New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1928, Page 13

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Speaking of Sports} With Stapleton swamping the powerful Orange eleven |yesterday by & 19 to 0 acore, the Nutmegs of this eity fully realize the strength of the gridiron combination they are to meet in Stapleton Sunday afternoon. Fortified with a wealth of back- fleld material, a strong line and an excellent staff of reserves, the Staten Island eleven y-esents a formidable opponent for the Hardware City s A great many of the fans in the city give New Britain little chance of winning. \ Manager Henry Zehrer and the Players on the team fail to feel this way about Stapleton. It is true, they agree, that Stapleton has the best team ever assembled there but they also claim that New Britain has a better team than any that repre- sented the city in recent years. ‘The Hartford High school foot- ball team has received a severe blow in the loss of Cunningham, regular end. Cunninghum suffered an in- fection in his hand. He will, most probably, be unable to play any more this season. ‘The Fordham university team suf- fered a swamping :t the hands of the West Virginia team yesterday in an election day battle. The New York team was snowed under by an 18 to 0 score. Fordham displayed a plucky de- fense in which “Tubby" Beloin of this city’ starred. The Maroons, however, were unable to scorc on the Southerners. Basketball practice for the New Britain quintet will be in order some night this week and again next Several other new candi- re expected to turn out in an attempt to win places on the team. WITH THE BOWLERS ROGERS ALLEYS STANLEY RULE LEAGUE Parker Olszewski Lawless Bulick Odman Campbell 295 9i— 219 609—1780 95— 282 14— 101— 278 84— 316 92— 343 93— 272 Burkhardt Klery Wolfer Thorstenson Knowles 607 599 569—1776 Sp. Shavers 03 97 115— 315 89— 311 Rund Leopold Partyko Rittner entine Willismets 87— . 92— 314 642 624 Tool Cabinets McBriaity 10 Thorpe Brune . Hinchelift Wilcox SCHOOL REVENES | MUCH T0D SHALL Increase Is Needed fo Provide Progress - BY H, O, DIETRICH (Superintendent of Schools, Norris- town, Pa.) Norristown, Pa., Nov. T. Schools of America exist for the! purpose of training or educating, .f you please, the children of America. School buildings are built, school administrations are organized, and text-books, furniture and equip- ment are bought solely for the pur- pose of providing facilities in or- der that the children may be train- ed by the teachers. America needs a strengthened public school, and the first essential in a strong public school is a capa- ble teacher. 1f the nation’s teach- ers do not represent the best, the nation’s children suffer. Before we can -have justice for children we must be willing to spend for our children at least as much as we spend for our cattle. The business man must be willing to pay the person who trains the mind of his child, at least as much as he pays his private secretary or his stenograph-r. Our method of raising school rev- enue here in America is the most antiquated and absurd of any civil- ized country in the world. Our property taxes and methods of as- sessments are the most ridiculous of any method in use anywhere. Until we realize this, our children are going to suffer. School reve- nue must be raised and spent upon the youth of America regardless of location—whether in the most mod- w— NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1928 duction rose from 750,000 to about 1,500,000 annually, The industry felt the post-war depression, but a pational advertising campaign again was started and since has been continuous. The basic idea used since the first advertisements appeared 1909 has been an attempt to make association eof .the words “pine- apple” and “Hawaiian™ as habitual as that between “hats” and “Pai ma” and “cigars” and “Havana. In 1900-1903 consumption of canned pineapple in' the United States. the only field reached by the association’s advertising, was esti. mated at one-forty-fifth of a slice per family. Last year it was more |than nine cans per family, enough to line a grocer’s shelf extending half way around the globe. COUPLEMARE HALL WITH BAD CHECKS Woman Presents Them At Six Stores Receiving Change A woman appearing to be between 24 and 30 years of age, dressed in cark clothes and accompanied by a man in an expensive make of closed car is sought by the police in New Britain, Meriden and Middletown for passing worthless checks in Economy stores. Sergeant P. J. O'Mara, who was detailed to inves- tigate a report by William H {eomb, manager of the store at 45 Main street, that he had cashed one of the checks.learned that the stores at 112 Broad street, managed by Anthony Orszak; 537 Main street, managed by John Chofko; 40 Broad