New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 4, 1925, Page 6

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6 New Britain Herald| HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY fasusd Daily (Sunday Bxcepted) At Herald Bidg. 87 Church Btrest BUBSCRIPTION RATES 45,00 & Year, 2.00 Thres Month: T6c. & Month. @ntered at the Post Office at New Britaln as Becond Clams Mall Matter, TELEPHONB CALLS Business O Editorfa) Roo protita City. b alation books press room alw open to adver Member of the Associnted r Che Assoctated Press 1 exclusively tltled to the use for re-publicat all news creditsd to 1 or not ¢ eredited in this paper and @ews pubiished heveln, en- n of 50 local Qemver Aodit Burean of Circnlation. The A. B. C, s & natlonal which furnjshes newspajel tisers with a strictly h elrculation. Our circulation are based upon thls audit. This Ineu protection against fraud in newspaper distribution figu.es to hoth natlonal and local advertisers, orgunization The Herald s on sale daflv York st Hotaling's New Stand. Bquare; Echultz's News 8tand. Grand Central, 42nd street. In New Times Entrance | COMBINING TWO BOARDS IN CITY The suzgestion public the park to combine the amusements commission with | commission has much te eommend ft. T rmer functions tor only three months or during the summer, whe playgrounds are open. During the equip- is under remaining ment used the cor tically out nine months the in playgrounds rol of a board that commission ha which to the is of existe public amusements s no place under it control in Atore material during dor- mant nine months and board takes care The really in fact of playgrounds of the city are parks unds er name; Willow Brook is actually a part of a park and is not now of the one of them under the control amusements commission, Some cities regarded as progres- sive have combined their park and amusement A park board than is now the case in New Britain be sary boards larger probably would neces- and in the c f other full play- rdvantage. citi. -committee of the board wo robably hand matters to Lest ground Such a merger would tend to cen- tralize park situation in the city committee in charge re- cejvin e suggestions of a comp tent body, yet being.in direet tonch with playground problems THI: ACCIDENT ON STRAIGHT RECORD ROADS report of state motor that tor accidents vear occurred the high- struct the ir own eye commentary upon that rtion drive 1 with. One can me ogically explain ®ome ening along sharp highway inter- also nc the ex but dent ther with that ed licer 1 dep SPRINGEIELD S RECORD AND NEW YORK'S LL-SHOCKED INTO CYNICISM the noose in Chicago fol- | were lowing his conviction for the der of a drug clerk during a holdup, | not at to pin a new mental disease upon their cllent, In | hearing before the judge to de- mur- a loss a termine Scott's mental condition, he was designated as suffering from ock.” To suffer from shell shock as & result of having participated in the World War {s bad enough, but this call shock” must be Prob- every prisoner who is thrown worse, bly 1 to suffer from At it individual least, any into a cell Ac- statistics of eriminals nowadays to thrown atter having committed crime, cording to whe never caught it Is quite un- r criminals nowadays to be to undergo this kind of r the victims of the ecell they frequently are beyond by The at can happen to them re- shocked anything. worst 1 mai st s a post mortem examination. ROCKWELL POND AND POLLUTION state of the water in Rock- — that ler over, W pond, Bristol verily is something to po As everybody by this time knows, bathing spot frequented than any | a radius of Time | was when to get to Bristol was | difficult than it is to-| New Britain Rockwell pond Is a that is more within 20 miles, mueh day, autoists make the trip with as lttle | regard to the distance as if they | were motoring to the other end cr: the town. The number of New Brit- | ainites who go bathing in Rockwell | pond quife regularly is considerable, | But when a pond the bathtub of thousands of people, one | naturally cannot expect as delight- | more when numerous becomes ful water as is the case at a shore | ‘h — provided the latter is far | cnough removed from the sewage disposal