New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 23, 1925, 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)

YWY | | mortu chapel is causcd by th contract not yet and . D, Kluney & st hidders, do not secia lowed out might lead to positiv passed by the Legislatur pense justice, tempered with merey tion without ation of | ( do the trick has New Britain Heraldj HERALD PUBLISHING COMPA A new kind ot farming taking root in the United States is tres planting and the Town Forest is one of the Inrger phases ot it. Massachusetis in taking the lead in this work ac cording to the Americaii Tree asso clatlon which is {ssuing a Town For- est booklet which will be off tl: press in a few days, This booklet Is | property for e of & walt —THE OBSERVER— Makes Random Observations On the City and Its People IITIENII NI I RN IEISIEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILLILILILILLY It scems that Senator Quinn had important engagement back in w Haven at 10 o'clock, and had MAKING THE HOUSATONIC NAvVIGARBL) s of moderate Tasusd Daily At Herald B SUBSCRIPTION RATES 18,00 & Year, 12,00 T Helghts A wis rtised fn the Herald present ey Soclul club met with g yesterda sewed and ense arathy th sale, Housatonle iy i \avigable as far as Derb \ = navigal ar as Derby, But v clgesin op HALL JURLL [ or two | [be installed in the office of the clty Iraft do not carry Quilts were The Obsecrver agrees heartily with the sugegstion that a cash rfl:lr(rr,"“ of (') Xntered at the t italn | tio re n ) an | mueh fr rest of as Second the i stnut vo that strect strect are eetri- secured in There's nothing like a laugh of the Asso ated Press Is Member The Ass titted to th v AT credited \n this news shed heve Member Cie A Audit Burean of Circulation. t are T a I BLACK NEEDS ROCK BRIDGI REPAIRING re s o CONSTRUCTIVE SUGGESTION ON WAITING STATION N Beatcd tiv posa pany waiting st patrons tion to panies % city dout the o t SIGNS O THY ON TIMI o1 PROGRISS NEW HAVEN 1AD POr STRI LUTION M ith a ot navigahle 0w charge of area, has announce ams ¢ ports in ¢ opment” INCREASING PUNISHMENT FOR BANK ROBBERS 25 Ye;rs Ago Today for For “lifting faces,” 1f folks knetw, a pe inm d can the mud-pack for tha ighting company | A | A team of gYMNusts | 5nd peauty parlors wonld go hroke! | invitation of the etic elub to put on | st Tuesday, | anson, and | Fred Bacon st Teich and fence, and the will drilling ind may send in Tough! | Well, Mary dear, the po- fce just found my stolen car,” Mrs, Barry: “Darn it. 1 was hopes we'd now get a new one.” in| man will | Hot Dogs be- By Weenle, the Dachshundt | runaway on | r | The horses | T never see a hot-dog sign bystander before Without a sense of They make me think of be taken in mine, fan fund | Companions near and dear the Swedish | Who frequently, without a is évening. Of warning, disappear. n Just where they go I can Nor if 1'll sce again | Those vanished pups T loved so well, Now passed beyond my ken. know that hot-dog smell calls them, now and then nr And #o the hot-dog man I shun, T'd bite him i T durst. . s mustard-pot and cloven bun To me are things accursed, And when he whets his knife! . , team do N tumbling One of Bernard ( e olved In a rk's hacks Passeit str st night by a fear. us done friends of Indian ved at whine not tely, Factsand Fancies ROBERT QUILLEN e I By only Smalipoy shington fen't the < all thing there, wite to be nuisance, t s for a being a ged Ger- anybody change r the wurst! A Cross O1d Bear Fiorence: “Is this your husband's den?" Mamie Moadernism: Taxing a railroad to bus line's roadbed. | help lieep up a A “It must be, he is aiways gro%ling around in it.” ! H. H. Beger. vs by radio is all right, > bedroom furniture, That's Different, Bilkey: Don't look so downcast, old man. What if your wife did run | away with the chauffeur? It could have been worse, vou know!" Joslyn: “You don't understand; he brought her back.” —Bessie or: “Now. darn you:; yoy have typhoid anyway.” Lindman, | What does it profit a stout man to pick up a dima from the pave- ment and burst every button of his trousers? —L——.——\- fiction saifd atd gossip, Footnotes can be offended by a for it has Kicking {1 ble, of cxerci ulges in. Any girl can s a slecpy foot but to have a slecpy-head around her is mighty poor company. Any girl will tell you that the best toe-dancer is awkward fellow to borrow mo women who are well pro- their husbands are still arch supporters Bometimes a man who tries to stand on his digr imbles over for lack of ground to support him. imes woman says Lier fe are troubling her, it is only that is wondering how going to get a new pair of her stingy husband —Josle matter i need of Somc¢ when a she is ¢ shoes she Fried about politics. Pernicious Activity. Hughes: “That boy of yours has a lot of mechanical ingenuity and knowledge, hasn't he?"” Crawford: “Alogether much fo suit He's been taking parts of my automobile to use in his home-made radio set too me —H. ¥. R Wally the Mystic Answer Your Q trembling at ns lifs door, or advic to cut mu them how A Man-Catching Stunt Wally of this? places witlout any you explain the around And Carry a Shamrock Dear Wall Sisal Industry in Mexico Developing May (AL In love to tumble at fi If 80. of course I must first ed ht or Iast. s folks may par sight love's ¢ The Editor's G week-end — Observations On The Weather ¥ lup every | radio and sometimes th clerk, but would like to recommend that its bell system fnclude enough notes so that appropriate music may peal