New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 16, 1927, Page 4

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! NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1927 — "VERMIN MUST 0, SPORTSHEN DECIDE Gunners fo Rid Woods of “Crit- ters” Preying on Game elub is making *shoot” in the ject of which wi tion of = prey upon Hartford a tempora been 1.800. has done ing the woods and birds and fis More th out by the orga the mecting las that only four of these I been shot ach bhird band placed on it it has been placed b ain Fish and ( 18 reques ths birds 1 that a record m X migrations. Many of the bird been supplied to the state but the majority been purchased by a gr broc ation th “ht r ity from farms which breedi A total of 700 b or vears placed during the past and $500 of the club’s mor been spent in oht The next mecting will be December 16 and membe given an opportunity to s selves in action on huntir fishing trips. Archie Hawl prepared feet of motion pic- tures. Five Year Old Boy Saves Pal From Drowning Alb N. Y., Nov. 16 (UP) = Five year old Albert Leone saved Ch his playmate, Billy Smyth g in the Hu t out from drow when he p Billy to safety. and ! he I p and Billy grabbed it got back to m SCHOOL ALCOHOL STOLEN Ten Gallons of Towa State Colle Ames, Towa, Nov. 16 (P—Disap- pearance of a qua from the Towa State Coll try partment, about a raid on the ternity house and gix niembers of the whose rooms alcohol partly solved today A ten gallon c “Towa State Colleg of alcohol was founs clump of weeds by identified by colle ing heen laboratory. stolen YORK NEW JUDGE MARRITS Trov, % L. OV T 1 pal Judge Joseph T. 1 of N gerald of Tr married at Peter's Rom fi Bero | On « best man Bishop Techan ¢ 1 Mass, w ot f LTI ffi:m&w&:‘ffl.‘/&"w&mv Time Now For Ante- Thanksgiving Resolution to Have a New Set of For That Bird h Or a New Kitchen K 8 J H. L “The Handy 336 Main Street SIS HLLS Hardware Store™ S I S DENTIST Dr. Henry R. Lasch Main St. Pyorrhea Treatments 353 X-Ray on ildre to RUTH Aviator Mule Bodies Nov. 16 [l of the ,000 appi City Items OWN DEAD 2 INGAS EXPLOSION Pn tshurgh Combs Debris for | Wo fire ir THANKSKIVING GOODIES WANTED FOR HOSPITAL the tank had ris ood of 1ar men Pos n to Bring Offcrings to School November 2 10 Apy n will I ool on Afternoon for $1.000 a Day. Puhlic ets s He n ‘\(( Al fite Foothall Game ly ponse d to this will Novem- Plans to Sign Contract 100 Days and Sold | He Jam H ACEEFTED BRIBES lover” ST mington the o Salishury Off t were fro s introd of the woman. ribi J T, UROURKE DIES .25 PRAISES BRITAIN ~ ATHIS HOME HERE - Resident of ity Tor 45 Years Called by Death O'Rou pa 101 fary O was a charter membe Joseph's parish and wa “ EX-TONN BEADS {0 6 of the on Monday two and soul toscther and even in with s were accused of ten- ! jyinner Prepared and Served Under | he was mostly unsuceesstul. It was lor Bonacorsi in the h the middle of the 19th cen- | mmer scason o Dizcetion of Men Who Provided ' tury that the bulk of the Jews in | Mona. hotel at R I, ) 1 (o see the gradual i i e Club's First Meal Four Years Ago. | ') bk proiisid aaiienc | period of weeks for 1 Members of the Kiwanis club to- | And it is astonishing to view with | nt from Con: il MR e cretot Pt dirceine dreams and linms, ».» Va5 Sallegod s to Whaye | dayienioved e iiniiucipiviiere of f Zion came o the f | e cating a chicken dinner in the new of Zion came to the fore in v the s n er W i m&‘ r and cooked under the supervision of seniyionistameement L the chet as the first meal the | t o efiort on thejl club as an organization ever had. DAt of the Jews fo ye-establisl [}F SUFFERIN&S SR e wlhen the Kiwanis themselves in Palestine’ might be SRR e e e Nl to 1 hegun with the first nesday noon luncheons in the old | Zionist congress in 1897 just thirty ——— ew Britain club, : ; | S ; The coming of the Purritt lotel | “I need not review just now the 1ed from First Page) and the passing of the old New Brit- struggle during the early e ain club brought the Kiwanis club the movement. You are | New i, an e nad by the duke during May and . Mannetti said |offered to atd ling of Jewish problems. had even on two separate occasions in colonizing Jews, | national England adopted a resolution in favor of of refuge that the Jew supports—- he establishment in Palestine must support—Palestinian activitics, Jewish hon the It is for the rele and the increas t about 10:30 o'clock in the | lonce on the Sinai Peninsula and same,gencral provi of the Jewish soul cverywhere that morning, the duke would leave his | later in East Africa. Although these original ‘Balfour Dec there must be a national Jewish e on Via ch'a, wander about | of(ms had no direct practical re- “The our Declaratic made |home in I Tor Pal Bity antl miitey he ie sults a feeling of good will was|in 1917 and the Zionist proposals for |has a mag its own—for tha could proceed u, a hunting club for | yrren’;d m]n g;\w l.]('\:ls flcf)wherr th ”Ld_rr)lr;x: n;.». of the po 5 1.‘“1u.w"~:\.v|\»l. ;‘HH lh-;m:srd it e 2 ck I¢ a feeling that England would surc- forth in the de , is tine, Jewish s a dis- LAasE. Ranout 2ioglock the rould Rabl}l Hfldas sp&flks 0[ PI‘OEPGSS Iy ald Zionist endeavors with the for discussion and sion by the tinetive quality. Already the begine a trolley to a different section city and spend several hours | apartment on the third flonrl Made in Palestine i — | of a small house. At about 6 o'clock (e would return to the club for a time and then at §:30 o'clock would proceed to the San Carlos restau- nt, whero he would meect Senorita |Lorenzino in a corner of the 1 through peace,” according About an hour later they would go to Rabbi Gershon Hadas of the to her apartment at 160 Via Sicilia | Congregation Tirethren Sons of Is- | L native of t of this rs, passed 0 o'clock “The Zionist 1d m movement was at all | " estine. st remain a moveme Yy Str 'Rourke. 1In 1882 from Farming- WITH SNOW STORM close of the war, Britain's genius her colonies, her interests in Egypt, and the Near Fast all pointed to Britain as an ideal protector of Pal- It secmed certaln Pt (under British control more than un- der the control of any other nation, |would a Jewish national home in Palestine be possible. IFor almost two years thereafter the Zionist office maintained an unbrok- en exchange of views with cultural actlvities in the tiny tloments in Palestine have found eir cchoed in the whole western rld. Jewish scholarship (through Hehrew University) is profound- scholarship everywhere Biblical and Talmudic 1aps more aston- the language of s of Isaiah and ge in which all Then, too, Great | Council of Ten of the in administrating | ence in I ists there pres an statement of their proposals, following year (1320) the m of the supreme couneil 4 a definite and authorit was made as re mandate. It was de | Britain should administ. under a mandate and sl too that nia is the malke our been failing re e would remain until morn- | rael in an address last night at an | “It was for this reason that al- T St AL e T e i Skt 1l months and although lit | ing and then return to his castle.” | open forum of the New Britain Zion- most immediately after Turkey en- NCrself responsible for carrying ou : i g ¢ Bield for his re-| The duchess was an attentive lis- | jer rict at Talmud Torah |tcred the war Dr. Chayim Weiz- | (I Policics of the ‘Balfour Declara- e ein roltor o en conflued to tencr to the court proccedings in hall The address by Rabbl Hadas [man, (then a member of the gen- 'on-' —his mandais Zions ana the word of the Lord from he was found which she i3 billed for a part today. concerned *The Balfour Declara- |eral commities) presented definite PIOVAC bY the councll of U s e S ind when death came ——— ltion *Today, with Amecrica closed proposals for the establishment of a | © ;“’l“"’f,“"“' jnpchigdel Biitatn Pandite Terh with {helexcention! ot [to the tmmigrant, with many other |national home in Palestine under S¢veral international comp) o of Hamilton, N. Y., fi[][l] WAVE [;‘]N"Nfi countrics creating restrictions, it is | British control. And as early as De- | ! September ! E cember, 1914, Lord Balfour express- Provision on the Mandate e - son of Mr. and Mrs. ed his sympathy with this proposal. “The mandate other thing: order the DVE S Easiest for sure results. Same cur British hment of officials on the matter of a declara- al Jewish h the full protection dye for wool, cotton, silk. tion of sympathy with the Zionist ©of all inhab! 