districts of the oltics along t coast, he story regarding the Rockwell lugoon in the Herald yesterday at ast suggested that it might not be free from pollution. How lution is possible before becomes a danger is a entirely much the water a question for ths doctors. We have nds of people bathing in | the pond and haven't heard of any-| seon thous: Lody suffering from poliuted waters, although that 1s no guarantee that it hasn't It would seem. moreover, that on a hot day a good many people risk pollution rather than do without & occurred. are inclined to plunge BUILDING BARNS WITH NEW BRITAIN TOOLS Good mews from the northwest is that there is a 30 percent increase thus giv- in crops there this the hard-pr farmers to recoup their losses of the { few vears. All lines of business ding increas upon rural trade report and this prosperily natur- ally trickles down to the mass of industrial producers in the cities. New Britain is just as vitally af- od in northwest, or this rural prosperity i any other section {lie country, as any other New England city and a great deal more {han most of them, as goods made in this city arc sold throughout the country in large volume built in tools | ny a new barn will be st this year with ht in New Britain LESSON DRAWN FROM RRISTOL HOLDUP noidup in Bristol by youths of a of a n in the nature bhave started help our or at least may cannot s some of bserver the other lawlessness entire- threshold of thought- who fail in doing their in hringing up their off- be much The old right- & to =ms clusion the home m parent who sees his r come home with flowers rden of a £ ndones the act is unwit ng to build up criminal take care them- toward children behind prison evening and asks ARUSING PRIVILEGES AT WILLOW BROOK 1t The park ing b RBrook while in bathing is a wat culprits still en “taking the leavings disporting in the pond the worst aspect of th f the plaint as voiced by the writer ¢ communjcation in the Herald yes- | English channel | muscles and in rare physical condi- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, i1 terday been that [ the campuign oug nether those in charge of the lockers | from a financial standpoint, s well or the hand other, ellcited It s that such Indifference to the public s s sty s | Fgetsand Fancies BY ROBERT seems to have ht to he continued policeman on have | as any much interest, time —_—— MASSACHUSETTS RIOTS | NELLIEN TOO FREQUENT riot Cony who are A The Westwood, Mass. I'l‘:'r‘\'\ resulting {n injury to a dozen per- sons, was not the first of the kind in Massachusetts as recent news re- ports prove. Indeed usetts is acquiring a rather unenviable record ad a state where at Time and chance and speed cops happeneth to them all abundantly Darwin i the des of Masa cent jurisprudence. Among th SonEyekal 1 the cot create ructions of a kind needing | oy, the cians, What s difficult to understand in these Massachusetts uprisings has to | do with mobs quite easily and 1 ngs that ar yple attention of numerous physi- | Tt may fish, but *once ? be why the reluctance of the state | Farly and the the drys to b . rise police to he near the scene of such gatherings before the mob galns headway and does damage. They get there quick enough after the world will list yon among splirlt | riots are over; but it would be | considerably more to the point to prevent such outbreaks rather than | merely quell themr, this irrespective | - of the rights or wrong of Klan semblage. Law and order ought fo with | is always a went out sardine There Hatpins | adopted bright have an even chance after ness and lawless- Stiaariay disorder, canning methods, Troubl and e It's fair enough. A NEW ATTEMPT TO menting in Europe SWIM THE CHANNEL |is trouble over here From the mere standpoint of cov- | - In the matter of printing francs, Caillaux seems fo take that “safety in numbers” idea too literally ering distance, swimming across the is a nonsensical | feat; but it isn't a matter of mere | covering of distance, any more than| Eve, first iw horse racing or walking. All the garden you have!" aftempts made to swim the chan- | Loty (Rerien o) nel — five of day them successful ~— | Science can ex have been means of demonstrating cept why the physical ability of