forth.when the proper button is pressed. It would be much impres- sive and would have a lasting effect on the applicants for a marriage li- cense if, when the city clerk or one of his assistants, rang up the proper fes for the llcense the cash regis- ter played the wedding march from “Lohengrin,” ¥ And when an undertaker came in for a permit o bury a body it would be nice If the cash register played a funeral dirge. What would add ‘more clan to the occasion——what, we ask again—than for an applicant for a hunter's Il cense to hear “The Whistler and His Dog” played as he passed over they requircd amount to the clerk? For a change, "Johnny, Get Your Gun," would be acceptable. more necessary for the course of It would be clerical force to ta lessons before each was qualified to manipulate the register, because it never do to play the dirge for a blushing young and her stammering panion. would male com- Tt's been a right long time since the Observer's colyum has heen graced by a radio artlcle, here place ain't no place to go on talkin' ubout radlo set construction, in the flrst place it ain't no talk about it and in the > we don't know anything There's two good man is defied to place to second plac about it anyway. reasons and any beat ‘em Now, listenin’ in an the radio ain’t like hearin’ a phonograph. In the first: place, you don’t have to jump three or four minutes to shut off the record and put on an- her, and in the sccond place they's a wide variety to pick from, as the feller gays. In the third place, well, it don't matter. Chew on them first two reasons for awhile, They is two kinds of radio scts Them as can he heard and them as all around u heard is much bhet- but sometim them as can be ter than the other: people likes the o oblivious r When a regenerative whistling in the ears of the next door neighbor, it ain't a radio set more, but it is something clse n. is a nufsance. The best way to fix that is efther to cut down he neighhor's aerial or fo ent up nel ‘s person The latter more lasting in its asons. ket gets to any nrse We erause don't dare go no further, this newspaper goes into all homes, and it 38 likely that this colymm will be read by many youngsters not yet five vears old and they might get to many profane words and then their parents could come back on I r and say the paper had fren pr worde. So thing 18 to play safe an then they is no come back, as th feller mays Sometimes the nights is good for v ain't. They the operator When old set yell is something. ane the best is usually better whe of the il screcch and its mother and the; houncing in the whole party swearing. As a genera as is made . s do irs in the ¢ ool is out, 18 much hetter than which costs five or ix thousand do! lars. The Kids usually bring in the statidns and the big sets usually bring i 8o ¢ ing is e for the big sets static eryt except madnaiiifve oot ra radio set ing 3Z of New wors s radio sets is better wl the ash ca around at > thrown out in ogs and cats come gnaw the wire tis b housc and 1S no goc to ereate nee in th w ody except 1en we n't got 1 off and y0dy 18 reading & newspaper or ometl it and the hest a hook or is playing cubebs or some 1 ¢ roven true, by er had the 4 more strikin e court. It recently in po- do with tk for ostponen trans- So Different Have a cigarelte “No. Don. When 1 started to be differsnt than Helen Dead Wrong Now this | for | agreed with Prosecuting Attorney Joseph G. Woods to a postponcment lof the trial, Atty Woods recommended to Judge Willlam C. Hungerford that the trial be postponed as agreed, but also added that since the bonds were ridlculously low, they he increased to $500. Senator Quinn dbjected to | this especlally as his client was un. nrepared at that time to produce the additional $500. He was overruled, Immediately leaping to his feet, he snapped: “All right, go on with (the trial, My New Haven business can be postponed.” Then it was that Atty. Woods be- came upset. “Unfortunatel sald, “this is impossible, We have not tested the beer, and Mr, Daven- |port who does all our testing is out {of town for a few days.” Thus it was that the plans went awry and Senator Quinn won his point, his client being given an additional day to produce the 2300 and the trial postponed as de. sired by both parties, | And Senator Quinn kept his ap- | Ipointment in New Haven. belde-to-be | New Britain {s intereated in a res- | olution introduced in the house of representatives recently for the ap- pointment of M. T. Downes as Jjudge of the Wallingford court, Mr, Downes {s now prosecuting attorney in Wallingford and is a hrother of Jehn T.. Downes of Monros street, this eity, Although he has not sought the | position, have pressing him and so overwhelming sentiment in Wallingford name has been consideration of the house, Attorney been Downes' friends to do so s hecome that his Some day when the Observer he comes A famous goifer and has his name in the cable dispatehes from St. Andrew's he will recall that his first adventure on the links was in company with the Wallingford man and his brother residing in this elty | The least said about that incident. the better. The writer recalls that he hit the ball in every direction except the right one, overplayed his putts by ten yards, more or less: tried to piny out of turn, and did other things which make the good golfer Despite the short- coming of the greenest of green novices, the' \Wallingford citizen, who swings a mean club and can trot over the course atop Long hill in aomething near par, restrained his desire to use his driver on the ama- tenr. Iv was a wonderful test of patience, the Observer now ap ciates, a test that stamped Attorney Downes as a man qualified to sit on any hench in the country and dis- ewarf BY CHARLES NEA Service Writer Washington, May 23.