1 their civil and Bright, clear colors. 15¢ at e GalOS Las[] (reat Lakes and | proposals. |etiious rie of ru deaters, * Insist on Dy-O-La. & S s or creed, the rec L Jey 4/ he SougHGSympatticticiH cannus il el o fbr Dyeing sk Bl ZaI‘dS BHIY ShOPBS “All the while Jewish leaders|,qmipistration in such matters L sought sympathetic hearings both in | mavc afiect the cstablishment of a Sels Paris and Moscow, but all hopes Al R e Ao n 16 (P—Gal ¢ were set in the main on Great Brit- S toEEhen Arabic and ) s Superior and blizzards ain. Late in 1916 and 1917 there ish as the of i | LIt arts of northern Wis apparently had been created a BON- |y the proteetion ane John | Michigan in de erally sympathetic feeling toward | oo 411 holy places nnd: ! el snow moved ard today, dissi- Zionism in every allied government | .ot jupisdiction is | man of pating to rain toward the h but and in November 1917 the British | voups sinee {he ' Dec ! rying much colder weather to a vernment sent to the Zionist or- as cxpanded in terms 4 territory. ganization a draft of its declaration : piandate has become fully Mary | Radio heacons were kept in oper- of policy as regards Palestine and -y o Tnlaced A ation throngh the night, guiding the Jewish plu;}x]:n Tl qrdm“r {m]mrl Zior : Ml ships fighting the stormy seas of the basis of the ‘Balfour Declara- | jrople has pre well . } serior. Nine crafts were in tion.' ; This decl ri]tll:m];‘lpp:;n'rrl Byl e v ben i flculllesn b QU]C‘( SERVICE ) Lily Pond, near the port- the cabinet states that, ‘His Ma arsalriot tay and there will g = ; 2 3 . . ; n Our While-You- S shipping canal. The freight- government view with the esta surely he many difficultics to fac Our While-You-Wait Repatrin or Duluth was overdue at Houghton, ment in Palestine of a National | {n (ha years {o come. But there hi WE are selling these Large Skull Tem« Mich., but was believed to have gon: Home for the Jewish people and | niiuady grown fn Palestine a lars ple Spectacles at §5.00 no mattes into Whitefish Point to wait for the will use their best endeavor to facili- | jowish population, frea from the in- WAt the oum fellow chlruu. All zuare storm to abat . 3 : te the achievement of the object, | {ollnctual, political, and social op- o i Vesscls in Docks RABBI GERSHON HADAS. (it Leing cicarly understood thit | wmecioes o aiterimine s of o e There has been virtualy no move- [, oo Inothing shall be done which may | Bastern Burope, Today with Ame 211 1ca and eipioy s registers® ment of vesscls on Lake Superior lMPUrativ oo R PR | projudice the political and religious {ica closed to the fmm | trist_ who s competent to make of Palestine,” he said vould keeps boats in harbor probab- nil ¢ throughout today. The North sed Lalcstine as a home fOr| ot o passing casual remark of one | IJHY tar, a 5,000 ton freighter, left Du- ldren throughout the genera- | o¢ the government officers. It was | = luth yesterday, but put back within chillren of Abraham held o carefully worded and deliberate District of “Pl Prohate 1o hours, the captain said, explain- | this promise as their most precious |statement of policy obviously con-| o M €0 FHIIEL i x he coult not make morc than Nuver throu s | curred in by all the allicd powr e four miles an hour nst the forget Zion Irance and Italy and Japan ver id distric snowbound not endorse Everywhere In the 1 wher 1, th sult of the same affected aren tion opening arts and minds of emancipat- ial buildit 1l Zionist sumably are well | ons into with other civic orga h RO O I S winted with at least this part of e ‘I"”m’;]’ :\, s (":‘" , as guests of the Commer- | Zionist history. Morcover my task S rinn {elal Trust Co., the Kiwanis had the this cvening is to present to you fn | ¢ meal under the new manage- outline the history and significance | ment of the hotel and found th of one particular event in Zionist M. Thornton, their old steward, now history namely ‘The Balfour Decla- | ; eign. |15 hotel m and Paul Sepil ration.’ | ; itk fits, jn. | the ehef, who cooked their meals in | “In order to understand the back- | : stip ; the old New Lritain club, again Is | ground of the it Declaration’ | IS ¢ony af thel neveement]inl el of the Kitehen where we mnst go back to the great war. | e ey thelr Wednesday luncheons will be The outburst of the war in August othod of her entrance fnto |Prepared. 1014, brought almest all Zionist ry was taken up in some, _Lhere was no official speaker at work to a standstill. The eleventh s examination, ¢ .1 the meeting today. President J. M. Zionist con: had met just a year | B e Ward expressed the appreciation of eding the war and had commit- stimony as to thie|the club of the hospi! ¥ of the g jtseif to an ambitious program bank angd in troduced President John | of constructive. work in Falcatins vis | €. Loomis. Mr. Loon followed his s for extensive colonization and tended efforts [ Method of yesterday at the LIons he establishment of a Hebrew uni- relation to | Club and ga credit to Assistant | vergity in Je lem were the chief | which, in July | Treasurer Louis 8. Thoma the litems in this program. Some six be natural- 1t ctory completion o thou: Jewish immigrants actu- nk building. “Not an ink lly entered Jerusalem in the year . taken at Mr. Thomas' ap- f h cong s. Many | cial “In fact the only rants we substan- S s wrong wi building, nd readily established poration y arc minor are Onehemselve d in April or May of o Tor- {Where I overruled QA HOUnd o NHa iz ization in con- | children L was wrong, and another where the {5 unction * with Baron Edmond de | or she nor cts falled to submit a detail | oipsepilg, was about to purchase | in their owr his v found 5o,n6” 30 or 40 thousand acres of | t (3 LI i) 4o Fich farming land in the famous val- ! ‘h Loomis S 10 jloy of Je 1. Just then came the 11.~ 41 : “. ‘“- . i "»”]‘ war and the world suddenly became tre 4 wa sasstord. 1), ey with the job of slaughter and treasurcr, and Walter M. Bassford, | o0 ¥ = I ! destruction. Shortly after the out- @ third party | the opening of the new banking $n- |y BAC SR Y TR e OU t 'u ,,“ 7 u‘m]'\ r.stitution. with the central powers and before of the duke in the s many months Palestine became one she said, | (Y 51 Ma i i et Council ‘lu\ Question of the thcaters of the war. ’ll“(.‘ Searching Bill Unprepared For War, of oecupying an ncilmanio eieles today | “The Zionist organization was S considerable . discussion WOIY unprepared for u war time R eans e ted by PPOETAI of activities and properly | N ol e onist movement was at Ll un- | searching a real estate titlo for the Al Unes and must remain a move- | water board, which bill was at first (Ment for and through peace.) | Chigi touched [held up by the finance board and -1t Is natural that ail Zionists A e e s L onld look to Great Britain for | Mari Tioi Members of the council may ask possible aid in the realization of tonight, it was indicated, by what |{h¢iF opes. Iingland had ever been ia was still on the authority the water board engaged |[VeTally minded toward all minori- « amination, the services of la r when the and had for generations show e e it M sympathy with and understand- take care of its legal business. Un —_— <paper Man der provisions of the charter the an in ant counsel, but only with the | in Romec in approval of the mayor. That for- One treatment soothes the irrita- s considercd | mality was not carricd out in this| yion and starts the hcn]mg it you use | Via Sicilia the mayor could re- H zino’s apart- afternoon, the “official | | READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ,\nv eslno average day as| IFOR YOUR WANTS The ‘Balfour ourn pt was but saon followed with very similar d S e b erior court Tronwood Is Snowbound to t m to Zion: larations. The United States could tPon the i el ad been on trlal | yruch snow fell over northern | {he captivi vintensificd | not make a declaration of its stand | CaCcamo pra b InseticnRIthill i wrieaoristh 1 upper ) nd rifi . love for | while we remained neutral and even | Ministration ma Erziiadion g 0 = Fhree others | arifts of six fect being piled in plac- Zion. And similarly the | when America did enter the war we te represented intestate as pery fNew Britain's Busiest Watch dniconnactionliRse e ey = o .\\l]”uy ages in Sp and in never declared war against Turkey, (@Pplication on file more fully ap- lh-,..mm: lhl'\l’llllt'u(. 4 there re- | \is Jronwood, Mich., was virtually England, and in Germany in Rty ihe United States, therefore, could | Prars. it is Alarm Clocks Fach 1 rs who i ‘Balfour Declara-| Ordered., That said application be o Clacks § and $25 the ; which definitely implied the dis- | he W. L. Hatch Company. Cox & Dunn. Schultz & Costello, Inc. Hardware City Cooperative Assn. Carlson & Carlson. P. J. Murray and Compan: o Teviah exaraination of your eyes, with since Monday night when the storm v ts of establishing Tmany. ollier icolntriea o ress by Rabb 5 was e sligation, when even the most broke. With forecasts last night l’nr : L B S Pas vhmlnum‘l]ti in Palestine or 11‘)1“ strictions it s imperative rated glasses are required, N 1s and colder right and political status enjoyed bY Jew fecp open the a!" Chan ¢ Plea" \til'lx!hi:r‘m&h\pphw‘:" men 2 aid Hn;’ as old as the |55 )r‘l e ey ! v et RERoDeH S pen an Account—Pa; 1 UL el g 3 v. Ever since Abraham w & s £ Declaration® was But it is not ffierely as a haven Plainvi in rminéd P'ro- rd and at the there r pronounced temperature a for Zion. memberment of Turk President | Pate Office in Plainville in said dis- Il and Charles | qrop Afissouri and Kansas thermo- 1 art of the n nevertheless sent a letter to | trict, on gl gl IC s former 10Wh yhoters showed sub-freczing read- e flons e phen 8. Wise and permitted [ A. D. 1927, at one o'clock in th ofielaly their pleas | jpgzq with similar temperatures pr et to Zion. The it to be published in which he ex-|afternoon; ind th public notic: of not @ Bovernment | jioed for 1llinois and Indiana t ot Palestine and it js | pressed his satisfaction with the |be given of the pendeney of said ap- 354 MAIN ST. had comp! nee of testi- | . e e ot (h | PTOTess of Zionist work in Ameri-| plication and time and place of | mon_jthal sumsiot money had IDEEn IS Hihiandimorthwestiwings carpyaitic: oot GaiestinahsYenoraot il Soetite e oe e il Son i e T e el e el e 1 to protect orts selling were predicted for the ’ 5 T Britain approval of the establish-|copy of this order once in a newspa- lfaunr L Form vt polic s today, with storm warn- ment in Palestine of a national home | per having a circulation in s lis- DENTIST SR £ ved on all lakes during owever, the poli- | foF_the Jewish people. Tt ‘)\vus]ahirr: . and In[v posting a roy\’!mv of | collecto wnged his the day, © r weather was in oveven it ROl 06t four years later (1922) when |on the public post in the town , 3 3 the * time. The uqed for the entire district, Jew I the questions of the Palestine man-!of Plainville, in said district, at | Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S tinued for sentence on e 1 that organi date came up for approval by the|least five days bef said day of Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D. turn were UHerly foouneil of the League of Nations |hearing. I X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN ! o] KIWANIS GUESTS OF BANK could hope for iy i houses of congress unanimous. MERITT O. RYDER, Judge. | BANK BLDG. guilty at keeping his body RED CROSS shelters 350,000 on the Mississippi WHEN a wall of water, at some points ten to twenty feet high, swept over the Mississippi Valley, 350,000 inhabitants were left homeless—bereft of all belong- ings. For several months, until the flood crest passed, the Red Cross sheltered them, fed them three meals a day, clothed them and gave them expert medical aid. Today a trained force of Red Cross workers is labor- ing valiantly to rebuild the homes of those 350,000 ref- ugees so that they may “carry on”’—as before, Help the Red Cross continue to meet such emergencies as they arise. Renew your membership and that of every member in your household. If you believe in helping humanity, yvou helieve in the Red Cross. 5,000,000 Members are necessary if the needs shall be met, Renew Your Membership Now ED CROSS NOVEMBER 11th—24th THE NEW BRITAIN REAL ESTATE BOARD The Louie S. Jones Agency. Rabinow & Rashkow. The Fidelity Finance Corp. De Witt A. Riley Company, Inc. Parker & Deming. A. Gorbach. 20

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