street, managed by Jacob Cross; 317 Main street. managed by David ern city or the remote part of the countrs. The time for an educational up- plowing surely is at hand. The tra- a relic. Teacher training schools must give us another type of teach- | er—this teacher must provide an- other type of instruction; this in- struction must care for innate abili- ties. This will prepare the children not to master tfacts only, but pre. pare them to act with greatest ef- ficiency in the niche which may be their lot to fill in life. Finally, thus 9 | up-plowing must demand a new type of educational administrator — one with leadership and vision, one able to educate the public to the need tor “Justice for Children.” The afafirs of the world will be run by those of superior intelli- gence. The reason for this fs that this class of individuals is not only the most intelligent, but also su- peror in justice and good-will. It has been a good investment to per- mit the intelligent to rule the masses. History proves this. So it must be in the future that su- perior beings — mentally, morally and religiously—must be the lead- ers. We are not making for class distinction when we classify ac- cording to mentality, but making for greater freedom, jlistice and power. | Ginsburg, and 552 Arch street, man- |aged by Rhinehart Semrau, had been visited by the same couple be- tween 4 ad 6:20 o'clock Monday ditional and medieval must become [afternoon and in each place a check | {for $15 was presented in payment tor small quuntities of grocerics, and cashed. The police do not anticipate fur- ther local operations by the pair on adcount of the warning that gone out, but there is a probability that they will be heard from in other places. The checks were drawn on New Britain National bank, sign- ed by §. A. Harrison and made pay- able to II. Merrick, whose endorse- ment is on them. The woman rep- | resented herself at Mrs. Merrick. TO HAVE CARDINAL L nov, T ATt is reported CZi here t 10 he named when the Pope holds his next consistory in November The is Archhishop Cordatch of Prague. Poland, par- 192 The port of Kdyn tizy vpen to navigi is the newest port on the Baltic. in | has | hat a Czechoslovak cardinal is | at least will monopolize the come- ndidate for the purple mantle | OUR BOARDING HOUSE DEMPSEY VS. FIRPO ——— e | B R S Here are Jack and Luls, the comeback twins. Luls is the one on the floor in the scene above (sccond round, Dempsey-Firps fight, 1928). The center pose is of Jack in his prime. Left insct is Jack today and right Inset is Luls today. BY JAY R. VESS the drub} he took at Soldier's (Feature Service Sports Editor) |field that Gene was his master and New York, Nov. 7.—P—If anyone made good his determination to keep ever doubted the sorry condition of ‘the peace as long us Gene remain- |the boxing game as it affects the cd in the game, | heavyweights, they must know now | Things are different now. Gene fs |since the ballyhoo has been begun on the shelr, bunch of mediocre | for the return of Jack Dempsey and youngs 1inate the heavyweight | Luis Firpo. lass and, the reports say, Jack necds | Many critics and fans who have the mon |the best interests of the game at| As fo | heart are scoffing at the rcports, old Pampas miauler just | perhaps to put off as long as pos- | withstand an opportunity |sibte visions of two old men trying £400.000, the sum to fight again. But it seems to be a foregone con- fights in the T'nited States. clusion that Dempsey, at least, will ~ l.uis is the hig overzrown |be back in fighting togs next sum- Whom Dempsey stoppe | mer, And the only thing that would raising bhout in 1923 | prevent Firpo from trying again is StOpping a swing with his ehin his present massive form which, at picked lLimself up rrom the audi. | his age, may withstand the best ef- | ence and eame back to pound the forts to reduce it to a semblance of a Argentine giant to the canvas in the fighting figure, | second round Anyhow the ballyhoo to test the ! Mavbe they'll attitude of the fans has commenced, S¥CCP through a few setups and If the patrons of fistiana do toler. then clash in a burlesque of their |ate such a thing it'probably will b | MCmorable championship battle of to prove to their own satisfaction fiV¢ ¥ears ago. that the old tiger man can whip the | % second third raters now clamoring!