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e ———— New Britain Heraldl TR KELLONE s e of My HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Hosveretury stute, logg 1% no diplumat-=yeti he u [ Jeurn more as he becomes better Dally (Sunday Excepted) | 1 Herald Bldg.. 61 Church Street customed to the job, AS presid At Mr. Ca nt Mexico BUBSCRIPTION RATES 43,00 & Year, 32,00 il w i I1s no diplomat; ha hves tioniin ery” mature and won't Vstand f 750, & Month. at the Post Off! Becond Cluse at New Britain 1 Matter, Iy and the just ossing N or TELEPHONE CALLS Ediiorial Raoms . s today fr Washington are to the effcet that ontroversy inofticiu Ho even to Ihe only nrofitable advertis in the Uity \reulation Dress room always open to mdve shably w nok tropped Member of the A The Associa titled t all news redited news put ocinted Press. i 3 Press usively en LY herwise also use for adiisd to 1t or this paper and i hevelr 4 long "k the past eat impro those exlsting during Men o of Circulation mber Audit Bure; A a ninistration, or tisers with 8 cireulation. are based unon < ; h threatenc cretary of Kel rty in i s not lue coneid ration Ameri Mexi LN PROTLCTING CHILDE I t att ot government expects ken over illegally or to indem ns. has been much radical @ xico. Some of this reckless as taken on activities aga ever, should been reigners” and all their wo RR should ecessary in ts own accord | Mexico cannot on the one hand such vite foreigners and forelgn caj an important and on the other fail to glve In « proper But ago agreed to adjudicate such 2 protection. mayor to t that traffic is al- both governments some t exist before This bod. almost continual- as may ims Gommission. just before, ; not been remarke school hours, | It app unpulani\w)zn avidence and make decisl t should sink into the | Both tion and the police |abid ‘l.‘l“.\‘ for ite during or atter s to need plenty of tim the parent size an able tru governments having agre eity adm by the Commission's decisi commission will be difficulty in ‘The been & long|ing the reason for a verbal &on 4 of | versy between Messrs. Kellogg Calles at this time. b finance ar n, with an eye to ast, has re- | | a sufficient appro- | oosts first fused to priation to - after Chief H peatedly made The la ty THE MOOSE PARADL. The Loyal Order of Moose in New oy more policemen irt and othera had re- convention fn Br He request for more. | cnde aturday, delightfu members The bright worn by members of the wom provided W k of polic with a spectact the colors of protection at the school has been: one paraded city of this false economy; the costu ent policemen on the clgy roster there would have been l\o“l\umalv blended impressil v in providing protection | ' the m Y surs, as is done near | ‘ ough not all, of Jol. Now that the lite | The Moose in America h heen hed out near doing a irkable prope something | Mooseheart in Illinois, home of the order, out the nation the order probably will be done about it, espe- is regarded a tendi are they ‘will insis wields the dren Two ot brother Britain was gla fact cient he ward; ¥ now, at | FISH AND GAME bee + i school th often mankind THE TROLLEY DEFY. portunities The ures of su and e C remain in spite on streams 2 . There hes, tra are ot by the influe ks But P ikewise may T zation ity that troversy. ompany, no longer appears to b is to be torn up the cente city should WARREN & STONL ] necticut company hse good w 2t gught worth the elties, rather than permit itself et into & jam over ghapging a trac treated wit! properties them | surre jetermin- streets. the more sombre costumes worn by | R 1 . Cleveland and the hranch banks in I« | other citics testity well to the care ' Factsand Fancies nay |l and prudent munagement that | M BY ROBERT QUILLEN Mr acs 8t Inaugurated me i enlightened | of man is the obligation to study under Ihe propar Is s | leader who thought that labor could laws obey | Lest | s a|do best by cooperating with the pres or' | ent economie system and being tden- | | titled with it to the hilt at considered banks Philosophy i what you develop as a substitute for & winning streak. [ v once in & while you & prize-winning poem or story that 1s pretty good It was for is we | this reason that he 1 w- | eperation ot as within th o I | purview of his labor organlztion m | greatly to the disgust of such radi soap made Lord Levers Soft soup made many a lord him, the | cals who oppose hae everything bu Common hutme hefore no co | Mr und ctive 1ded i kers Stong's thesis in the long run He | cooperative ownership | rn have fur-reaching results. kind with Classieal glven th literature: The free in eight volumes of trash. Well, 1t Germany has imperialistic dreams, that scems to make it unanimous again with enterprises by o8, | a set workingmen | ownership class | the Increaso & | result that morg wre in th ome the largest cor-| an economic In some of ons in America there are many times the total of stockholders than | Mr n a wonderful stinqu- i 1 did not hother | ow-| him and the attitude of other cap- | th ftalis \ ogg | formerly was the case Stone's t in this directi criticlsms -mind of husband having the “Blah! You haven't got to shoot.” Example last the 8 was a hearty welcome word A\ REIGN OF TERROR | the reasons for the | nere i good thing about a resort is you can enjoy the view every tipping it. can One tha lay in China, the methods fol- without ey vithou! A nify 1 reading of are closely akin to barbarism, inted f the capture of Canton | hes Az Press well to be fastidious, but a suit every season Is go- Agi- oree 0 by the and Cantonc lit ‘I“H\" in- | blood of every righteo sital | dividual boil. The Yu ndering, were mercilessly operating under 1 It a man is small enough, the session of $8.60 can make him superior to other people. rks, was enough to make led {n® after po nanese You can't alwaya tell whether it ne publicity an agent of the e frs favors, or personal publieity, en to death, some of t un- | | d dif- | combatants met going torture, and 1 th At this rate it won't be long un- Mussolini can form a new cabi- Ly reappointing himself. 4| Unfortunately no has ed e to] blam many-sided CrutonToras often wonder whether it is or the unexcelled facili- allghting that attracts a spot ons. | being d ved to| the Pekin gove Britis 1 murder of C rt nese in the f qu whic by the way st quarter {n that contro- tro- fin and | Shanghai—is proof and the bolshevistic ra | a great ald to quick thinkers eventually survive, ic wil evolution. Only most of the attacking the solidify Whe Rarmit hen | entiment here are - reason some great men are < hecause they sacrificed too riends on the way up. mes are extremities er | s | ANy with | 8 SHUNNING MONEY. chatters incessantly anything. but that prove Darwin was it onkey Some people § peoy | withe aVing Joesn’t en the value of i arn woman may bave faults, doesn't look as bent and tutiful wife” did in the as a worn as a old The reason there than mosqiitoes is quits boring you you reach for some- Note to loaf fies fly senter 1He rteen lodges and lunch- said the man, “but s his bueiness a game.” Associated Editors) § 25 Years Ago Today of That D a serious 1 From PYaper o " physicians have cir appointments to the staff and are hot about matters, including the send i The hospital is t doctors. watching \s reduced its rates for n patient& from $4 to $3 out-of rd and THAW AND THE PRESS, daughter 1ve gone to Boston for & wo weeks, Lawlor yesterday actured his hip ) by Dr. Martin employes of the Aetna Works i today when a fire where a large vas stored, and the roof. The put it out after an by chopping and pouring street af- He 100 F 1l Gerstaecker \s appointed T. G. remo- Aid in the June 17. will begin the White Oak this t of the Turdbull's attention their le others ost and 1 fruit on the same on A 1sities Irew much pursuing owners are ) the auto July of travel ents, and e In its cont m wonder of 1w at elopment Depu 1 insta strides are being District Hartfo offi- S Igdge. evening Worthy All; vices n \vnr‘h’ hapman; treasurer, new H ¥ W. A K. C cticut. We reputable 1 have anything Con- to Conr such a scheme. take kindly At means word “sheik” old man,” L liter- | ally “an be-| the | Leveridge | Come on, folks, let's “get on the air,” Not up in it, and tear our halr, Let's each “broadcast” from FUN/ | The days'll all be merry then! ’ | Out of His Line Mrs. Botta (hopefully): the baby s awake. Botts: “I'm not. “John, A Yaux Pas By Newton Carl Spencer | “I certainly play iu hard lud | Sald Franklin P. Mitchell to me, | “Sometimes I'm 8o Dblue I could chuck ! Myselt, in the indigo sea, | I hate to be singing to you | This sort of lugubrious song, But it eeems that whatever I do, | The darned thing is sure to be wrong. “From a wedding I've Just come away, . And since it is not of my own T ought to be blithesome and gay Instead of exuding a groan. '"Twas the wedding of Lulu Blue, | Who's been led to the altar hefore, And old HMorace Robertson, who Has eaid ‘I will' three times or more. Mae “I don't think thut either of thom Will ever aguin to me speak, ¥or I made a break that's a gem; 1 should have been smashed in the beak. 1 took the old girl by the hand, 1 smiled in my prettiest way And said 'My dear bride, yoy look grand: Many happy returns of the day!'" Bullt for Action “] want to buy some handker- chiefs for my husband.” ery well, madame. Large size No. he's rather small, but he has a big nose.” o —Edith Wiener. Some yr ! was afraid of his wife. | Now he's afraid of his children Misnamed “We're ready to eat now.” an- nounced mother. "Come on, Paulie, !and wash your hande!” “Gee whiz!” came back from Paul, I thought this was a picnic.” —Mrs. Armin McKeough. | A High School Howl By a Graduating Senior | Of all the guys that I don't like The worst is Julius Caesar; | I'd gladly give ali that T own | For one whack at his beezer. | | He strutted | Rome In nighties made of satin; { But what 1 can't forgive is, he Wrote “Gallic Wars” in Latin! round the streets of | I'm glad my good friend Brutus stabbed 01d Caesar with his sticker; [ 1t's a darn shame it waan't done Some thirty-five years quicker! | —Monroe Munzner. | Some Scrappers Edwards: “The Chinese are sald to be peaceful, but in this country | they're at it all thebtim Xern: “Yes; at it | tongs.” | -C. D. P. \ Some Love Afiairs A colored Romeo called his sweet- | heart the light of his Jife and she | was as black as the ace of spades. | A vagabond lover told his dear cne that she looked good enough to cat and the heiress turned be his meal ticket even after they were wed. An unsteady lover keeled over at the thought of marrying en nothing 80 he leaned on the girl's father | for support. A poetical youth whose life had Leen a sad one wrote sonncts to the girls he loved and at last he found that his lines were cast in pleasant| | places. | An enthusiastic swain promised his dear one that he'd give her the whole world after they were wed and he gave her an atlas when she | reminded him of it. | A lover took his swectie to din- ner and theater and escorted her home in a taxi, but he was so bash- ful she found his shy a dollar when the chauffeur asked him for the price of the ride. —Samuel Circumstances Alter— fiother: “Now I hope you young people be careful. Don't drive too Daughter: “Don't worry, mother, Harry never drives fast When we're alone.” A. Clough fast —H. F. W. Wally the Mystic Hg'll Answer Your Questions If you're beset by clouds of doubt | Let Mystic Wally help you out; His keen perception finds a w | To lead you to the light of day. { ety Responsibility Declined Dear Wally: | My beau says that he | Wants me to sit upon his-knee: |1 satd 1I'q Walt until T heard It you'd approve of it. Blue Bird | Dear® Blue Bird: | Don't expect of me Advice to sit upon his knee; | You suit yourself, my littie one; I will say this — it has been done i ) Rich Dear Wally: My soul's in a whirl; 1 am a well-known cherus girl. I'm losing fast' my perfect form. :\\hal shall T do? Dear Rather Warm; | The common | 1s to pick some rich collége | And wed in alcoholic glee— Then settle with the familee! Answered What estlonality Pickings | Yours, Rather Warm. plan man Hasris | you?r” .|ern physiclan. rs ago Mr. Henry Peck| hammer and | out to| hd Bigler: “I'm Scotoh. I get my maother, and my I father.” Harrla: “A teh , Trish, and ish Trom my h from my ?d where do you get r, of ~-Bert Marghas. (Copyright, 1025, Reproduction Forbidden) COMMUNICATED An Objection Is Voiced Editor, The Herald, New Britain, Conn. Dear Sir: Your paper of May 29 contained an article entitled “Much’ Meat Cauges Gout." The article refers to the work ef a Danish physician, Hindhede, who believes in & lows protein and non-flesh diet. Over- eating of meat is blamed ay a cause of gout. In reply may we call your read- ers' attention to the teachings of other physicians more experienced with gout.. Dr, Llewellyn of Bath, England, where gout has been treats ed for several hundred years, writes that gout is the nemesis of high liv- ing but that “attempts to throw all the blame on any particular fodd- stufts, e, §. red meats, etc, on the ground that these highly nitrogenous substances engender excossive fore mation of uric acld, have failed of their object.” He and many other sclentific physicians state that the urie acld bug bear dies hard but that it has lost its power to fool the good mod- The older theories ware based upon the belief that the human bedy could not destroy urle acld and that during gout or rheu- matism or arthritls the uric acid was not all eliminated and so was deposited in the jolnts, muscles, or other parts of the body. Tt has re- cently been proven by Dr. Felin and his collaborators that we do de- stroy uric acid in our bodies and that some reason other than its in- clugion in our food musts be given for gout and rheumatism that some people fall heir to. May we have space in your paper for our letter? Yours sincerely, Department of Nutrition, Institute American Meat Producers C. ROBERT MOULTON, Director. J On Sunday Meat Sales New Britain, Conn. June 15, 1925, | | Editor Herald: | ayst a few lines a |suggestion of opening or closing of ‘lhe grocery stores on Bunday, AS 1 understand it our mavor's intention !is to have the grocery and small |markets close on Sunday but be- [causc he suspeots some. opposition, he thinks it advisabla t o allow them {0 keep open for two hours in the 'morning. | To my opinton thi small marketmen, as | of local stores keep open seven days and nights because their competi= |tion does not allow them to close. The small businessmen’'s oppor- |tunities for recreation are small as {he has no time for himseit or for |his family while other classes of | people are trying to have shorter Ihours for work. The Sabbath day | was given to the people for rest, and it is up to us to observe it, I think the local businessmen will do some- |ihing for their betterment and for |{he betterment of the community. As T understand there is & law [for Sunday closing and it is up to us to abey it as good citizens and to Kkeep the Sabbath as it was meant for in the beginning. Yours very truly, JOSEPH VOLEK, Bellevue Market, 87 Hart St bout eur mayor's s is best for: the majority Cutting-Tn A few cvenings ago I was wait- |ing in 1 in front of a Harttord | (heater when some four or five late | comers cut-in and ask friends to buy | thelr tickets for them. This is quite common thing when one is wait- line before some ticket clswhere, to see some | one come up to a personal acquain- | Sance pretty well up in that line, |and ask such a one to buy the de- sired ticket for this late comer, when really such |a place at the foof wait. But some folks always have way of getting ahead of the he people. If & wom- |an was hurrying home to look after |a sick child or had .some similar | reason for haste she could be ex- cused for this cutting-in. But as a | usual thing there is no such reason. | The people who thus take advantage ve an impression of bad manners. The number of people who have the | habit of cutting-in, without think- ing or caring about courtesy, are steadily increasing. The idea scems {10 be to get what they want, regatd- |less of the rights of others or any injustice it may do. This disagree- | able habit not only shams discourt- lesy or a lack of, good breeding, but it is wrong. There is a principie in- volved which the quilty ones never scem to consider. | 1t one be allowed to push in ahead | of those who are really ahead just {because he wanta to do it for his |own personal cofivenience, then why ot all be allowed to do it? Gener- {ally, 1 am sure, those who do such things would be among the first to resent it on the part of others. This alone proves it bad manners when |they do it. It may beta little incon- vienent or unpleasant to walt your turn but just remember it may be inconvenient for the other fellow to give his up. ~ If there is lany - reasen why you should |go ahead of others, & simple request {will usually give you the right. {Those mot willing to yield in such 1»|mun|u(;nceu display a degree of | “hagguishness” that marks them as |good fo | ne la ing in | window or t of the line and | smart ! general run of th lks to “be away trom." Re. |cently in & barber shop here it New |Britain, a man was in a hurry for & hair cut but & friend was ahead ot him. When he found his friend's | hurry, he very gracefully oftered to |yleld his place. Before the man got |in the chair another man came in. When the man in a hurry got eut of the chair and thé mext turn came, the man who yielded his turn said to the third man to go ahead and |that his giving up his turn had put {the third man ahead of him. In other words he did not understand that he was just exchanging plases are|with the first man, bt rather that |Forecast for Eouth Ine was yielding his place and must a one should take | you and we offer you helping you to hold costs. \ than the larger sizes Yard & Offics, 24 Dwight Court Tel. 8108, By CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Service Writer Washington, June 15 — la this a billjon? — 1,000,000,000. Or this? — 1,000,000,000,000. The former, you'll say. Probably yoy won't consider there's much room for argument, cither. The point is argued, nevertheless, and while 1,000,000,000's advocates re- fuse to mdd a aingle cipher to their estimate, 1,000,000,000,000's sup- porters are equally positive in their refusal to lop one off. war debt discusstons between Wash- ington and European caplitals some- what confusing. Here we're of the — not all, there are a few rational ones — and Latin Americans are of the 1,000,000,000,000 group. . . “Now, as to that 12 billion dol- lars you owe us—," begins America, preliminary to a debt disc with Europe. “Twelve billion: claims Europe. “Why, 12 thousand millions is all it is.” "Well,"” America, “ien't that the thing?" “We should say not,” Ku- rope rejoins. “A Dbillion is this much.” And she writes it down — 1,000,000,000,000." *“Do you Mmean to say a billion’s a trillion?” in- ague at all,” says Europe. | a billion, and 12 billions are 11 bil blons and 988 thousand mlillons more than we owe you — not to mention the fact that we saved civi- fization and ought not to be regard- ed as owing you anything at all.” | get mixed up carrying on a con- tried. . What official Washington can't understand is why almost every Chi- nese who comes to this country for to say you never .. |go to the foot of the line and begin |over. He not only had considera- |tion for one man's pressing haste but |for the other man's rights as well. {Some folks do not hesitate to take | all in sight if no one disputes their |action. Sometimes a man ( or a }‘“omn\) will go into a railway train. [turn two seats together. pile kinds of luggage on one, leave room for their feet only, then sit in the center of the other seat, Thus on {one ticket, two seats, the room pro |vided for four people, arc taken. This would be all right and rail- road employes rarely say anything if |there be plenty of vacant seats. But it is often done while people go up and down the aisle looking for seats. not the whole coach. Others pay |entitled to the same consideration. That “all men are created free and equal” s a natiopal idea that is supposed to be very dear to us Americans. Let us, then, practice accordingly. 1f we would cure oth- crs of the cutting-in habit we our- selves, must practice the golden rule. J. W, BUSH, M, D, New Britain, Conn. {June 14, 19 Qbseroations On The Weather [} Washingion C. Juge 15— m New Eng- (unds Partly ploudy sad eon- This difference of opinion makes| 1,000,000,000 party, Most Europeans ion | ex- | aske | quires ‘America incredulously. “Not | “A Dbillion's | 1t 'you don't think it's possible to | versation of this kind, then it's safe all | One ticket pays for one seat and | |as much for tickets as we and are | Hold em down d S retsil coal dealers, our success depends upon our ability to please our co-operation in down your heating Here is the way to do it— PEA and BUCKWHEAT coal are the same coal, the same kind and the larger sizes, They are le quality as expensive and if they can be used—AND THEY CAN--they will cut your coal bills from 10% to 33%. The Citizens Coal Co. Branch Office, 104 Arch 8t Tel.' 3206, ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED 1an education returns home a ‘“rec radical.” American education doegn't | work that way on moat Americans | Why has it so jazzy an effect or | the Chinese? | The correct anawer is that It isn' s0. i The facts are these: “Treat 'em rough.” ls the atti- tude of the typlcal foreign resident of China toward the Chinese. Governmentally ~ Amerlca hat been more considerate of €hina than any other country — except, recently and doubtless for her own purposes, Russia. But the average individual Amerlean in China treats the Chinese much as they're treate ed by the rest of the foreign #os | journers there — harshly, arrogant: Iy, often even abusively, to the point of blows, The masses of the Chincee, peac: able and patient far past virtue point, and too densely ignorant and downtrodden to possess a spark of spirit or so much as realize what they're being subjected to, accept all this as part of their day's work and say nothing, But when an occidentally-trained young Chinaman returns to his na- tive land, with western ideas bred ihto his mind and much of his ractal meekness bred out of it. it angers him to see his countrymen knocked about without resenting i wouldn't stand that,” he “He's a Bolshevik," exclaims every toreigner within hearing. They hon- estly think so, too, and that's the way the news sent back home. . That Russia seeks to win the Chi. nese to herself by arousing antag- onism among them against the rest of the world probably is true, The worst of it is that the rest of the world's behavior toward China has been such as to make this pretty | easy to do. \ [tinued warm tonight. |local thunder storms followed by |cooler. Moderate to fresh south- | west ang west winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Local thunder storms tonight and Tuesday; except fair on the coast tonight; somewhat warmer in south and cooler in extreme north. }“ost portion tonight; cooler Tues- {day; moderate to fresh southwest shifting’ to west and northwest | winds. | Conditions: 8howers have oc- curred during the last 24 hours in all the northern distriets cast of :lhe Rocky Mountaing and along the south Atlantic coast.” The greatest amoupt of rain reported was 8.0% |inches ta Des Moines, Jawa. _The pressure Is high gyer in the Carolinas and lower Ufh. The temperature is rising slowly. " Far | this vieinity fair weather followed by inicreasing cloudiness on Tuesday. Tuesday THE Harvey & Lewis CO. 85 W. Main St. New Britain, Conn. OPTICIANS | Movie Cameras [}