its | Home, exact location just behind St. Clem- of the spirital life and the holding Christian {deals, as exempli- d in the Record of Christian | a scrmon on the Christian in which the writer say and out of a great variety of |structure which occupies an island i8 not the moral break down, |site in the Strand opposite the law it is not the unhappiness, but it is| courts, is clearly indicated by an in- | laek of the epiritual note, the |scribed tablet. The office of works, absence of religion in family life. It | has given the necessary permission | ie not that the situation as regards {o cxcavate to the chureh authori- morals is ba it ecs who, two years ago, succeeded not in our family, in having thrown open fo the pub- | ideals of { he says: Igoti hon we have up to the And further lic the ancient Roman bath, nearb that | which visitors may now see in exact- y the same form in which its build- | is that lived Jesus Christ.” is my experience thoe religious life of the family is non-existent in America today, ex-|crs left it 2,000 years ago. d pt in a few case: And he thinks| History makes frequent mention s a tremendously serious situation. | of St. Clement's well, which played As I 6it in my study this Sunday|an important part in early Saxon ernoon. I can see the extra trol-|and mediaeval English Christtanity. vs pass on their way to the Wil-|Tts uncovering will have a great Brook park antiquarian and archaeological in- owds who are jorest to many who do not care a game. | fig about its spiritual significance, | How many ministcrs have stood in | although tradition has it that the to br The Story Teller of Bagdad HE MAGIC CARPET carried the to his father's kingdom. It was strangely Nowadays business is carried on with a Magic Carpet of far greater magnitude, and it is available to millions of modern people. When a salesman wants to accept an order his Magic Carpet and hasa short but effective every point and connects with e Bell System The business man who 15 making the greatest amount of money i1s making THE SOUTHERN NEW ENGLAM Oue Policy « One System e« Universal Servies, their pulpits, and said that Sunday | waters of St. Clement's well were games of this kind are wrong? | specially efticacious in the cure of Yet they secm wrong to me. We ad in the Bible which s still used the churche. R ember bath Day to keep it Holy Thou shalt not do any work." Those who play on the teams in a football game nd it hard work. It is recreation only for those lookipg These crowds of people encour- | e the game and by paying the fee n A Shifting I heard A man say that his boy | played Sunday afternoo it he could earn mon: and some did earn as much as six llars. This boy ncver goes to hgreh, 80 Sunday 18 not much of a| spiMtual uplift to him, 1 would like to say one thing on the evangelistic type of preacher. | There is a prominent one of this| ¢/Ve: type in the South who comes to| Northfleld quite often, and is a most wonderful speaker. In the maga- | zine from which have already | quoted, he relates his experience with one of the worst men he had ever known. bling busineas ister's church, and young men astray. He went to the man, and tried to talk with hlm‘ about his soul, but was refused. some check upon the r culty, This was brought out by one of t An inteilectual feat was to be of humanity and to decent conduct, 1 astray. was leading | The intellect is the cutting edge he is of doing harm, It is just like sharpening an axe. Finally through the ‘minister's in- | ting a good edge upon a plece of steel, but, if the | ting a g & In fact the whole Leopold-Loeb case show solely dependent upon, will lead us to. underlying natural repulsions and attractions, that hold us to the mass ‘ §' \ f i 5 ‘ l | skin diseases. Possible the forthcoming excav: tion may throw new lght on the uses to which it was put. One his- torian definitely affirms that around St. Clement’s well in early Christian days newly-baptized converts were wong to assemble to commemorate Ascension Day and Whitsuntide. In later times, after the murder of St. Thomas, a Becket, archbishop success aboard reaches | | of Canterbury, had made Canterbury Cathedral the constant resort of pligrimages such as Chaucer de- scribed in the Canterbury Tales, the holy Weli of 8t. Clement was a favoritec halting place of the pious cavalcades for rest and refreshment. 25 Years Ago Today From Paper of That Date A large party of cyclists went to Newfield yesterday to pay a surprise visit to former local residents, Mr, and Mrs. Edward Ives. On the re- turn trip the wheel of Charles Rossberg broke in two, but he re- paired it so as to get home without further mishap. The New Britain Telephone Co. is settling its affairs prior to its trans- fer of its property”to the Southern New England Telephone Co. Two carloads of stone for the sol- diers’ monument coping have ar- rived and will be unloaded today. Thatcher's minstrels will play at the Lyceum tomorrow evening. New Britain council, 0. U. A. M. aceepted last night the invitation of the Newington council to attend its 10th anniversary celebration next week, The Union Manufacturing Co. is preparing to add to its foundry and plans are now under way. " [ DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL Instrument By DR. FRANK CRANE The intellect, for all that may be said of it, 1s a frail reed to léan upon. It is a question whether it is governed more by traditions, customs, stincts and pasglons than by reason. 5 on it is liable to lead us into all kinds of diffi- Certain it is that unless there be he experts in the Lebpold-Loeb trial. i “The {dea,” sald he, “for these master criminals was to do a good job. It was to be thoroughly and completely planned. There was to bé no accomplished.” what the unaided intellect, Unless there are sound instincts, the Intelligence is llable to lead us People of very rudimentary intellect, grossly uneducated people, may, He conducted a gam- |2t the same time, be law-abiding and good neighbors. While the most not far from the min- | dangerous rascal unhung is likely to be gifted with extraordinary powers. of a man, But, if the desires be wrong in the first place, the more-intelligence he has the more capable The training of the intellect is put- teel itself is rotten, it fluence, he was put out of business, | makes no difference how well it is sharpened. and even though he threatened the | minieter's life, he finally got Whether the plea of mental deficiney, or moral deficiency, is a good down | one on the part of young Leopold and Loeb we do not presume to say, on his knees, repented of his sins| but we do dare to assert that a man is safest in sticking to the great and he and three companions joined | moralities whiclk he has inherited from the race. | doing than in blaxing a new way for himself. the church. I am reminded of the words found | moralities is governed by laws that in Daniel: “And they that be wise|®volution of mankind, He is safer, far, In 80 He who is guided by the have slowly been developed by the He who is governed by his intelligence alone is shall shine as the brightness of the|under the charge of a faulty master. firmament, and they that turn many | to righteousness, as the stars forever (0f the abandonment of reason and ever. TRUTH. |lion, the education of the morals New Britain, Oct. 5, 1924, [ This is not a plea for Ignorance, nor any devil's argument in faver It is indeed a plea for a deeper educa- more than of the brain. Copyright, 1924, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.

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