New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 3, 1925, Page 6

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g New Britain Herald * will * chances o HERALD PUBLIBHING COMPANY ftesued Dally (Sunday Bxcepred) <P At Herald Bldg. 67 Chureb Stieet BUBSCRIPTION RATES I 88,00 & Year } $2.00 Three Munth c. & Month Kutered at the Post Office at New Hritaln ‘a8 Second Clasa Mall Matter TELEPHONE OALLS Business Office .. Edltortal Roor: The only profitable sdvertiving medivin in the City. Circulation bo press rour always open to ad Member of the Asso The Associated Press titled to thoe for all news credited (o It credited in this pape news published herein ated n ex Member Audit Bureno ot Clreulation The A. B. C. s a notional org which furnishes newspapers a1 {sers with a atrictly honest an reulation. Our clrculation &t are based upon this audit. This protection againet fraud in ne Afstribution figures to both patioial and local advertisecs. fa on_sle dally wo adve ysie The Herald York at Hotal Bquare; Schu Grand Central, INCREASED TAX WAS ANTICIPATED Adoption of mills by t an increa rate of last v sary by in run the city, notal ased expansion of th plant. The school depar approximately $100, ly responsible ment increase of 0 was primari- hig avoided 1 for the tax rate and was not to be the city was to keep pace with creased demands for achools; and the de tully fliled, testity, Payment of certain fixed had been delayed until fiscal year, tI because the ta found incapable of n nd is as T t compla afte is provin x rate of last y quirements, together wi nary expenses whi anticipated, including t epidemic and school draft. Cur money approp charges. not only have to be year also, so 1 double payment of necessary from year's and last ¥ A Spi over the s ial tax a matter of the total ¢ pout the le in mere come in vic methods of with them THE FEDERAL DECKION ON MOTOR \EHICLES Tt was in plexing problems * truck and bus states fr would federal opport gratificati 80 soon State or tryg the state off clals state c¢ * fng diffic ticularly jts decision, not ne legislators = gourt such 1 The which has cut and pending | drivers W pany has Hartford Meved that eision W in deciding eompany in ! Bo! T in Connec serious legal ¢ of inter-sts not all of are swep cision. The first fru Pe that interst greater the without fegisiatic ghich they p3 B mas only & ® railr K or 88 28 Massach had under levat - agains hus setween Provis and cut points. ot of the fed- Wt judges in | been the experience of various con- | od In mak- most impor- and truek FHEEE OF POUR MAJOR CRIMES ORIGINATE HERL rely un- na Vot- He ther is was ed and fled police depart- et quickly was being sought. ystem to facili- police in emer- t continue a frec a for his nsion of Mary Dain- father, brother and a third on being held in th by all odds revolti the ection ost pisode in the annals of th the notoric hen man, who is credite robhe irderer of 1es Skelly in this eity. ¢ is the case of Olympia 1. This s the NEW BRITAIN AUDIENCES HIGHLY PRAISED VALUL ACTO SHOWS 1CONOMIC o1 between | clalmed, not been reached and will ‘-‘vm be reached at once. Machines in use are constantly deterlorating and their owners enter the llsts of re- newed purchasers, The fleld remalns enormous and tempting, aud it has | cerns In the business that a failure to toot the horn of automobile val | ues brings with it a slump in dis- | tribution and a conscquent lower- '{ug of production requirements, I'he industry remains wide awake; the Britaln 1 the of promotion automobile show in New dicates that the Industry here partak vivid characteristics of the industry as a whole, New principle that Britatn operated upon thic sceing 18 belleving,” n attend sition without feellng that the old nd no one c such an ex- car has scen its best days and the new models are or If not yet the possessor of ne of these universal means of lo- | that the getting comotion, be chassis time into one's has come to gin SAVING POWER ON TROLLEY CARS of saving clectrl- en hrought to a high of perfection by the Connec- ticut company. Motormen are pected to mal avoid waste, llere are the rules “guut off power as S0on as pos sible; s much avoid making unnccessary stops or ‘fanning the w-downs; avoid » (the method of turning the air- | on and sava time in up, 1 this t ing; watch the off); notching braking and at the stop. Use ime for extra coast- power saving bulle- tin board.” of Whi ites meticulous cars economi- cally. There being a plenitude of hills along the lines, t be « tles for coasting must nsider- also the opportunities for ip extra electric current in o ing up hill. It is to be hoped that the motor- time to follow he cars; tokens an ng change these men are 1 to all the hor ich goes ith the job. As are capable of worl yrding to amateur company is mo- for economy also Jle enougl s of tho | A show such as that in | better worth hav- | own | ex- | » a good record and | as possible; | opportuni- | wny bank, ac- | thinks will occur in other landa but remalns mum upon those that are due for Ttaly, so as not to scare away the tourists. Belng on the sjage and getting | margled often scems to go hand in hand. Nora Bayes, in her early days rogarded as a perfect stagd mate to Jack Northworth, has married for the fifth time, This 18 getting closo to the stage record. Mlss Bayes ~— | now Mrs. Benjamin Lester Fried- land In real life — 18 still young as | proscenium youth goes, and hers | public will wish the newly marrled all the happiness in the | world for as long a peried as is pos- sible or deemed advantageous, | couple Fact; and Fancies | BY ROBERT QUILLE: Distant relatives are those who | | have money and know yeu need it. “A man's second wife is more sprightly.” Al, well; an encore us- | ually is. | The quaint old-timers had a grab- bag game, but it wasn't ealied na- tionalism. | | = | Still, 1 Trance pays her friends | all that Germany her, who | pays for the deva pay station? The hard part of heing poor is| trying to save while spending as | much as tho rich do. i | Zesa | Maturity has advantages. A small Joy can get only three sticks of gum | in his mouth, | € \_'_. Kkia oursclves! We never almost as great as Brown, but that we are greater than | Jones. | How wr say we Aar When a rlch man dics he leaves | poor man, They thing. ‘ | Perhaps the Eightcenth An | ment thought it wouldn't have work until cighteen years of age. American m-nur‘ and it would take to get it back. | to 387 lecturer | After an, th velop a young m lifting. In the old days of Dol the | worst that could happen to a hugged driver was matrimony best thing to de- | is a short course | in mor | America is large, but apparently | enough room in it for omy and prosperity > both e | Borgsdof, | | | | t chance, | ayve a decer e dads who wish to for them. | | was down with pneumonia. Americ publicity s an, e . ad. Well, speaking gardening. 1 say ings. Those who | with a mule's business end heads the mule can monkey seldom have hurt. Johr insuranc about it.” ¢ thousand of at 1T never think Editors, (Pro by 25 Y;z; A;) Today From Paper of That Date two T snake in < is reported ) stop of Merider Yo. was put A. G ar out ol & Wi 1d a whist and in & Hoimes' hall P Ashle M ption evening. | ng those | Gec Beern Mr. an Herl on, My rry Parker, | 1 Mrs. W rist, and mps Mrs. W. commissic six- | in their ] in their | positions may have Applications for en have I Anderson nd John J . Curtin t of the Dor ts annual meeting yes uniors at the Y. M. ted this forenoon on “Re and's tion in the Harry received from | George C. | K i wa erday the jerbies, ir new rtise may yet be the record, although the | I Could regulate the carth, | of clothing with which to combat ' | cases bl | there Rightot He sald, “Let me hug you, my s== ) \ But the girl sald, “That's fot = (2) V gald the man, “Now don't = ) I'm aware that it - (4) Jut it's done by the best folks, I'll e (B) v . 1. An animal, as a dog or car, that is fondled, 2. | regulations that take the joy out of {lite. 3. What a proper girl should | do when proposed to; unconsclous- | negs. 4. There ain't no such word h!‘llv\s. 6. Somcthing done at horse race THE REFORMER (By Fred P. Marion) I have & cranky nelghbor Who sings a doleful tune; You should hear him belabor The women, night and noon, No matter what they're wearing | Or how they fix their halr, Ho docs & lot of swoaring In phrases rich and When skirts were short and About the size’ of kegs, 1. Cop; 2. He crted, “In Eighteen Fifty 6. Pop. They didn't show their legs! e When with the change in fashion | 1. Proofi The skirts went to the ground, | Guy; 6. Roof. He swore, in raging passion, “The hussies should be drowne 3. W. Sternberger. Answer to Yesterday's * Cross Word Limericks .o Stop; 3. By; 4. Eye; SNy Woof; 8. By; (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction forbidden). COMMUNICATED 1f such confounded kickers Goodbye to girls in Kknickers, And other sights of worth; Goodbye to pretty stockings, Goodbye to daring style, Gioodbye to all the shockings | That make men's life worth while! Relativity “NMrs, Curtis -h clothes as T have. “Well, she's had twice as husbands. Itallan Todge Addresses Cive Safety League To the Civie Safety League, City. Gentlemen: A letter, communication or pro- test, should always he addressed to the president of the body addressed, but in this case we are sorry that we are unablo to do so. 4 A communication signed by A. W. Upson as your president appeared in the papers, but in the same {ssuc we saw that, although admitting that he