—~The Wheel- er defense commiiftee has raised $5,- 00 to fight the Washjngton conspir- acy case against & tor Burton K Wheeler. Contributions are from all parts of the country, some under 31 e big contributors thus far are ex-Congressman and Mrs., Wil liam Kent, California—$250. The commitice wants $25,000 rich. His him & good dea when the prosecution the New York as a witness, Wheeler real- that he needed rebuttal test- P. ETEWART Wheeler fsn't ontana To il- an- Instrate nounced Hayen |1zed mony. He relicd Yor 8 wh he had to find He couldn't frust the justice department which sought his conviction to look' for them. so he 1ad 10 hire private detectives Refor trio reached Great Falls, Hayes had fold so weak a st { they were turned ba New in a very for it on three the | By 1 e e be still Mon. there will Most of the right brought to Was? Whe 1 is last re his friends feel it win he hard if he oni hinglon cusc ensive, e 10 be ington Perhaps manage it by sonrce straining himself-—es Washington eharges as flimsy as those in Montana i the Of his conviction they express no said one of these, “I'll be if there at least one car, hut prised tsn't You Stie Have== Tive— To MEs 170 MAIN ST he' pre-court | presented for the | store warm weather and moths can harm them. SAFETY WITH SERVICE ~—Fully FESTABLISHED 1899 | for free distribution to municipal authorities contemplating auch a | program, to Beout troop leaders, | Chamber of Commerce and Cily | Plan Commissions, The American Tree associatior stands out as the unique association | of the country in that there are no dues and the only way to join is 1o Iplant the tree and register it with the association. Tree planting In- | structions and a tree day pwogram will be sent to anyone who will ask | for it, which isf rather large orde) People with vast business Interest also see good citizenship in the tro planting idea of the assegiation. “Our Idea,” says C, L. Peck, “is 1 | et the stranger to trees interested lin one tree. With the Individug | sold on one tree we then introduce | him to the larger phases of the sub- jeet. The Town Forest is one ol | these phases. In hundreds of Eu [ropean tow the citizens receive | little check every year instead of a Itax bill because of town forests | Rather an engaging idea, I this you will admit, in these days of come tax returns and the high cost of lving.” The Tree associdtion finds ma cases !lke that of a company which offers to plant 5,000 trecs for an: Itown that will establish a public forest of one hundred acres or morc | The town of Warwick haa just vot |ed to establish a Town Forest. At | Northfield, Vermont,« the Chamber {of Commerce is behind a movement to plant 75.000 trees. On a water |shed near Pittsfleld 40,000 Scotch pine have been planted. A new Cify Forest is undsrway near North | Adams. At Ludington, Michigar 10,000 Norway pine have been srt [out by the Boy Scouts, This organi- | zation, as well as the Girl Seouts, | very actively engaged in this muy | cipal work. | Other states are awake to the li | portance of putting eighty-one mil | llon acres of 1dle land to work grow- |ing trees. Alexander Macdonald. ti | conservation commisstoner of New | York has completed plans to enlarg the commission's acreage &o that { will have forty million two vear ol | trees for planting in 1927 so great | has been the demands from indivi luals and municipalities in that state, That there is a good busine cnd to the proposition is scen i Albany, New York, where 50,000 pine trees have been planted in or der that the city ean take care of it dock replacements and river front structures G0 ycars from now. A | memorial forest for Clara Bartor | nas been set aside in New Yor! state. A municipal forest has bec started under the direction of Ar | drew H. Thompson, city engineer, a1 Cohors, New York, 'Nfi)asfiingl?m Seaclellor- ljuror fo insure a disagreeme: Thers wasn't in Montana, but Wash ington's different.” Wheeler's lucky in his friends, B for them the justice department would break him financially, if no otherwise The state department looks wi ative satisfaction upon Leo ‘rofsky’s return to power in Rus o department realizes it may disappointed but just now it think the outlook encouraging. As th vorld knows, even Lenin admitted undiluted communism had fail and sanctioned a partial restoratio, of capitalism. Trotsky favored i complete restoration. A good coi until he fried it. he'd ha After Lenin died. he can y for whole liog cz have to give Trotsky for sense and nerve fo ch mind but it nim his minister. Tt would have his life but the radicals v had too many So they exiled him. Now One possible explanation is that i recanted his heresy. A likelier o s that the radicals got into such had to have him. In thi le probably will run thinas | himself — capitalistically. H en be practical husiness n nough to acknowledge Russia's fo That's all Washinz! decd. it would malke ! and doubtless his = would be recognized munist enough. out open ob as wi oat hil cre afrai cost He still supporter he's ba jam they suit ere ernment | welcomed | Trotsky Itive! as a your Furs before 2% Protected Against Fire Theft and Moths

Other pages from this issue: