New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 24, 1930, Page 13

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, 24 FRIDAY, OCTCBER 193 13 | Sentiment for Cross Increasing, Democratic State Secretary Says; Mangan Hits at “Cheap Politics’ man's best friend is himself and Republicans’ Action in Ob"m\l\ by, putblug forth his best sf= v . [forts and preparing himself through taining Possession ”mumx and other forms of educa- Uon can he hope to improve the Rialto Hall Scorned bv conditions which surround him. 1‘ Urges Enthusiasm Candidate for Judge of | !° Probate — Jails Should | urged that the voters in the support the democratic ticket, comp avoid Be Sanitary, Paonessa States. ed of worthy candidates, ani falling into a lack of enthu- siasm, for the man who is not en- | thusiastic about the work at hand is [ ““licked” before he starts. | The audience made up in enthusi- asm what it lacked in numbers and received the efforts of a battery of speakers with noticeable attention. Judge William 1. Mangan, nominee for judge of probate, was given an especially enthusiastic greeting aft having been referred to by Aftorney Francis J. Conti of Hartford as lawyer who could be thoroughly | trusted to fill the important position | { with credit to himself and the cit Trom all sections of Connecticut notably in the rural districts where | the republican strength has been proven time after time, there is| strong sentiment in favor of the| candidacy of Dean Wilbur L. Cross tor governor on the democratic ticket, Secretary Joseph A. Tone of the state central committee told au |} entinislastio gathering atiy, iy Al The fatfomngy sseald hio ihecidealin B society Mall hoat night in tns | With Judse Mangan and knew him first, genieral rally funderiino) party)| o A WAl CC 18 WORdARuE oo HEE auspices in the campaign. In onvl"‘“"“"’ In e iclionion BnEe :,l;’é‘tp(:(;[?gé; el ey crand Mangan Charges “Cheap Politics” Unemployment is the most (BN IE RN RO alze TRUE oy yortant sssue before the volers, Sec. |Publican fown committee for engas- Petary Tone. doclared, besause it af. |ing Rialto hall on Broad street for fects the livelihood of the majority |three nights for the purpose of pre- of the. people. “Drosperity jusi | venting the democrats from using it | round the corner” and the “fuil|t0 bring their arguments and issues before the voters. "It was the first nner pai captivating slogans % used by the republicans for. yeaes|sign of cheap politics in this cam- | paign. That's what it was—chean | to attract votes are not heard in | 1his campaign, he said, the “full din- | politic he declared Maybe they ! ner pail,” pictured with the legs of [call it political sagacity or clever- a chicken protruding through the |ness but if that is cleverness let top, apparently having a soup bone | them have it.” instead, for soup lin He called attention to the claim | ence throughout the country. v | of the republican candidates for the must have pulled (he bottom out of |legislature that they should be r the pail,” he said. “Hoover is quite [turned for another term because & magician, you know. they had experience which the “Firebrand of the Senate’ | democratic candidates lack, and he Preparing the local candidates for |answered it with the assertion that | their work in the general assembly, |unless they can put their finger on to which, he said, he confidently |some bill which worked out to the hoped they would be elected, Se benefit of the people and which they Tone related his own experi- |introduced or helped to have enact- when he held a seat in theleq into a law, they had not justified senate several vears ago. llc Was|{pejr membership. As to his own called “the fircbrand of {he senate™ | cangidacy ho said only that he by Hiram Bingham, present United|ouinocily solicited the support of | States senator and once BOVErNOT|iyo' ots of the city. Cdalcaydeolmndiat SbghoRo T Conti Criticizes Opposition Dbl Ol U U @i | Attorney Conti spoke at length on ship of the committee on sales of | 5 5 ' [the republican party's claims and land. “But they had no land to seli | s | and if they had, a substitute would |5¢ored the republican leglslature an: have been found for my place” he |EOVErnors for the situation created | ol | by their failure fo enact laws and iis Tistenad tonsday toa have them signed in the time re- quired by law, with the result that | facturer who was a senator from Naugaluck valley speak against a|the supreme court held the laws to | pe null and void and also disap- bill pertaining to the pollution of the | a waters because it would drive the |proved the validating act intended to | fndustries out of Connecticut an.|correct the first blunder. “Let's show throw thousands of workingmen out | them that we have some intelligence of employment, and immediately he |and brains in our party” he pro- put the senator down as a staunch | They have been in office for friend of labor only to find, to his and they cannot place the | surprise, that when the old age pen- for their actions at our sion came to a vote on roll call, the senator voted against it. That oc-| He criticized the republican party currence demonstrated, Secrefary | for its failure to take a stand on Tone asserted, that the working- |the liquor situation and for the GREATER CLOTHES VALUES And We’re Proving It Every Day! SUITS TOP COATS OVERCOATS TUXEDOS 116 Step into the TRAVERS Store and you will see how we are keeping step with economic conditions. Greater values because woolens are reduced—finer quality—the same that one year ago cost $35 and $40—direct from our own fdctmv to you. Every conceivable saving®goes to a im manu- Dlame door.” CLOTHES nc. 352 MAIN STREET |state. A large expenditure was mady | |streets because the state has failed | pay | sherifr. neglect of the ill und needy of the|presses confidence in the manage- ment,” he said. “I do not contend to provide hotel” in Norwich for (that jail and prison chould 14 to 16 women inmates who wer heaven on earth, by y means, but transferred from the state prison at |[I do believe that they should at Wethersfield to live ‘n luxuriously [least be sanitary. Not cveryone in appointed quarters while sick and |jail is a criminal, especially since mentally defective persons valk the |violations