New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 30, 1924, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

New Britain Herald'\'nnndp campalgn it cortainly has' HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tesued Datly (Sunday Excepted) At Horald Bidg.. 67 Church Sireet SUBSCRIPIION RATHS 5,00 & Year, $2.00 Three Muath, 86, o Month, not The has gained from cecding is and LaFollette has seiz done s0. only party that the summary pro- the Progressive zed upon the avidity and party, returns with tion NEARSAY NEWS A TRAP satistac- NEW BRITATN DAILY HERALD, noss they will elect me. T am won- dering now what a bursting stoekingtul of votes they are cook- ing up to give me this week. Every week has seen its Christmas pres- Republican this campaign I should nico onts from the Topeka I | lasted another month | headquarters, res Facts and Fancies UY ROBERT QUILLEN | ! people , traded State rights were the things the for federal ald, i Out where they scorn {lese cow- THURSDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1924, ' ©00! Applicant: “Why, ma'am, my name ia Pansy." ~B, @ Clark. A Finishing S¢hool for Dad- ¥riend: “It must come high to send a son away to college.” Dad: “Yes, that's why they call it higher eduogtion.” rs, L. M. Frost. \ | turn to my innocent childish be- I et 1n Claus,* 1 have had more luck in this campaign man within a mint with a license to Loy pants, that's where the West Entered at the Post Office at New Hritaln begins, as Second Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office . Editorlal Room POR NEWSPAPERS gathering continually Santa r of the o The cross-word puzzle that gets the gout of the average child is “Don’t." ‘ A. hyphen is on the level, thus! differing from the politicians who | appeal to it. | Kidding “Your Editor “Here's a joke! The editor Tun Shop paid me for this!" “What's the joke?" “It's on him." In NOWS every news- than a By Willis M, Barnes In grammar or geography And in arithmetic My little son would come to me When anything would stick, Throughout his grades 1 helped him out With all his problems, till The silent vote is a known fac-| Within his mind there was {tor. It aiways comes from feathered | doubt nests. ; | T was a man of skill. | paper runs into cur- news that it is im- but “it delectable read- 928 rents of hears: b of hearsay steal.” It looks as if White chance of being | possible to verity, which, has & good elected true,’ —W. 8., ing. No gard The only profitable advertising medium would form m the City. Clrculation books and | Press room always open to sdvertisers. COMMUNICATED Rev, Mr. Brooks Gives His ldem of the Trath in Reply to Dr. Elfigtt. proved my [To the Editor of the Herald: Waterloo; I have been asked by seveml to With tear drops in his eyes make some reply to the addre¢ss of He came and asked me what to do|Rev. Dr. Elliott, as reported s your With x's and with y's. issue of the 28 inst. I.am &t a loss I'm really sorry for the lad. to know just why I should ‘be re-; | For now he's learned of me quested to perform this task, unless | That algebra ha's proved his Dad it be that I have become. to be An unknown quantity, recognized as the champian of the whole Bible. Frankly 1 do not relish this sort of work. (T had one experience, as a boy, hunting pole cate which ha$ remained = with me through the years.) To the one who suggested that I make reply I quoted the Verse in Proverbs 26-4. Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.” But no sooner had ¥ quoted that vgrse than I was reminded that the aserse following gave the opposite aedvice: “Answer a fool according to This folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.” Per- haps he needs a rebuke, Anyone who is familiar with the Bible is prepared for such remarks as Doctor Elliott and others utter. We are distinctly told in the word that the end of ‘the age would be characterized by a falling away from the faith, especially on the part of the leaders. , In 1 Tim. 4:1-2 we read: “Now the Spirit speaketh ex- pressly, that im the latter times some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and doc- trines of dewlls; Speaking lics In hypocrisy; kmving their conscience seared with a hot fron. In Thes- salonians 2-3 we read: “Let no man deceive yom by any means; for that day shall mot come, except there come a falling away first, and that man of gin be revealed, the son of | perdition.” 