New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 22, 1926, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY imagine is fewued Dally (Bunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 87 Church Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATE® 4800 & Year 4200 Three Months 8o Butered at the Post Office at New Hritaln e Becond Clase Mall Matter dilemma of lay shuffles up to a cal asked down a name and Month. no stenograp! er, clerk, the finds it necs TELEPHO! Busness Office Editoris) Rooms . W CALLE 31} 926 ing out in The only profitable advertis! edium fa the City, Clreuintion books And press room to wdvertisers men as rule » open Member of the Assoelafed P The Associated Prese s xclurively en titied to the ure for re-publication of all pewe credited to 1t or not ctherwise dited in thie paper wad also loca published herein m office door to p do man per ' in Member Audit Burean of Cireulution 8 The A. B. C. b & natlonul urgnuzatior whic® Curnishes newspapers and adver tivers with & strictly hooest anniysis of clrculation. Our tion statiatics are based upon this audit. This insurer protection against fraud in newsparer distribution figures to both oational and local edvertisers. pocket nook; but wr nook requires an iny n_New 1 Times rance The Hersld fs on York st Hotaling’s e News anlly and NELIDE at the ca 00KS rried aro in the ral, 4200 Btreet. bound to BUILDING ry time. IN THI Although cities showed a recession tivity during with New Brit drop -— building ebb 3 ing the number of operations The will ACTIVITY STATE ot ently f Connect uge call in building ac- of February compared the same r own note book time hes this year, lding | address of some . 18 about the s enunciated by erks, conten see ¥ operations in the t his- wasn't t tory completed or There can I boom a building boom | 1925, and ¢ too much to expect ane- Tt havir ot ery policem 8uch 1t is other during is that year will charac and ir operations fair, The eredited basic prosperity modified an importan prosper in the closely major W in | obviate the ned this | pockets blue all buil tions in be fair, mou and will onsidered, a idual than to ations. Pads boxes b was nd peneils 1 of the means! by standardiz with E reaso nation's and in | large continuation form will t CENSORING John 8 Yor of vie LIT hardw ind New soci fo tion busy Ie reflects building DRt e New York FALL OF T There be nott abont fall 1t (B} in of v wing a may the ench at this th en for franc. has so often sion of that conneeted happene was ha with it long, lihood that ago. It is only wi lowest there is plunging unctions Paris, cents, Bad as some t ¥ of th renking finds its v 1924. Tn New Yorl little W 1 of 1924, tice. This people of ssary for such source of publ is serious Fra handling the themselve i no re 1o compar the franc et mod urisdiction ad. As I lving soar #Hons. All ticians agreement Peret, may e books would be o find {t cations ness for circulation nanc ed have the end of thelr ly, and usually irculation It Allow any Sumner and SReni mner and Abinee ot 1 to hold inft o world's right mame guessed Aot is Presumably Ton itted to drink the 1t atio fra cor sional of is exiz the looks forwa champio champ? or apartments. year: nds in the guise of nobody qu whene 1 headquarters #0) With no private secretary at hand, 1 horney-handed ssary to obey ord can. Henee the interminable all kinds of o8 ho pencil hictk estig ch boxes, A wr nggs f Hart that pads and pen- pol boxes, onth last year — | policemen will avold the necessity | a gearch warrant for quarters them to jot down the mamo and | evi most chief in two It is, in truth, Solomon-like | in its profundity and wisdom. Why‘ at thought of before? Here is a reform which will save | time and effort. | worry stub of a pencil and note od | book in any one of the numerous | climinate the con- reminders of their wives not fmportant rnalia of police rules and regu- in L t quantity on hand at all times. Sumner, secretary of the or 1 trying to get ture circ riends to. censor literature. He has but at legislature failure for his pains. .There is no | i will be | leg a 1 upon the news | i n to any city or town to elimi- | nate the distribution of improper » being a S\v(‘.r'k‘hi’)‘i purpose in every | sor socicty pestiferous ove suppress in his cohorts sway in New &Y would whi and art, it is un- | will be NEW BRI HARTIORD FARMERS ite readily | Doubling the ced annual Hartford appropria. with @ to th he s on 0 ¢ ar ver 1 I g box and t tlon from $5,000 ¢ one of the r county write | etead of — was me Agures solutions passe annual meeting of the county not even lators. a There arc some in the ) county who do regard the farm bureau impe enough to receive double X om county exchequer, al upon Trum- PBrig: though such an authority farm bull ham matters as Governor was quoted of higher When by Senator Granby as approving appropriation it comes it donato to a matter of not common logle would seem there top pocket to money from any of the » funds to any private or- fon of farmers, be county al an or- In any Adcemed money me 1 fonate n would lo in some | to particular And to h ganizatlon of manufacturers ' tain kinds of farming especinlly toba other The o do are the little | important, 0 grow- v cops are | ing; but so are ndustrial ong pocket pursults important farmers they stand should he expeeted, °n have an organization, feet, appropriation only should not have been allowed but all should have been ed for such a pur- stion made to upon their own increased not licemen be | g0 that no money at approp pencils | pose. It constitutes a raid upon the wants | public treasury. the chief ldoer being | of the farm bureau as being semi- | political rather than agricultural. The American Farm bureau is the backbone of the farm bloc in Con- g to a subsidy Many regard function momen- gress, which has been endeavor! | to get what amounts from the ing. government for price-fis about CURBING A GRAD OF WATERSHEDS All large cities as vance thefr water supply to cover uits of ar- ey grow ad- vast areas, depending on rivers and the to provide | drinking material for their inh Pard-|the lakes in effort tants — and such other purposes 1t nd rring the call | them be there be for which water is a necessity. is not surprising, thérefore, to a | their necessities constantly tin watershed areas which are needed by other cities and towns. TURE | And now Connecticut begins to take notice of the designs of metropoli- Boston to the watershed ar he preven- | 1y in endeavoring as of w to of PASS | ern Massachusetts, Nothing of the sort would be of interest 1o his to Connecticut were it not that river depends upon certain streams s fora part ater to carry to the Sound, each { for the fact the Connecticut has had | in western Massachuset suce of its Islators are | meanwhile serving the Connceticut tempts of | alley in the in state in divers way qnasi- ot inclu acture Boston engineers figure upon diverting the Ware and it — making them run back- in that take Connecticut Chamber also condemned ma | power. Consequently when iterature is rivers to other cou nsorship at 1t 1s, Governor fact — it is meect ion. s | Trumbull The Commerce should notice. o the New York has gone far up: lookout for aqueducts has project 1 to believe | built guards its lakes 1 water and would be and dams and nulsance at Wrong 1 and the cul: a mother car T we ing for a brood of youngsters. Ch cago has reversed the Illin at course of the the is riy Lakes in so doing, and ha roused the ire of cities as far east °s Buffalo. Boston virtually annexed the watershed possibllitics has water has lowered cir el n ally has reach of central Massachusetts of the upply systems in the country; but the necessity for growth paramount i the future a dearth er for its in- habitants, and the project of utili the Ware merecly one of the schemes involved Connecticut hae defiled the Con- cticut river until it is no longer to bathe in, and °r partakes of the charac- and | one most extensive were | b seems York, 1 is not to be find of not i and Swift g rivers is per- | at|n, id prohibition | q¢ its one-time | pure wa | toristics of that 50 even a sewer, h he ¢nough water w fish find it difficult But the state river ut harming to live therein. nevertheless needs the and the Mas it ot chusetts must bo properly met. Boston should be able Connecticut. to obtain Sundays by | Come to think of it, a mayor has of talking for to do a amount Perhaps the Washington chief of policc who told his bluecoats to be very careful | ruly prisoners iy afraid of injuring 1sional congressman., ‘ how they strike gar maker ¥ an occ produ ning to take the Beckley crossing. pla of the due. Its head- where More static soon quarters is Yucatan, static divorces come from. PER COLONY Madrid, March 22 (P)—In its cam- ign to isolate lepers ‘and suntry of leprosy, Spain v ish a model leper colony city of Granada. Hospitals be erected at Fontilles and Ali- ante. The campaign to rid the country of leprosy has been intensi- fied following tion trip by Francisco director ge of & of leper nies, th pro MODEL LF a 1 1a also ing an inspe Muri ation and not fo gh t some parts of Hartford county cer- | s, | candidate | terrible | rribl 29 &y TAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH Factsand Fancies | By ROBERT QUILLEN | 1926 &0, (Conducted by Gertrude, Jr,) cetchert “A little tawk on the subject of froot off of you today, Hezekiah | deer, and slide ‘apparent' in if you dont want to be kepp after skool," Hezzy Tayshion: | ‘A banana and cherry Are a couple of diffrent shape foot, A orange aint as sour as a lemon Wile apparent as squerty as grape- | froot.” o Phe talks to 1y round | | a little" need t & miracie, rally t Send all communieations to Pun | Shop Lditor, care O the New Britatn Herald, wnd your fetter L will be rorwarded to New York e dsste- —Harry Snevly. (Copyright, 1026, Reproduction thos Forhidden) men are speaking of Maple Syrup, Folks— | W like A to do interesting AT falk- em to know Hard Luck t Prisor “So the judge told es, and 1 told d he tacked because 1 told 0 1 ) a WHEN BLACK IS READ deemed | Experiment o live on love ¥ la alone, QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any | question of fuct or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain cHrald, Washington Bureau, | New York avenue, Washington D. nclosing two cents in stamips for reply. Medica, legal and marltal advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended rescarcn be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are ‘onfidential.—Editor. o lo,— The other Knows rprise, probab how me a shadow- v sigl icl Kramer. No Dancin’ Fool the Charles- about a poll in Ci | iat President | a special day Arbor Day this | o determin m what degree of crii it true t apar hrated stop for Thi; lot of pleasure; tha Liority mo fome of the birds th in the spring ; President Coolidge has desig- | nated April 18-24, inclusive, as tho 1 rican Forest week, accord- | 1l proclamation made o United States Depart- | culture. In his procla« recommends that the various states also designate this week as American Iorest week and that Arbor Day Il be observed in that week wherever practicable and not in con- | flict with law or accepted custom i clamation is dated March 3, in spring train rles’ To drive Hag too i the m la : aster Vacation Here! 1 cleans the furnace of cach week, lay is to him ' 80 to speak! F. W. Catling. forcing bout obeyi cnougl noug, me mation he governors of My out The the ma y when boss s om Bad to Worse The doctor told me that I'd co heart if I didn buying A Fred and now Q. yout an you tell me John Morton, ners of the Decla pendence? He v grandson of Morton | on, who migrated to Dela- | ware County, Pa., from Sweden in | 4. He received a fair education | acquired some nowledge of o E erved as speaker of the Pennsylvania assembly from 1772- oon after entering political life attended the Stamp Act congress vew York. He held the position High Sheriff of the