had penned it, he disclaimed responsibility. When the papers published your statement regarding law enforce- ment, many members of the Victor | Emanuel Lodge of New Britain, of the Sons of Italy in America, that T have the homor to represent as their president, first thought that it would have been too much of an nonor for any of them to reply. Upon second thought, when the matter of your publication was of- ficlally brought to their attention at | their regular meeting yesterday, it | was considered that silence would 1ead the public to belfeve that you ] were right and T was instructed to “Our recent severe weather sug- write to you, and in the name and | gosts the timeliness of a few words hehalf of sald lodge to protest on the subject of the proper Sort| against the charge you made, es- Wly against the Poles and ltalians. Your communication showed clearly and unequivocally that your | the necessity of having all outer| minds z ry narrow and highly garments air-tight, | projudiced against some classes of This was brought home to me by | people simply because their fore- an epidemic of single, double, and| fathers did not have the luck of triple pneumonia in Overshoe, & coming here with the Pilgrims.. hamlet in the Wisconsin veldt, four| In all nationalitics you will find days' sledge-journey from Milwau- | good and bad peopl but that does | kee. The cold was aggravated by {not Imply that everyone should be | nigh winds, after a week of which classed as a law-breaker os your | epidemic started. Its persistence | communication would lead the peo- | for the natives are a|ple at large to beieve. en, day, I dls-| You must have forgotten that 0 “there is so much good in the worst “With a husky woodsman, Sven|of us and so much bad in the best 1 had withdrawn into -." of us that it is not realy worth to shack, the door of which stood open. | say anything about the rest of us!® Yiven here there was a strong breeze blowing and 1 suddently realized | to the Poles and Ttalian in no un- that it came from the actual person | certain wa Think of the number of my companion. In an instant all | of I: akers in all other nation- | \lear. The wind, forcing its way ' allties, compare the statistics and into Sven's pockets, was blowing | yeu will see that the comparison is through his button-holes, thus pass- in their Ask police of- | ing across his chest. Next day he | ficer how many STk he | has arrested since the Volstead law | wont into effect, and how many other “drunks” he has arre ing the same period and you will be surprised. About the short-coming of the Poles and Italians compare the good hat they have accomplished for our country of adoption, and think of the arduous and dangerous work performed by & great many of them. Think of the great help they have glven to develop our country in the construction of our roads, our Comparison | tracks, our buildings, our sewers, . Newlywed: “T suppose times | Most of them came here in the ry hard with you." prime of life between the ages of 20 ump (eating biscuit): | ana 80, and the most useful years m. But not as hard of thelr existence have been spent in toll so that this country of ours { coutd lead the world. Did you ever stop to think of the His Ardor Cooled | great number of Poles and Italians Little Jim, aged three years, was | that voluntarily joined our glorious very fond of a little baby girl who |army during the World War, how lived next dopr. | many of them gave thelr lives 8o This little girl was teething and, | that “the world could be made sate therefore, had an unusual amount for democracy®” of saliva | Did you not know that the great- Accordingly, when Jimmie leaned | est majority of them could, if they ovor and kissed her, his mouth was wanted to, claim and ebtain exemp- filled with saliva. asked you for | tion, by law? But they went, they a tiss, T didn't want a dink,"ehe said | fought and d angrily Why treat them 2ll as criminals? . As most Poles and Ttarians landed The Fditor's Gossip Shop the U. S without knowing a one language, it you at th made without instead they get Mre. Tishel twice as many Tisher: many —Gertrude. Boom! Little Bobble: “If the word ‘fort! is a masculine noun, then ‘fortress’ is feminine, fsn't it dad?” His father: “Yes, they call them that because they have more powder.” His Life Work Farmer Donahue: “Has your son chosen his fleld to endeavor, noOW that he has graduated from col- lege?"” Farmer Hart: “I have choscn his| fleld for him. It's my 80 acre corn fleld.” —Mrs. A. T. Wilson. Dr. Baldpate on Cold Weather Clothing intense cold,” Dr. George A. Bald- pate recently wrote to Dore Reich-' enbaum. “I cannot over-emphasi one avor. “A survey of the population show- ed that wearers of long trousers were the first to succumb, In some