New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 1, 1925, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tasusd Daily (Sunday Bxcepted At Herald Bldg, 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 95.00 & Year $2.00 Th Months, T5e, & Month, Ratered at the Post Off) Second Cluss Mall t New Hritain Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Rusiness Oftice ,..., 925 Editorial Ro [ The only profitable advertising medium In the City. Circulation books and Press room always open lo advertisers, Menber of the Associuted Press, Associated Press | 1 7 d to It or not o vaper and al exclusively ene publication of all ’xu credited 'Y ) news pu Member Audit Burenu of Cireulation, The A. B. C. Is & national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with & stric snest analysis of elrculation Our lation statistics are based upon this aud Thls insu protection againat fraud in newspa distribution figu.es to both pational and | Tocal advertiscrs. e L | The Herald | k at Hot are; Schult 4 Centra n New Times Entrance | s on sale dafly 's New Sta 5 B . Stand. NO MORE “ORDIN When Pa TRAVELING 1IN ARY PULLMAN" sident Coolldge goes to St, repeat vithin a week he wiil not his former experience of traveling in a Pullman car as an ordinary passenger, a decision by the President that will be received with satisfaction Dby the nation at large. The “ordinary passenger” system of presiden traveling was prac- ticing entirely too much economy, and economy of a kind that, in the case of the nation's chief exeeutive included too much danger. The agrement of the Baltimore & Ohio reilroad to run the tial presiden- coaches as the second section of a regular train will be a fair compromise of a situation In which policy President will enjoy economy ideas and The publie clashed. what amounts to a special train, yet by runnir regular train the government will be €1.500, joth the Pres- t in conjunction with a saved the tidy sum of This ought to satisfy ident and the country “THE PRESIDENT TAKES UP STATE ISSUES w such questions as en President Coolidge took up aw enforcement, state taxes, state government and his Me- discanted tederal road building in morial Day address he most Americ upon some ¢ pressing problems be an people— problems whi celved con- sideral illumina- tion, yet remain in a falr way to be as unsettled as ever of course is cor- rect in be enforced of his view that laws exist to and that it is the duty Americans to how to their in- evitability; the other recourse is to rescind the law that isn't enforced. Since prohibition came the discus- enforcement has ss threadhare; the question ribution to jected the ility of states in rating to en- t states Presi- luws were One com- king he “north- too strongly upon and mountir reasing. the ountry a ide ag i state broje added o taxes vet elim- eft, were inated # it would alons tend to i milk of The s that during ever since ucers, ex- most states tally in big and require thor- cepting edu are impr such stat an of such t possible for states to ys for , Congress constr improved tourists from oth passed fegeral aid law. This was one of the jJaws that the Presi- Memorial Day used dent eritici he address. nts he R those made famitiny sestons, bu wheth means iher sy Con come from states which are greatly helped by the federal road ald law and point to the fact that numerous great highways across the country | | would imposaible | achlevement without federal aid The President is to make more | speechios this summer—one on June $ at the centennial anntve of | ln‘ have been of sary the first Norwegian emigration the United States, to be held in 8t, Paul, and the budget specch to be delivered in Washingon on June which will be broadecasted. He will speak at the anniversary of Wash- lugton’s acceptance of the command of the Revolutionary army in Cam- bridge, this to be early in July, and may attend the governors' confer- Me, on June 28, also to make a speech, | With both the and the Viee-President steady | throughout the ence at Poland Springs, President making a round of speeches it is not to be permitted to forget the summer looks as it the gountry lssues” before .the next Congress. SSMUTTY” MAC FEMININE he campaign against “smutty” magazines, which be has become na- tionwide, wil of value to the | country if professional vice crusad- ors can be induced to keep hands off. to Tt doesn't require professionals letermine whether a magazine is good or bad; there are laws upon the statute beoks appertaining to