county, judge in several counts and was a member | ot the Continen s from fits | inception. He was one of the mem- | bers of the Pennsylvania delegation to the Continental congress who | voted for scparation from Great e Britain. He helped to frame the ROWS, AND GROWS, |plan of confederation but did not | £go T()a’a_}' A STORY G AND. |live to sce it adopted, as he died | (Picced Together by Sunny) fever at his birthplace near | t Madge Reall delphia in April, 1 5 Is the world popul movie very rapidly? town that Irom 1804-1914, world popu- . |lation increased by almost nine- [tenths of one per cent yearly. There are 1,850,000,000 human beings now on earth, and it Is estimated that at the of increase the population in less than 250 years . | would number 14,800,000.000 which| t Mrs. Browne Said She Saig |economists have declared, is more ve yon noticed how stuck-up "h.‘m the earth rn'llti supn.ort. is? Well, Mrs. Smith says that | Q. Did the United States gov-| vas once engaged {o Ben Doyd, |ernment ever have a fund from} star! T don't think much [Which they made loans to the vari- HIS choice, that's alll ous states of the United States? .. A. In 1826 the United States had What Mrs. Jones Said She Said— | surplus in fts Treasury, largely vou know that Madge was once |the result of the sales of public vried to Ben Boyd, the movie |lands. The states wanted money. In | star? Mrs, Browne toll me that he |June of that year an act was passed | finally threw her over and ran away |Providing that after January 1, | with another woman! I don't blame |18 any surplus over $£5,000,000 | Madgo for ke it a do |should be divided among the states you? The idea! as a loan, subject to recall by con- | . |gr The amount loaned was dis- Ny—TIt seems that Madge |tributed among twenty-six states. No 1 marricd to thres different [demand has ever been made by the q ! Everybody's | Federal government for repayment some heljove |Of the money but it may do so at divorced from |any time. that she s try- | Q. Hos name? SNAPSHOTS OF something one of the tion of Inde- | Y “So 1 s I have Modern take any- ood in th rted buying candy a sweet heart.,” John Saldeius. in comeback and it's just idence Dorothy nt i Helen ng which, to nt THAT'S nothing!" said Doro- u great I can rem s born! T {home except Mam re having to whose mem- had produced her mind, w One 1 a big and vital the fragments shudders to how 1 s gur think o i best. the of the he in of Correct this sentence made a lot of money,” said { “but he doesn’t feel o advise people (Protected by I 25 Years A o5, he's | man to of mber asn't superiority, the night 1 anybody at and me, petent dicate) ma tion in- 9 ramous | non night gl in me gin, Speeial . and hotel with |52 confiscated Dame and Quirk, C. troke into nd found for some half- | | Bett church has|{_; that it will claim $10,- |3y Arch | cho ted 1 1 churc I did. . What Mrs. Smith Sai | Madgg, told me that I lived Xt door to her were old school IMAGI found his b Co 1, the actor} and that they chums, Can y Officers M., and Eug Jol another at the same a room empty except full beer bottles The Swedish a notice present rate proposed > is ador of the rday t the the movie [ mre chur or of . | continued Taplin the coming ye Mfg. Co., t is one of the bus city at present completed some sc Grand depot and its products arc creasing demar The gold w a prize in the Saturday w er, who m, Othe of rst cone It has just holders for the in New Yor in ever Centrol g secret, And ¥ Y shoot | has be out it! asn't real first two! I hes to sue Ben v hush T su t all the nd o r scores included J L. J. Rowe A {mass 27, B H did lemons recelve thelr Fred Midd Loomis 1. Johnston Edward W |Russell & Erwin's dent Saturday wh to look at the ne Natlonal Spring Bed C to t for custody of the something like | it \ child! n Dowd, foreman at a bad acci- stepped over building of the He climbed floor, | rown to 1 d he some lost h the ground. called and four located his shoulder planking foothold, and was Dr. S. W. Irv 1 Mr. Dowd had dis- was ttot There was a 14 . Y. M. C. A. meeting last evening. A | musical program was rendered by E. {L. Morey, W. H. Latham, G. D. Matthews and Mr. Benner. 1 e o [\ PARLOR COMES HOME PROM SCHOOL AND 15 REMIND- ED TO HANG HIS THINGS UP NEATLY IN CLOSET Observation FL0 On The Weather 22.—F w England warmer Massacl Tuesday temperature, moderate |southeast and south win Forecast for Increasing cloudi ed by raln Tuesday; rising temper and in central and Tucs moderat cast A h | wash st for Soul cloudy rec ght, in rain to rieing fresh Jastern York: probat tonig lat Strongheart the Pup IN KLASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE (Conducted by M. F. J.) south to winds portior h and =outh h Mi de is aged in trying to make | withont ruining the 1 will take the Mr. O'Goat to trifle lather. esota from Kansas castw mperature rthern ahout freez OFF OVERSHOES WHEN HE REMEMBERS WHAT HE WANTED TQ ASK distr mt down HE foine lot av LEA ABOY HANGING HIS THINGS UP RETURNS TD HALLTD TRKE FOLLOWS MOTHER INTO PANTRY DEMANDING (AN TOR LUNCH SATURDAY is ( a village in Italy where the fruilt was first grown in Europe Q. How may copies of the Con- gresslonal Record be secured? Drive Collector Tells How Funds Are Solicited A. The subscription rates to the Congressional Record are $8.00 for the long scssion and $4.00 for the short session and $1,50 per month. Single copies are 8 cents when 24 pages or less and 1 cent for each S pages In excess of 24, Orders for —_— it should be sent to Superintendent | v 0a of Documents, Government Print. | Ne™ York, March 22 (M — The ing Office, Washington, D. C., ac. |technique of high-pressure salesmen companied by cash or postal money [who tap the tear ducts and pocket- order. Checks and postage stamps |1ooks of “suckers” In fake charity a ceopted. re not accepted. | drives is described today in The New Q. Who was the gculptor of “The | Ind of the Trail" that was awarded | York Evening Post in an interview ‘wlm Larry Taylor, professional 2 medal at the Panama-Pacific Ex- vosition in 1918, and what does the | rivo director. | The article is the second of a ser- statue represént? A. The sculptor was James Ea A% The Sountot maN TRMeR AN el T N S votiion RaniEl ly glve up $10,000,000 in contribu= I'raser, The statue represents an American Tndian on horseback. Both man and horse are about to collapse, | 1ON8 in '{_rlmlulvm charity cam- at the end of the long trail. paigns. The entire United Stat Q. What President of the Uniteq |1ven out $100,000,000 to fake char St appointed his chief appon- ‘,{"“ (l‘u! Evening Post estimates. cretary of State? Taylor's latest “racket,” a drive for the international nameotic crusade, is now being investigated by Assist- | is temperature does Pneumonia Is Fata-l to Wife of “Bo” McMiilan Beaver Falls, Pa., March 2 Mrs. Marie McMillan, wife'of A. N. “Bo" McMillan, former Centre col- lege football star and now head grid coach at Geneva college here, died last night of pneumonia, with which she was stricken last Tues Mrs. Abraham Lincoln appointed rd who was his principal op- ponent for the nomination, Secro. |ant District Attorney Pecora. tary of State. & Any organization ostensibly cha Q. What is the name of Pope |itable can get endorsement from Pius XI and where was he born? |men in public lifc, he said, and A. His name Is Achille Ratti, He |these names so impress the suckers was born at Desio, Ttaly, May 31, |that they break their necks to send 1857, in checks. Q. What are the differences in| Armed with such endorsements, or the welght hetween a cuble foot of |¥en using names of prominent per- anthracite coal, a cubic foot of ice Sons without authorization, Taylor is and a cuble foot of pig fron? |saying, adroit telephone salesman A. Anthracite coal weighs from |call up persons on their “mooch 47 to 58 pounds per cubic foot; fce |lists" or “sucker lists.” about #6 pounds, and cast pig iron 700d salesmen make from $300 to 450 pounds, $600 a week, he said; in\his first Q. How much opiuth did the |“charity racket” he lined up $1,000 United States import last year? 1in donation pledges in three-quarters A. The net import during the |of an hour on_the telephone. fiscal year ending June 30, 1925 | Taylor was quoted as saying that amounted to 100,478 pounds. he had raised money in a fraudulent Q. Where is Tallapoosa river and campaign for the blind and in an- what does the name mean? lother campaign of “The American A. It Is one*of the two main |Society for the Nervous.” When he headstreams of the Alabama river, (asked his employer where the sana- sing in Paulding County, Georgla. |torium for the nervous was to be and flowing southwest. It is Ibuilt, he was told not to worry about miles long. The name is Indian |that, that his job was ratsing the meaning, “swift current” according |money. to some anthorities, and “stranger” | Vanity and tears are the hest ap- or “newcomer,” according to others. |peals, Taylor is quoted as saying. Q. Wi is the consul for Jugo- |Promices to print contribut Slavia to the United States and what | names and pictures in magazines de- is his address? voted to charities have great appeal A, Pavle Karovich, Consul Gen- | among public men, a good sob story eral, 443 West 22nd street, New |a drive to provide cripples with York city, | crutehes, for instanee, of oven Q. At what | greater valug. Cash sent to head- fron ore melt? |quarters for doubtful charitles, fre- A. It depends to some extent on quently disappears long before it the kind of ore. The approximate |reaches officlals. “It depends on melting point {s 2200 and 3,000 de- who opens the letters Taglor says grees Fahrenhelt, Q. What are the méasurements P ” ofktina iy Tanipniert oo aeal|DIAN I‘S Mal‘(mned on T'Op “Miss America” at the Atlantic ‘W{ Of Gigantic Ferris Wheel beauty contest last summer? ew York, March 22 (A—The b A, Helght, 5 ft. 6 in.; neck & |ferris wheel at Coney Island, the bust 34 In.; waist 261 in. bighest in the world. ran yesterday arm length, in. + |in honor of the arrival of spring. It in.; thigh, 21% in; calf, 1 i stopped at 6 o'clock. Hours later ankle, 8 in. {policeman, leaving the deserted beach in the wake of the crowd, saw a tiny burst of flame from the top of the mheel. He also heard a cry fromy the air. The owner of the wheel was skep tics but fi Iy consented to turn jon the power again. As each ear came down the policenian peored into it. In one of them he found a [ huddiell figure, who first said: “T got left high and dry—very dry,” and MeMillan was formerly. Miss Marie [then dentified hir as Mile Pugh of Fort Worth, Texas, and wis + of Jersey City. He mig united in marrlage with Mr. Me- [have been left at the top of th Millan at Dallas, Texas, in 1921, wheel all night had hie not set fire The three-year-old daughter of [to his handkerchief and waved it in the McMillans is {1l with pneumonia. |the alr. i i Ladles Chalni” “Swing Partners!” Here they coms back a en’ thé orchestra ¥ In the Btraw. Our Washington Burcau Waltz, the Virgluia Re M the Badger Gavotte the Liye the simplo steps. 1 you've never gl here's your chance. Fill out th Tasl The Al those up with t the Don —It Rivea 1 an old w en coupon below and mall as d CLIP COUPON NERE Washington Bu New York W eau, New Britaln gton, D. C. i enue, T want v of the bulletin OLD FASHIO! herewith five cents in looce, un: tor eame: a co 2d enclo tage etamps or coin I NAMI L vates oveess (i STATE ST. & NO, or R. R. WILLIAMS GLUYAS WILLYR By GLUYAS SE- DROPS BOOKS ON HALL CALLS TO MOTHER WHERE FINDS HER MAKING COOK: OR AND GOES TD HANG 15 SHE HE'S 60T SOME - IES AND ASKS (AN HE UP CAP BETORE HE TOR- THING IMPORTANT TDASK. HAVE ONE LEAVES COAT GETS SHEDS MITTENS IN LV~ ING*ROOM ON KITCHEN - CHAIR TORGETS TO TAKE OFF MUFFLER TILL HE &ETS UPSTAIRS DROPS IT OVER BANISTERS HALF HOUR LATER SAYS WHY HP'S SURE HE PUT HIS THINGS AWAY - ANY- WAV HE REMEMBERS HANGING HIS CAP UP G0 TO EDDIE PRATTS VES SECOND OVER - SHOE IN PANTRY

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