| STARTS AGAINST HARVARD | for championship recognition. Philadelphia, Nov. (UP)—Joe Gossip about Dempsey and Firpo Olexy, one of Pennsylvania's early season regular ends, has been shift- ! back spotlight until the inevitable ed back to his regular place, instead | boom starts for Gene Tunney to quit 'of Joey Schaaf, and will start retirement. |against Harvard Saturday. Dempaeyis 33 years old and hasn't | |had a fight since September, 19 | when Tunney defeated him in Chi- was and the choice of films to be | cago. Despite the long count con- shown to children are subject lo |lrm‘(‘rny, Jack was convinced after regulutions in 31 countries. s Firpo, it seems that the cannot to collect °x Rickard 18 said to have offered him for a few | lad in a hair. Jack, after | both come back. i The admission of minors to cine- | Scuth America, | babies undertook | through southern Chile. In { desolute count v, they way. Finally, after iours in whien mother tried to P ] LARGE PLURALITY He ga them food and shelter and Hoover Carries State With Wide TEACH GEOGRAPHY L) lost their many anxious Children With Them to the sixth orn thological congress in Copenhagen. The young ters ex- plored to their heart's content the famous Stora Karlso. the “hird is- Wasliington, Nov. 7 land™ In the Baltic. From most of Mol crd et weoe the countr visited they book, cagerly read through ti Roles of steamiships, the windo trains—even from the backs ot Key brought i » costunies children. That is the lot of the three chil-| dren of Dr. Robert Cushman Aur- | phy of the Awmerican Muscum of | Natural History. Their dad knows all about every kind of fish and | animal and they go with him into| the most interesting parts of thel world to see them. Theic mother, Grace 1. Barstow Murphy, who is treasurcr of the So- ciety of Women Geographers, be- lieves that travel cols class | rooms as a means of education for children, She now is writing trav- el books based on actual experi- ences of her own littic oncs in for- | T anl Labor Council, ut elgn lunds. The children are help- | Lefore he coull read it Councillor ing her, T. K. Scot! moved that it should Alison, 14, the eldest, has written | be laid upon the table His mo- an account of their trip through tion, however, was lost witlout de- Chile. The two boys, Bob, jr., and | bate. Amos, contributed many child In' the letter impressions of various countries | hor council as which their mother is incorporat- | to reconsider s decision not to ing in her books. | buy the book, pointing out that Arimals hdlsione | there was already a large number father would cxpr of political books in the library pological and archacologi forms | including some by Mr. Shaw. Zhave unfolded before them in, Councillor J. R. Mellor said the Mexico, Sweden, | committce had decided that polit- the Baltic Sea re.|ical Dbooks should hot be pur chased. and he saw no reason to lter this in regard to Mr. Sha He moved that the committee ad- here to its previous decision, and this was carried unanimously, 7. The raphy St. Louis, Nov., 7. Hoover carricd Mi n in T P—MHerbert ouri by a wide sday's election and it the republican «d States senator, to victory with don sw Unit nd governor, alon, m With three- fourths of the state's vote tabulited the republican prosi- dental no ‘s lead over Governor Alfred Smith Stood at 96,545, with indications it would casily vx- Roscol, C. nominec for 1 Iy had won Town Bearing Shaw’s Name Won't Buy Book Nov. 2 T me of onc authors, but witl of his litest hook. smbers of the free library committ of the Shaw district council have twice refused to buy M. Bernard Shaw's last book An Intelligent Woman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism.” At their monghly meeting rk reported that a letter been received from the local La Shaw, BEngland, s town England have non The n Tatterson, republicun . 8. senator, apparent- <o. Season of Pearl Diving Brings Many Hardships Tahiti, Nov. 7. @— The on in quest of mother of hell is in 1ull swing at the of Hikueru in the Paumotu Archipelago. which consists of 78 coral atolis washed by the South Pacifi o the e had Pupeets islnd the Trades and La- & the committe rl buyers frem near and far there, for while a large num- of pearls of ordinary quality found each scason, there al- ivs is the possibility of the = na- tives iging up gems that will niore than repay the long wait and the hardships which life on Hihueru and the other pearl slands imposes. As is usnal during every diving season. an epidemic of dystentery and other enteric diseases has broken out and there have beea many deaths. as their anthro- | Denmark and gion. They took their first trip in 1924 when Alison was ten. Dr. Murphy was sent to Ecuador for occano graphic research. His wife and the difficult trip a high, —— e { The total woodland area of Great READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ABS Britain is 2,458,672 acres. Real Comfort “AH ,m HERES ~TH' FINAL A FIGURES MASQR, PRINTED NEXT —To -TH" LosT AN FoUND COLUMA ¢ wane WELL ,“THATS oVER WITH MASOR ,»~ NoW Nod CAN DEVCTE ulurphy ADVERTISING AIDS Grose Perctia ler Brotta Burdick Morrisen Moffate - Jacobson €. Benedick Btrom Hrooks . Maler C. Myers Al Jolinson Ritter . A. Johnson sanford