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GIFTS A election of GLASS [TOELA Desd please the bride 1 Dept. THE DICKINSON | DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST. PLIGHT OF WIDOY, " FAMILY AINSTAY Works From Morn 'Til Night " With Little Recreation plight of a widow with \ to care for is graphica scribed in the monthly veport M. B of Miss Cora ile, executive sec- Britain Welfare Be- wesociation nitted st night of her i mate acquaintance ) cases of this nature, Miss ¥ striking com- average home 1 is the only parent and children depend on her tirely Miss Beale's report follows “To the directors of the Welfare 1ssociation of New Rritain “Douglas Thom parent is the It's a bit easier, parent ‘Being arth.’ when hoth says a biggest job on perhaps, ly on t s been placed wnd sympathy °d on the ss family itiable indeed gle without doubt, is the case Jowed mother left to bat- with her group of depend- therl ather 1lon v de® NEW BRITAIN DAILY |to 100k after the little ones; perhaps she does know that they are near by and so far safe, More often it is ten year old r on whom the re. sponsibility falls. She learns to be deceitful because of the need of an excuse for her absence from school, land an aching head or painful tooth may be the apparent reason. Sh can purchase food which requires no preparation and give the ehildren something to The coffee pot remaing on the fire since breakfust and furnishes a drink for the noon meal. When the father returns at night, tired and hungry. the evening meal must necessarily be hurriedly gotten, perhaps the meat of the highly seasoned prepared bologna type, or a quickly cooked dish of fried eggs or potatoes and maybe a buker's pie or cookles. Cer- tain youngsters are not over fond of soap and water and father's orders to wash up ate not always followed by a close inspection ‘If a mother s 11l and away from the condition is usually of fair- Iy short duration. 1f she has de- sewr.d her family or is removed by leath and the situation is of long standing, what are some of the re- sults? Irregular school attendance, with a loss of interest and a falling down in marks; undernourished children with a lowerir of weight and a lessening of sistance to disex of bodily canliness, intidy clothing, minor accidents and the numercus delinquencies which ire sure to occur when parental care some 1 lack |time being, and became home-keoper ‘“m» the mother retained her job, After all else falled, one father, huy ing ‘n few hundred dollars in the | bank, stayed at home to care for |his chronically invalid wife and the |house and chlidren shone with cloanliness. This was temporary, A | housekeeper “was hired later, but, like many another, found it difticult to please and left, so the situation is not permanently improved, Some times it Is so much casler to follow the path of least resistance that a father ignores all suggestions and plans of social workers {interested and glad to help for the children's sake and a court action is necess because of the parent adding to t neglect and delinquency of the chil- dren “Little ones placoed In the care of | the Day Nursery at a nominal sum soon show improvement through constant care, clean living, rest and good food. Anemic and frail young- sters of school age reserve their strength at the open air school by means of transportation to and fro, remaining at school during the noon recess while they receive a whole- some, appetizing dinner, with sp cial nourishment in between meals and a much-needed rest period, “Underweight boys and girls are bettorad by the removal of disea sed tonsils and enlarged a with a vacation of two or me coks on Burlington at the noids, the hilltops of fresh air camp. “It is @ big job to be a parent IS THE WOMEN " WHOARE BOSSES At Least Regarding Rents, Building Assn. Man Says Cleveland, 11, ("1t 18 the woman who controls the rents,” June speakers at the convention of the National' Association of Building Owners and Managers, declared to- day. Woman can make a store a success or a fallure with her buylng power, Thomas P. Danahey, Detroit, chair~ man of the organization's renting committee, said. “Women have their preference re- garding the side of a street, which accounts for stores prosepering on one side while those opposite may have difficulties,” Danahey declared. ‘sually women prefer the side that is shady durlng thelr shopping hours." There is an increased demand for porcelain tubs, open fireplaces, spacious rooms, deep closets, lght and alr and high grade equipment for the maid and laundress, Roland I, Elliman, New York, asserted. Nowadays if you can't supply HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 11, 1925, PRESENT INCOME TAX CALLED DISCRIMINATIVE Favors Tdle Wealth, According To the Under-Secretary of the Treasury June 11, GOOD OLD FASHIONED Palmer (P~-The present income tax law dlscriminates against productive wealth and favors idle wealth, Garrard B. Winston, under-secretary of the treasury, de- clared in & prepared address today before the convention of the Na- tional Assoclation of Credit Men, and it is becauss “congress has refused to reach the abuse of having a type of seclrity the ownership of which works an exemption of taxation.” Tax exempt securities now total more than $13,000,000,000, he de- |clared, predicting that the total |would reach $15,000,000,000 before any constitutional amendment to change the situation could become The means of tax avold- lable to the wealthy, he are many that to try te close them all by statute would sim- ply put business in & straltjacket.” “The economically unsound basis |of surtases” and “our excessive in- come tax rates” Mr. Winston as- serted, “encourage unproductive 1 vestment of capital and dlscourage |business.”” This unnatdral division |ylelds no revenue to the government and is costly to industry. Excessive ‘ashington, Mexican Hammocks Hot Weather Hardware $6.00, $7.50 and $9.00 Each The Handy Hardware Store HERBERT L. MILLS 336 MAIN ST. e and guidance is lacking “It isnt’ always that a mother is king in the home of death or desertion! Perhaps back bills have piled up due to if one time. Mother finds she hold a good job at the factory and you must at least give an“ap. rance of space.” he sald. “By eut |{he government the size of the kitcheén, bullding other §s thrown away."” in refrigerator, wall cabinets and | “No system of taxation which ranges, you get the needed room for |forces business into tortuous and the extra bathroom. unnatural channels can continue as o ones. As soon as her cir- AN rates cost the taxpayer two dollars known one ny Tt Is a big job, too, to try and bene- fit the children the eration of the parents old ng might he ed to read ‘All the world loves a— All the emphasis of social i« being laid on the better- t of the child, for his sake, of the parent he is to be, sake of his present com- munity and that of the future, when will be m ger of our city <. the builder of future families the strength of the nation quite s0 ex- 5 submitted M. Beale, xecutive Socretary.” nces are unless we have to help her in il Friends and relatives are on hand to assist according to heir ability and means; churches Brighjer P ver— gladly jend and aid the lonely Than Ever mother: private socleties add her to | works away from home nine hours e their list of beneficiaries; the city |a day. Her pay envelope, in com- The New o aid department formulate | bination with father's, after se Sports Apparel s wherein all aid possible may be | months means a solid looking bank for Men— feels the urge 56 vay possible 8 T misquot- can o child W chosen by a committes upon recomfcouector Seizes Cll’ mendation of the members of the . and Driver as Well class as the man who most closely | approaches “the standards of intel-| New York, June 11 (P—Michael €A1 J, Maxwell, collector, was under ar- lectual abillty, high manheod, pacity for leadership and service set | rest today after selzing not enly an on which he elaimed by Francls Gordon Brown, 1901.” | Cottle was chairman of the junior | aUtomobile : | $400 was due, but its woeman driver as well. for ne the s for the ake veral given to the fatherless. In spite of laccount and the temptation comes to a1l this the struggle is a long, hard keep right on working, And then one with the mother trying to be htye children suffer, conditions being vage earner and home keeper, tWo |similar aithough not parents Instead of one. treme, as when there is no mother. “And what of the motherless fam- "o o 1ot e fly? Consider for a moment What | couig wiie oo scoll nigh helpless be one mother did according to her . Iy log' as quoted from a family . cv. il Monday:—1 am downstairs at First T put on the hoiler for the washing. Next the oatmeal for Now I sce the children I help them to get be iressed. And get the and the hest she ca tubs ready. Now the children are ready for school. Now 1 stairs and open the windows and the beds and pick up. And next run the carpet sweeper. Pick up in the and in the ki up the dishes and put them away. I get the first part of the washing in | cpo oniy train the boiler. Tt is now 11 o'clock and |} them In a as 1 have enough bread for | ciof o lunch, T have to and R | I make a stew of left-o dir And wash up the breakfast di and now get the ready for dinner. And while are cooking T will do a cspectful “or ances are The trousers— wide of incurable physical They too are In da as the children, when left un cared for. condi- SIFIED ADS IN RESULIS THE CLA ADS FOF most tions as READ The Sweaters— a ger, 6:30. “The children wit is quite mentally without o I 2 b breakfast nt might we at 7 o'clock. rhaps she dors “Once accustomed to bigger rooms, (the permancnt policy of this coun- he new facilities and sunshine and |try,” he sald. air, Mrs. Rentpayer, who really dic- tates in these matters, simply re- ONORE fuses to live in eramped quarters and GOTTLE H D semi-darkness.” < i = SEEK COMPI ’\'nle Halfback is Chosen as the Gor- The boad of public works is con- | 4o prown Srudent at University sidering an application by the famlly | prom committee this year, is a mem- of Joseph Scheidell, late street super- | From 1026 Class. ber of the student council and be-| intendent, for compensation in his | longs to the Sword and Gun club,| _Mrs. Rose A. Robin was sitting at death. He was injured several weeks | New Haven, June 11 (A—Edmund | ne)ta Kappa Epsilon, and Scroll and | the wheel on Broadway when Max- prior to his death and did not return | Petets Cottle, Jr, of Buffalo, N. Y. | Keys, He prepared for Yale at Phil-| V¢!l demanded payment. Mrs. Robin to work after that date. ‘hn"blr.k on the undefeated Yale||ins andover and played on flwi‘"‘d not the money with her or if | toothall team of 1925, and & mem- | greghman, football, hockey and ten- | &he did declined to give ft to the | ber of the university hockey team, | ;iq teams. He has a major “Y" in|collcctor. a mother who b has been chosen Gordon Brown | eqsipal and hockey. | Maxwell sent for a wrecking car Il &) cas warmw | scholar at Yale university from the and had the automobile with Mrs. { | class of 1926. The holder of this Robin still at the wheel dragged to clothes it is like an ad | seholarship, which is considered the| Claseified advertising Is an art—|a garage. Then Mrs. Robin pre ditional child trying to hring up a “THE HOLYOKE” greatest honor in junfor year, is To use the Herald is business. [ terred a charge of grand larceny, amily. She becomes shiftless, her marals he questionable in that hough apparently adult, she s the mind of a little child and mall sense of right and wrong. ~ ' . . mall sense of right ant wrove /B (ias and Kerosene Heaters, has r children? selfish, immature wilfully g0 np. n want—the mor and here's always find it. That's what n prilliant, the better: where - HORSFALLS §3-99 ) @ylum Street may an can living room en pick Un 1 coils, quick to heat, saves the fuel stop some. During the last fow months the ay er. W requ a fare association, through various 1 complaints, has come ‘mnthe families jue to all of the ahove mentioned Hartford, table upon severa the thin wash as the ittle the CORRECTION Because of an erroneous impres- sion now existing, we wish to state emphatically that our only place of business is on PRATT STREET, HARTFORD. Having no branch stores, which mean double rent and other ex- penses, besides a divided stock, our over-head has been reduced to a minimum. Here at our only store, we present for your inspec- tion a far more comprehensive showing of fine furs than is pos- sible in any branch store. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” . hera at 12 o'clock. | conditions T Juneh the children clear the “In one insta o combined | 1 put ome of ERICKSON & JOHNSON 34 DWIGHT o on with the washing clothes. DOCTORS SIGHTSEEING . Tt is ) fluenced to remain at home and care Tn another fam health being some- donc And 1 r house Now the i1y P he washing the tubs. floor. T niit for he hold or, h= changed ple kitehen is done and next 1 wash up ces for the and start to pare Now supper s the clot! the lunch dighes arrots for SUpper. d1 to eat npen some of t} \per at 6 1 such a rasionally e her plac and vell trained in on well i1l it of discipline a big girl and ger ra varied house haps she has been ousework and ms comes to the ma Then. most natu pudding can be glorified with “hoy heing so little o to bhe hildren ong bothere €0 les - plus onfe' advantage no other open car can offer ERE is a sturdy, low-priced car of the very finest quality — the new Studebaker Standard Six Duplex-Phaeton. It is the most powerful car of its size and weight, with every proved advantage that a high-grade open car can offer — rugged dependability, brilliant performance, outstanding comfort. In addition, it has one great advantage no other open car provides — Duplex roller side enclosures that give enclosed-car protection in stormy weather. You make the change in 30 seconds—without leaving the seat. Built complete by Studebaker—both body and chassis —in great manufacturing plants where the overhead is shared by three different models. Thus only “one manu- facturing profit” is included in the low purchase price. Come in and inspect this new-type car—see this ex- clusive Duplex convenience—Ilearn the value Studebaker offers before you buy. A & D Motor Sales Co. STUDEBAKER Standard Six Duplex-Phaeton Hence we can better serve you both in price and service, in the finest eéquipped and best appoint- ed store in New England. New England Furriers 59 PRATT ST. HARTFORD ) USE SEIBERTS PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM Her Dangerous ‘ Game D by was a flirt w chief boast was th S1145 F. O. B. FACTORY 50 k. p. Studebaker-built en- gine—the most powerful in amy car of its size. Full-size balloon tires. Safety lighting control. men lose theirs. P it us game had got her uations but shealways managed somehow 1o escape disaster—until she met Carl Jensen. At first th SHE'S PLEASED WITH OUR MILK There’s a reason why IMPORTANT: Let us repair or remodel your furs now, while charges for this work are lower. Renewed and stored at once, your furs will be safe and ready at the first nip of frost. We call for and deliver furs anywhere in New Britain e been a great joke to Dorothy but she was to learn les- son from him that she wou er forget. If you think fii g is smart—if that's dea of fun—read what pened to Dorothy. It app £ g nder the title, “A Soul's cleanl) ¢ n,” in True Story X e for July. Oneof 18 ures. Get Sto our milk receives such It is pure and and from farm to the bottle it's handled in a I ESEIBERT & SNk 437 PARWK ST HONE 1720 NEW BRITAIN, CONN MANE SURE IT5 SEVBERTS a welcome. sweet Re- anner your copy ¥ 2 TH18 18 A STUDEBAKER YBA.L,“ B o i Bt Al iSRS Es R S