New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1930, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, AUGUST 23, 1930. New B manner ¢ We hav guarde generalities, ritain Hera! PUBLISHING ~ CAN HAV] atements MPANY RAISING NOT A 11 BACK TO Fl1 BONDS FOR THE MONEY STRADDLER RST PRINCIPLLS INMPROVEME NTS rbs is compli- | points and one to Newport to grect f-AQM&QMMQQA&&&&!AA&A0&0&&bbb&dbb&&a&&&&bb’&”““'/: ingmen. They complained to the ) Pt oF faine to His Gaushters building inspector, who communi- e publisher of the Baltimore | "Lx’ll!(l with the owner. The latter : s : | — e & caw the force of the inspector's ar- was not strictly a publisher or | gument and with little to do. other Pl Pt than copsulting a lawyer, decided Makes Random Observations that he could not continuc to keep L his factory in the forbidden zone. On the City and Its People All's quiet along the Glen street front editor, he had authority to “di- both the Sun and the Evening Sun, but carefully refrained from He let his editors run they saw fit and the Sun &“OWWWQMO“WQ Aaad scome leading figures American Plants Abroad May Increase U. S. Exports No end of economic speculation has followed the creation of a trac- tor plant by Henry Ford in Cork, Ircland. Mr. Ford has let it be krown that he intends to establish | additional plants in other parts of the world. Indeed, Mr. Ford is not in a class by himself, other Amer- ican corporations having cither es- tablished foreign plants outright or liberal journalism Guarantee of Action fall. It is possible that they will hav. many times mek- | 1y js safe to make this prediction | Suficient power to carry the day trips in faraway | —the congressional campaign cven without him because they are seems to have | fall will be made interesting if f said to feel confident that this will | mer Mayor Angelo M. Paonessa is | be a democratic year. ¥ granted his wish, revealed v, to T who consider | get nomination on the demo- New Dispute Over Zoning planes. Yet it | cratic ticket Concerns Question of Authority With Paon n a campaign, it | Although the zoning ordinance never la hes, it never lacks for |has been in effect for only a few Paonessa in Campaign have presented a strong front in the i | off his yacht NEWS FROM ANDRE} Botar The probabili- lack, accustomed Shin ; A i those cssential clements which help | weeks short of five years, it hecam : 4 , 2 . purchased existin eign plants ling of airplanes, | (o enliven a contest for office. apparent this week that it has not E forgieninlan : : | One school of e . nt the occan | Thrice mayor of New Britain, Paon- been completely understood even by |, m:on L n‘(“’“'f"":l“‘“‘;"’"\:f’:‘ cssa knows how to make a fight. By 'those who have had most to do with | o> MP¢ 5 L | with alarm. Another school. probab- A f e 1y equally astute, declares there is polish on his spirit of Sharp differences of opinion have : : P 1arp differences of opinion have | o HIAEE AT We have digested exhaustive he 1 4 —— | been expressed by attorneys as 1o | reratt . A ve Disnesa A asliin NESDrogedure to oRopEd treatises on both sides of the fence, ay aonessa should have .mending the act and changing ordinary acts an ancies Influenoaire (e ot s alishont | o L it s hinted 1h the West |2nfgat the moment ave inclined fo N expression, a “man of the bt e Y| favor the side which holds that the uld E XF é an Main street seat of municipal gov- = ———— experience administer- establishment of American plants 1broad, though it might immediate- x 1y and directly curtail the manufac- ill be voiced at their next meeting. |\ "¢ ¢ . ngs peo- rty. During his lifetime he The developments of this week |'S7e Of American goods which s i * | might be shipped to Europe. in th d to do with an extension of the | n &1 long run wil result in indirect prof- 5 siness zone on Myrtle street. A | 2 he same thing feels about ik this end. was presented ||l coming fo Americans just the resent conditions, there is g 2 fEe me ng. conditon . to the common council, forwarded 8 : | For instance: The money which e BILIGEE RUEIE ORI o the board of adjustment. subject to have the democratic Moy Roarc oL aluus S Ford and other American firms pay i to a public hearing, recommend- y ion to Europeans in wages will give el fo the feommon icouncill and ap-if 2 RTS8 USSR PR B proved, then sent to the ordinance B s JHES A D Nl b it |l st ey men'to work whoe cfectiveness of the COmmittee. ere L 1~ I now are idle. With this purchasing - vincai NG of opinion arose r they will be abl e tu ? D O iy | Eomer tneviwill belianla & to iy democratic play- I ot officials |} .24 made from American whea, e alist o d that a special hearing, | o20 made : plishi . he ! : clothing from American cotton. s e o sccond, must be held by the or-| {7 Al ; } : s el by n Or | American shoes. and other gool ho admired him personally n ommittee