11, Peter 3-2 says: “Knowing this first, that there shall come in, the last days scoffers, walk- ing aftar their own lusts.’* There will evidently be more of this tpr we read in Luke 18-8: “I tell g)u that he will avenge them y speedily. Nevertheless when the twas hard t0|gon of Man cometh, shall he fiml beat, faith on the earth?” 1 readily will agree: Every nation has had her Bene- For how they get three dollars &1gjct Arnold and. every fafth its seat, Judas. I.do not marvel at such s a mystery to me. talk any more but allow every such speaker to label himself as an apos- tate and pass on. The pity which at first one feels over such weaklings 48 soon changed to supreme con- tempt. The address was evidently a con- glomeration of verbal camouflage, meaningless speculation, cheap vau- deville and glaring untruths, If governor, | although it is said that was not his newspaper having a due re- its responsibilities the inclined to be cautious of the libel 1 in primary intention of going into the | Member of the Asociated Pres ¢ The Assoclated P ts exclusively en- | titied to the use for re-publication of | all news credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also local news published herein. to to o campaign. “show up the politicians” way for a general cleaning up later through the protest he could _ garner. But if the redoubtable edi- to the public prints in every news- tor should happen to be elected it paper office to L would serve him right. e ; i His idea was to public and in the face afford to d and pave the laws can hearsay informa- lost vote Anybody can be a great execu- | But high school's Itive if he can afford to hire able !men to do the work. tion. Many a “good story” is Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. The A. B. C. fs a peiional organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly honest analysis of circulation. Our elrculstion statistics | are based upon this audit. This tnsures protection agalnst fraud n newspaper distribution figures to both national and local advertisers, usually greatly trresponsible - Halloween G N MANY countries H.AlL- LOWEEN is traditiona ly; devoted to merrymaking, with playful ceremonies and charms to discover future hus- bands or wives,” so says Mr. N, Webster. As a matter of fact HALLOWEEN really marks the beginning of the long winter parties so dependent upon heat and comfort. disgust of re- porters who have no groat stake to lose in case of a legal jam—merely ! facts are this important would form AND MOTORISTS yerifad oline business is in a ter- lacking. point | won- | becanse Except for hearsay stories [ rible fls—according to the oil com- panies. There admittedly are 500, 000,000 barrels of ofl in storage, and it is costing the industry $150,-| 000,000 to “earry it ac-| cording to the Standard Oil pany of New Jersey. ‘Where there is such a surplus of product over immediate needs, the only remedy would be to stop the ¥ore! Nurse: “It's & boy.” Confirmed ~ Golfer: | caddi ‘The Herald s on sale Oal York at Hotallng's News 8t Bquare; Schultz Sta Grand Central, 42nd street. e NOW WE KENOW HOW ANARCHISTS ARE MADE Even the staunchest Republicans must have shuddered when they read former Governor Marcus Hol- tomb's openly expressed opinion that electors voting for LaFollette should be shot. In a democracy mhere the ballot, not the builet, is supposed to prevail, the suggestion shocked public decency and lowered the speaker to the level of a scat- ter-brained soapbox orator. For some time Republican cam- paign orators have broadcast the prediction that the election of La- Follette will bring the United States to sovietism. None less than the erudite Rev. Dr. Sven G, Oh- man made such a prediction in this city Tuesday night. The public has htad dinned into its ears the na- tional menace of LaFolletteism, the elatm being made that our govern- ment yould be turned over to the *reds,” whoever #hey are, if the feader s elected, But we doubt it Bob LaFollette in the moment of his greatest zeal to right 'wrongs ever suggested that those who dis- sgree with him be silenced with a rifle. The Gtates gives to woman the privilege of free specch &and opinion. By urging death fer those who register their preference for LaFollette for president, ex-| Governor Holcomb violates that im- mortal document, engenders hatred among the masees and makes the | average man wonder whether occu- pants of high stations in life can es- derful news from the standpoint of | reader interest. Such storics pop up nearly every week. Much effort is lost in an at- tempt to verify them, and the urge to print them anyhow often is very ‘Frominent. done so invariably have plenty of time in which to regret their en-| oy pu¢ until the surplus were within ;rzfl‘“" The law makes & sharp | reasonable bounds. But the Stand- v:mr;:lnnn_rv::;dl:: l:fit ::;;::a ard says this i not possible be-| o romarkable thing about pro- 2 4 | cause prices of production tempt pjpition is the durability of the observer supposition sometimes is!y. producing companies and ad- |great American stomach. as strong a staff on which to lean | g4i1iong to the surplus continue de- ——r as fact. But the main difference in | yite the enormous demands of the court is that one may not be able| . tomobile riding public. to prove supposition or hehrsay.| myo guation is flluminative, and while a verified fact is AlWAYS BUS- |1y pegt escribed in the Standard’s cepuhle ot proot, own announcement The first thing a cub reporter T oianiokn. pbtrslstan has to learn is the distinction be-| industry has stored petroleum tween a charge and a conviction; in costly steel tanks as though nine out of ten tyres in the busi-| 1it. feaved that esch month . might see the last barrel taken ness show a tendency to convict a from the ground. Credit or man before he is triecd. In time| plame for this situation belongs the tyro learns through experience equally to the producer and that verification is more Important purchaser. The v”rchuln; com- than hearsay evidence and by the ::;:‘B’*:““a;;:{]“c"r e time he graduates into a jourmey- it or not, or see waste and man journalist he is convinced that bankrupcty in the producing carefulness and caution is by far fl“ldo e kheibetice halflnToNT: have been gullty of inducing Of course, occasionally an editor| ,on {5 sink wells when they will consent to “take a chance””| were not needed by paying particularly if it appears to be in prices tdha‘r\ pruv‘c‘rlh ‘mr:«cttllxr‘ ers. Vhatever (i P ST () O [, i :T;pto}:lt)lon::\mt of responsibility, chief penalty is to lose sleep a few (PO oday finds itsel? nights until his mind calms down in the position of being over- and until it appears likely that no insured against the near future. gerious consequences Wil follow. Tn other words, he finds that luck had not deserted him. The chief danger is that one lucky experience Its reserves of oil above ground awaiting consumption are much in courting trouble may make him less amenable to caution the next larger than is either economic and ultimately: he loses the “Hurray! A Telling bed-time stories to the Kids is great fun if they get in be- fore you go to bed. It dittle Willie n't add, don't |y worry. He will make a great golfer some day. a year Costly ¥un First Fair Movie Fan: “I believe could watch slow motion pictures all day.”" Second Movie Fan: “I thought 80, oo, until I had a plumber in the house.” ~—Gertrud® Marle Heller. com- Newspapers that have Most of the German marks were bought by men who believe what, a bootlegger says. Half the world doesn’t know what the other half can see in Mah Jong. Did you ever stop to realize how impossible things would be with- oui coal? QOur “OLD COM- PANY'S" LEHIGH summer coal is still available, the finest coal that money will buy. The Citizens Coal Co. Herlin Xard opp. Herlin station o Tel. 2605 5, Know' the Symptoms Helen: “Oh, T think football must be a wonderfully exclting game.” Irene: “What college team does he play on, dear? —D. W. Hanks. Uncle Sam and John Bull never will fight. Blood is even thicker| than the heads of jingoes. Perhaps the old-fashioned had a comp! yut slipper kept it from becoming serious. child tea Looks Bad Her Mother: *“What makes you s0 sure that Jack's love is growing cold, my dear?" i Mrs. Newbride (in tears): “This morning, before he left for the of- fice, he forgot to remind me how pretty T was.” | —Mrs. Charles Reichenbaum. Child labor 18 wrong in principle, | but a little of it might have Loeb and Leopo! 