New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 16, 1926, Page 6

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New Britain Herald m PUBLISHING COMPANY —— Tewwed Datly (Bun Excepted) At Herald Bidg., 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES Year. ae. %4200 Thres Moutha. 5c. & Month. red at the Post Office at New Brituin Entered etond Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office ..., 926 Editorial Rooms 926 1 e dinm | The only profitable advertising me: in the City. Circulation booke and press room always open to advertiers. Member of the Associated Press. The Associated Press la exciusively en | titled to che use for re-publication of | all rews credited to it or not otherwise | Credited 1 this paper and also local newa published therein. Member Aundit Burean of Circulation. qhe A. B. C fs a national organization which turnishes newspapers and mdver- tisers with a strictly honest anaiyels of | circulation _Our _clrculation .| are based upor this audit = This insuree | tection again-t fraud in newspaper | Bretribution Mg e to both mational and | Jocal advertisers. | 1a s on sale dally in New York Hotaling's Newsstand, Times | Bquare; Bchultz's Newastands, Entrance Grand Central, 42nd Street. The He —Queen Marle evidently has been called home to help prepare | the family Christmas tree. With the Sacco-Vanzetil case | nearing a head Governor Fuller is| in. Parls. |and pocket the profits. with the committee on the matter of a revised system of bookkeeping tomorrow night. various New England states should| American coal was a dire necessity be able to jointly regulate New British coal England's power development. This| strike lasted. Had American shipping | "SI0 MO0 oning at 7:30 1s held up as being preferable to|companies chaged these exorbitant|gwciock, members of both sides of federal control. But who owns and | rates the Europeans would have been | the Y. M. C. A. debating club will i . | setting up a tremendous howl about | meet for consultation with their re- operates_the existing New England g up e e S power companies? Are they New < | sing, o | our dollar chasing, our readiness m‘und A. H. Starkey for A side and Englanders? There is Samuel Insull the of Chicago, for instance, and . the take advantage of auccea:he;cmmn A. Quigley and George B. plights of Europe, and our avaricious | Clary for B side. The businéss meet- TUnited Gas and Improvement com- pany of Philadelphia. These are na- | ing will begin at 8 olclock. H. T. tional concerns, not state or sec- Burr, teacher of geology at the Normal school, has been secured as | critic for the club. A. H. Middle- tlonal concerns. Their interest in|are being operated mas will be presiding offjcer. New England is to exploit the possi- |OWners and these are the gentlemen 4| who are squeezing the last dollar out | of their fellow citizen coal buyers. | Consequently there has beea no out- lery European circles to Europe while the conduct generally. But it 5o happens that most of the | trans-Atlantic steamship companies by European bilities for power in New Englan | Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN BY ROBERT QUILLEN whatever in BUS PARES It the city finds the argments of |against them. The European consen- been that it is t busine: sus apparently h the proprietors of the Jerome| street bus line sound it will not op-|all a matter of It makes a difference who is at- The truth that makes men free isn't the truth about clection ex- penses. pose a fare increase, is the word | from city hall. Mayor Weld himsx!f#tpn‘lmg to business. is attending the hearing before the Umpires might read meters in Public Utilities Commission in Hart-| TEACHING GOOD MANNERS | wincor That would keep them in ford today and will learn of the| The New York World is justly| practice at being hated. situation at first hand. The mayor | priding itself upon starting some- At any rato we've got this far without an Eat-more-spinach’ week. is doing a creditable thing by being thing In South Carolina. This present and learning the situation oracle of liberalism, progrisseivism |and democracy is entitled to all the at frst hand. The entire bus fare situation is|glory there is to be had for its noble | work in causing offictal Investigation | Americanism: One man making | | a thing; seven men waiting to get a | profit by seiling it. | predicted upon the costs of operat- ing the busses. show it is paper loss, but an If the company can losing mone: —not a ctual | —only one result can he looked forward to. have been told that they had best improve their technique of keeping ——The noise in cities one reads so much about must be the excla- | mations of automobile drivers fail- ing to find a place to park. ——A