her nd the | 2de in America But suppose they purchase Euro- pean goods? If o, Kuropean busi- ness men will be ble to nire more workers. pay more in wages, and thus place money in circualtion that g0 1o other workers: which money the others workers inevitably will expend wholly or in part for American goods. An industrial awakening in an country, the world beiag as inter it swells of when on the crnment that these differences ex- dlitins a democral t.ng to members of the board and iptey in a as well member ol to hoe his own row and he nows how other fellow who is is his chief face of great odds «ho wished to protest through |Attorney for the petitioner, insist ublican or- | Lhat having once been heard and Without the support of |approved by the common council, ould not ha n the act of transmitting the question ay to office the ordinance committee was one ssa is dynamite for the fulfilment of a merc ¢ can and does | ministerial duty and that no fur- vote from the other |ther I 1g can be had. The tic T t ens co proced been 1 to fight a second ands for ina- n what was, or is. depend- t 1 is, aids other countries cares to return to Wash- [ing on who is right, a residential | AerSonT a contest develops at the om question, a e 1o zone | 125 been aptly put by one writer victor the 71 the board s a public Democrats Banked Greatly t on in t is on Having Judge Gaffney on Ticket nta hat the adjustment rd 5 aring s ient while it is claimed that the was merely for the information on which vhich t a recommendation. The i which r froni the success and prosperity of he 1 made that the common . wou : every other people. We gain in eco- tion day alonc can charn a zone 5 Eers SRt nomic strength as others grow i 9 : strong. We lose as they continue to ALY weak . The man who fears adjustment res “Would we in America suffer. or vould we prosper. if the people of Africa. Asia, or the undeveloped countrics of the world would raise standards of living, limit their numbers and develop their natural as we ourselves hav ery people in the world seems clear, ¥ expect to gain forcign d limited view of the pro is thinking only in terms imber of jobs. If other of the jobs, we get But when work is for people who were previ- we increase the number around. augment the to- actories takes but part- of lahor and increase ally determined & o neral standard of living on. Meanwhilc e imber of zone of which. we are aware, does were adopted with but one EIRadon not conform to the thoughts of L e D B folks who seem to believe there are only a limited number of jobs in Eb freniang o ¢ roning laws have teh|ine world, and if the standards of an majo nem. howev 1emonstrat-| i jne in other lands remains low and ours remains high, we will have most of the jobs and most of the Jrosperity Trade, however. consists in ng and selling. Let the savages of Africa become civilized and raise iheir standards of iife and the im- petus would be felt everywhere else It is not entirely an accident that our best foreign customer is (anada, a nation with nearly as high a standard of living as ourseives and e personal following, - some consideration Jough. perhaps. 1o overty e 7oning laws A e e - eck by the evictior S o Ao r o s of Glen oise made by ch were being shift of work- 1 vast producer in agriculture and e products of nature. She remains r best customer in spite of the ct that there are American auto- obile plants distributed all over nada: and strange to say. nobody s ever cited these as tending to ymit American jobs in the United States. Our experience with Canada, ndeed. tends to prove conclusively the cstablishing of American s in Europe cannot do other- wise than aid Europe and aid us o g |for the same thing has occurred in | Canada. In spite of the astonishing number of American factories in York, Aug. 23.—New York time it was empty. A few minutes|Canada, we sell more goods to t would be likely |Canada than to Europe, and our 5 army of sm salaried men | before or after 0. becoming widowers, assume | half filled or filled. Every now and trade with Canada surpasses all the E 25 Years Ago Today | housekeeping burdens — holding n as an experiment they would |business we do with all of South - jown jobs ar ng childre out the “empty hour” and the | Ameri = Ameng socia ’ vorkers the sult never differed. They are Perhaps. if we could raise “male re noving t they've been a long|buving power of South America 1 time at i ould e about n we have done with Canad Morocco by now e story would be different, homes v samuel Hof 1o Non Ticket Selling Cops PO . d digger in 5 w Have some Public Backing. every opportur > rse Of course it was mighty nice of an how household | She walks in beauty, like the night |the police department to do honor SHOE ON THE OTHER FOOT s ik progress S 1¢ should, the parasite. to Policeman John L. Carlson for : Recently fh t , £ his