1t isn't a question of voting a “straight” ticket this election. The average voter is trying to pick out a “straight” party. YESSEL AGROUND “Nieuw Amsterdam,” With 250 Pas~ BUT TWO OF {4 WOMEN CNDIDATES _ BLECTED Lady Astor And Miss Wilkinson Ge Seats In British House ‘What we can't unders the radio is how the static xnows you have company that night. 1t is safer to hunt rabbits. Your companions will hoot at your feet instead of your head. AfteriSceing a Mystery Play As a mystery play, ] sengers, Proceeds Afted Tide Car- onstitution of the United o ries It Onto Bank every man and By The Assoctated Press. Southampton,” Oct. 30.—Phe liner Nignw Amsterdam, bgund from Rot- terdam for Ne\v‘j\'m‘k with 260 pas- 1f it is true that automobiles will cause legs to atrophy, the future of the stage is gloomy. . The lining of oxen was used in the Shenandoah. Other prominent gas bags are largely bull, also. Americans make poor waiters. —K. J. E. of Commons By The Associnted Press. | London, Oct. 30.—Only two of th 14 women who were candidates in| yesterday's general . parliamentary clection were successful in winni seats fn the house of commons Lady Astor, conscrvative candidat] for Plymouth, and Miss Wilkinson | labor eandidate for Middicboro This Is What Love Does 1t was one of those rare but not altogether extinct times when a man and his wife were holding a love- making conversation reminiscent of the good old days before the wan As s usual with women when in sengers aboard, (was aground four hours thjs “moriing on the shingle | bank southwdst of the Needles, in the! Knglish Channel. “The vessel left Southamptan last night and went aground at about three o'clock this 'morning - while or comfortable.” Consumption of oil will increase annually, but it is doubtful whether consumption will increase in the | | near future in anything like lhw] to | su- act humble enough Americans feel They can't time, make other cape for the which is abroad in the land. blams nor and eon of Connecticut apology to the people of this com- monwealth. We recommend that Cicero's "De Senectute, he trospection and bids them e clouds of bitterness, discontent Bx- Holcomb has caused & blot to appear on the fair escutch- owes an read which leads the aged and decrepid along paths of pleasant thoughts and re- chase churlish- gamble with chanc News {8 a tricky ‘nmmndn,\: A newspaper is always justificd in publishing facts — if there is no doubt about the facts. But it is no rare occasion to be in doubt about the available information at hand by press time, and there is no law compelling interested parties in helping a mnewspaper to ‘“get present to keep destrable informa- tion from the source of publicity. ltl | straight” when a human desire is| ratio of increase in the past. Mean- time the surplus will be increased. gasoline stations will multiply, and prices may fluctuate with the sea- | son—at least, they may silp every | ¢an and go up every spring. Where there 1s such a surplus of oil it would appear logical for prices to hit rock bottom and sta there until the surplus is exhausted, .ssuming that low prices might have a tendency to increase de- mand. But the oil men declare perior. Correct this sentence: “She has| remarkably small feet" said the girl fricnd, “but she never mentions | them.” (Protected by Associated Editors, Inc.) 25 Vears Ago Today From Paper of That Date New Britain and Hartford High a tender mood, the deficiencies were forgotten for the moment and she actually speaking well of him, strange and improbably as it may seem. o on,” he remarked teasingly, “if T were to die tomorrow wou'd| marry again in no time.” She wheeled from the gas mnge and sald in a voice trembling with emotion: “I wouldn't