New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 14, 1925, Page 6

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" i | the American nment will | New Britain Herald gover to pay Liberty Bond holders HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY |4 1.2 per cent interest on the money | It less than two per it loaned to will recelye | trom Italy | or the tirst five years Italy wil 10 Ttaly, Dally (Sunday Excepted) 1d Bidg. 61 Church Blieet. cent | | pay no Interest; t Dy then next yeurs SUBSCRIPTION Year. 2.00 Thres Mont RATES | per | the 1t wi nie-clg of one cel W until t rate Rt two per co is he Po Clase Entered a! A Second t A payment, or in 1980, Matl M Haly's capucity (o pay was e 1 one-fifth thut of Great Rrit LELEPHONE CAL 8 he ought to have no JImMdulty Business Ofice tortal Roy paying the debi under the gener » \ s will arrangement. Few of us — to sce it happen. The ounly profitable ad Tl in the Clty. Circuln press room always open o advertlsers. | Lofor debt arrangement must come Congress for ratification, but would be to cavil about Member of the Assoclnted Press. Fhe Associated Press 16 ox: 1y | titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to 1t or not otherwles FOREIGN TRUSTS credited in this par also local | news published here MULCTING Dritain = housewives ] oF and — ave n wondering for cther coffee a year ov 1 it cost Member Audit Bureau of Clrculation The A. B. C. 's a natlonal organization which furnishes newspapers and advers tisers with a strictly honest yaie of cireulation. Our circulation statistics are based upon this audit, This \nsures protection traud In newspaper distribution figures to both national and local advertise was worth the charged for it or why 50 mucel, ‘he the compared with formerly, that the facts are increase in price of the past year netted in itelle the An coffee specniators the South rerica mere ba of | The York at Herald fa on Hotaling's Bquare; Schultz's Ne Grand Central, 42ud Street, ————————ee s Ne 000 more than they other- wise would have received, When 1t 18 eeali fee speculation, 1 that this cof- | stabilization, other STATE DEMOCRAT AND LEADERSHIP the in a price orization” and Thers Demo- | n eratie party i8 no reason why be ehoosing a national committee terms under which it magquer: need lurry [ades, las been made possible | man | through from loans to the speculators v to succeed Homer Cummings, American sources, the people | who resigned in order to have less | have additional reason to be indlg- | nant But Brazil, other to worry ahout. Nor need it be in a hurry to name a state chairman fo A. the province of Sao Paulo, succeed Fdward Yeomans, who suftore alight rebuit the the state a will become a Superior ¢ judge in Thinking it til December 10 ought to be a great urt day when American de- February. out It un- | partment of objected to the plan of Amerfcan bankers to loan | help. Numerous cditorial writers |the province another neat sum with the state — Democratic [ which to control the coffee situation The had throughout R make the Opposition to Thomas J. Speila and Republican—will he pleased to | for another year. state depart- plenitude of suggestions in [ment, of course, no power 1o meantime. enforce its ideas upon the bankers, but the e they latter knew well that the | gestion Congress might be induced very for national committeeman and to David I, man—in spite of liis experience from 1914 to 19 party in Connee to went contr to Fitzgerald for state chair- to pass a law restricting such loans indicated that the 'altogether in the future. endeavoring by for better leadership, cnt is But Sao Paulo was not rebuff improve its circumstances for Jong. It simply appealed to En the and Jooking about € such an evil and That the ership than it has been receiving is | lish bankers and got money, 10 a| he is can found, This is not [ matter of between 30 mil- | not reprehensible. lons of dollars. Now the coffec party requires hetter lead- | raising province can buy up all the it in enough coffe sury again, store let refron ware- | a belief current in many Democratic | hon ind 0 circles; and the need for such im- | en the to take of Nice look, isn't it? | Hoo care indicated by fact the | party provement is hest posaible price out- | that ha an whereas v in the sta in many citics d. It Slippe Secretary er sa than towi the state build the cities and ine ago that foreign trusts | wide organization wishes to were controlling altogether (oo many upon the sucecsses in products consumed in America, and towns that hay owed Democratic will be that were helpless unless dras- Hr nit {odine Iver, The gains it naturally tic action were taken evidently to « 1 to ec requirenents, ber, potash, quini sisa some dyestuffs, quick and NEED FOR OBEYING gtad e BUILDING LAWS hav thes being kept as pul will bear The coffec barons of South the