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happen parents are New Britain | Herald{ WP e g o o HERALD PUBLISHING COMPA ; are suffering from same all On the ntion — they did not suspect, Tssund Dally (Sunday t At Herald Bidg., ¢ Ste s i tth @ pound of cure, th ounce of pre plan SUBS( $5.00 @ Yoar servision appears to be W w worthy example of guardia ship of ite young ve too huve & su Entered at t) Red Cross as S food grown than agriculture hus been to find ber of the Associnted Press, kets, and In which eff o8 of malt Dritain sufficient- tisers wit are bas the placing of xpert here in an effort conditions. whether or not a erweig times he- king, and do not appear to be 1t some §'s New St z's News Stand undert Ent upon the methods em- CITY MEETING BOARD s are more stock- VACES 1Ts LND Y & ly gestion o built than others The s iward en usually are Hall to strike Section 7 of the | eavier. ily ®haracteristics go in for diminutive Some races and some fam- rep committ ich the ecity's revision more would offspring, so that what the eli nor City result in Meeting MIght be considered a normal child Boa entitled to careful con-|Of One race or family probably sideration before definite action fs| Would Le underweight in the case taken of another race or It is The senator is 1o be com- family tree. mended for not yet introducing a like clain that a baby prepared resolution to discontinue Should weigh so much at a certain the board, preferring to withhold it | 382 &nd if it doesn't there is some- while awaiting popular reaction up- on the proposal. ik thing wrong. 1t would seem that weighing five pounds whe The City Meeting Board has 186 | born has a disadvantage comps members, 144 ot whom are elected, | With the baby weighing e the remainder heing members of Common Council, pounds at birth; yet every exper enced | Mayor | L hysiciar board eof finance taxation. stances where v of is a remnant of welght was the that it is ne old town mee ing and experience has been | Out his carly t to impossible to obtain | shown that plen a good endance. The corpor have dic tion has given it as his| “brethr that a counsel opinion meeting at W thy and happy two members of the — On board are present only one or the wt would cons averages ought a quorum, instead of 50 percent of nutrition exy the membership, as ofains in other | value in appiyi elected bodies. This would give the times ar unne powers of the entire board to a over the receipt of car relatively few schools tending to show th ormal men; but an irfportant point is that City Meeting Board pass even more as the | dren are sul in some capac- or other. Usuaily Then the copious q upon the | ity it's a case of city's bond issues it might be ques- | being. underweig par- tiened by banks' attorneys whether | ents feed them on bends passed upon by less than half | ties of milk and i the memMWership of the board are child is over tully legal, Under sueh conditions the case of unusua there is always the possibllity that nervous children honds may be thrown out of | feeding secms to do hond market ing attention to Hall, board of Senator who is ghairman of and taxation of the city of Britain, is rig in cousidering the situation onc vocative of danger to the city senator thinks it best in the inter- est of the city that the board be wiped out, as it Is not f nct ' properly and in all probability can- not be made to do so. Citizens who are members of the hoard Inyariably find themselves too the meetings, Whether the City busy to attend Meeting Board | j; abolished will rest pri-| defects ear the make should be marily upon views of those tpan permitting citizens Wwho thetr opinions interested citizens an acted interested citizens to give a has wishing carefy CAILLAUN'S RETURN TO POWER ator to give all e opportunity to express It 18 no = proportion the subject appa thelr views Jarge views upon favor @& discontinuance of board. The views of who 18 re such matters, arded as an expert u probably *will have great welght with a majority of citizens. Whether the is to be retained bly will have to I 1t there will mea be A POLITICAL SCHEMI GOLS TO DEFEAT Hera props from U as calling ing designed N When 1 EXPERT SCHOOLS NUTRITION FOR THE o as been ey tonishing eMciency. M. may ferent position thun William resigned as pec dig Wilson Bryan when he state bocause he with Prestdent of paloy he i ernment.” It e back in®the probable that hs net changed his views as te the best means of cord maintaining interna- here are still many who will not agree with it is safe to pay the been called a “pronounced iternationafist, In cconomics ay 18 in®polities;” a “dangerous ars speak more truth man.'" Ot kindly of hin. The probably lies be- tween extreme both Without views. warming up to Caillaux’s anclal - ability, his views or his uchievements, we don't expect to sce France go to smash because he again hus his hand in the gove that taxes apd an actual taxes ment. W note, however, wvors heavier collection of from those who haven't paid their just stipend to the From tax judge e collecter, this we won't gain enormous and unanimous popularity and may ride 1o an carly AN “AD” SHOWING IREND OF TIMES Many readers probably noticed an dvertisement in the classified sec- Herald the having to do with the sale of some household tions of the other day iture due te removal into a small apartment, Small apartments do not req ich furniture to flll as a And little modern which the ken due cogniz- or as a single house, ong of the elopm furni- trade has Talk to will tell less confidence any furniture man and e you in a spirit of more or that small rtments are a t evil. And will be textile premise the eame as af, of the mar turer, who can give a multitude of reasons why short frocks and little generally on the raiment female form di- vine comprise one of the oufsta ing evils of the day. Furniture favor of old man rs are in time spacious and com- there s rge collec- modious liouses, where plenty of root for a la tion of furniture. Textile manu facturers would like to revise wom- en's etyles so that there would be plenty of textiles ne they conditions over have no control deeide controversy We are in ined to agree the textil with | is & point in the apartments no lomger are such but e the name of apart- consisted of the more years some construct water POWER 1N AUTO MAKING Observations On The Weather And off we t'm Wad the grgat Creator's plan Included in the seul of man A sense of humor; that is why Wo are to laugh as well as cry. The Shadow. Reporter—*"1s it true 15 haunted Tenant—"Yex, the landiord is al- ways hangin’ around tryin’ to colle his rent that RIDE OF PAUL REVERE (A Barnyard Bit) As T0ld by His Horse, Listen, my children, and you shall hear 1 carrie onj the night When the s flashed out in the helfry tower, The British had landed! me a pi And suid, “Well that." How | my master, Paul Re- bank, at the mid- Paul gave try wide, ; And maybe T didn't give him & ride But ,honest, I had to laugh at the folk We wal who sald. a joke?" old “What's this, And one party, a Cambridge squire In nightgown “Where's And. of course, you kno T just whinnled let's go! Then away and town, I don’'t know the route, hut it's all set down In Longfellow's poem; T simply said: “We'll make the grade it I don't drop dead."® Paul sail gton."” And I saw a stall and a pile of hay Well, T just lald down and I pd.ued away, when T wa heard and the fi as 1 couldn't talk Imet, “You tell 'em, Paul; flew, through village | And “Bess, there's Lex- ed up next day and | 1d- What the minute-men had done, my | I worg! ¢ jbled up and gave three horse cheer > For that ride of mine . . . and Paul Rever's! T v An Indoor Sport. Beatric in the school of love?" Nan—*"Not so good! of home work that he He's so fond never thinks of taking me ou Wheeler. THE SOCIAL PRIMER. 1 L] Poor Re-la-tion. tion here weo see; in ev fam-i-ly 0 he cor-rect she, as she knows, fust al-ways wear the cast-off Al books of et-i Agreed sho should ke But some-time zh poor e are quite p out of sight; s £he gets Daug 11 The Maid maid at Ma-dame ke a job else-whore The Editor’s Gossip Minute-mer The is ré 1 Shop with LR ibes what about men, as you THL. SPORTING GOODS COUNTER A By v is your When we Hornsby or Richard Orsol Fell for Tt You sho this ‘ Bess, old girl, that's | sped through the coun-| velled, | + | quaintance, —*“How is Dan gefting on | Athaletios, (With & Bow te Rudle L.) Wen you are a kid you play games Jost for the fun of it, and wen you grow up you take up atha. |lotios to keep from getiing eny fat- | ter, Kids run rite out of the house and play Hop Scofch or Cops and Rohhers or Red Hover and get ex~ erclzoe without even thinking of it till somebody calls - them in for auppor, wile their fathers take & |train and ride away out somewares to play go!f and ceme home late | for suppir jest beeause its not eon- |sidered dignified to play shinny eut in the strect after you get old enuff to think about your dignity, Golg fe*hitting & ball out of site and then wawking atter it to hit it | ferther it you can find it, glying | you maore to think about than it you | | was jest wawking all that distance | without enything te hit on the way. | Horseback riding is good exereise, especlally for the horse. ~Kid Boots. Bum on the Greens, | Landis—*"Did you say Nagor, the | golfer, was put te death?t' Richards—"T said e professional the putted to death, For Saturday .... played a other day and was | For Saturday .... —Edwin Melsner, ‘ pepaca g THE NEW SPRING COATS that COMMUNICATED For Saturday .... | DeLand, Plorida, Resident Disagrees | With Mr, Martin's Conclusions | Editor New Britain Herald: 1 note in your issue of April 7 statements attributed te Mr. Wil- liam E, Martin to the effect that real estate is on the downward trend in Florida, mentioning par- | ticularly Deland. Though a frequent visitor to your city for a number of years past, 1 {have never made Mr, Martin's ac- and wish therefore to | | make reply 1o his remarks through | your paper. By just what process of reasop- |ing Mr. Martin comes to his conclu- | | sions is hard for observing Ilorida |residents to understand. State cen- sus figures just compiled show an incrcasd during the past & years in population within the corporate | limits of DeLand of 75 per cent, while the population of adjacent |territory scems to have increased :|150 per cent, the most rapld in- |crease in both cases have taken {place during the past two years. I mentioned to a prominent local rcaltor that Mr. Martin stated he 4 been offered a whole street in | this city for just half what the | would-be seller paid for it. He im- | mediately stated that he would like | | to know the name of any man own- ing lots In DeLand who would be | { willing to sell them for just half | |the pur e price, The statement that there was not a single house on | i, postmaster finally learned that | this tract Is of no vallo unless(n, word was an attempt at Latin other circumstances are stated. |anq decided it was meant for the |There have been at least a_ dozen |ine Herald, sub-divisions opened - in DeLand | Aifreq Anderson,.s newshoy, was during the past year, most of them | rup over by a yagon on Main street | of such recent development that |yesterday, and the driver of the | sufficient time has not elapsed since | vehicle, much to the indignation of |the sale of the lots of whieh to|the bystanders, did not stop to sce | erect homes. {how badly the lad was hurt. J. L.| During January, and | Dawson and Dennis Fox picked the | A h, city statistics show that | boy up and found that, though eut | building permits have been muu}\anr] bruised, he was not badly in- to DeLand residents to the totab of jurgd. Mr, Dawson bought all hi | $106 ; of this amount $89,-|papers and sent Alfred home sore, 275.30 has been used in the erec- [but almost happy. tion or alteration of residence prop- | Dr. W. P. Bunnell, who was de- orty; the express office shows un feated for chairman of the health | increase of 2,892 shipments over [board last night by Dr. R. M. Clark, | the same period a year ago; bu is greatly displeased. He sa he ness at the post office has incre was not a candidate for the position | to such an extent that 200 post |and thinks the republicans took | hoxes are to be added in a very | greatliberties with his name in nom- short time. These are but a few |inating him at their caucus, for } atistics, but using them as a stand- |is a demoerat. , it would dly seem that De- Land (whose permanent restdent population fs 5,501) is quietly going to sleep. As to genoral conditions in de of Deland, 1 can do no beter than to quots Roger W. Babson, who, when fnferviewed & i vs ago ut Babson Park, Mass., | For Saturday T01' Saturday .... For Saturday .... For Saturday . For Saturday .... For Saturday For Saturday .... For Saturday .... February sed INVESTMENT GO0, STOCK INVOLVED IN DISPUTE Judge Haines in the state ou Superior Court Hears Suit of Kolodzicj “AS to how present con- tinued mounting of prices will con- tinue, no one Khowst bt surely, (in| ,, Four. lundred and Seighty-wo e anations flia venl boomi 18 just | Shares of commen stock of tho Pol- \ ish Inyestment Co, of this city re- beginning. The national publicity whieh Horida has reccived this|Dose n the company's vaults with- vear has awakened an Intcrest never | 0t & definite owper, hut .Judge Without doubt | Frand D, Halnes of the superior next vear will show a great increase | COUrt heard .arguments in the mat- over this year and for some years jicr Yesterday and will dec come 1he nbers going to | Proper possession of t ¥ior hould continue to in- pKolodziel of this city claims owner- croase ship in his sult against John Gan- T hove ad- | carz, allcging that he obtained a Arratine judgment for $4,143.27 against Gan- | your pap carz and that Gancarz as former state ope owner of the stock, should transfer e it to him. The investment company agree with Mr. : contends that G 2 T firmly belleve that Florida's future | the shares to Peter Tw {s brighter todag than that of any |Kolodzlej alleges this state in the Union have been iilegal Very It appeared from the testimony, { given now in Polish and now in welish, that on May 6, 1924, Bol- ziej obtained a”ju ! | Gancarz in the superior court |that. to satisfy it, Constable Fred Winkle sought to'attach 482 shares belopging to Gancarz. Stanley Gor- dek. secretary of the company pre fised to deliver the stock on th Bassctt, | ground that on May 5, the day be- e first time evening | for the judgment was obtained, the \nd cloterd offiecrs, generally those | giock was transferred to Twardus. nominated at ti republican eaucus | wwardus claimed the tran r was the evening before. . L. Hunger-{aje on March 14, 1922, two years ford w corporation counsel. | parors th judgment, and that later | amed assist- | Afey, Gancarz became possessor of an attempt | )4 giock, He admitted he did not Moskill, ngineer | ynow whether the stock was his, was: defeated for city sUr-|..q judge Haines, also bewildered, oy blga M. D. | cgerved decision Btockwe esident PPO| " py o014 Gaffney represented Kol- tem. of and J. R. An- cdziej, while M. A, Sexton appeared ARONREDD ner .hy AC-| 0 "epna polish Invesyment Co. and clamatior Is composed |\ 1is J. Danaher for Gancars The last did not appear in court. long the Against Gancarz, before equalled no ulterior motive in comuunication to for T am not a real nor an extensive owner. T simply cannot | Martin's views, for rator rdus, transfer truly E. RICHARDSON. 25 Years Ago Today From Paper®of That Date ymon council, Mayor Humuel last W. Klgtt was of 17 republica ur demoarats and thr The bi team play its first home 1 of the sea Saturday aft- socia C anada Has ngh Hopes Of German Sugar Beets Winnipeg, Man., April 17. —One hundred plote within 75 miles of Winnipeg are to be plan this summer with i of sugar beets grown in- Germany. The Manitaba Sugar Beet company Is distributing ; {he seed among chosen gardeners and farmers, to insure a trial un- der the best conditions hich is nearly 3 yards long, ‘The bedts are to be dested later be eompleted by to determine the quality ‘nql.-u - A tittle T newspa ressed | abllity of Manitoba-grown beets for “Honorifeabilitudimtatibus, New Sugar manufacture. Machinery cost. was recelved at th nx $1,300,000 is 1 consulting | (esta are matisfacton Leets Taised on 13,000 ncres, will son wit crnoon Mrs. sing pa- triotic airs t at the Foresters, atrioty’ Day. .The gree mittee of the Ma- @& ¥ i wil and Harry :ch wor ns are no temporary course yrdere wre {or Dritain, Conp office today. After experia in variotis foreign Jangy THE NEW SPRING COATS that were priced $39,00. THE NEW SPR!NG COATS that THE NEW SPRI\IG COATS that THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were priced $29. THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were priced $39. THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were prlced $49 THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were priced $59. THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were priced $69. THE SMART ENSEMBLE SUITS that were price $89. NEW SPRING DRESSES that were priced $19.98, For Saturday, ... .. NEW SPRING DRESSES that were priced $29.00. g REIEGER 0 oaoogungaanoaaon oo NEW SPRING DRESSES that were priced $39.00. For Saturday ...... ON OATS AND ENSEMBLES THE NEW SPRING COATS that were priced $29,00. $24.75 $27 50 $39.00 $49.00 $59.00 $2250 $32.50 $39.00 $59.00 $69.00 $1595 $24.95 $3250 WER I e s were priced $59.00. were . iced $69.00. By CHARLES P. WART (NEA Service Writer) Washington, April 17. — would have considered the | pole worth quarreling over a years ago, Toda it unusually warm, unusually cold or just middlipg? Inasmuych as it's past, it scems as If wo ought to know. Nevertheless, experts disagree, Herbert Japvrin Browne, unoflj- cial but widely known weather fore- caster, eaid he could make an accur- uto predjction for at least a whole son. "The government weather fepariment said he couldn’t, “All right,” rejoined Browne six months 1go. “I'll make a forccast far the winter of 1924-25 and leave it to th crmomter to show whether I'm ht “of wrong, It will be gxcep- ajly cold,” triumphs Browne. “It exceptionally mild," insists the ther department. The seeret is Browne toolk his temperatures from the vieinity of the North Cape. by its difficultics. » weatler, nent relied on Now, however, tifit the traveler hborhood ¢ can shut himself inside a nice warm cabin and fly across it at 60 to 100 miles an hour, &hortness counts. s one v e charging superfluous government pole employes; something entircly dif- point, i | ferent to do it. Public Printer George pole’s vicini- | H. Carter tricd it and It nearly cost ty,"which would make a good way, lim his Job—may do so yet, Now an stution on a trip across, to whom investigation has been started to de- does that land belong? termine how many of Answe It belongs to “independent bure: finds it first and stakes it out. | ent of any Hence the MacMilldn which the United States navy is fitting out. Hence also the Norwe- gian expedition under Amundsen, | ol which already is on its way. Eng- land, Japan and Ru re reported making similar preparations Navy officers like to tell about the MacMillan plans up to the point e visitor begins to” ask about annexation of the polc “Shush on that talk,” they cry the very thing we don’t want mind the others of.” Nabody north few v the question, “To whom shall the pole be s In- ternationally so delicate that several | se: big governments hate to have it dis- cussed, lest trouble he bred The idea is that the pole is the shortest way of getting from almost anywhere to almost anywhere else. In the days when it could be visit- cd only by dog-power, on a diet of tallow candles, at terrific cost of hardship and the expenditure of months of appalling kard worlk, the route's &hortness was infinitely more than offset ong?" this. thing to talk about dis So to whom does the north belong? Still more to the there's any land in the sa-calle independ- depdriment—are worth The regular departments could take over their work. It would save money and cut red tape, Buf, what a roar is going up! JARDINAL Keliey and Henr Kersey United in Matrimony York, April 17.—)iss Doro- Kelley, _ formerly® of Butte, and ddughter of Cernelius president of the Anaconda Mining company, was yar- The proposed way station at the rday, by Cardinal Hayes in pole may develop into a mighty in-|St. Patrick's cathedral, to Henry teresting place, Traveling, say from | Donnelly Chicago te Calcutta by the Polar| The I route, tqurists naturally wil guests in a hotel, stop oft for a look at the mony, and a wedding breakfast w t as trains pause for aw A under a of red ram- to let the passengers see | bler roses. {he falls. This raises the question:| Mr. and Mrs. Kersoy Who will get the coffec and hot dog|their home in this citv r concession? And if United | re from a wedding tr States annexes the pole, will it t v e dry? Thousands of hirds have died from i mysterious disease in the North Platte River valley of Nebraska. whomso- ever cxpedition, | having. MARRIED BY Miss Dorethy where Mo Kelley, Copper riad yeste 1o rey Korsey couple . rec ridal ived 1, after 300 wan SCTVE canopy make their vill the DR a Last winter was a test winter e ———————— MARBLE CONTEST ENTRY BLANK Marble Editor of the Herald I wish to enter the Herald-Junior Achievement Mar- ble Tournament and I hereby agree to abide by all the tournament rules. My name is Yprint) My address is S AN AT i S S 1 1) [am-..... yearsold. Tam a pupilat ... «.. school (Every boy and girl in New Britain and immediate suburbs’ who will not be 15 years old before July 1, 1925, is eligible to enter the tournament. It costs nothing to enter, but you must fill out an entry blank and mail ¢ bring it to the Herald).