wn out of their clotihng by the terrific blast which passcd up the trouser-legs and out through the o and neck-bands. I fmmedi-| convene dall able-bodies eitl- and sealed their outer garments with piteh and oakum, thanks to; which the town of Overshoe is still on the map.” | “Yes, as this —1I1. A. Whitus. Tomorrow we shall present ¢ of Fun Shop's most popular tures as a regular feature to which | we want you to contribute. Wild Willies! insulted, Now and then, in The Fun ¢ 1¢ wo have offered different adyen the of this boy of boys, the combination | there is of Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer, | do inste and Peck's Bad Bo: Your Without any request on the come 1o us un [ ur-liners and lette evident that we must to popular demand Willles with us ever They begin tomorrow! word of our ould have surprised progress they 1 at heart the ly of our city ou can or should you have good of land and especi the Po particular, and ir 1em you she ¢orts in showing them good nd helpfulness. ou have done nothing but shown contempt, and your sincerity is very loubtful. and at the bottom “of & secms that the up- in your minds, our part, ors, num} s maki soon T nd have have ians in ad g eriti your will his trouble it I commute ten miles a{ permost prejudice dy." or at least in the minds of some of | Crabs’ “That's fine. How many cross word puzzles, do you average " s you is the religious question, that Al fair keep clear of in this Jan e frcedom is supreme lodge in whose name this st is written has requested me to publicly -prajse our mayor, the Hon M. Paonessa for the stand he has taken in this matter, and in Joing 8o the fact that he was born in Ttaly was not a factor, Calleq “Come, Kitty probably in showing you that a man Where are you, you the two nationalities mentioned “Twas his wite that he c: by you was honored by his fellow (5) by being elected tw as ] first magistrate oblitfrating all lents of political history in repeating to you gentle at 1 have said be in criticism, do some and ali LA oL imes J. O'Connel CROSS WORD LIMERICKS The Cave Man llow inclined to be —— (1) home from a terrible gy e itizens If it was a wom e v rec 2. What Babe Rut Jo if boss ca en feel of to ariony woma kful, and ~Mrs, C. D. Schmidt. [stop making will do s, the 1 cannot yourselves nother Soclal rules and ¢ nifty, | You have shown lack of fair play | ted dur- | Of our city 1 spend | minded citizens should al-| except hing | PO o1 24 s S s o L e, L What is (val? 0AL consists essentially of carbon, together with hydro- gen, oxygen and nitrogen. Usu- ally a certain amount of sulphur is found. Coal always contains more or less earthy matter, which is left be- hind in the form of ash after burning,. Our own analysis of the coal we select assures our customers of a minimum amount of ash and a correspendingly larger amount of heat. The gelection of coal i our specialized business % The Citizens Coal Co. Tel, 2398, Berlin Yard opy. Berlin Station. Tel, 2075-5. Uptown Office, 101 Arch St ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYMOWTED Jaughing stock of the rest of the| We specifically mention, and hold people of New Britain, and above | Mayor Paoncssa responsible, for al- "Il when admitting members to your | lowing the park board to rent city body or clecting them to some po- | property for commercial law- sition of importance be sure that | breaking purpose, as the corporation {hey are people who arc not afraid | counsel told him, and for allowing {o “stand by what they have writ- [the police bpard to station policc- ton.” {men there o protect the law-break LUCA DI MINNI, President, | °r8 in carrying out their law-brealk- Victorla Emanuel Lodge, 8, of L ing plans. It was not an amerteur sport. Mayor Paonessa cannot es | cape responsibility for this by call- ing it “innocent sport.” We have no controversy with Polish or Italian cjtizens, or’ any |other citizons who are law ablding. | We number _these indeed among our best friends. The records in the police court which we have exani- ined, more specifically those bear- !ing upon liquor violations, show that |2 1a¥MGer proportion of citizens of | Polish and Itallan ancestors arc | convicted than those of any other | vace. The record speaks for itself All we desire is that that delin- quency he corrected. Perhaps it | wonld have been better to have | published the entire list: but this as considered impractical because 0 long. The league has not at auy time touched the religious question as A Mother Makes Plea For New | .School For Lincoln Street District While there are numerous de- mands upon the municipal budget, surcly the ecity should spend it moncy first upon those vital e tials which will pay the bes! gividends in return, And while we | may need a trolley