indecent literature, courts have in- terpreted the laws, and the authori- ties virtually everywhere have pow- cr to sweep the offending publica- from the news stands. under worse {from the out- the inside; | of the so-called ‘“art” which profess ap- peal to students of art and not the general publie, have the chief offenders in the of these who eannot see the necessity of such magazines going into gen- Poses of women garbed in nature's raiment may be but the gencral public is no judge The magazines discussion invariably than some 1o side they but magazines, are on to become minds eral eirculation. artistic, as everyone is aware, of art. Britain arc no the a unhealthy—cireulation But of late they have To test the situation a representative of the went store one of the chief offenders | Conditions in New different than elsewhere in country; such magazines have healthy—or In this city. not been much on display. Herald to a news to purchase and saw nothing on the stands toin- | But a query that were to be hag for the asking, the ' dicate it was in stock. elicited the information they newsdealer merecly going to the rear of the store and there procuring the in that common rumor magazine. Pietures the maga- zine were all The demand for magazines was indicated by fact that the Herald representati claimed. these the desk drawer as placed it in a A the next hibit A and it morning. What cannot understand is was gone the unsophisticated eritic why so much The landscapes, art has to do with nudity, re is just as much art in rural sccnes generally and even wrban scenes as there is in the hu- man form, and oniy the urge to at- tract attention seems to lurk behind effort to photegraph it many of the pictures in these alleg the to paint flesh—or As a matter of fact, o not reproguc- art magazines are ons of paintings, but mere photo- graphs It the Greenwich Village artists s got out into the and near-arti country more cleared thelr ls, they would not have s0 for feminine adjuncts in ption of what Is artistic. much use SOME PET MEASURES CAN'T STAND THE “GATT™ Vice-President Dawes went to the South the other day and had quite . pleasant visit on the same plat- . Benator Underwood of The latter is of the same form with A mind with Mr. Dawes on the “neccs abama ' of curbing debate privileges in It to two sity is quite unique Hats Lhese representatives of political polcs agree on something L Senate— Dawes plan in the lifterent thing from the which is a in Europe—would per- in the Dawes plan mit a mere majority vote f loture, instead of Senate to en e, as at present it th majority de- it would mean that the par(y it a two-thirds vo! Under the Dawes scheme, would wish to end a sate in power could enact anything wished, being only circumseribed and 1 this effert he extent termination of insurgency er u there we probably epgendere Another point such a plan 1 pe more in 1 an at present. Dawes scnatorial plan is to pre irrcle- vent senators speaking on but what is irrele- t matters val and what is not hard to d couples irre Dangerous requently talked to Moses, scheme in opposi for senatorial i on this point as f his opinion 2 ma been opefating i | troduced NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 1, 1925, under clotur had free silver we in would 1893, have ship purchase In 1915, which would the beto ready, und in 1919 the | would have | reserva- | | | have launched us into World War two years Wwe were Versallles been tions," Treuty ratified without v Whether some of the fo would have been good or bad is en- | oing tirely a matter of opinion, and pretend to speak no one will for the ntire nation on the the we subject. To World War have entered two years hefore might have found the nation divided upon the question, and it might not have heen an entry vigorous cnough to have brought about a much earlier termination of the conflict. That of course is also a mafter of opinion as is the senator'’s observations re- garding the ratification of the Ver sailles Treaty without reservations Charles Michelson York World have of the New lsts bills t} killed Twenty years ago Scnator Lodge bill, other at fililbusters. in- involving been by his Foree the establishment of practical mili- Negro tary suzerainty souther The bill vote in the northern states, over n tions, pleased the and it was hoped to break up the political unity of the solid south. The bill was a sectional measure, and tir Republicans had sufficient votes to put But Ar- thur Pue Gorman of Maryland con- it thre Senator ducted one of the most able filibus- ters in the history of the Senate and killeg the project, There is no douht in the minds of most citizens today that the bill, had it become a law, had ten- that it off would have mischieyous dencies and dead, Mr. rivers and harbors pork bills in two The b ma- was botter Michelson then refers to two successive congresses. were log-rolling affairs, a jority profited in their districts through its congressmen could passage; but ihe treasury would have suffered severe 1y. ¢ a deter by minority mined Alibuster the killed them. Sometimes filibusters do not al Mr. Michelson counting the efforts La against the Aldrich-Vrecland bil), when he established the ways succeed re= cur- rency long-distance talking record in the 13 passed for bill e e kin g ours— | Senate—speaking hours— | only to have the into | The Dyer Anti-Lynching recent memory is referred the Negro camouflage to proteet from outrages in the south, The committee to which it was v did not favor it, hnt political ex- and Watson Insisted upon it Rut Der they pediency gained of t G, 0. Senators Lod in the 1 notice wonld hold t floor indefinitely againgt it, and the majority party lct the bill go by the hoard, | e Republican Al to hold up the League of instance result o gressional election of 1918 as proof they were and instance the he Harding lan two years later Had as confirming proof the Senate upon the cloture plan it could h through he treaty and the B¢ any sincere elfizens wi motivating foree Dawes campaign in the in anticipation During Ha subsidy nistration the talked to death session in the lays of the an was not revived at the g scssions, hut may be reason made Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN rds me imbing | Crime - doubtless seema horrible | even to the eriminal after his liquor dies out, Driving in a great clty Is danger- ous. Some steel worker may dent your top. The astonishing thing I'rance ablc is cabinet mate; The communists are ground in Bulgaria, They are seven assassinations Lehind, 86,000 to educate ing the lawyers' fces, Tt s estimated that there fis enough oil in the earth yet to cors rupt 8,672 public offictals [ At home I'm swamped with work to AL that a wave of prosperity | s to most of us is the privi.| lege of watching others buy better | cars is that men do not | save civilization for, one an- ut from one another, | The try 1o other 1 trouble Another of America’s troubles is stay excited until the spell of virtue gets results, ity to A nice thing about ried the bl ance comcerning the tting mar- sful igner- price of coal, in June is elp lering whether civilizations get their war debts paid up before cashing in. the deac Correct here permission (Prots this sentence: “Let's net rid Die, “until we ask that house.” Associated Editors, Inc.) pienic p at ted by 25 Years Ago Today From Paper of That Date Berlin voted last establishment by sewer beds in ||\-'Al‘ t it Brits New town Mr onild church in of George Rapelyve directress of Lades' Al held yesterda It was voted to ¢l ¢ the name organization to “The Wom- was elected the Baptist | at the | afternoon. society “ling 1's society The proposal to lay Myrtla opposition, L. the heari a walk on the sonth side of <irevt is meet- ing with stating at night that t m Iease last one on the north side | and that the laying of | » south would incommode | the husiness in- The sou'h now for unlonding | 1 alk would force the r hauls, | lay the gram- hold only one ses- | at 8:30 und The high schedule as T one on th and injure terests ¢ section is used {relght a froad to ma ginni mar sehool ion a v it try this term for the spring team collided with Arch street this as thrown ahout the cut zolf tenm whieh tomorrow , Edward Herhert Perking and 1 team will tamorrow after- feat and in- at it of isual de Fast Ber s team will Jman high t Berlin vea Qbservations On The Weather west north Fresh v for cloudy in winds, nos New Racing Sloops on Way to Home Ports Now H x IR | L Two uilt in owned o to Bar Har- r. owned by sailed their voyages days. Both are international Marblehead this TRIAL LADS TODAY K& ] (AP) ne ast The Ne that | should have so much avail- | | 1t Is cstimated that it costs about | @ boy, not eount- | | Looks wise, meets people, collects much working en crogs-word puze zles,"” ~H, G, Burfor, at I don't understand about this here game of golf,” said Uncle Tke, "la why some people play it when it makes ‘em 80 darn mad." | (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction PASTOR I ROW O CHURGH AND WAR Windbam Center Congregation- alists Takes Up Dispute Willimantie, June 1 (AP)—Rev. James G, Graham, pastor of the Windham Center Congregational church, who has been in dispute with the county minlteral unlon, over the question, it is said. of war and pacificlsm, took up the issues in his pulplt yeaterday morning and criticlzed a paper read before the union by Rev. F. W, Tholen of Stafford Springs on the subject. ‘The Concession of the ‘Church to When face to face folks, Temember to think up some jokew, Beeause, perhaps if you look glad, They'll want you for a tooth baste ‘ad!” with kodaks Competition Now, Roys! "A penny for your : “No indeed! The editor of the Fun &hop will give me a dollar Apiepe for them, Discontent By Angela Anderson On Monday mornings when Y A pile of washing facing me I'm sorry I born a she; I'd rather be a man. My husband, dressed clothes, A well-cooked, Atows, Then blithely off to work he goes; I'd rather be a man. in classy ample breakfast to have declared, “We of the clergy cannot see that we should offer our in the future wars of the do, With cooking, cleaning, sewing, too, And washing dishes; I tell you T'd rather be a man. Down in his office, at his ease, He dictates letters, “Remit, pleas Following the meeting of the union, the Rev. Mr, Graham char- | acterized the remark as a “disgrace to Christlanity, disloyalty to our na- tion and an {nsult to lives sacrificed for the price of the home and the community,” In a letter to Rev. F. C. Willlams, rector of St. Paul's church here and | president of the Windham' County Ministeral union the Rev. Mr, Gra- | ham demanded that he be granted the right to read a similar paper at the next moeting of the union of “Pacificism and Individuallsm versus Christianity and Democracy,” “Dick teld me to go over to that| According to Mr. Graham he was new restaurant it I wanted some denied this right. 8ood roast beef.” | At the May meeting of the union “And?" |held in Lebanon, the Rev. Mr, Gra- "It was a bum steer. |ham handed in his resignation. To- —Rudie L. |day Mr. Graham criticized the re- {‘marks made by speakers at the No Wonder He Became a Minister! | memorial services in tha various Ts it fun or a serious matter |cemetories yesterday, claimed that when, in the dear, dead days be.|they “breathed with Paelficism” and vond recall 1 was calling on the|were “anarchy, pure and simple.” one girl among all others, I should | The Rev. Mr. Willlams, in explain- be saying good night — and on that | ing nis refusal to purmit Mr. Gra- night the clock pointed to a mew|jpgm to read a paper hefore the record in latencas — oblivious, of | ynjon, said that the meetings of the | course, (o all around; and there | ynion were not publle and were held | should be @ volce resounding|oniy for the good done in the inter- through the hall: “Young AN |es of the country, churehes and take your elhow off the door bef Rt e (R ot o ——Rev. Charles H. Whelan. | (1o entire membership, he said, that | | Mr, Graham might~try to debate | with Mr. Thelen in public, but not | | with sanction of the union. he; | ¥ To all her charms and graces R“h“:‘(ounded at the second battle of the ~—Laura Wasson. | ALne. i | COMMUNICATED fees— I'd love to be a man! I stay at home his socks te mend, All by myself for hours en end, Until his homeward way he'll wend; T'd rather be the man, He has a fine tima every day, The salesmen tell him storles gay And for all this he draws goed pay; | I'd rather be a man! Tough at That ‘ Pun Points (In Jingle-Jangle Manner) . in which the Iatter is reported |, ble for 1£'s gone, cite. right Yard & Ofiee, 24 Dwight Conrt Tel. 2198, By Charles P, Btewart NEA Service Writer Washington, June 2.—The unac- commodating refusal of the Riff tribesmen to “fight fair” is responsi- France's campaign. fled— T amateur spoener said. | —Richard Land. | S S i brain was turned by “But one From her amateur lovers the maiden service, EDUCATION ON THE RELIGIOUS QUESTIO 101 Harrison St., ! New Britain. Conn. May 29, 1025, Lizzie; Because of Lizzie lzzy dizsy? Editor: —Ruth E, Auer. | The New .. | Sir;— The use of the scouts jn New | Britain to distribute letters n'em‘ the office of the achool board invit- | ing parents to accept the new pl-n} for religipus instruction of public school ehildren was improper. | The question fs one eoncerning| Britain Herald, | A | If you like a chew, as gum lovers From man who sneczes you'll get “Atehoo!” —Russell Dunn. The Rounder | Arline: “Some of the flapper | which thers ix a difference of opin- | ang is just slily. Now, what does jon among parents, although the| a cal need of pajamas, anyhow?” plan has been adopted without pub- Marfon: '“That's so, dearle. He's | lie hearings by the school board. likely to stay out all night.” | The conference presided over by —H. G. Bteln, | Mr, King in February to which & eertain number of people were In- vited by letter was not a public hearing. Tt was a gathering of those | favoring the plan, The writer fearn. ed of it quite by accldent. The letter sent out hy the super- intendent of schools and the en- 8o we're learning instead how to| closed card to be signed make no shave, | provision for the signatures of par- With towels on your jowls we are ents opposed te the plan. friskers, | Distribution of these cards and learning to handle the jetters by the acouts tends to create shears; | the impression of substantial uneni- . come let us cut off your whis- | mjty of pubilc epinion regarding kers the matter. This, the writer con- | Your nose and a couple of ears, tends, is not the case. Chorus | The president of the :Teachers Bum! Bay rum? Union in New York city is reported What'll you have on your hair? jn the press as condemning vigor-| Lilac, Shylock? ously the proposal there “to link the | You ain't gotta dime you can pyblic schools with religious train- spare ing.” He urges the “avoldance of | Bo! Lay measures that have the effect of | don’t cut off your making discriminations between beak. | puplls.” Three cheers! Free beers! Why, as a member of the school We get our diplomas next week! poard sald to the writer, cannot ~—Arthur L. Lippmann. children go to church for instruc- tien after schoo) hours? One of the writer's children has done so, | The scouts should not be used for propaganda purposes. Yours truly, | J. G. ALLEE. | Gradustion Song for a Barber's College We're chronie hair tonic purveyers, Witeh hazel and bay rum we lave; We cannot get jobs ws bricklayers, And S0 Say We low! wanna Sporting Goods Counter Sufferance Friend: “Tell me (rankly — do vou, as an eficieney expert, reslly and truly earn your salary?" The expert: “I'll say I do! T lia-| ten to the hess tell of his game of goif so as to let the rest of the of- fice force attend te their work." —Leo Moyer. COMMUNICATED The members of Staniey Post, G A. R., wish te expr through the | Kkindness of the press, their sincere thanks and appreciation to ail who contributed in anyway to the ob- servance of Memorial Day. | Especially, the children who (‘"'i nish flowers se liberally At one-hand stuff he was poor— To the Veterans of the Spanish Almost hit three trees, or more. and World Wars, for their hear “Let me take the steering wheel,” cooperatien, also, the Sens of Vet- Judy sald, “Becanse I feal erans and their auxiljary, Daughters | We'll be angels if we pet; of Veterans and Woman's Rellef 1 don't want to be one — vet.” Corps. QALY Thanks fer the bountiful lunch A Fish Story served, for the use of Center church Judy took her bamboo pole dming reom, also to thoss who so And went te the fishing hole; kindly loaned thelr ears, We should But the bunch, despite their wish. 'be glad to thank all persomally, as | Did pot cateh a single fish that is impossible we take this pub- | Till toward night Ned used a bug lic way of thanking all who helped | For his bait, and felt a tug, make the ebservance of the day I've got a bite!" eried Ned: such a success, “Scratch it!" jealous Judy said. Richard Nesser, The Bunch and Judy A sport Indulgad in All Year! Judy went eut for a ride, Snuggled by the driver's side; The officers and members of A, G. | —~ Hammond Camp and Auxiliar Outdoors United Spavish War Veterans. wish So even the fsctor ad. to axpress their gincere thanks to all ta take up tennis?” those that so kindly denateq flow. I it wan just What ‘ers far the deeoration of the grave & ifMoors so of our Alice ised So reports the United States army air service. The fact that the world's premier | power in the heaves seemed to be relying so little on aviation in North Africa has been spoken of before as quite a puzzle to experts, Tt inter- ested this country's flying military men 8o much that they have been investigating and now relate what they found out. « . “The Riff: according to the in- vestigators, “have no regular strong- holds or supply bases, but operate singly or in groups of three or four, from caves and sheltered rock ledges in the mountains, making air- craft of little value, “If there were supply hases they could he bombed. or if the tribe: men gathered In any number they could be wiped out by gas or ma- chine gun fire. But their onslaughts are short and {mmadiately afterward they disperse in the mountains. “Resides, most of ftheir are at night, when airplanes are at a disadvantage.” 