wipe m‘ feet on the best man who ever lived, except you." 9 And he went back to his work feeling real happy. —Walter M. Brown. | disclosing those who have Dr, Elliott is ignorant he should be removed from his position, if he hos purposely crucified the truth he should be branded as a knave and a bold-faced liar. For him to say that Moody and Spurgeon would be modernists today were they allve, or that Wesley believed in evolutfon, is to slander these godly men and to | hold the speaker up to ridicule. Mr. Bryan needs no defense from me, When the dog barks at the moon, the moon does not cease shining. Dr. Elliott is not worthy to unlace the shoes of Bryan. Mr. Bryan is not making infidels but always slackening her ‘epeed to drap off the | i pliot. The ebb tide carried her onto | the bank where she remagned until freed by the efforts of her crew. i She was undamaged awd is pro- ceeding on her voyage to NewYork. TThe Needles is a cluster of pointed | rocks west of the Isle of Wight, at | the entrance to the Solent. | Patrick Looks for Freighters in Ai New -York, Oct. 2&—Major Gen- eral Mason M. Patrick, chief of the Plust, The defeated women comprisd four conservatives, one liberal an seven laborites, the'last named gron including Miss Margaret Bondfield member from Northampton in thd last parliament and also a membe of the MacDonald governnient, and Miss Suzan Lawrenge, Jabor membe for East Ham North, in the lasi commons, Miss Bondfield, in an address a | Northampten this forenoon, referre {0 the way the labor party liad beey handicapped by her absenve f Canada during the carly part of th Asserting that some 6 . 8. air service, predicted last campaign. might that within tlyee years dirigi- bles storing oné himdred tons of freight will regularly engage in two- day traflic betwen New York and London. He also said that ainplanes which fly at a speed of 300 miles an Between such individuals and a newspaper ft is sometimes a NP | oy been infidels under’ th cloak of the faith, Mr. Bryan is the greatest preacher of the truth in America today. His vital and unanswerable arguments will not be effected by | the ridicule of men of “two-by-four® calibre. Any man who can ml.{ take the same position Mr. Bryan takes In relation to the Bible is clearly not a Christian and is wn- worthy of the confidence of any truc believer. Dr. Eillott's address revealed an alarming. ignorance of the Bible, I challenge him or any other to poént out where the Blble says that *Je- hovah tempted Jesus, and the other says the devil did.” Wherein do the Books of Kings and Chrendcles confgadict each other? The inconsistency of the address was evident in the fact that he stated that the Methodists had not been effected much by. the pontro- versy between the fundamemtalists jand modernists and with the same breath said that there was compara- tively few fundamentalists in the Methodist church. I would suggest that he read the book by Dr. L. W. Munhall, a Methodist, entitled “Methodistism Adrift,” or read regu- larly “The Eastern Methadist,” pub- lished by Dr. Munhall to find out the condition in his own church. A rotten apple need not boast that | there is little soundness in it. 1 will further recomumnd that Dr. Elllott and all of his kind read car fully Ezekiel 33:6 and 34:2, God will some day deal wizh those who are unfaithful to thein charges. May I take advantage of this op- | portunity to say to the people of New Britain, who sl believe the whole Bible, and there \gre many, The Editor's, Gosslp Shop v::;:lqlne People’s curch stands ab- DT i Wt N A ely tipon all that that B, ’_Wka“‘lmxzo“ ean by yous re.|teaches. It is fagriessly Pnflc:j: Their triumph, in its way, is purallel to Fulton's steamboat on, th | quest that the mame of this paper \r:.‘,:. Ml:out };,‘",.d to fear or%!]