man out of | clamation and his natural element, It Miss American ain everything ¢ ‘Heavens!” is an ex- “Hell" a cuss word A man needs the jary. “Perfectly swimmer, in | seem to describe svimming between Calais and | proves. Dover she will have been the first of her sex to do so. Other women have it, spite of the evident of women swimmers — many foremost swim- | mers being women — none o far has succeeded in making the haz- ardous water journey. The difficulty confronting women rabu- doesn't he ap- a gre: darlin everything Gertrude Ederl “succeeds are no spite the picture nothing else to martrydom. There Tdle title do, Wives i lias it tried but in ghe works adaptability as channel swim- mers, of course, lies in the tax upon strength and physical stamina, with St Yell fire at a movie and half the flappers will rush out without wait- ing to slip their shoes back on man s more liherally en- dowed After Webb channel for the swam first across the 1876, time in Civilization d the feat was not again equalled un~ | Wonderfully, and Ul 1911 by Burgess. The year 1923 | “hIna probably aliens was a notable one for accomplish- ment of the task, no less than three| A velops 1lhie civilized call the nerve in Chinese men wife in the if you i a person who wishes to midst of your favorite will haye know, story, coffee, men — - Sullivan, Tiraboschi and Toth — swimming the in year, Tira- boschi breaking all records by get- ting over in 16 Webb, in and 45 minutes Just as th in slightest in | it is only soms horse racing, so the ability of .man | some more over tem- pestuous strait in that If the 5 min- | private 21 hours | riehia® patch morals of nations life, v proceed in a certam v 1 in hours and 2 to have 1575 took itermelon utes, automobile hasn't Since the rol a question American will his souvenirs ery at 8t. Peter's, until bragzing the decreased interest ot be time about to navigate the waters in swift in| major swimming achievements. For ships has not decreased interest Carre e hour,” said mentioned ot this sentence callers remained for an “and I he, never a person to battle with the turbu- once clothes. lent waters of the channel for even (Protected by of 16 hours taxes the human body Associated Fditors minimum Tne.) a is & feat that to the | 25 Years Ago Today Yet how fleeting is the fame that| Tacal R {the Wisconsin conver held tomorrow Roher limit of endurance, even though the | swimmer be endowed with pertact tion. | vhlchisl an Lol attaches (o a successful consumma- ot could offhand remember the names be he fien the feat. Searcely anyonme .S "0 7% O il of those who have succeeded except | nation ¢ Wehb, There 2 1t Elec laurels. It Miss Ederle swims across || Letween A. and to be remembered because she will i poss the first fo win the will fiel \ a team m Roche. T from her name better chance ngl may have a slation inin Dr have been the first woman to ne- Hayes, . Williams, M. Rhod gotiate the S Pride American girl being the trip fn the possibility of an | first of her |croft, W. P, Fe ing on James That she is biding her |, .; into the gex to swim the channel naturally | lends the maximum of interest to her attempt of time and will not venture water while conditions are unfavor- able has been indicated hy repcated | 2050 | Works, lert |y postponements, the last only yester- e lay The um is NEEDLESS MURDER BY A HEEDLESS CRIMINATL tion for many fine brought 1 Jacoh been a holdup £ Abelso with such unneces- SR person complair Iy eruel results as that perpetrated Denver. reporied in yester- folled by day's p was a desperado who a woman's scream, began shooting indiscriminately at nhia Brew occupants an automobile, 18 in a critical =0 canght on; there doubtless wiil ining persons to his ing his vietims nal arking r leads to the effort y-o1, to| ¥ conclusion ited v that really has be way egistrars of the November presidential The town election in from the old losk each one of the \ the city for his or her infraction Qctobes “What a beautiful | '7{:”2 Maxson Faxiare Junay, wel 1t Folks, that fig | vet 11 ? Leave You, Folks! Wwe ag ) our they e om rvents ning from Sad Faie Hear about 8i visited next Ilis house one ni i morning they found Stone Walker do it Wells: “No. did it himself, when