splendid work in connection with kedies of a father and girls. the Incidentally, Hoffenstein is a poet | the annual drive for the benefit of the cldest nine, were found in the squal- | able to live elegantly off book | Pension fund. as was done at the i1 two-roon: flat. He was a night | royalties. He recigned a well-paying | banquet this week following the hman and for four years strug- | post as press agent for Al Woods to|baseball game with the Meriden gled heroica to keep his brood cxperiment. His two volumes since | {°am, for any person who gets re- s ntast, sacrificing all in the attempt n. “Poems in Praise of Prac-|Sults such as the policeman showed nepsiflo cl claest lly Noth by selling 1,000 tickets at 50 cents uch families the be- | tically ng” and “Year In, It is expected that . b 1n suc . p et Leee X e comes head of the house during the | You're Out.” have reached the sale | ach is deserving of special compli sported by tro ment, but to the criticism directed . ence of the t Sometimes of many best-selling novels. Unlike Greek Cat a boy and sometimes a girl. They | the popular picture of the poet with | DY Chairman Parker of the board ireek Catho = Zhhe of police commissioners at policemen offe a tragic maturity although raiment, long hair and flow- t who did not sell any tickets there merely children ie. Hoffenstcin might model for e is another side, it seems, from com- e i A male mother” is up at da lothing ad. He swings a cane, the 2 e rease In the sala ment about the city : e oimtin: olnre et breakfast, help children dres: hour and 60 cents a week tart them to school. He makes —_— erantedtby | the R Conaolid ceps and docs other chore Berton Braley, too. is a Brummell Railway Co The changes hefore going to his jobh. He returns bard save for an ancient hat with made without solicitation to cook lunch and is home at din- o drooping brim that continues to ' ner. vithstand the hoots of friends. to becoms Corbin Foremen's ¢ strect will be dedicated Mon- required by charter, ordinance or department rules to possess qualities of salesmanship. The demands that |are made on them in their every men, it was announced day duty are exacting, to say the officials A Rsocial yorkeniialls fofion el (o Rl least, and in some instances almost Members of Company T w . ther who nas not been out of his it Of all poets. Harry Kemp in his|ynreagonable, yet they manage (o ceive their camp pay Monday night | tlc flat after 7 at night in six|Village days looked the minnesinger | .orry along, some doing better than at the State armory vears. In that time. too. he has not |He had acid wrinkle of hunger and | gihers, whether they are in New The New Britain Turner society had a vacation, because vacations|could te an exuberant playboy or| Britain or elsewhere. When it comes vill hold an athletic + its | at his factory are without pay. dreamy romanticist. He would sud-|{o button-holing passersby., how- park on Arch street. from In the slums. neighboring women | denly vanish like a puff of wind aver, for the purpose of relieving Holyoke, Meriden, Water and |try to give a motherly touch toland return in the fame manner.|them of money, even though the Hartford will compete such homes, but are s k-worn Temperamentally and financially. | cause be worthy, many of the blue- = themselves he' is the true poet coats simply cannot make the grade DIES OF TRICHINOSIS t 2 te were = = ind they know i Willimantic, / 23 — Rod T i ther,” bui From a magazine article on eal- Perhaps all should dig into their A. Boucher, 16, a student 1 they won rec- ing: “The gourmand has a Tth gas- | pockets to the extent of a dollar or 3 m high school, died yesterd mic sensc. A savory dish to|two, rather than turn back all the GOl trichinosis in St. Joseph's hospital him is an emotional poem—an ex- tickets given them, and, in fact, a world—ex- | o sister-in-law, Mrs. Francis have for quisite romance!" great many policemen do so, while oceans on | Bouchard, of Hartford. is in = s n elevator in their | Imagine have an affair with a|others merely solicit the same pros- Amer- | condition in the same ho: vith | apartment house for the street at [plate of tripe! | pects year after year and let it g0 the same discasc. They were taken {he rame time. About five — {at that. To patrol a beat with a ill after cating pork at a beach re-|vears ago they noticed if they got| (Cepyright. 1530, McNaught |bundle of tickets in their hand goes New England | sory geveral weeks ago. |into a certain elevator at a certain Syndicate, Inc.) against their grain and when they South o begin with, policemen are not are so constituted it might be well for their superiors to turn their thoughts to different channels than [ that of criticism, especially in the | form of public rebuke. | Several years ago a fire commis- | sioner in New Britain said openly at | 2 meeting that the time would come | when ticket selling by city employes | would be discontinued because it was offensive to at least a portion of the public. As a prophet, it seems he was not at ali accurate, for fire- man and policemen have been at it | ever since, although their method: | are probably not as offensive in this city as elsewhere | In a nearby city recently, a New Britain motorist had an experience similar to those of drivers in many other places, and its effect on him {was a vow mever to buy a ticket for any kind of benefit for firemen or policemen. He drove past a traf- fic light, his thoughts being center- ed on something else, and as he | started to back up so as not to com- plete the violation, he was “bawled out” by a policeman. to whom he apologized and tried to explain that Ihe had no intention of breaking the law or endangering others on the highway. He was promptly given I choice of going to the police statio with a “ticket” which would cost him 33 or $5. or buying tickeis for a bencfit, and naturally he dug down for a few dollars for the ben- efit. He actually wanted to help the fund for which the tickets were he- ing cold, as he had always done so, {but he was disgusted with the po- liceman’s methods and to this da he has never relented It is doubtless a good practice for | policemen and firemen to put forth l'some effort to add to the pension | fund, for they eventually bencfit thereby. and those who are able to | make good records as salesmen are well deserving of the plaudits of their fellows, but as for the others if competent. faithful and otherwis orthy of the confidence of their superiors and the public, they will probably be better off if there is less criticism of side-line activitics cket selling. BASEBALL WAR 1S CAUSED BY WOMEN Chicago Argues Whether They Know the Game or Not cago. ist 23 (P—There 1s sort x war being waged end of Lake Michigan. It over ner women know cnough to be allowed alone at bas ball it < ccause William Wrigley ner of the Cubs has secn fti t 1 out 17.500 free tickets to women every Friday The men aren’'t going for the idea judging from the letters they ¢ Wwriting to the express-yourself colu Chicago daily news- papers ¢ women are handing righ k—and are continuing to ack the two top tiers especially re- rved for them grandstand Wrigley Ficld v set out to promote inter- nong women in baseball. To- day the women are the most enfhu- iastic fans in the grandstand. They cheer lustily, clap and stamp their feet. The men say they screech and applaud whether the home teand a ho n or bats out aze of woman from high ris to zrandmothers can be the crowd. Down in front ago Cubs-New York vesterday sat a gray- woman peering through cles and holding her false in her hand. She cheered with others. Nearby was a wo- an with a tired old-voung face forgetting for the moment that per- haps all was not well. Next to her was 200 pounds in a flowered chif- fon. velling louder than anyone in the neighborhood And despite no male escorts for entertainment or interpreters the women were having a very good time and did not scem confused They drank pop. munched peanuts and aindwiches, Some had brought their lunches As for understanding what it was all about—which the men claim they don't—sell. every woman questioned said che new exactly hat was happening And an usher was overheard te ask a woman who was pitching. Observations On The Weather Washington, Aug. 23.—Forccast buthern New England Rain irday; Sunday fair, rising tem- perature in interior. Forecast for Eastern New York: Cioudy. probably showers in south portion Saturday, Sunday fair, slow- Iy rising temperature Conditons The Atlantic coast disturbance is central about two hundred miles east of Cape Hatteras attended by gales. It will move northeastward with increasing in- tensity The outlook is for rain on Satur- Conditions: The Atlantic coast and in portions of New England and for showers on Sunday in the lower Ohio valley and western Ten- nessec Elsewhere the weather will be partly overcast Saturday and Sunday in the Washington forecast district. Temperatures will rise on aturday in the Atlantic states Storm warnings are displayed on the Atlantic coast from Cape Hat- teras, N. C., to Nantucket, Mass, | Violet Rays in Winter | Shun Industrial Towns | London, (A—Answering the ques- tion whether there is ultra-violet light in winter in industrial towns. Morris Bower h measured that in Huddersfield, England. Enough ulra-violet to cause & moderate sunburn he rates as “one degree.” By this scale he finds from De cember to February there is about one-half o degree, while the maxi mum comes from June to August with about three and a half degrees. The female polar bear hibernates| | about three or four months during the coldest part of the year., Males| do not hibernate,

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