{udmn‘ )\(h:‘mh- v]r;\ln:rlulnnur cable, the steam engine and other event shot ear on . all contribu- |fa¥or. New Britain ought to give |that marked the s should appear on ORUHBN. | 0te s P UoA el s Their feat Is another point in the history of nations, it is anoth . are innumerable _ways in |0 8how what it can do for lost men, | breaking down of barriers, and tends towards the realisation of the world - I will appreciate t, Mr. Editor, i |dream, whioh is unity. of | that lowered prices do not have & tendency to increase con- fehools battled to a tie Saturday in Hartford, the score being o to 5. snd tuck struggle, and the Mews-| ... Tye ipveterate motorist|The regular referee did not arrite | i |ana Hartford ran in one of its aper, 10 be frank, does not always ' it rides mo matter what the price 01 . .. " Captain Arens of the local gasoline scems to be, provided Of| jovey claims that the referee Ihe price is not unreason-|coached the Hartford hoys during ably high. [the game. The tie will be played : i o0 cing the ol |Off in Hartford next Wednesd: Thegloosl BolGcAFTY 08 The stamping machine for the which the Standard reters to, prob- o ot office arrived to- | | ably is no libility sgainst the com- | gay, The money order department | penies, as the cost unquestionably |has reccived its first ins allment of | is passed on to the consumers. 3f | the new money order blanks. While the city road the case the cOM-Tyy,nging on the brow money. Hill yesterday, someonc there is no evidence as yet that any |let through the oil can. ; The Boys' club now has 337 mem- | nies are going | [ najuckeEurs BOINE | hers, but only 18 took baths last week, | Building Inspector Andrew Tur bull arrived turday from a trip to Yel | Marion county, an many wild | mines of that ¢ Judge Mun, his address of the statements made about the Jabo: party and incidentally about hersel were scandalous. Miss Bondfield de |clared the political fighting of th conservative party was bein, {brought down to the level of thd Nour will then be common. Within {f8hts in the old rotten borough {hat time the commercial develop- | When there was nothing but misrep ment of the air will ba.accomplish- | Tesentation and corruption. ed, he said f T S | !Open House Tnesday Nigh ] 0:DAY LEAVES FIRE DEPT | - 95 im0 Neimsatmior v Ak N ew R Britam S Clul the substitute force of the fire de-| The entertainment committce partment for almost two years, ten- | the New Britain club.has arrange dered his resignation to Chief Wil-|to throw open the rooms to clu liam J. Noble yesterday afternoon. members on election night and fur} | The resignation will be acted upon{nish election returns from sever Fat the next meeting of the beard of | sources. A light lunch will b fire commissioners. | served. ness and disappointment’ out gheir mental skies. S GROUP INSURANCE FOR CITY EMPLOYES insurance for Yesterday. Today, and Forever “If chosen on election day,” Declared the canpdidate, “T'll never rest, but give. my best, And labor long and late [ win. Press assoclations are in the same | fix as newspapers. Every telegraph instances of news stories of high reader interest coming over the wire, only to be ordered lled” later by the press assoclation with the explanation that verification is lacking or later information throws a, dust cloud of doubt around the facts. Such stories type and in the “kill” heads of press as- Group city em- | ployes, which it is reported will be discussed at the next meeting of | the board of finance and taxation, | would have been considered a radi- cal venture decades ago; but since that time much radicalism conservatism | ourse, 4 L g “No boss has any strings on me; I wear no faction’s chain, And I would spurn a chance to turn My job to private gain.” editor can relate of several B A tough old stager here was secn To wink his eye, and cross His aged knees, and then to sneeze, | “The same old Applesauce!” | —William Taylor Shaw. Airy Persifiage did Maude fall out with her sky-writing aviator sweet- heart?” len: “She was driving along| one day and read one of his notes to | another girl.y roller was : Osgood | fired a bul- has become genteel and nowadays it is regarded as a| good thing. @ - With the slaying of Patrolman James Skelly still fresh in memory, the committee will find that citi- zens as a rule are in favor of such protection for the dependents of its public particularly po- licemen and firemen. It is declared that existing char-| ter and ordinance regulations may not permit the city to allow