station, improved parks, repaired streets, and so on, | these eannot compare in fmportance ith the safe housing of our school New Britain may well be proud of the autiful new schools, erected in | ist few years in the north end jv But New Britain should [be profoundly ashamed of ofte |chool—not orly ashamed, but fear- ful. The eity is gambling with the | charged by the mayor. The league lives of hundreds of children, as|has nothing to- do with religlon Jong as the old Lincoln school is in |per se. We arc dealing only with Tho writer has been present | Connecticut ahd United States law: Iroro than onco when the stairways | and when any socloty, b it chureh fhoeatencd o collapse under the|or othorwise, broaks the clvil code, welght of the crowd. The buliding [ they ure not truo Amev ans. The {s positively unsafe for the number |law does not concede the Tight, as of persons who attend a parents‘and | claimed by Mavor Paoncssa, for teachers’ meeting. anybody to build churches by gam- Not only are the staircases unsafe, bling. The civil code, with great but the building is & veritable fire- | wislom, makes gambling by chureh- trab. The board of education, as- fc3 just as reprehensible as gam- gisted by the teachers, does all in its | Dling at horse races. This is Amer- Dower to protect the children by fre- |ican 1aw and the mayor cannot pre- | quent fire drills, but even these are vail against it by calling it of no avail unless a fire is detected | liglous prejudice e very sl IE wouldlta alpity | g dlcariie hes Dayer done the for New Brifaln to be added to the | work of ¢ officlals; we have list of citics which have experienced worked only through them and this the horror of a school fire. is proot of good work done. These o 1666 Earanits wHo Dave visited | omelale have been uniformly courte- the basement, I need not add that ous: the mayor, too, has been courfe- conditions ate far from sanitary.|ous &t times. Of course we shall O e tol thinioranari oniid not sl MRon himit Ho eave Do, .9r spending month after month in su it he will not treat us as gentle- men. roundings which are so fertile a 2 3 ground for discase, It is a constant We have had good co.operation from city officials on the whole feb tonleen apcuoo cloar and | poen when secking the aid of the [H‘lh\'m'l‘ 'C,”hli"{x'flf-ii{n ‘;El\:o\r‘lyl‘j; sfate's attorney we have been care- 1N 2 1 | ful to let the local authorities know proposltion is hopoless, ~|in advance our purpose. The fact he school dnh_hr_n of today Willl )¢ we have acted wisely in these | make the Now Britain of (omorTO¥: | yqqisrs is well attested by both the [ Do thiey not deserve every chance 10 | giato's attorney and by Chief Jus- inasafe and | oo Wheeler; and we submit building? Is not for “liberty under law” fety of much more im- strictly constructive at than any other improve- |overy point. The present contro- city can possibly make? versy I8 proof enough that New Brit- A MOTHER. in necds just such an organiza- = tion. Fxecntive committee of the New Britain Civio League, ~B. B. BASSEPTT, Secretary. the {t 150 { reeeive their education hat suitable schoo! | their sa | portance ment the !Civie Safety League Discusses Row With Mayor and Religious Issue | The Civic League stands on the | ground that there is no such thing | true lib y except under law. K- The league has no other object than " 1o spread this good American doc- | Qbservations On The Weather {trine and to lielp all officials to sce | Washington, March land act on this fundamental truth | American democracy »r Southern New England: ir nd warmer tonight; Wedneaday un- 1f this controversy with the mayor «s brought those principles clearly ttled and warmer, probably rain possibly etrong, waat and into the light, it will result only i uthwest winds. | good for city, and country | In all our business with mayor, we have been specific point; specifical up his hands in good worl such as in the promotion ¢ (onditions: The western area of tutional week, and in insist zh pressure that was central yes- at as mayor he has the right ¢ day morning over Oklahoma has oved eastward during the last 24 ours and now forms a long ridge xtending from Louisiana north castward to New York, It is pro Jucing pleasant weather with un the duty the work | his boards and appointees, and usually low temperatures for the stason ot the year in districir turn bear the responsibility for state 1 s have rosh, | held done we to direct of that they do. Boards that are car rying out their work under the law ur hearty praise and they re the all Mississippi river, N warmer We edit mayor. Only upon we have 1o the give ast of polic for easter nd Srtion; York 1onight dnesdas ) gambling machi i in north d. T W Bt

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