he st his head under Ferrible! Did the bur- Stone The Best Peo By Luther D. H ke to talk with Hen Chough p of Ie's f e's a thought t By those wl I met I s day; He said that he had heen away Had gone from New York to Bom- | thinking. And ont sinking rywhere [ ways took me out homes of people said best ones in the city to thinking that st People’ like all other far as dough's c erne went to see be point more | Some of them feed the kitty suffer feet; ith the at hats to ladies whe fish with bones t those they look Ais And so when to the | “They with corns on their 20 cold, sweat with the n they meet at chok n; down on, the Worldi theyic ‘Brhold, you're not so good as 1a Hokum Natural Solution A What do you think tation print im the 1 Vays answer of news to papers Henry: “That time is it ag less in will right itself common t all.” Gertrude Crime getting . go s00n won't be news 4 The Privile dat srrible ed Sex ter ccalled me other down something day.” complaincd Uncle Ike, “just because 1 happened to trim my nails in public. And all the time she was fellin' where 1 off- at, was usin’ her puit and her lipstick somc ndalous right out on our fr the whole town could me got she powder hing it porch where see her Prof. Bell and his little daughter, Dorothy, aged three, entered, a re taurant and sat down at one of the little table Dorothy was enjoying th occasion, and, in imitation her daddy. took menu card by her place, and looked it over as if she w ¢ studying the it The waiter approached the table, ind Prof. Bell asked, with a smile of amusement, “Well, Dorothy, decided to orde Dorothy 100 b r a with perfee trinmphantly I think I'd some Mrs, Ruth Darling Shultis. up the ms. what have you iously then she up ser moment, ossession, S like college cheese The Traprock Musenm of Unnatural History By Dr. Walter E. Traprock e Astronomical Department doing work in the astronomical department of the mu. during the midsummer months when the stars attain their We shining hours are great | I the | We seum, greatest the brilliance, are improv- so to speak | To many people the stars seem far off, remote, aloof, but, when ene learns to think in terms of millions of miles, distanca is annihilated have made the int ery, in observatory that there i hod and the heavens. The ement E and import discov- at order in of onur Derby, me controlled. The nets s iz a one-wa group of topic, looks sing Trish on “Englan curiously We public Gre one atness.” Tt n ng hard on th lik onr ow communic g witl t I think T may say, in that we have established weeks agc r museum hich and 1 distin the wave length hook stion be a another? effect Ma it s. In fa wo on o is very tly caught powerful n the ot on our the v Bar sun-spots and their share in quakes in Santa looked int matter grand j symptom definitely s that there is a direct rela- the development of ne carefully It may be One estab- ustify it ned over {o tt rt spots on 1 but it is a Turn About and T 1 do you What prised to in no tches T had ed 8o much Americ idea n the wa American doughboys “Mo#t ‘of the wounded recovered long ago |through the chinks ITONS ANSW n RED answer Intormation ng to n Bditor, tain Herald, Washington Bure New York Washington, enclosi ots in stamps tor reply. Medical, legal and marital t given, nor can ex- be undertalen, Al s will receive a per- igned requests can- All lelters are to by . Ques two ¢ other questior sonal reply not con i m Tential ) Did th exico earlic 1l United States recog- on - government than Great Britain? Obregon wernment was ized by the United States Septemb 3, 1923 Great has vecognized this ment in Mexico. . Q. Did President Wilson ev n the national prohibition act? President Wilson vetol Jistead enforcement act, C 7. 1919, It was immediately both houses of ¢ veto, sher on Britain never govern t rock uged as the walls atistactory as plas ing 2 ASs Rock” is the trade sum wall board. While material is perlaps not 5 in as satisfac- three coat plaster erected it is an rooin as natie for gy this type dury tory a work e wall i Dmi Are rilable or 1 properly it 1l substitute plus war the United States t agriculture? \. Yes, shipments of pyrotol in rload lats 1o groups of farmers are from Gihbstown, N. J., Wisconsin; and Dupont, Detailed information shipments can be te agricultural ex- from the U. 8. jculture Japanese econ Q atill 2 lepart ent o bedn made rkadale, Wasl ton. concorning th secured from tension partinent Q How (he United A serviees or of many tates navy On June 30, 102 These had heen in r of yeurs Are (1 are in the for e were a num- any figures show- the total value in gold coins by the United States up to time? aniount up to 1923 was $19,574.427 Q. Who fired the first shot from e p in the World A an rican battles! AMichael B, Chockie, from the 8. “Supply,” April 7, 1917, What is the meaning of the I'rency IFier sans Tache A Prond withov stain.” Why are Frenchmen some times 1 “Irogs A. Back in the hen England and France were at off and on for a good many the English had @ low opinion Frenchmen, and their small cakness (as they fact that they ate Hence they were " which term be- rogs.”" distar motto * sixteenth century years of the ged valor of to attribute ture and general the frogs claimed) to snails and ame curtailed Q. What is Capetown fo 7,000 miles, What i glass’? to the e from 1iro? Q meant by “burning lens, nsually foc A. This is a convex of comparatively short praluci con- fo- convex lens will do the work, the lar he glass the speed- burnin Does the f distribution? ral Mher phea birds or t state game de- however, write to the thefr o Any jer the Q 3 phe department gricultur sants for The No. ses not distribu rtment its other game ir the have done re should warden of eral of yd inquir chief game state What the total wheat of the United States for 1so {he total corn and apple for t vear? iy 575,000 Q was crop same Wheat 4,305,000 bus )l 34,303.0 barrels How should white i Wact soap the d shels; els and ap- Q. <) satin he she A Do rub, Rinse well put bluing Hang In a Tron on the it in Ik and pure snds not i in in squeeze veral the last ters, and > water w rin ace to side Wh numt in an is ever the largest installed of cylind is at T St fhe scbond larg- stockyards Nlinoi is said to be at Chicaro Who haracters in Shakes: terlude in “A Dream.” (hishe was a Babvloni den beloved by Pyran o lived in adjoini house g to parental opposition the garden urting only \rranged at the tomb of arriving fir fled at of a lion which had She bur Mid Owi do their tashion they conld Tn t they n the app w his ist rance ed itself her rot just an iropy on ox and the lion stain the ting smashed idents.” T now ar in auto acc Thomas Proest Not Hard 1 don't see chorus girls!™ as long as the stage 1 bear how you manager them I can them.” Beth W 1025, Reproduction _ Forbidden), mhoff. (Copyrig or | own | and | incur- | Another Lot that boes on Sae $6 ) It seems that as soon as folks reached home after shopping here they told their neighhorhood about the wonderfnl sale at the “Vogue"— All Leather: Most All Sizes 6.00 and $7.00 Values Early and Pick Your Size $8,00 and $9.( Values JLLING FASHIONABLE SUMMER SHOES AT OLD-FASHIONED BARGAIN PRICES ALL EDUCATOR SHOES for sses and Children MARKED DOWN 25% Off ON ANY PAIR ORE Women's WHITE PUMPS and OXFORDS Wid, Canvas, Buck All Kinds of Heel 00 and $6.00 Values VOGUE SHOE SHOP 236 MAIN STREET In the Heart of the City explosives | ed h arri with blood 1 hastily concluded th had been devoured and so himself, and Thisbe, r-turning, molated hersclf on his corpse, Q. What is referred to when one of the “Black Assize’? This is a popular name com- memorative of an extraordinary |episode «of jail fever which broke | |out at Oxtord, England, at the close |alleging lof the assizes, July 6, ¥77. Con- |temporary accounts describe it as | | having originated in the court house | |immediately after a sentence to loge | Stamford | his ears v passed on Richard | Russell Sage and heir of a-large for- |Jencks, a bookbinder accused of |tune, in specifications filed today |Sedition. 1t was popularly interpre- |With Special Master John Keogh: lted as a divine judgment on the| Slocum failed with $168,000 in ruelty of the sentence; but the |debts, He listed his sole assets as | phenomenon is satisfactorily ex- [not exceeding § plained hy the pestilential atmo- Simon Lederer, here of the adjoining jail, then |enue, New York city, who says and long aftervards, a seat of mis- | Slocum owes him a judgment ery and disease. From the 6th of [$23,091.33, In objecting against Tuly to the 12th of August, 510 per- |discharge as a bankrupt, decis ns are said to have died in Oxford [that he neglected to list among | |and the neighborhood of this ter- |assels *h= ownership of 20,000l rible malady, among whom were the |of capital stock in the National Tir hief officials, most of the jury and tion and an insurance poi any members of the university. ler value of near- Women, poor people, physicians, vi | itors and children to have | escaped the infection Pyramus o Thisbe killed | VIOLATIONS CHARGED | Stamford Man, Heir to Large For- | | { : tune, Accused of Violating Bank- spe | A ruptey Laws of State, Bridgeport, Aug. 4 (A—Chargos criminal violations of the have been lodged H. Germain Slocum, Jr, a grandson of the lats bankruptey act gainst 5 West End a\- hi Iy $1.000 said Mormon Museum Draws Crowds of Tourists Salt Lake City, Aug. 4 (A—Mum- mies of ancient southern Utah cliff dwellers, weapons, agricultural fm- plements and other relics, declared by some archeologists to. e among fhe finest specimens in existence, are housed in the small museum of the Mormon church, located on Temple block here. The museum, visited annually by thousands of tour! also contains many relics »f Mormon ploneer days such as ning wheels and houschold fm- plements, What is declared to be the first <o built in Utah — it is nearly rs old — stands just outside musenm building. PICNIC IN COLLINSVILLE | Schiller Lodge, No. 25, 0. D. H of Collinsville hold the second annial pienic on Collins Hill, Tor- (which is one-half | mile sonth of the Nepaug dam). | sunday, August 9, The committee, onsisting of Rudolph Tharau, liew Schinkel and Conrad \ke, have planned to make this a better affair than ever, and cordially invite all to attend They have & cured the Surdam to furnish musie for the affernoon, Those | coming from out of town can make .conneetions with the jitney which will rington avenue, Hen- Bros. {eonvenient Torrington-Hartford mins hy the pienic grounds. ho 100 y the main Qbservation Mayor FitzGerald Wants Great Issve of Bonds Ofl Tlte Weat/rer |« Haven, Aug. 4 (P)—An issus of bonds to the amcunt of “one or two million dollars” for new schools, fire houses, police stations or other s- [needed public buildings, exclusive of la city hall, is suggested by Mayor | Fitzzerald in a message to the board |of aldermen last night. Need of defi- N-|nite program for additions to the ng | system with considera- [tion of disposal plants and sugges- tions for the appointment of a music | committee to have charge of municl- pal concerts, were other matters brought to the attention of the al- ages from the mayor. Aug. 4.—Torecast for ew England . | washington Southern Jnere ing cloudiness tonight, probably fol- | lowed by showers Wednesday. Not much change in t | erally fa moderate Fore ewer easterly for I Mostly cloudy ton 1 day: probably sho in south portion; | temperature; gentle | becoming moderate e | Conditions he pressure that weather in this : try is advancing northern New En is relatively low tates from the xas. tt thunde several plac southern states, | Northern | perature remain same as y lay ditions favor for | weather followed loudiness. York tern New and s Wednesday little change in varfable winds | dermen®in mes The HARVEY & LEWIS Co. 85 West Main Street w_Britain, Conn. -OPTICIANS FIELD GLASSES $23.00-$28.00 high | falr | coun- | over | Brietiva| area of producing ion of th eastward nd r to] and from the and m- the Con- reported in the interior, the Ohio vall ew practically morning. this _vicinity by | THER o Eaw 5 girafte at AINT NO H ANIMAT cifcus for the first ength. u know that are not gn? smake? Have you been told that a cat care v ire A that a drewning you t scarch for fleas e vou heen that it's dange to drink too mu: Do you think that cats can sae in the dark; that that el months bat er live; that thun- time, That's prey ght £ s ne: | hs. fables and Bureau's elow and mail & com FACT AND FANCY 22 New Y EDIT Avenn Wetiy elled 1 loso here- for same. and en or coln, T want a NAME : Sease STATE ...... 1 am a reader of the New Britain Heral

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