New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1924, Page 6

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" n FTYN R 5 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1924, A - — e o T T T M —— W | 1 ' | | ‘er‘ald i \| gatherings :H\ru:nrl.‘lru man, he will be penniless, with | : o e 1 I unofMelal economical | his carning power largely dostroyed I ' 1 h rehabilitate cco-|and his eyesight gone Yet ho‘ u'“n‘f 1 bty (o . 3 and financlally sub- | probably will be & better maun men- | na. This means unof tally than he was a year ago, "\‘n\-‘ P biopabid i BA CONGRESSMAN VNN co-operation. while in theory | pathizing friends probably will fiy al $2.00 o IS CONGRATULATED L w ot naive pathway | for him a method to sarn his liveli- N political und econom hood for the remainder ‘of his| Butere t . ] } pean ob ers can years, And h will live with his A as So “ t v stand this peculiar mind his kingdom. In spite of his ' TR 1 to bo frank, an gricvous afliction, Gilpatgle may ‘The Day After : o a1 who thinks can scarcely | have happy years before him still By Willlam M, Barnhart | ! \ ctter { The eharitable view is that hls soul I'm feeling mighty gaod today ! ‘ 3 Last night 1 didn't hit the ha e s el any I have bren ¢d and his @il eariy Mo, i g Co-oper ) 1 purified, and stuta will be! 1 helped to turg old bedlam loose; v : \ n fing g to furget the past and wish 1 shouted, marched and raised the : 3 > deuce, | . ’ = o la 1 phenom " ier well in a new Sl Ay At Lowest Prices ' t m ohservis a e I watched reports thrown on a| i i cy sheet o By men who u a . R X ot " a’ 3 cross the || & = W ° : B e B g g Al 5 Fact,J an fanczes‘ L e These new Axminster Rugs ave especially appealing at the ¥ ! | stereopticon. ~ ; . H finu 1 BY ROBERT QUILLEN With others there T stuck it out 10\\’ pllCES we are quOt“]g' * ! v 1A kuseal viattony. Dir: s st 1 T knew, beyond a doubt, s . ‘ : ki e R DL My man had won. The soft, lustrous sheen, the quiet blending colors and ex- r e 4 y s g 1 is 1 f i " H H v than tonars | T 2 T TIek o0 eirle upon hatchesks cellent quality commend them to those of diseriminating taste. a v loansd to forcign coun- s T'll have to whisper for a week; A A ' — SR e e T ol T pearly frosei C Our daylight display room and large assortment of patterns THE LOCAL BLECTION gh the offices of an 1 ow strenk ion.” ve got coufett] by the peck " 3 $ | ; BT e ks ik YD Cal D e by malkes rug selection an easy task here. The ideas presented be- o ; S e O P G ChE e low are but a few of these good values. . e ! g e 9x12-ft. Dark Blue Ground with Rose and Blue Figures. . .$28.00 WITH BEST WISHES The more th more lay I am a total loss, ¥ { = 0 . . v ] : S T e o et i ellove and] . Likewlso. the: crow; 9x12-ft. Tan Ground with Olive and Blue Figures .. .. 28.00 r great scribed in 1 b ¢ . But hie's so glad he'll let it rid n ARy 1 s q 101 v gri g ride; o e : Sl on the ) B Dutiiee aolestindl] o B 9x12-ft. Tan Ground—Light Blue Design ................ 30.50 : = S e (o Tcalism 15 soms that And celebrated, too. 9x12-ft. Pearl Ground, Tan and Blue Border—a handsome y % 18 1o a ma r his 3 i 1 A ) *, It t r » ach s ful Rubbing Tt Tn NEWADALLETT RN 30.50 o ety She says she's the dead . ‘mi S e ¢ el e Imige of Narma, Tajmadge.” | 9x12-ft. Gray and Blue Intermixture .................... 3500 h o r rupry. Last J t they ming Alice Yes - so I've moticed 3 o s 3 & by &g e e - s Tve nouced | 9x]12-ft. A sensible pattern with harmonious floral design, e, e B ons e ol _ —Hugene Owen. |} TR ORI RIS 60,6000 80060 6 60005 0500508800560 0a (IR . 3 : - His Passionate Outburst Others up to $55.00 S o A Louise: “Jask is over-fond of it . S o o g 8-3x10-6dS|zes~. everal choice patterns in a good wearing } i —Felix Zinn ’ o 5 : f e : . a0 o 933,20 R winer of G wa : £ ¥ 1 3 g : Thwough the Rack Door 6x9-ft. Sizes—A good quality at.................. 20.00 Rotrsl 1 A ¥ I ge was Sceretary Curtis: “Why are you . . (; : e : bl e firing 1o private life?” —A nice size for bedrooms and dens. S tuve. Whethe : Senator Dormat: “IUs the only s g ) Lo Somtor Dormats ave e vy § - 27x54-in.—Special Mottled Axminsters ........... 3.55 ) eating at places W. Ridings. |B i 1 ‘mi i i el T M R il o B 36x63-in. Special Mottled Axminsters .. ... e el 5.3 officia i with the old- | the steak ) the Fight Began ’ ¢ v » od ” . J g : e B i LD U i Excellent rugs for odd corners, etc. Nicely match old b : {eiie s s Amer-| In/hin tamily Jifs rugs of any color. ; many Nor ever a pang of regret; 9291/ : o : LR e ) e s o T § 221,x36-in. A good assortment at .... $2.65 o . But an ill-fated day K : pian . £ Too v men think they love He purchased a radio set! e Sleares et s had their cou ely love —Harold Lewis. l ! the soft s i : f f questions as if afraid of an “en- Happiness i3 just a matter of i “Kitty andersdowne looked | B¢ [ [ ] A AN A R O. 5 K o oft every.goreign Ing a job that tickles your ego while sweet, didn't she? She was sitting | o s E stors go about dis- filling your stomac with the Van Burlings.” 40-56 FORD ST : 2 “Did you sce th . HARTFORD W z \ v 01 I I h in a business-| Lo . 2 : . wgingle women enjoy fiction more thought they were still abroad.” = S X et - manner and with international {han married w 5 Perhaps the “Who was that tall, willowy [ Furniture Rugs — Glenwood Ranges 2 ind ‘ —— e ) While the government married ones hear too much of it. woman in the box with the Camp- many statcs rs MORAL ISOLATION AND i | isolation, Amer- —_— bel tic t , ECONOMIC CO-OPERATION | SR Correrol,, e PILO R C who s thought Genevieve looked 80 e ’ ¢ actice 0 this continent has produced no good | tired.” " i re in r of falll 1 finan e e an1 ) (ol Lo e B (Rose Benchrings!| S92 SACOC I CLLCER nayeidonedocl Most of the occupants af the burn- no v g nntions making pleas for help and | Means on old Mrs. Netherwicke? caslonally when a contribution baf-| |ing building were able to escape i S S to o s e ia S e (DD G RS AT L) ) {down the rear fire escape, but twelve : sl doudt as to its orlginality, we send persons, among them five women T ver ol arry Hughes looked fafter o note to the contributor 7\k1w l'! |and four children, were trapped in i y R i ARl than 3 I' is nr\m‘nu! and u_npulfllfinnl, and A |the front section of the house with st ¥ GILPATRIC'S BETTER SELF s\ ine Forrestorat alnays Ket] - L roes defend it on Iogal com-| IR |a blazing wall of fire cutting of their e NOW HAS CONTROL good seats.” paind | | exit to the fire escapes In the rear. z - 1 liked the lttle blonde on the| To manuscripts Which are not ” G "w S s | Firemen carried all of them down - : W o ooTo mamscrigte whicn are st M| Kpe Carried f0 Salely i teir aaders, white otner fremen g q symy g (el {e b crately stolen, some have searched the rear part of the house = 3 ‘ , e frank nerve to reply that they to e that all had laft. G Il s ) ; o ! X \What's in Al Name! original and that they would Mrs. Mamie Tromboni, 2§ years E v & g e b “Why do you call vyour dog f°n9 fl'nninn legal complaint! ; | | 0ld, who lives in the rear of the sec- ¢ itoaa) Aragraph i Nero? are in open warfare With|{ = d floor, made to the e : piie ) = i i o BT h Thing sent to us that has ever ap-|“a# seriously injured, several per- |jumped to the courtyard, forty feet i i . e The rea L ? - ared in print before. {sons lad to be taken from their |below. She suffered a fractured t S By o N et 45 As a Last Resort = apartments by firemen on scaling | '1ght arm and right leg and was . : 5 I B 4 5 it “Would you marry a 1924 Iz Golng—Going— ladders, and more than a dozen |taken to the Staten TIsland hospital, e ey hi Myrile: “Have you taken advan-|familles in the immediate vicinity | Doctors and ambulances from the . . \ r Nat { I couldn’t get it any tage of Leap Year and asked any Were driven from thelr homes by a Staten Island and St. Vincent's hos- wa I \ a paper co s s 101 young men to marry you?” fire in a five-story apartment house |Pitals went to the scene, and the ¥ o e e ic aff —Charles Gregg. e Chiges T asked three, but'at 281 Jersey street, New Brighton, | Physicians treated some of the fire- b oy —_— they all sald T could not support|Staten Island, last night. men who were overcome with ( A {5 Ane tokl knowledge, but What Price Glory them in the style to which they had | The building, formerly the Mac- [iEmokes : ¢ 8 o aliaiRo it S n work ¢ yon had the children’s ton- | been accustomed.” |cabee hall, is a concrete and wood- | When the fire was at its height it 1 1 ioavie g dsl S - sils removed vet?” e en structure with stores on the |Was feared that the flames might : in advantageou 2 Dbt Tihave, seyerall sUrEeons 1 a great many young men | 8round floor. 1t is owned by A, N, |#pread to the business scction on i ¥ : aliion SplLh gD GX - e mamerous able Awmeri- MAking estimates on the job.” love 18 a matter of losing the head | GInsberg, who conducts a nlolmng,o"el;“i" "]"’1 ‘:*’ "':"*‘(“”d’ “";{"‘” c tnowicdge of investr - { S Pl H) [ %ather thanlithe heart store on the ground floor and lives |00 the other, but the firemen kept 1 : 4 vast sum 2 i s g s e o8 . 71 o i with his wife and family on the floor [@ Sharp watch on adjoining houses aEn sip 1 igh his Wally the Mystic {ahove, | and stores and as fast as they caught : ) grrs Wit - of it stick- . i He'll Answer Your Questions Y A T d The fire started in the rear of the | fire streams ot water prevented the " | Ay RO e 25 Vears Ago Today |ttt e von 5 e | nae sprending. The whale of the 1 is that y 58 . If something's on your so-called - the air shaft and through the wood- | Wooden section of the building was 1 - 5 § Bz onge) e : mind From Paper of That Date en section of the building that | destroyed. S g 3 A quick relief you'll find ¢hen Deputy Fire Chief Willlam | T a A ¥ g S e If you will write to \V w Frank Berg, Alfred Peterson, a 1 i ggins arrived on the first alarm he | As Pt c hiaf W o i e Champeen Chaser of the 108, James Madden were on an clevator jsent in two additional alarms that| Salt Lake City, Nov. 4, —A double : ) e Thief W l‘\'() v'\ as BIACJ . Language of Cards it the Staniey Works this forenoon, | brought out all the fire companies action faucet which when turned one s o Freight Complains Dear Wally when it fell from the third floor to | froin the north shore of Staten Is- |Way flowed water and when turned T i $333 T : By AY a I'mal . and green the pit, a distance of 60 feet. Berg jland and four companies from the |another flowed moonshine liquor was t i r 8 1 A Wo cd. What did she and Petorson jumped as the elcvator | south shore, as well as all the avail- | found by the police dry squad in a it f ar m shot past the second floor and jable police rescrves under Deputy recent raid. The faucet was “Ted" » : v T i But g three calling | Maddén as it went by the basement, [ Chief Inspector Cornelius Cahalane. with whiskey from a barrel buried ; t 10 the | oiaint aeatnst the fealiht A card all escaping unhurt Sparks ‘from the burning building | four feet under the ground in the i - moods ¥ Two were her hushand’s Engincer Cadwell has returned | were carried over to houses on basement of an alleged “soft” drink” ] ¢ - Kind Regards, from the Adirondacks, where he en- | Fourth and Fifth streets and the |establishment and was forced Into \ t It is af course S e ted & fr t D Kind Regards joyed his annual deer hunt firemen ordered out the occupants!the tap by a compressed air ar- ; e ; T is the way Contractor O'Connor tod su- | of these places. rangement. . 5 . e % & A w n uses cards to say phrintended the work of raising the | e r € e s . 3¢ you will leave my man alone | four lamp posts at the corners of -———*———-————— - to t ¢ . ¢ he L ; ! 