com- | pensation for the family of Patrol- man Skelly. This is pure supposi- tion. No matter what the charter and ordipances say, any first ciass | Iwysr, should bo abie to/shoy, (he | WHITE ARDn S intentions h chard Wait, son | Meriden. | out in Kansas an AW Wait of the | 1 ; ‘\l s Frances w of the patrolman|tion campaign with bark of supreme court, Miss ] DAY 8 NS : | Eaerd Wait is a| for his death while in | William Allen Hervard Failure to in his He Osburn, Osburn’s grandfather, provided 1o should share equally in the es- ‘s sister and t! or her nd should a wearly income. No provision w girl's mother. On the i, . of Miss Osburn or her hus-| o ortion tenigl will stipulated, this in- 1 revert to the estate Wait and Miss Osburn expiained that /., 4 pur! in planning to marry | g time was ta protect Miss Os- ther and permit her to « income provided in the will ceremony will be perform- ,,.qcuré jg central over d, after which Wait Will| wan with a ‘barometer reading studies at Harvard and | grince Albert of 29.18 inches and an | in an.adver-|aroq of high pressure is central over end of 1 I- | the St. Lawrence valley with a| a church cere- | jarogeter. reading of 30.60 inches #aid. at Quebec.” Pleasant weather pre- | vails feom the Rocky ‘Mountains ward to Atlantic. The still remperaturé on _the Atlantic at 5:45 | coast, high in the Missfssippi valley Myrtie and low over the Rocky Mountains. strect dump. was no damage. | Frosts were reported as far south as Engine Co, nswered still | Macon, Ga \arm At 6:40 o'clock for & rubbish | Conditions favor for ar of 672 Arch street | fari There was no damgge. | perature. that were not of panies would and lose sometimes may be in the forms when the story. The sociations are loaded with great re- take & of the chases . bankrupt. FINANCE VS. MATRIMONY — 1 two wee sponsibility a never chance; they NS papers depending upon them and | the papers demand reliability. To the Intry’s newspapers | libels would the o | Arkansas, es about strict of Ansonia rep, T Legacy Under Terms of Will. Y man- | i : ‘ Cambridge, Ma 3 ) T Wkt e a formal m anyual apro in its rooms | which is o e : \in @ legacy. became!ternoon and ex { » filing of marriage| James Martin have 1s servants, [DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL The Prince By DR. FRANK CRANE There were recently two significant arrivals in the United States, One of these was o smiling, pleasant Dutch boy who was greetéd b (he society people of Long Island and made much of because he was hei to the British throne. The other was six young men who had just cpmpleted a trip aroun the word in an airplane. This fllustrates the gmerican ‘and the old world point of view. Th old world is inclined to honor a man because of his ancestors. The ne world rather honor men hecause of something they have done. These young men had just completed a trip around the world by al plane. It was a significant and record breaking achievement, as significa in its way as the voyage of Magellan some 400 years ago. It Hiustrates th triumph of the internal combustion enginc which is @estined to wor wonders in -our future civilization. This engine was ‘made by men « courage and skill so that the circumnavigation of the globe is destined in the future, to be a commonplace event. Richard Wait and Miss Osburn 0 —Frank G. Davis. Marry That Mother May Obtain el M. sprinkie co la fore a with tainly | agers of suct i sympathetically said Heloise, of the Rapid Fire restaurant. “She married that fella to reform him.' “Did it work?" returned Claud- fne, of the same establishment. ah! Look how bowlegged he a story cer- crowd be a calamity for ociation 4 &l WO L for arriage, the |its enable bride’s | —_— over the omorrow af- mot er to ol known h A KANSAS CYCLONE WITH 3 w Sunday fn is! there city how to get around them and You Can't Plcase ‘Em! Stan! “] will do anything for you that you ask.” Marion: “But T want a man who has originality enough to do some- thing without being asked.” —J. Willard Ridings. Osburn Cambric graduate student White is fu Observations On The Weather 30.—Forecast York Fair to- d eatreme compensation the service of the city. pay such compensation Would be | long to a political uphcaval, these blase days the pep that of rights ought to be- 2 Miss in | black blot upon the fair mame of | somehow the city. e e MELLON 1S TO BLAME FOR TAX MUDDLE Whatever the law regarding pub- returns may ates are fortunate enough to pos- sess such a colorful genius as the mporia editor. in fresh rorth- cast shifting to southeast w Forecast for Southern New Eng- Fair tonight and Friday; iy warmer Friday; fresh north- shifting to cast and southcast y coast He nearly As a hand shaker White o quintessence of popularity ad- ds income tax night “they licity of e and granted that a coalition of Pemocrats and the Progres- i6 congress passed be. shook and t next Pose the in wri cast wl wind son the Conditions: An a Sives the law, pletives calc it is patent that it was not incum- butn the hide off his polit o bent upon Secretary Mellon to cou-' ¢\ omies, such publicity ey sal sent to and order owed 1o clean (he Klan tinne hi Having At the June just at this time canvass Miss Osburn The treasury department had un til Dec. 31 to act, it is deciared reliable authorities, and before that have been in- of its cow showed th d the g the ou pastures’” a S ng office ol s at he already has i 2 year mext Kansas is planne Klux eggs politicians { RESPOND TO RUBBISH FIRES Engine Co, 4 a alarr ay 1 a fire Ku the low corgress might en years.” Re considerat Whi answered afterngen at the law as to the is take cé en- duced to clarify the The Republican state machine re- ne ! complimentary At he declared morons down proper procedure 19 ives or But tial siate leachers department it 1 order. If the idea was % help the Topoka doesn't get out of the ks ot a presid Mellon's the near the close a meeting that notice from eampaign Secretary suddenly ch a contribution can be lost i or 1!‘:‘-!9‘1.1(‘:\4]—“ must be remem- | vou give as nuch space to real truth There is no doubt that civilization rests upon tran_spor'axlon. Not onl) low | ered that we—this newspaper — |23 You do to untruth, {has such such a railroad as the Loutsville and Nashvilie done more tha o | get other letters outside of Fun| Sincerely yowrs, {all politics to reunite the North and South, but trans-Atlantic liners h "t | Shog contributions ¥ 1. BROOKs, _ |done more than poliffcs in uniting the world. This trip of the airmen | *oB cotbre, if you put your name| Pastor People's Church ot Chriat. |sigeificant ot great strides to come. % and addpess and the name of our i 7 The visit of the Prince has no significance except in the social World : . B il which is very small. Of course all American parvgnus are worshippers d skl e s St g Packard Ce. Earnings | Foyalty apd do their best to get at least a glimpse of His Royal Highnes| hutio h We / = P 1 y C nd in no wise touches the re: means of fdentification which win| For Year Are $4,805,175 i;‘p‘l‘fi:}_‘:;"e:' "o"{“(’;ff“:nzf"‘r“‘f phity So¥kere a0¢ &, prevent what you send in being| Detroit, Mich, Oct, $0.—Net earn- | * myq ig no, disparagement of the Prince, Who seems to be a deces loMt, and insuring prompt attention ' ings of $4,805,175 after setting aside ying of oy and inclined to'behave himself. But he is a wonentity, keey i ud 1 "'r(\c' ) $1,000,000 additional for = rese~vesS. iny himself well out of the road while British statesmen of another ordd i <y e W g e e the annual regard of ' pinage his politics for him. * He s & kindly, genial gentieman and back to us because the addresses|the Packard Motor Car company smericans wish him well but his visit 1o this country, in comparison put on ‘the accepted contributions| for the year ending August 31, 1924, | {he coming of the airmen, was insignificant. He has done nothng, & were carelessly written. made pubdic today, This 18 equiva- |can do nothing. He merely prolongs the institution of monarchy by bel this vicinity s 2 lent to 1543 per cent on the €OmM- |an jnoffensive gentieman rising tem- A Kitchen Name pany's $28,770.200 worth of. shares Bell: “"Are you a good of common stock. \ssues at band of at 2 re in the r wea slowly Mrs. Copyright, 1924, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate.

Other pages from this issue: