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_New Britain Herald """ HERALL PUBLISHING COMPANY Tasued Daily (Sunday Bxcepted) At Herald Bidg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RAIES 0,00 & Year $2.00 Month. Three Month. Enterad at the Post C as Second o At Now b Mall M 2 always op D toa Member of the Associuted I'ress, « I'he t all news creditad news © Associa exs exclusive ar an shed he 3 Member A Audit Burenn of Circulatisa A MOVE TO PROTECT LIVES AND PROPERTY s wit di- only right not 1so pro- by stimulating ng care and eleetrical in- properly or NEW “DRY" DISTRICTS AND CONNECTICUT elimin the prol hibit from in Was of the head iry been thorougl country at la gatherec TOO MANY ROBBE RIES ARMED GUARDS NEEDED tamond I ter ° mbat the reporters call “proad day- ‘uen by only four was of & sort to make even | clear that the map makers have not to | been justiied into going inte details i, The explorers, during the ninth trip 8 Judge Ma- lone reader L accustomed reading about rob- | about Bristol k and other burtes, perk a startied eyebrow it a But not ouly robbery of into the Hudson Bay country, the kind taking place In New York | With good luck ought to bring back | definite Information about the ! great | sont times, The same Kind Mo of robberics, with scarcely any which is as high as that of Niagara, While MacMillan wing alrplancs ils differing, have taken re- N haunts of place | attempting the | It 1 into Arctic | fastnesses, the party of Bristol mep | d the New York ell on (h toward peatedly. Diamond shops in New 0 be favorite to aternity. One or two Sl London, Sec wries it may be mene priest will ned in passing, were said to have ir way their ob- | that . | the Susan | which clared and ' cetives, are ( to be other 1 thousand the Nascople, Beaver Jliumonds were | avatluble And ot on guard maps, exc Negro porter. most detailed topography. | ference carm hant I'ather McCarthy & | June €o! me NGLAND WILLING FOR LIMITATION a-to v wviee | But Thinks U, S, Should Gall New Conference (P)—Foreign powers in | limiting naval armaments or reduc- rivers—none of which are upon the | jng jand forces, and his intimation pt perhaps those | that the initiative for the naval con- should United States, were regarded toduy ary Chamberlain's declaration ircat Britain would join with great further from the | a¥ the features of his statement in wop were . member ct in front of i difficulty orniation as natives may be able to | pact, " The o place 1s0't & po- nan in sig g as priest speaks the Ine With su=k tkiugs continually hap- dian languages common among na- 1 on Wallace of that secure his release from Culver Mill- in Indlana to be a member of the expedition, which has a definitely practical object in s small -ty section was regret- southern mountaineers ' ta that could not rn cowmen opine t [ ey are ) lan than we 1 forc polic ald to visit the hig centers, not tary academy £ hing to take the risks of getting have been as well as satisfying a spirit | view from the | power lad s this week. of adventure, 1t re a wild holdup will have been noted that the hank got front pi be the Northwest river post of the Co. tribute to the remarkable corpora- do it was discovered paying & | ©f [ sec | The ithor” of a bank holdup thus Ax p 2 bank or important mer Hudson Bay 1 derson, former pal . \an. Nearly every | tion which has followed northern antile | explorations since the ea 1t is perhaps oldest trading corporation on earth, ishment is being robbed some- | the continent. the We hear only about those more details; holdups don’t get space states he sensational of the continent, at least as far as civiliza- -fry uttermost northern parts tion of the papers except in tion reaches. rcely a story of the northland has even been written 1 they occur. It is about time this sort of busi- ss was made harder for the rob- In Boston about a month ago d that a ba | 1ess | without a Hudson Bay tradifig post|ipg fi Th K's au- | would be well nigh impossible for |find a way New | No than e uring in it; and most certainly it it was discov tomobile which carried heavy con-|the Bristol explorers and the the ir one nts money bet an- | York priest to adventure in could be aring signn clal institutions was protc without 1 dec T past maintain pe northern cot lone driver and a helper, W | contact ime with { of these Robbers scem to he able to enter | d and | Factsand Fancies t1 QUILLEN romantic easy prey to daylight holdup men. where valuables ar make comparatively e | comn moved with the handy automobi waitin More pro more BY ROB ection lib only Europ . 3 Tins ion wit by i » police oney more coop: and above merr While th nsists that 1r first green. reds Ie Americar they W Most got of becau: A little operty would Ir s bluc hore g g of valua- elp to I stop the P Sioforms from below come where all Tllinois. . vided for & (s nothing stirring i months. with ike a robbery for ng an nitt On 1 o pre re- to fu ral = fav r end in June. A LESSON FROM i “TOM” LAWSON 1 W, g stops. nomas Lawsor he wrote articles refle yases of f T A I Connecticut rolieys ha O ratio 1o the ¢ were vondering chop housc be will night c in body cou isted i PESTERING THE PRESIDENT Henry W Emil Am AT white men, it is i Classified ad. 1 initiative ational gathering to consider re- duction of land armaments, he salt, might properly come from ei United States or Great Britain, both of whom had already reduced their | s “to a scale 4 regards the invitation might L { summoning the in the party 1t should have |the house of commons in gaining such in- | quring the debate on th last night o security | calling any in- | wer the no larger for the intcrests which to guard.” a naval nited been an seeret “Fear domin of every count | where, among the uni-lateral among the s contemplated, ditions whole, t eoms pst parliamentary adoption te wor! he better States, responsible Washington confer- ition's “jumping oft place” Wil lcroe which resulted in the firat in- ternational agreement for limitation armaments the conquerors conquered, psyehology of the world parliamentary support of th rly days of | poscd security pact to guar frontiers between Germany, nd Belgium on the ground that it and maintains trading posts in the 1:\'013 :““"‘ll_"'l' lwf”:‘r ,"‘:’l(“mrl whole i and the attitude " he said. conference, come that for as had ever asked for pro- ntee the France be a great | ament. | posi- Every- no is there the vanquished. British Government is trying to of this impasse.” pac lljes ag: new t W among those powers whose differences provoked h must be war, to ce in the future and to v dou s remar accord of ry ¢ anti-go some ol British obligations mu ale e deba to (i Co. | avoid recourse to wir The newspaper commentators this ! morning take the iew his th v ) no disposition in this quarter to harr ernment in its delic e W ¢ th T ur e task of ‘see agreement in view have in the direction of | a8k the Lord for forgiveness that the 8 debate on security has re- certain which previously troubked the pub- mind regarding e problem. and fears European the de- vith the rising | at ment rities press still the gov- | of this re- security received a ilroad and the ain | jeveloped today npe ith a violence ¢ Spe tha fact ac raised ng tried to lower by e un open ed cman out ler unt hercaftetr. Professor Matthe cal s city ' ] theatrica nizat 1 over t w ere ounces in di- of the y a ra the tr days ago ilroad again Ge and s suggested in orrs’ drug | structor of ington | over on | mee 10 a x Leonard of ymmit ateh, §f it tch-as- Is out tists and f\fl)d@ls" Girl _Tries to ( Suicide P—( yria o, of the m- attempt- json 10| ANd ®0 brutal, she quailed director. "o | | in | rematn and that the question of the | to the dogs,” t be watehed | 18 manifested | high-toned k- " fishin'."” | That night her mother told her to |2 | “please forgive me for | today but Dear Lord it you'd hecn | usual precautions in 25 Years Ago Today And keep the fact well under cover. | Just how to give my girl a | Farewell, days on the college cam- How About It, Folks! The census man Is on his way And it would boost good cheer, we say 1t at each house and of roomer, He'd ask, “Have you a mense of humor?" each Q. What wind velocity constl- futes a high wind, a gale, a storm and a hurricane? Frank: “So you don't belleve that] A According to the scale used | women dress to please men?" by the United States weather bur- Leonard: “I know they don't|€au, a velocity of from 32 to 88 They dress to tease women.” statute mlles constituteq a high wind; from 39 to 46 milés a gale; from 64 to 75 miles a storm and above 75 miles a hurricane, Q. low does the division of the farm family's dollar for living ex- penses compare with that in indus- tull of thrills, | trlal groups? A. In 1021 from 402 farm fam- | flies in New York state, the Bureau of Home Fconomics found that liv- ing cxpenses were divided as fol- lows: IFood, 39.5 per cent; clothing, 15.8 per cent; rent, 11.6 per cent; fuel, 7.1 per cent; other purposes, 28 per cent. Figures gathered by the United States department of labor fn 1918 from about 12,000 indus- trial familles show that they spent their money in this way: Food, 38.2 St | per cent; clothing, 16.6 per- cent; Choras |vent, 12.4 per cent; fuel and light, 5.3; all other purposes, 26.4. Cash outlay of the industrial familles, however, was much greater. In the case of the farm families about I've got to half the value of the food, all the Start to punch the time-clocks— | rent, and ncarly halt of the fuel start to buy my own sox — | Were furnished by the farm without Wake up in the dawning and for- | direct purchase. Q. What is the best method of sake my morning Snooze! killing the common barberry which spreads the black stem rust of ce- reals? A. The four prime requisites of a satisfactory chemical with which to kill this arc chcapness, avall- ability, effectiveness and a mini- mum of danger to adiacent plants| and to grazing animals. Three chemicals have been found to meet | lazing, | 81l these requisites: Salt, sodium hazing, " betting | arsenate, and Kerosene. Of thesc And commence the bustling, busy, | S8t 18 perhaps the best and most dizzy, hustling | effective. | Blues— | Q. 1In replastering walls that Some Blues! | have already had two coats of plaster and have been painted what | is the best method of making the Mother: “Ruth is on Gene's lap | third coat stick? the parlor.” | A, The third coat of plaster will Father: “Thank Heavens! Then|not adhere to two coats of plaster | she will soon be off our hands!* | Which have been painted. In order —Gertrude, | 10 obtain a good bond upon such | a surface it is recommended that he painteq surface be hacked or | seratched in order to remove as| much of the paint- as possible After this is done a good bond for | Creating Envy I've Got the Now.Its-Graduation- End-af-Recreation-Blues! By Arthur L. Lippmann pus, Gay days, play da When the cute co-eds would vamp us ' And our fathers paid the bills— Smoker days 1In caps ana slickers— Poker day knickers— bye, days breezy Tennis racquets we all twirled. Life is not so free-and-easy In the hard-boiled business when chaps wore Good when in manner | T've got the Got to stop my shirking — gotta start in clerking Blues! So let me Give you all an earful as you hear my tearful Views: I'm sad, for Now I stop my learning and start in my earning— Now T quit my petting and be- come go-getting— Now I stop coquetting, | Parlor Games! Ruinous Luxury reason this country is going asserted Uncle Ike, | because people that they won't their old clothes even when they go are getting so oat will be obtained. | wear | the third Q. Can pimientos be canned at | | home? | e S | A. ‘They can be preserved by | Divine Sanction | brining. A ® degrees brine, madej aged four, had told a lie.| by adding 1 1-2 pounds of sait to gallon of water, will give the hest | The brine must be main- | Ethel, | tained at tlie required strength by | the gradual addition of salt and the | regard to keep- | submerged in the | | brine and the surface free from scum must be observed. If this is ed out there is no reason why | pimientos should not keep in good | condition for at least a year. If| after curing, the pimientos are transforred to glass jars of con- | venicnt size — pints or quarts — completely covered with brine and | tightly scaled, there §s no reason | why they should not keep indefinite- | ly. When using the pimientos, re- | move the excess salt by submerging | them in warm water for 24 hours. | Q. Can a person honestly sur- | render his adjusted service certifi- cate for bonus to pay & bill? A. The oniy legal way by which | money can be obtained or a loan de on the bonus certificate is t provided by the bonus law herchy a certain amount will be ined (he veterans the banks after the policy has been in force If the loan is not paid veteran at maturity, the X presents the veteran's note, secured his policy, to the gov- ernment, It one wishes to make his bonus certificate security for a house or any property or for a| private loan the only way to do it is to make the person, from whom | the loan is secured, the beneficiary | of the policy. This, however, is| risky for the person taking the pol- | icy as security, as the veteran has the privilege of changing the bene- | jary of the policy at any time and | without the of the bene- | ficiary. Q TIs “traveler's A Th travele i= a re- arkable plant of the family Mus- a native of Madagascar. The stem resemblcs that of the | plantain or banana sends out ives only on two opposite sides. lower leaves p as the stem | grows and in old trees they are sometimes 30 feet in A tree has 24 leaves each leafstalk 8 feet long and the blade 4! feet more. The blade of the oblong, bright green and shining. The fruit is succulent but 15 filled with a brilliant blue or irple fine silky fibre, among which 10 seeds. Forty or 50 in & bun bunches may be seen at once tgemiqul 2 on the tree. The leaves arc used 1Al ) or thatch and for other purposes alarm. | i Ethel, “Dear Lord,” prayed tellin® a lie as ‘'fraid of gettin® a lickin' as 1|ing the frults was you'd lied too. Amen.” —Pegey Snowe. Black Bawled the colored belt of political convention The chairman chosen to pilot the thering through the maze of parliamentary procedure, was the only white man present, “I moves you, Mr. Chairman," ed a lighter skinned delegate from the rear ‘of the hall, “I moves you—-" “Hol ler,” Ar- was Down in kansas, a in session o T ri broke in another. The ghair recognized “Whut ‘is yo' point of order “Didn't we elec’ yo' as ¢ two years?" aid,” of it?" what on! s to a p'int of oo the ter. an fo' “Yo' *Whut agrecd the chair. 1 ' yo', “Then wn ni ants zall got to know " W0 years, oft by the S = ‘Wally the Mystic He'll Answer Your Qu gouls their secrcts bared, their confidence by ons T ) have un- T've rould ared g0 now to me,. where th I'd real help, to k He'll Come Wally Girls say them Back I'm somec lover around me hover, all I do! I'm sick of t Yours very truly, Uncut Gt = of What st em consent such a ere tree as Dear 1 it Gem tree The price fame 1s that one sickens of the game. | Go where you're not known as a lover aceae e siikviiy The Green Fever he Wally: Wiil you tell me Dear 2 ) air, ase queeze? [ knees or L often or her “ When 1 get m iver, fiesh near J is covers them not 8| r Shiver You don’t use s a pretty girl a squ or your knecs o fruits grow four arm Sure Fire “This watch ten years.” “Yes. My b and that's what Fattening Disgusted patron lower, bah! All he done was to swallow pins, needles, pocket knives, shears, and a butcher Knife." de show barker: “Yes, my dear he was gettihg too stout and ctor put him on a diet.” | —Harry S. Bloxham. | 1 is guaran- e Sword swal- other stole 0 it he fellow, The Criminal | the a Tricky Triolet) sibly paled! His remark was unglossed, (A He'a Better Be Good! Meyers: “Lucille will make Harry | a good wife.” | Spurgeon: “She'll good husband, tool" 1 Yes, she visibly paled; ! Thought he should have been jalled Since he recked not the cost. Yes, isibly paled— For uge box he'd lost —Estelle Koaur, make him n" H. D. D. 1 Reproduction Forbidden), her rc (Copyright. 192 - | ter, - the 45 is plenty of the yard, right now HERE is In the Fall, coal ave” Raise .plenty of coal in this country and there best of it,in our prices usually ad- vance. In September of this year, the wage agreement with the operators will terminate, Th in a suspension of is very often results mining which fre- quently raises the price of coal above the average. You can fill your bins right now and cut out worry over future conditions. The Citizens Coal Co. Yard & Office, 24 Dwight Court Tel. 2708, Branch Offies, 104 Arch St. Tel. 3206, ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED and the leafstalks for partitions and | often for walls of houses. The bases | | caused general rains during the last | 24 hours from Texas northeastward of the leafstalks usually hold wa- even in the driest weather, more than a quart being readily ob- | tained by plercing the thick part ! of the base, This water, used for drinking in case of need, has sug- | gested the name, | Q. When was the opera T first .produced ? A, Traviata by Verdi was first | produced in Venice, March 6, 1853, aviata | and in the United States December 3, 1856, at New York. Q.. Are the Jeaves of the tea plant always fit to be picked for the making of tea or are they picked only at certain times during the year? Although the tea plant is an evergreen, its leaves are used for tea only during flushes in which active growth takes place. ILeaves are picked from 10 to 25 times & year in Formosa or every 10 to 12 's in Ceylon, Only the tip of the | ghoot or one or two of the young- est leaves are taken. A few older and coarser leaves go {into the| cheaper grades of tea. The tender upper leaves and terminal buds are picked by hand according to one of | the several systems of plucking and subjected to a complicated system of processes before the tea of com- merce is produced. Q. What is the meaning of the term “tenancy at sufferanc A. This is a legal terfm defining the occupation of land. When a tenant enters upon land lawfully, but continues In possession through the neglect of the landlord, he is a “tenant at sufferance.” Such is a holding over after a lease has ex- pired, or the possession of land un- der a ole agreement of Q. rom what i8 wilch made? A. Witch hazel is a term applied to certain shrubs and small trees, one of which is native to America and the others natives of Japan. The American specles blooms late in autumn among fruit of the pri vious year and covers the barc | {wigs with clusters of yellow flow- | ers with thread-like petals. I'rom the bark and leaves an astringent principle is obtained which is much employed in medicine. D hazel Qbservations On The Weathe: Washington, June for Southern New Eng ers this afternoon and night; Friday partly cloudy slightly warmer; fresh to southeast winds becoming by tonlght. : Iforecast for Mostly cloudy showers in north and portions tonight; Friday partly cloudy and slightly warmer; fresh to strong west and northwest avinds. Conditions. The storm that \h:o: —TForecast nd: Show- | probably to- and | i | | | | strong westerly New York probably ast @istern tonight central jof a pa | €d by thelr cries. | tional victims has moved eastward and 18 now cén- tral over Lake Ontario. It ha to Maine. It will probably pass out to sea tonight and be followed by ciearing weather on Friday. The temperature Is high in the southern district an don the Facific coast, but continues cool in the northern sections east of tHe Rocky mountains. . Conditlons favor for this vicinity rain, followed by clear- ing weather tonight or Friday and |not much change in temperature, Warnings for high winds are dis. played on the coast. THO KILLED WHEN BUILDING CRASHES Boston Opens Investigafion Tnto Fatal Collapse June 25 (P—The collapse Iy demolished East Boston tenement building late yesterday, which caused the death of two chil- dren, Injuries that may prove fatal to a woman and another child, and more or less s¢rious fnjury to a doz- en others, was belng investigated to- day by the police and Building Com- ssioner John H. Mahoney. he entire building suddenly buckled into a mass of splintered timbers soon after workmen en- gaged in tearing it down to make way for a ne wcity health unit had t for the day. More than a gcore of children were in the building or nearby Ivaging bits of wood and Boston, The police of the East Boston sta- thn, augmented by reserves, all available fire department ladder | companies in the district and vol- unteers extricated the dead and in- jured within half an hour. Extra doctors and nurses were rushed to the East Boston relief hospital to help the regular staff to care for the victims. Thousands of persons, headed by antic mothers and fathers of the scction bent on locating their chil- Iren, swarmed about the wrecked building, ran after flying ambu- { lances and milled about the' hos- pital until far into the night, Elea- nor Bruno, 5, and John Ferrino, 13, both of East Boston, were the vie- tims. The first rescuers to arrive lo- cated several of the victims by arms, legs and licads sticking from the wreckage. Most of those cuught the collapse were swept ino the basement, however, and were locat- Scarch for addi- continued after dark under fire department searchiights. The-removal of part of a brick rctaining wall and tampering with timbers used to shore up the walls on the part of childresd was advanced as one reason for the collapse after h and three or | central over lowa yesterday morning |a preliminary investigation lasg night e ! | I psquito, Summer time brings ti o ves—the house fly, the es, and fleas, The latest bulle old Pests tells you of comfort and b t t t ready b Fill out CLIP COUP 8T8 EDITOR, WASI York Avenue, HOUSEHOLD ¥ 1322 New y of the b its in loose 1 [ want A five © NAME ST. & NO. or R Ru wevevnnnenne Wa HOUS HOUSEHOLD PESTS s that are the bane of all Bouse- house centipede, the bedbug, ants, » e y our Washington Bureau, on House- effective war on these destroyert coupon and send for it: PON HERE 112 3TON BUREAU, Dally gton, D. C. HOLD PESTS, and enclose here- ge stamps or coln for same. (Herald.) . STATE