1L appears also. that the tribesmen have had good luck in bringing down low-flying planes by rifle fire. “And as the natives," adds the report, ‘care nothing for inter- national law and have a habit of disembewelling captured aviators, fow flying over the hostile country is somewhat unpopular.” yiadia France trles to give the impres- slon that the RIff struggle is between civilization and harbarism and that the world ought to wish eivilization good Juck., Not necessarily. The Riffs are in rebellion against Spain. A people in revolt against Bpanish colonial misrule are en- titled to the benefit of every doubt. The Riffs may be savages but it's doubtful if they'll be fmproved by any civilizing they're from Spain. The French simply were side- swiped by the fight. They were glad of it, too. They've heen want- irg to get Into it for quite a while. inability to use | | planes suceessfully in her Moroccan attacks | likely to get | The Last Shovelfull— ‘ The bin is empty, Right now our yard is full of clean bright Anthra- It's new Spring coaI' and the time to put it in your bins is also now! The Citizens Coal Co. Braneh Offics, 104 Areh St Tel. ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED They hope to get some territory out of it for themselves, The Spanish know it, and badly as they need help, are mighty suspicious of the kind the French are giving them, Another thing, as the American army air serviece notes cynically, | France has been ‘‘overstocked with | general officers” ever since the war | *and the- Moroccan agtivity pffords | exercise for some of the surplus.” ‘ They ought to he grateful to the | Riffs, instead of ealling them sa:- ages. In reality, maybe they arc | They're killing them, byt without i} feeling, 1fkely enough. The prediction that Ching’s futur: |will be industrial, rather than agri |cultural, like her past, made by Dr. | Chang-Ting Wang, the present Pekin {government’'s high commissioner to Russia and a recent visitor lere, is immv!hh\g for the western world |think about. | Here's a country of 400 million in habitants, fully half of them work- | ers—for women as well ‘as men do men's work n China—willing to toi 12 to 16 hours a day, seven days eek, at A daily wage below Amerlean cents; a eountry with coa |0l and tron resources perhaps sur- passing America's. Industrially neither people nor rc sources have been much explnite! If they're about to he—well, 1 sounds ke “some’ competition Senator Bingham Leav | New Haven by Airplanc New Haven, June 1 (AP)—1", & Benator Hiram Bingham left Beth any flying field this morning at 10 o'clock, D, 8, T, for Lakehurst, N, J. in a naval alrplane sent here hy or- |der of Becretary of Navy Curtis D ‘\\'|Ilmr who has finvited | Bingham to visit the principal Ialr stations on the Atlantic coast In his inspection, Senator Bingham will also visit the naval station at Philadelphla and the station at |Hampten Reads, Va. which is ) chief alr base on the eastern coast The entire trip is to be made b |plane, Scnator Bingham, as a member of the senate military affairs committec Is making an Investigation of mili- tary aviation In July he will go 10 the Pacific coast where he wil | visit &l United States thers, Heart Throbs of Humanity LOSE to the heart interest of many—reflected in the call that comes from every walk of life—the Classified Ads are brimful of news that’s interesting and valua- ble—the desires, hopes, plans and endeavors of humanity. Study them carefully, to kee; in touch with the business world, to feel the heart throbs of human needs, to know what's most in demand. The Classified Ads radiate the needs of every business— tell the desires of household and individual—carry the message of the ambitious and prudent. They are an ever- changing, up-to-date index of opportunities worth while, They bring landlords and tenants together; effect sales; introduce employers and employes; rent rooms, present business opportunities; consummate deals of many Kinds, Classified Ads are simple, direct, wonderfully resultful— they are convenient, quick in action and inex akreast of the times—make dead comrades and sisters. | neive., Be full use of the Classified Ads

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