Thompson Argosy Norton Hchlsicker Schafter Tyler . . Walker Leupold Kramer Needham C. May 304— 930 Canwell Tieinzman T. Walker Installment Selling Life of Motor Trade Chicago, Nov. 7. UP—Installment selling of automobiles, and the sta- bilized methods of the payment plan saved the automobile industry, and now assures it of a bright future, according to C. C. Hanch, manager of the National Associa- tion of Finance Companies. The assoctation will have its an- nual meeting in New York Nov. 20 and 21. Fourteen years ago automobile production had reached its cash sales “saturation point,” said Hanch. Consumer credit was intro- duced., stigidard terms for loans were fixed, bankers were that the pistallment plan was safe, " | pineapples general | PINEAPPLE TRADE (Industry Has Been Greatly Developed Honolulu, Nov. 7. (P—Advertising d with baving made the canned pineapple busi- sccond largest industry in rritory, with a total puck [8 216,000,000 cans a year. The industry, only a quarter-cen- | tury old, was the first in America {in which competitive producers | joined in an associational advertis- | ing campaign for their commodity, spending nearly $5,000,000. The first canning of Hawaiian was done in 1896, but | the venture was not a commercial success. In 1900 the Pearl City Fruit conginy began to can as they are known in the and in 1903 a pineapple ¥y was started by James { Drummond Dole, who came from Maine to grow coffee and remained to make a fortune in pincapples. “Jim” Dole has, become the lead- ing figure in the industry and his company cans a third of the pack. om the start he insisted that | technical knowledge his company gained be made available to com- petitor “More power for the in- dustry.” he always said. Thus, when over-production de- veloped for the first fime in 1908- 1909, Dole’s competitors responded when he called them together. They must get retail distribution in the big castern markets, he teld them, and advertise Hawailan canned pineapple to the women of iational advertis- started. Tn a few months over-production had he- come under-production and adver- tising was dropped. By 1913 mar- keting conditions again were criti- cal and the advertising campaign was renewed. Then came the war and in three years pincapple yro- assoc satisfied | and the future of the trade was as- sured, he added. “Panama Limited” Off Rails; Engineer Dies Centralia, IiL, Nov. 7 (UP)—The “Panama Limited.” crack train of the Illinois Central railroad. was de- railed here today. The engineer and fireman were killed and several per- sons were injured. The dead are Engineer Fred skine and Fireman George Lang, both of Centralia. The severely in- Jured, Charles Kusang of Chicago and Henry Paterson of Kewanee, IIL., were taken 1o a hospital here. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS Charter House— Young Men's Clothing TAILORED BY FASHION PARK $25.00 to $45.00 | Fitch-Jones Co. “CHAS T, VATES ELECTED JUSTICE BY blq VOTES AGAINST MAJOR HOOPLES nn VoTeS “— -THERE ARE SEVENTY- FIVE MEMBERS OF “TH” oWL'S CLUB, ~+SO L A COUPLE OF EM J WANT & “ T\N - Roof " ax Vs uP HAVE VoTED WITH SHEET OF CARBOA HEY BUD}')_‘I-HE ALL \JouR ENTIRE “TIME To STEADY LOAFING ! = DoN'T PE_?AAMD A RECOUNT, i REMEMBER THAT DAY IN “TH” CAFE- -TERIA VoU CALLEY " CHECKER ABoUT OVERCHARGING YoU, AN SHE WENT OVER YouR “TRAY AGAIN, AN 4 WILL DEMAKD A RE-COUBNT!. wTHE VOTE IS S0 oNE- MosT A ~ for all three.. the most pleasing seating arrangement of any car in the world . . . another reason for the sweeping demand for the New Buick! Not cnly in beauty, performance, luxury‘snd completeness of fittings . . . but in comfort, too, the Silver Annwersary Buick with Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher is winning enthusiastic preference as the great car of the world! 7 Every Buick model accommodates in complete comfort the full number of gusengen it is built to carry. There’s ample room in Buick’s wide seats for three full-grouwn adults! This vital comfort feature, in addition to extra-width seats and comfortably-located arm-rests . . . the wonderful new adjustable h:ont seat, twin-blade electric windshield wiper, and marvelously simplified operation, due to fingertip steering and accessible controls . . . a’nsms in this new Buick a degree of comfort abso- lutely unparal eled in any other car in the world! WITH MASTERPIECE BODIES BY FISHER CAPITOL BUICK CO. 1141 STANLEY STREET TELEPHONE 2607 A TIN-ROOE " 15 AN ICE CRERM SoDA, WATH = = -~ = ETc-mrTc- ETE— WE'LL ALL HAVE ONE- Associate Dealers Kullberg’s Garage. Plainville Boyd J. Height. Southington WHEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT : ; . BUICK WILL BUILD THEM! ] Free-In Other Words BECAUSE_ IT'5 ON TH' HOUVSE. !

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