1 wiil not try to charm your ow the soldiers’ monument ———— e bl . iy Lt il GiET James L. Dawson, William Hanna, ‘ oy or tam oser A Litte Momopolit ey v woen o (DR, FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL | v I S e i Dear Wally: the Jeffries-Sharkey fight They { i = ) . 4 T2 me. 18 it right say that Sharkey did what little! i Ing v To have boys calling every night? fighting was done but that both men - : ‘ fen a y o e, | fought Ik ifts and a8 if - thelr | The Tragedy of Motherhood x J 1 | hands were tied. | e o Honey B ere were 35 deaths in the city | By DR. FRANK CRANE 7 from pneumonia and | ch from consumption and nerv- play, written by Yiartha Stanley, was produced in New x e Qbservetions : : e e AT S our bUATe dlseases York under the title of “My Son.” 3 1 0'1 T“':e Weatiher b Il get you in Duteh The Philharmonic society It was an illustration of the tragedy of motherhood. The mother 1 "L try to hog 100 much. P. Corbin's oftice last nig instinct is doubtless the strongest in the human race. It goes brck to ‘ A Ry cided to have no concerts this y animal life and is one of the deepest and most secure of our emotions. ; v o = From Our Own Infant-ry Drill I L. Mills and George Stevens| A man will live 2 long while, but never find a friend who is invariably L s Regulations have returned from Winsted, where jwell disposed to him like a mother. t < : they have been hunting for several! he mother has an unshakeable belief in the goodness of her ofl , . T ang 9aye Yapr It is not a belief founded upon intelligence, or reason, but onc | ! i sing | . Fire com ly gutted Morris | which has its roots decp in the fundamental cmotions. i ¥ CORN tore on North street last | Nothing can ever chan it. No acts on the part of the son can alte: ‘ ! ) 5 L ferisively, ing before the fire department {it, liven when he i3 proved culpable or unworthy, the affection stiil re- ; : o Larrived. About $1,000 damage was ‘mains and a mother is quick to find excuses for all that he docs. » lone { Wherover there be ether ties, they can be broken. Friends leave ue [ = o lanx New RBritain ste 1 Into 4 tic for 'wives can get disgusted and quit, brothers and sisters can be alicnated P 3 \ ] Jack. Lovs | rst p in the National FPolo but mother love contfnubs down to her dying day w 1 ¢ ndit &ing . some air gue last night by defeating Wa- | This love even prompts the mother to do thinga that are {njurious f ; the A + terbury, 7 to'5, after a sUf fray. 'to her child. She is apt to want to give him advantages, and sacrifices ' b € - Jor = ST !herself for him, when, as a matter of fact, he needs no ifice, but hard /- : - MAY HAVE CHEAP THEATER | knocks that shall enable him to stand upon his own fect. . ; ’ ' Gossip Shop London, Nov 5.—A playhouse It is an interesting and tragic thing to reflect that there is no ra T 5 ' r . list of 51 per- | where seats may be bought for six. .scallion 1t the country, not a thug nor a criminal nor a neer-do-well, t ve sent us material as it e b0 56 GPeriad | LueLe 1 BackiNoewAEre n LhS offing, the shrouded figure of a mo o 1 1 unpublis) 3 g |Who believes in hin. 2 e r A ik Sl S Doubtless this unchanging affection ls necessary In order to hold the t .~ s fall i ; M Vs have Do sympathy at all R ae a0 PAstus i) Mii Yoy tossth it it Is not always happy for Its possessor. When a man . ) se the person who deliberately copics | Staniey Baldwin, who have started a | ks his own life by his indiscrction he knows that he is injuring and g 2 3 yaining her who gave him birth more than himself or any ofher person - . a R i robe ol sauimaIra b Eaibe 1o Recewry | S e R e ot ) 'y other pers 3 - 5 | Ihe great tragedy of wrong-doing is not found in- the wrong-doere s e b § . = i 4B oviginel. wud cxiect®its open Onty i1ar o much as in the mothers of them. f ; business or B 1av® v A his tersa, and he 18 ag ol g i 1 r of it. dramas and comedies will be pre- you Know what | sented. Copyright, 1924, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate. ~

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