to nection Amer- | fea are picking Sitialn pockets of the | of man, {eionie will now be American people the tune more than a dollar child their for every voman and in the country, ne regular 1 told than thelr grab | not 1o mention wo dollars money on me nored during t constriction, PEDERAL TAXES TO REMAIN HIGH one's el cductions” t cannot be lifference ur in e o payment 1t the NEROUS TRI ITALY Gl ATMENT Kl 1 1 we treatment. ¥ It | tee; they would make a tax reduc- | elimination NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1925, tion of $0600,000,000 and take lon The time to pay taxcs | or to pay oft tho natlonal debt Factsand Fancies BY RUBERT QUILLEN plan 1s bad. T is when one has the money to them, during a time when the = and e generally ac- pied rhaps the i clreulation most high All things point to lower prices much money In is seulskin, § ure uniformly pric i o to cconomists lonel ve know Mitchell complex, what's 1 has a ording will be ler future He v great 1 tax money in dits are migguided don't realize that only nation. al with honor, who can yuar than It is at pre Tt the mocratic scheme went reductions te through tax but wou L A child if app is norma liree par from now noyears which much more al, it would be = ficult to ralse the money than now Americanism: Voting ofticr; wondering ™ asin or in the near future, an ass into In an argument over government why vernment between the Springficld Republican and the Wall | finances fndulged in 1z aworlng | f ! nd the natlona are of prote of one another those Journal—tl; need gery ie latter a radical r the Re. duction now 4 former counselling caution publican came to bat with ney 1 overlooks “Irederal expenditures be reduced mueh farther policy of economy, In spite President Coolidge's honest forts, the number of tederal employes been fnereasi while the ordinary cxpenditures of tho government, now that the war activities have been pretty completely liquidated, already show a rising tenden- c¥. Economy intelligently ns well as rigidly applied s always & to bo desired and manied, but what can be expected with the war department now &pend ing over $350,000,000 a year, on an cconomy b w8 com- pared with $182,129,305 in Iaet before the war? The veterans' bureau alone cost last £400,000,600 and it i the life Erown-up people hy s American of 18 on fhe tourist -got-t joned 1 sport button,” game. The “Who's got has was new the an na- i6 thority?" An ay e as warden, timate tamilies is fo get to get with " w haps on we are wholly eivilized gomething will be done time pore ahout slacke Sophistication fa just the re that the stock exchange anything « us. paliza- yea tio fen't like Santa voar will tme of now aliv “Again, we cannot lgnore the fact in outlining policy that, if another war comes, this country will be better able to it successfully if the na- tional debt at the beginning of it is virtually wiped out. This is cerfainly an argument for a relatively rapld retirement of the present natfonal debt and the high taxes attending such a policy.” over not One sm canism for of the privileges consists in other Ameri- Ameri- of ling fellow cost the less ] | An Unel Inhe v Sam, it that means ks, from 1tion wage Another good test of personality Mellon the [1s an empty gas tank forty miles of the Seeretary desires entire natlopal | from anybody who knows you, debt fn 25 years. There is a p R Rl e e e e siderable progress, and always ove the protest of “intelligent minori- | thes.” | ¥ tude of good argumentation favor- ing such a policy, Such tax reduc- tion as could be accomplishe meanwhile would he merely nomin- ; = Aesop's fox leaped and leaped fo get the u at's . a3 is the case with the plan now We direction “Darn, said bubble in Florvids grapes under way. cannot get very far a it the governmental in any well-adve Do the young men seem less eager Well who wouldl hunt | the rabbits would tised economy s to rabhits flanked by a high éverhead of fhrec '“'”‘l rs of a9 billion in intercst and oth el expenditures, the pr nearly two billions including pay irplus (e ments upon neipal, totalling u year. The chiet cloud with a silver lining in sig that natfonal debt can b band} a5 ime s, and I n slightly reduced sinee (Protected by Assoc Ine.) fated Tditors, Observation On The Weather Washin 1 ® weather 1y dssu 25 Years Ago Today Tl state Klett, chairman of the republican ward | committce reports that George chajrman of the second this ) ittee, received $750 R G D the prohibition expended $23.75 Britain has) ason on storni w Advisory, | warnir lantic m 1 latt, chair- m. - I Storm At cakwate great in va contit 1 T Disturbance Lawrence man of town com- it The Now will et b open Noveml th homy opponents ¢ P Ul ¥ northeast; will caw with St. Joes of n- R sino. polo Hart- o ; oon and tonight vill be o game between t and Morse ] ford Travels Frem Africa To See Nyracuse