Pittsfleld woman, infatu- | ated with a married man, ammpu»u} sujcide. And this when there are <o | many bachelors. | — The “plg woman” in the| Hall-Mills case is said to be an ex- adtress. If so, she evidently prefer- red in her old age to throw her| talents before: swine. ‘ ——The most significant about the late election has at last been found. It was that Pennsyl- vania, outside of Philadelphia, went Democratic. ——We have about concluded that there was no murder committed | at the Hall-Mills rendez Judging from the number of wit vous at all. mosses the couple must have been crushed to death. ‘When Court idea being gl up President of the United States he is abandoning a plan that ception in the mind of ritt when he lived in New B ——1It is stated in Washingt that it President Coolidge want a third term the logical publican presidential candidate be Nicholas Longworth. But was he bort i1 a log cabin or reared on a farm? we does Re- will ——If the grand old party the senatorial in M due to be held the end of month, it will lose even paper con- trol of the Senate. But Senator Fer! loses | election ne d loses. ——A dispatch from Was notes how the ‘where gton sembled senators, they happen to as fully discussed the Vare ele: Pennsylvania. added, the New gl won't be rushing into print w their views about Vare. Not at They afterwards—and perhaps not emble, But the dispatch d senator: will vote first and e ——Weymouth, N the huge new electric Edison Compa it of a line of ma or more old h grace a hi highway leading into the town. Now the electric company down the trees to high tension power line, The people are in revolt about it and ¥ not allow the power company to proceed. Thls attitude highly creditable. The company should be made to take another rc In what w of New overwhelmi ment of see. Of co I pow will be a ne not give Ne tionate advantage tions of the coun ¥ 0 power sbrojects were a veloped el New England the s different. But have' plenty of potential power re. sources " most otiier and are develo faster than New Fngl: It 1s unlikely that Will catch up and pass them. T» gouth, for instance, owes muct Ping thenm its vast increase in industrial life t the development of its power re sources; and most of them remain untouched, The ‘point is also made that the publio utility commissions of the | L \ \ |'s thing | ougt n in | { books. This no doubt has been done, | tions 0f an ordinary newspaper in | ponest.” The real show down now is under | the ¢ase- The official inquiry into s the murder had ended—and accom- If the clty finds the bus claims PlShed nothins. ;he lmwsmpur: ; warrant opposition 1t should not | XPOSe however, brought out tha hesitate to put forward a strong | N Sheriff himself let ‘hv‘rnsonpm1 contentlon in behal? of the pubite | OU ©f Jail and handed them over| -o o SR L B R ot mob. Goysmar, Fscbent | | s argt appears sound | 0o acted to “vindicate” South | 1f belng in love makes people thin | it would be useless to argue for the | rteq a| perhaps that's the reason so many | mere sake of controversy. UNIFIED COAL LINE TO NEW ¥ ND The merger of the Lekigh and New England railroad with the Reading rallrond, tentatively ap-| proved by the In ate Commerce | Commission, is logical. The L line is a 1 | short connecting railroad | | g from the coal fields of Penn- | d, using the d r the ITud son at Pou It is a dire line to New , and the co trains over T through > Waterb: s gateway into ought to be e nnder 2 consolidated tem, and to provide the low should mean New been g up I herever oftered, and the plan seems to r the N. Y. Central to sell its stock to the B. & O. later, under a prear- rafged agreement of co-operation against the Penn: a. It the Pennsy which objccted strenuously to the acq Lehigh and New Eng Coal Tro: for ) d over the and Ohio. If it can come all the way by | It does no read our obi L ton. and other s o s rate rat existing before the British coal strike started. | Carolina’s chivalry and | new investi | | 1or the cold-blooded murder of three | negroes. one after he been found not had been yet Ford originated the five-day week | but the five-day week-end has been guilty of a with us for some time, | charged, and the other two not placed on trial. Epitaph for Debs: M“T}]xcre are | k ’ 5 many abler men in public life, sev: | The World went beyond the tunc- | ”Myn e S S hatd s foy ha crime as | wives get stout. ation. ing to learn that the| The white race will keep the reins unless the yellow races act white and the whites act yellow. It is grati press of South Carolina has sprung to the side of the World and is de- g punishment of the mob and manc those who aided it. The t to be past when a s There are men who can be suave ind gentle despite their authority. About two of (hem are policemen. me appears n 1yn hy ing can be hushed up. The way tof y, ¢ig 1azy radio age the phono- stop lynchings is to punish the| grapy is doomed uniess it can learn Iyn, It local whit o tun itself all evening. 1, then leave it to the v 5 Another pathetic thirg is the lec- Al ciief that radio tune in order to hear him. | GOVERWOR AL SMITH | } SOUTH | Governor Smith of dship is the pleasant fecling .tween people who don't | o s e want any notes signed. | on ~the Democr nist is one who thinks 1928 what will be car pald for before he | of carrying the 8 | is the qu s being nd all communi Shop Editor. care 0f Britalp Herald. and your letter | will be for Look, Ahead, Boys! Fall it is, but boys, we'd say, Don't fall too hard this time of year— For Christmas isn't far away, And gifts, the kind she’ll want, are dear! Doing Her Best Mrs. Farrell: “What do you mean by Kissing my husband?” New Cook: “Ay thought you said he ban liked mush for breakfast.” —>Mrs. B. C. Dunker SHOP NEWS WEEKLY Pie For Her One case that's in the public eye Contains the makings of a ple— For Peaches, as you all must know, Is after Mr. Browning's dough! THE FUN Prophecy Twenty years from now we'll be reading: “Hall-Mills Murder Case Wit- nesses Ilold Nineteenth Annual Re- nion.” Hearth and Home The scason smacks the old man's roll For 15 tons of costly coal; The furnace bill each year gets big- gor— laadsia A. Tor the last 200 years they | I cartain parte of B/ mante| 1o 8 i ORI TG AR A e, . Inicertaln DRGSR | day, John Stewart Mill, William | s ‘“‘“”“; fe 29 ‘:,'m P | Bllery Channing, Horace Mann, e ertany n& to 1eaf Horbert Spencer, Ernest Renan, froms other: ooRnLzless Charles Robert Darwin, Ralph | S Waldo Emerson, Louis Pasteur. | 3 h“‘ % the ether | FOT 2:300 years he named Aristotle, fnese "\"f“‘: when = on the ether|ggjen Leonardo da Vinel, Milton, | feads | Shakespeare, John Locke, Immanuel {The shrill soprano trils and raves| Kant, Francls Pacon, Isaac New- fv“fl SIREY _“”’ "r‘:":ai“?f’”]“ ‘;‘- the | ton: Ralph Waldo Emerson. The Sre gp ey nitul —for the | igt §s publiShed In a. booklet called Sty Mon”, issued by the University of | Chicago in February 1925 in con- | . (O\i':::“df;:':‘:m‘:‘":‘lfi ",,Who,m | nection with their endowment cam- | 4, aign. —(hlo) —yon?s o 5 PO What 18 “Mate? Bystaniety) | ghm: Mg A, An infusion of the prepared | Intoxicated Genlleman A | 1ohvan o Bmy T Rs an ban 1Ty evioni) funny. I'm fuller, Mister. Fisen A e LovEraEs AT oRa 0t | H. Van Shoick LUCKY DA He had been very | and our fricndship was ripening into something deepe In the warm | duty is 33 1-3 per cent ad v: | None is charged on the rex | of the set. | Who fesues lice 1 order busines s of Indian sum- | mer he asked me to go with him for a stroll in the couniry. T saw no son to refu: sing a field when an i Condition do favar & wet y do | not favor Goverr on rell- s grounds, trifi these may | | | People can't th ORI M by but B D R SOUAIY | pcak far beyond the reach of e the Civil War, and by | ‘ninking. majoritiés for each euccessive | atie candidate inated 10 money §s back o big fellows. | cderline, | Kentucky, Tennessee, and perhaps | @ b a few others in the s ! On the un- | (Protected by Publ victory. Rochester Man Identifies of Walsh Murder Victim as Wife| Nov. P— 1c. ster, N. Y., ¢ of the wor n in a high ¢ s would Mas: The carry a la nee 1Selts 28| o otion of the city late S right, | & identified by her husband as Carrie Phelan, 42. T William Phelan, home about 4 o'clock St He had not scen her reading of the fin: of | went to the an something to worry al horlties, the! n and he victim of | in front of whose was found, bile con v wv'l. Burk: the bod 1tc men drive up and stop, th Cooy chur = : at a rapid rate of spe ir Tav, F ody was found only a few doors M ’ T » woman's home, the iden- it wation last night revealed The fire flend appears to b ¢ The identification followed ve of lat v Br \ 1 four hour search by autho t 1. P for some ciue to the u e being qu over the iden 15ht back the body e over o of the chief objections w al that the corporation be s to 7 on news Sty h the private com- lish »r men, Y S ) © William Mitehell-Thomson " ster-gencral, in hehalt of the il the el s nt, defended the priviloge, | that broadeasting should he o expand so that the broad- corporation could collect 5. But, he argued, the cor ia 1 that he on should be forbidden to ex- h four feet of opinfons of an editorial char- Eagr on the ground |2 Likewise, it should not be| N e red [permitted to broadcast advertise- | by the city as an expert, will meet |ments. “ its s and ferocinus dog charged T scrambled hastily over the® s and fell plump into a muddy n T got the mud out of w my friend frantical reach <omething just c One glance at it his head was enough s trying to grasp st THAT was my lucky day! dna Ruehl ed “Valencia” on thout stoppi ures. T rizo - his place and steal the roil! 1 was about to make my entrance ence was detected. T worth, and my own on the de me- thing head. te my neck sfiff my get-a however, without his tearning who it w Tn the morainz T went out to see what it was that struck me. It was the “Valencia” roll. Hummmm! That was MY lucky da . Davidson 11 Undertaker (watching football match:) “Great game that! Any- g might happen!” ‘ OUTSIDE THE LAW The Fun Shop Joke Factory) What Happened to Jones Robinson: “You're lookin' tough. What's the matter, sick?"” Jones: “No, jus’ recoverin’ from 'a painful operation.” Robinson: *What | Jones: “Th’ doctor !bones out of my hand! | —Mrs. H. G. Meloney (Produced at was it?" s’ took ten by other Fun Shop written Contributors— No Father to Guide Him Ramsey: “I couldn't get a job lat that t i Bowers: “Why not?" Ramse “They wanted a man | who v 0od at counting one dol- {Tar bulls Bowers: “A bone specialist, eh?” —Eleanor Kelly Dibhle When anyone tells you he saw e MaxsoN ”Jum 1 The furnace Is a mean coal-digger! | | tu nd to me, | So T resolved on desporate meas- | to stick fitty boys throwing dice, that’s a lot of crap! Stranded Teacher: “How many bones in the body?” Dexter: “I dunno.” Teacher: *That’s strange. You seem to have them all in your head and yet you can’t tell me.” —Celie Moran (Copyright, 1926) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question New Britain Herald, Bureau, 1322 New- York avenue. Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions | wil receive a personal reply. Un- signed requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. Q. Where is the largest oyster { bed in the world? A. The largest bed {s in Chesa- peake Bay, and Long Island Sound | ranks second. Dr. Charles W. Elliott as the ten | | best teachers in the last 200 years | and in the past 2,200 years? America. What is the duty of a two- radio set imported in Scotland? | A, On wireless valves and simi- lar rectifiers and vacuum tubes the | lorem. | nder | es to conduct Editor, | ‘Washington | Q. Who were named by the late | Prestige of Leadership “SALADA" TEA I.eads All Grades of Package Tea more than $1,800 per year, two-|cy, the pai raced from court to thirds were employed in clerical |court in company of a patrolman or stenographic and typing positions and thence to the marriage license and one-third were in occupations [bureau where they were duly wed. requiring specialized education and| Ia the West Side court they receive experience. Accounting and audit- [ed the blessing. ¢ the magistrate ing, for instance, claimed between and Schmidt obtained a dismissal of $ and 9 per cent; legal work nearly |the charge against him. In the Jef- 5 per cent; fact collettion compila- [ferson Marke tion and analysls, more than 4 per pended against Verna they received | cent; scientific research and investi- |simila® benedictions. zation 4 per cent; administrative| The girl came from Pennsylvania work, more than 3 per cent; library |to look for worlk, according to polices service, 3 per cent; editing and|She met Schmidt, according to her translating, nearly 2 per cent. ory, and thc - set up housekecpings Q. What is the difference be- This led to the arrest ot both. do, cyclone, hurricane | tween a tor and typhoon? A, Meteoroligically a totnado is a small violent rotating windstorm, sometimes confined to an area of a thousand feet or less. The funnel- shaped column of dust whirl is not the tornado itself, but a phenomenon Observation On The Weather Washington, D. C. Nov. 16.—Ths that occurs with it, a product of | weather bureau today lssucd this |the violent and destructive winds | storm warning: | that constitute the tornado. A| “Advisory 10 a. m. Southeast. cyclone is a system of winds ac- |storm warnings continued 10 a. mg companying an cxtensive region of [north of New York to Eastport, low barometric pressure. It may|Maine and changed to northwest at 12 noon, south of New York to Cape Hatteras secondary disturbs ized by clouds and precipitation, [ ance marked intensity over middle A hurricane is a cyclone which | Atlantic states moving northeast« usually originates in the warm wa- | ward with trough extending southe ters of the south Atlantic or rd to Bahamas. Tropical dis« ribbean Sea and consists of violent | turbances have moved northeasts destructive winds that damage | ward and apparently merged With property and endanger life. This|the gencral disturbance.” same type of storm is called a t phoon when it occurs in the vicinity of the China Sea and the Philip- | pines. Q. How does the annual of the Pennsylvania railroad compare with its capital stock? A. The total capital stock of | the Pennsylvahia railroad company | is $500,000,000. The total payroll of the system for a single year fs $375,000,000. | cover an area of a thousand miles or more, and usually is character- Nov. 16.—Rain and ‘Wednesday ‘Washington, Cuch colder tonight. mastly cloudy and colder. South- 1| cast and south winds, shitting - to em | westerly gales. Diminishing Wed< 2y morning. 5 Forecast for Rastern New Yorks: Rain this afternoon and tonigh much colder tonight; Wednesday mostly cloudy and colder; probable local snow or rain in north and west Q. How can rings be prevented | portions; strong south shifting to from forming when gasoline is used | west games, diminishing late to- as a cleanser? night, A. Take % cupful of common “onditicns: Pressure continues salt or the amount needed and drop | to fall cast of the lake region. nough gasoline on it to make the [The storm centers over the upper salt moist. Put a pinch of this on the soiled place and rub with a piece of cloth until spot is removed. Then rub with a dry towel until place is| eptirely dry. | lake region with a secondary dis- turbance near the Maryland coasts Showers weather continues in the castern poftions of the lower laks reglon and southward over the No license is necessary, but regulations must be com- plied with. Postal laws and regu-| lations can be ~consuited at any| office. | How should the name be en- | ! ed on Chr 3 % | Tse the full name as on al calling cards, as for instance, | Mr. James Wells Bro How can a beard be :ned before shaving? Apply a steaming hot towel, - then & good warm lather, than a hot towel over the lather and lastly more lath i Q. What causes sheets of paper ther n printing? ! How can it be avoided? | A. Statie, due to frictlon of the | paper with the metallic ports of the print es them to In establish- | ments sp: o 1l equipment revent it. Controlled nditions assist in this r paper that.is kept moist gives very little tronble. What doos T It is derived ning a bundle, having the e that “In union there is“ but type of work s per-| ority of women em- | federal governmant? | In a recent study by the | United States Woman's Bureau ft | was found that of those recei ingJ middle Atlantic states to Washing< D. C, and Knoxville, Tenn, nt snows are falling in the | upper Mississippi valley where tem= perz lower this mornin| atures are abova the seasonal normals in New Eng- land but are falling decidedly in western portions of the Middle Atw lantic states Conditions favor for this viclnity unsettled, showery weather with high winds. Penn Couple Wed in | N. Y. After Hectic Time New York, Nov. 16 (P—Compli cated pre-nupticls attended the wed ding in the municipal building here vesterday of Harry Schmidt, 28, and Verna Bensoky, 18, of St. Benedict, Pa. TFollowing arrest by New York po- e he, charged with abduction, and e, charged with juvenile delinquen- | e ————————e COLUMBUS TO COOLIDGE! Here's that Outline of a bulletin prepared by our e. givig overy tinent American History you have been walting for— ngton Bur condensed Into 3,500 words “high epot” In American history from tha discovery down to the present day. It's “different”—it will give you { the development of Amerlca from the time of fts dls- owhere else. School hoys and aps will find it equally fnteresting and valuablo—whether thelr g lower or on the latest steamer from Europe! Iill out the coupon below and send for ft: o CLIP COUPON HERE = o — SRICAN HISTORY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britaln Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washingtom, D. C. & copy of the bulletin COLUMBUS TO COOLIDGE, and enclose th fivo cents in loose, uncancelled, U. §. postage stamps, or coin | for same: I am a reader of the HERALD. N L—— — — _’ THE FAMILY ALBUM—UPSTAIRS AND DOWN By GLUYAS WILLIAMS CALLS UPSTMRS DOES ANY- BODY KNOW WHAT'S BE- COME OF THE LETTER HE WROTE TO THE GAS (0. AND LEFT ON THE DESK DO AND MILDRED (ALLS V 15 TS Wik~ TRED OPENS ATTIC DOOR ET'S ALL AROUT - ANY- BODY WANT HIM ? PEAT INQUIRY WHEN {E SIMULTANEOUSLY WITH MOTHER AND MILDRED TO KNOW WHNT THE RACK- PUTS THE CGUESTION A~ SHOUT TO EACH OTHER TO GRAIN , KOBODY HEARING KEEP QUIET SO THEY CAN PATHING REPERTS INQURY, AS Mil- DRED STARTS EXPLAINING 0 MOTHER THAT NOBODY WAS CALLING HER, PAPAS| LOCKING TOR SOMETHING OR OPENS UPSTAIRS ANGTHER DOOR OPENS T+ AND MOTHER DEMANDS 15 ANYBODY CALLING 5 IT? STARTS TO RE- ) TALLS INTO 6LOOMY 8)- TINDS LETTER IN Pock-| LENCE WHILE TRIO UPSTAIRS ET AND 6CES OFF, LEAV- ING TAMILY $TILL CALLING BACK AND TCORTH FIND OUT WHRT PAPA WANTS (Copyright, 1926, by The Bell Syndicat®, Inc. court where charges ‘\ ? " &

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