Game NoX Nov. 14 (& —Har c) Whi Or- ny 1 her af half i Lindel the Hera jout the Swedish-Republican not «uits as there factions withi nthe communic states that s club correet, are are veling 1 10 see Syrac traditional rival bold way not G wor the state Arcl port of s ws the been 15,442 on number stadium tos where he long has been en- ! h work for the Cen- cxpedition, White came » to see | team in the first since he a uniform himself 1y this tral African |to Syracu: ading | scored ain, fs havir to Prin is old fme 1l on by 11 to lowns £ action for worc 14 | Manchester ainville Muthodist church ms home on | ening with a | of vocal | and recita- | of G Assails Foes Aid Hill s 1 ting inetrumental music i Telegraph Co hoard of select- | e to thelr their route and re- to pass around | he town, B, F.| ttorney for | | tives of the Ameri- | T raten t Mr. Sternber artford last > The imself was minute, Clerk Ju T City clamoring of their party. expeeted soon to tak consol Anti-Saloon 1 Way figure clared Close Calll f er statc B is e William superi ling ned 12 Miller: “H radio, and there $10.” VU ared Whee amas that en- able him (o &it oa the Wd" { Der a man living [a palr of asbestos pa au- | &he Maxson send all communications 1o Shop Lditor, care Of the New | Britain Herald, and your letter | will be torwarded (o New York. || S . Just a Difterence in Method, Folks! he hold-up ma blackjack and a gun, no longer wears a mask to pl lis game He's the guy that t twenty “put e just the | alling | retived 1o longer He ay fills our coal-bin bucks a ton, up!” gets 'HE BLOODY By Wallo M. TRATL Bayliss In Bii Land cal Thnes i full of strife unting for a wife; lis sight, and life— lissed mson, The Holy When men He lost his hair When Delilal n R i Times When Romans, with a mighty shout, Had put their galleys all to rout, The sword and asp smoothed matters | ont When Cleopaira kissed Antony. Medieval Times Venice, love's sweet pang bloody feuds go hang! both the death knell T In lovely Radc Yet ancient for t\m rang Julict 1 When ~d Romeo. | In Modern Times e Tloody trail of Kisses thick Still marks the modern youth, love- sick; He gets smeared hy too much lp- stick! When Mary kisses Johnny! on. Tillie! “Was it thrilling when Bol rm around you?” “If was breath-taking!” . H. 0'Connell, Millie ut his Tillie: From Our Own Tnfant-trs Drill Regulations | The process of dressing little Bet- ty was made pleasant by asking her what the noises of hier animal friends were, On corfain mornings a new sound would be added was having a very awake her il procedure: ound a-moo- characteristic 1 or One day when hard time 1 Mother started the “Betty, what gocs getling us “What goes aronnd a-meowing?” “A cat” Then came a new one from Moth- e “What roes around a-huttin Sleepy Detty looked at the [bloomers which were being fa nd drawled: “A button-hole.” —Mrs. H. M. Campbell. little red, TIgnorance Is Bliss An old-fashioned gentleman who < mot very well versed in etiquette d his son at college one day. There he was invited to attend a dinner. When coffee was cd, he poured the hot coffe the cup into the saucer. The young student, feeling very mich embarrassed as all eyes were furned toward his father, asked in a whisper: “Why do you do that, {fatter?” The old gentleman {awered: “You go to colleg leven know that! Wh cool the eoffee, | on Rositzke. unahashed, an- and don't 1 do it to - The | { ler building permit fees and fees for | whale of a time,” or The Silent Drama? So 1t Goes “It's a comy life.” “Huh?' “Some wives starved and oth- fed up.” e Ada Meadler, WALLY THT MYSTIO He'll Answer Your Questions Before and afier taking mates |Doubts rack both male and female pates To Mystie Wally And you will pror ErieE elief. N yo Correspondents, Be Wally wish o prope 1 old enough Explicit oodness knov time T try assed WHY. st, Old Dear, hit more clear. sed, in her eyes, rwise? emha fally, or Another Widow Heard From Wally lom loy ols ais ver on will end m o married me is for g0; LIKTA NOE ar Likia Noe: You can de is no en go, I when they swear, to knc there! (Copyright Reproduction Forbidden) totes a | actlon, |* " [sion this week when he que from | 28158S0EEE0A01ERATLENLAAEASINEIEAIEALEICAIAMMBMMLAIAL | duy with us and go Makes Random Observations On the City and Its People f1323sdiensatasatensisaiziataninaziitanidsiant Merchants are looking forward to | electrical permits. Ithe greatest Christmas trade In ot e’ B iy commission years and buors are scouing the | o H b and the common council have al- Wwholesale markets for merchandise. | il have sl Already the approach of Christmas |1¢a0y recognized the need for a is belng heralded by the appearance | deputy building inspeetor and filled in storc windows of scasonal SUEECS- | that need on a temporary basls by tions and desirable gifts, |uppointing a deputy. He accepted | Si the cold weather &€t A0 t)a office on a part-time plan, but |trade is veported to have been good not only has he found it necessary | {In clothing stores for men and |ty devote the full working duy, but | |women, There las been & steady |ho and the chief inspector now keep | [demand for conts in particular [ihe office open several hours longer ver before have the lines and | (han ordinances require, and still {materfal of women's coats been | wannot keep up with building, Al | {more beautiful with & lavge Varicty | though bullding activity at present from which to choose. is abnormal, the growth of the city, | | 1wt it s the Christinas shoppiag |and the frequent and systematic in |season .merchants are anticipating. [spections of new and old buildings | Industrially New Britain is prosper- [required by zoning will necessitate | ous. Announcement in the appoinement of a full-time | {Herald that factories are wor deputy on a permanent basis, L 95 per cent of normal is certain| 1t should not be difficult to o stimulate trade i will |that a situation taxing the services the stocking up of Christ-lof two building inspectors would | merchants can |make it equally advisable to have that their plumbing and electrical deputies, |Kivery new building job requires |numerous inspections of plumbing jand clectrical fnstallations, Defec- ro doing their Christmas shopping [tive plumbing and clectrical jobs are Iven at this early day there more easily hidden Qisguiscd wealth of merchandise suitable [than are building operations and |} for gifts, Small articles which can |unless the inepectors are vigilant, | be convenlently stored away are in |damage may result. This is par- |demana, {ticularly true of the electrical work A flood of money will be released |gince it makes conflagration possible labout December 1 when banks {should the wires spark near Inflam- | {which e conducted Christmas | mable substances [clubs will send out eheeks to de- [ The danger feaved by the commis- | the general assembly has always di- {positors, These funds in themselves [sioners Is that an exceptionally well | rected the education of children and {vepresent a tidy fortune, the great- [prepared set of building, plumbing | has created, as its instruments in fer part being disposed of in the pur- fand electrical laws, the fruits of 12 | towns and cities, school committees, |chase of Christmas gifts, {years of work by city officlals and | 7hese committees recelve no author- So far as can be predicted at this |which have the approval of numer- | ity from the local government and |date, it seems that the shopping {ous authorities on the subject will|gre responsible for their conduct {season this year will be the largest |be disregarded if a staff of inspectors | gyiy {o the general assembly. since the era immediately following |sufficiently Jarge to erforce the or- | Judge Gaffney's statement fs well the war when pocketbooks were [dinances is not malntained, LSl R M i {filled to bursting with high wages. | While it is perhaps the first e | ion or what an authority considers 1t may even come up to the spend- [the common council has been asked | o 1o true situation, It {ing level established then. The ithorize the appointment of em-| ¢\ 1ing 1y every citizen, particularly {population increascd consider- | ployes doubling an existing staff, the | ¢y e o 5 nieed knowledge lably in five years, merchants have [weight of arguments appears to Im‘mr Tow (onnectieubiwent idbont tha become more progressive and many |with the bullding commission and | oot S EE G G e minds of [new stores have been opened, offer- |favorable action would appear to be | @00 B0 T8 B S ling greater inducements to people {in the clty's inters ¥ : A |to come out of their homes to shop. | No one in New Dritaln has bee more intimately .in contact with the school department than Judge I I, Gaffney who, for many years, sorved with credit to himself and honor to the city as president of thn board of education, No citizen iy more familiar with school depart- ment affuirs or more capable of ex- plaining the responsibilities and powers of the hourd, Ior this reu- | son, his statement regarding the re- lation of the school government and the city government, printed el where in this paper, doserves have weight, Judge Gafiney had heen asked for his views on the re ctive author- ity of the school board and the city government. Ever since the con- solidated school district was ereated, with permission of the g 1 sembly, there has been a confllet o opinlon regarding the lengths to which it might go. ‘This hus been cspeciully true concerning appro priations of money, Supporters the school board have declared is the duty of that board look out for the education of New Britain’s children and, in carrying out the duty, the board could justify its expenditures. Citizens whose in- terest in education was not strong, insisted that the city government ad completa authority over appro- priations and could snap its fingers in the fuce of the school board. Jufige Gaffney traces the history of democracy in Connecticut back to 1638, when, he say. Hooker at Hartfor sermon wherein I enunciated the first fundamental principles of democracy in the colonies” 1rom 1818, when tl | present constitution was adopted, mayor, building to t to Lo timulate oils hecause ceed with confidence |wares will be bought Because of disappointing exper- fiences in past yeurs many residents mas |pro ‘H'l\',. or ached a oul as | TOSE: AR TACKLE | Storrs, Nov. 14.—When the ( — A few random observations of the Commissioner Parker echoed the | Observer: e I necticut Aggles line up, again expressed opinions of many (-mzlwm‘ We hope every loyal citizen r»r‘),hwh‘ Island State today Nanfeldt at a meeting of the police commis- | New Britatn has his blackjack ready | (%0 0o 50 e Snpe yn tioned | for this aftel hon beiNaw | L0 aEELE AT oS ¥ or this afternoon, when the New s tas e nlanig ¢ . : A e | able to start. advisability of another “lane” | Britain-Hartford High school game {2 My s\ Criinipine! e on Main strect to be used by fire el | : 2 i |a scries that started in 1897, ing to alarms. | d rence between this game and a To automobile drivers the streets |war was that the football casualty {are heginning to resemble a foot- |list contained no deaths from dis- {ball field with lines running from |case—there were plenty of men 'carh to curb nearly every five yards. |killed in action wounded, and miss- This 1s an cxaggeration, of course, \ing. In fact, the term “gridiron” but ¥y call the aftention of city pplied to football is sald to have officials to a situation which is not |originated at one of these games, (improvin There are lines here, |when gridirons were used most everywhere telling driv- | effectively as weapons by the inter- ¢ 1o stop, where not to stop {ference, Now all this is changed, » to take curves, There |and while they haven't yet become wre Janes for pedestrians, which are re is a chance yet. In becoming obscured. There are curb and they t time out for tea. narks near hydrants and lines ex- | Well, last Saturday New Britain tending out into the roadway at fn- | High took time out for coffee. We tersections. lexpeet the only time out this after- On the west slde of Central park | noon will be for blood transtusions. is a lane for drivers who intend to Now that Governor Trumbull and swing around the park and head the movic producers have patched | north but few use it despite the fact [up a truce and the film exchanges that it would be of advantage to all | have moved back into the state, we operators. |can look forward without fear to This sit | winter evenings spent-in weeping at Britain. It is Increasing in all |the sad scencs; it's great enjoyment. citics so that the average driver is | Only oftimes we merely weep at the hecoming crosseyed trying to wateh |sad attempts at scenes. We under- for lines and traffic policemen at the |stand there is no truth in the re- same time. | port that the law which oppressed {the poor, starving fiim industry was fostered by the radio manufacturers. nd the great increase in bulld- | New Brit been refused ctivity, i3 the desire expressed la fuel a or, which s by members of the building com- | outrageous, as now we will have | mission to have full-time deputi no individual to blame for the| provided for the building, plumbing {lack of coal. We understand | and electrical inspector: |that the threatened shortage has| An argument that should glve o railroad to tighten its| support to the proponents of the | ons abont {respassing on the |augmented building department staff | 1t's 2 big boom for Florida. | Desperate because he faced a is that the v thing that makes a | are no furnaces, but | $1,000 fine for non-payment of his larger number of emplo: neces- | some ulso get along with- |income tax, Elliott Gabler, president |sary, will provide a goodly part of jout coal in Greenland. We think |of the Gem City Engineering Co. of the revenue by which their salarles |we'll start a boom up fhere, with |Dayton, 0. held up a bank mes- will be paid—that being the mnew |some such slogan “That bafflin’ | scnger and robbed him of $10,000 building codes which provide high- | Baffin land; and have He was arrested and confessed and “Spend the | the money was recovered. Turns Bandit ) and wl rs fon 1s not peculfar to ow Conslstent with the growth of the Ve as come up a The wWorld ,A 4) \\\;\\( KV :Q{t, By GLUYAS WILLIAMS (] T e e RENUOUS AFTERNOON YOU'RE LEFT WITH A WINDOW MARKED "KITCHEN - FAST", WHICH YOU CANT MAKE WINDOW AND A5 FAR AS YOU 5 TO HAVE TO TAKE THEM ALL. TO TIND THE ONE. THAT BELONGD © McClure Newspaper Syndicate ININGROOM VOU'RE N ORDER NO \Anu.l'A?fi '

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