of the liquor law have re- sulted in sending men to jail for a | week or two and they certainly are entitled to living conditiens fit for | human beings. Local Attorn nominee torney to provide for them, he said. Slap at Rorabac Henry Roraback, chairman of the republican state central com- | mittee, who for years has remained | in the background, has come out i the open in the present campaign, Attorney Conti said, and now the claim is being put forth that the power interests which he represents | pay several hundred thousands of | dollars in taxes besides providing|Hagearty touched on the old age employment for thousands in vari-|pension bill which the democratic ous parts of the state. “They do not |party is backing and criticized the say anything about the valuabl:|republican party for decrying it on water rights those interests have ob- [the ground that it would cost the tained, though, even to the extenc|state foo much money. “Money, of wiping out an entire town, ceme- | money. money,” he d. hat i tery and all” he said. “You also | their cry. Instead of the full dinner remember the little jitneys which |pail which we used to arted to operate when the trolley |from the republicans. it tuation was found inadequate some | you-go. payving while going vears ago, and how they were wipe.i [hills to the poorhor out to make room for the Connecti-| Councilman Macora cut Co. buses controlled by the New |united drive election day Haven railroad. They have the best |set the work the republicans parking places in every city where |doing and Atforney Googel promised they operate and you and I, who|te support the old age pension pay our share of the taxes, cannot messure. Both assured the audience enter them.” |of their desire for support. not only There was a power station mear|for themselves but for the entire White Oak, Attorney Conti said, | ticket which did not pay taxes until \ld\ori Speaks for Old Age Pensions Paonessa forced the power interests William Kelly of Naugatuck to do so. and as to the bus system |livered a ringing address on the he asserted that he would gladly | merits of fhe old age pension bill $1,000,000 in taxes if he could |Wwhich the Fraternal Order of Eagles | have control of the bus lines, be-|is sponsoring. He was brought to | cause he knew it would be weH the 1y by x-Alde n - Michael worth it T. Kerwin and stirred the gathering Paonessa was a thorn in the side [{0 a high pitch of enthusiasm when the republican party in New he ared his confidence in {he Britain for years, Attorney Conti |Probability that after years of ef- said, as evidenced by his election to | fort a democratic legislature would the office of mayor three times de- |cnact the measure into la and spite the overwhelming rtepublican | have it signed by Dean Cross as majority normally credited to New 8overnor. - . Britain, and he suggested facetions.| Chairman Thomas I. Smith of the Iy that it would be a good move for | democratic town committee presided {and introduced th qxf:\hrw the republicans to sond Paonessa mi Hartford for four years as cou The republicans would thrn | be rid of him and Hartford would | welcome him. U Jalls Should Be Sanitary | I Tn a brief talk, ex-Mayor Paonessa | | referred to Governor Trumbull's an- | i nouncement yesterday that he | 1 et (13 (I Gfts G RBSIIIHDUOH of Nego(la[]ons With but, according to the newspapers, | x the governor made it plain that he | Chma Expemed SOOH had every confidence in the dires tors and the warden of the prison. “I hope the governor is sincere in | his move to have an made, but I notice J. Ticket Speaks William Hagearty. for state senator, and At- Samuel Googet and Council- Lucian Macora. nominees for | representatives in the legislature urged that the entire ticket be sup- ported on clection day. Attorney man hear is pay over urged on de- of dec would have an investigation made W investigation fate that he ex-| shington, Oct. 24 (P)—Tmmedi- resumption of negotiations be- tween the United States and the HAMILTON CURTAIN SHOPS 168 Main St. Opp. Strand —— SATURDAY SPECIALS At New Britain's Exclusive Curtain Shop COTTAGE SETS § FPour distinct, from, in blue, Special for set 1 vies to selcet gold or green Saturday only, CrissCrossCurtains Made of Irench Marquisette 82 READY MADE DRAPERY SETS cream and beige. Special for Saturday only, pair In all the popular colors, Special for including side draperies $9.39 Lace Edge Valance CURTAINS Hemstitched, made quality voile in cream. Special and valances. Saturday only, set Fringe Valance CURTAINS Made of fine quality Marquisette, 4 inch fring valance and curtain. for Saturday only, day only, pair $l.98 $l.00 FORT MILLS SHEETS 98 ¢ DayBed | PILLOW CASES Limited, 4 to a customer. Made’ of a neh on Special of whi for fine or atur- set Sizc Seamless. Saturday only Saturday only, cach fine cre- tonne, ruffled all around, each 88¢ Size 24x48. Shown in many color combination. gold, green and gr: ited two to a customer. Spe- cial for Saturday only ... 65¢ HAMILTON CURTAIN SHOPS 168 MAIN STREET Opposite Strand beft | cials on st about | Chinese nationalist government look- ing to cvent abolition of the | j reaty right Americans in Chir ‘ forec with the active | resumption by . C. Wu of his duties as Chinese minister t Minister Wu, who has been tending meetings of the Leaguc Nations at Geneva for his gove ment, is expected to confer this week with state department offi- reopening the entire ques- tion of the extraterritorial called treaty rights. To Resume Conversations The state department in a formal statement last month mounced it was prepared to resume conversa- tions on the question. Under these treaty rights American citizens in China are in effect governed by the codes of law of their own country and their property is not subject to the many hazards of the ancient Chinese laws. Since becomin, the predemiinating regime in China, the nationalist government has made a concerted effort to have the United es and other powers agree to an bolition of these privileges he state department ed for submission to the Chinese government a set of draft proposals to serve as a basis for discussion of the subject between the two nations The documents has not heen ma public, but probably will be sub mitted immediately to Dr. Wu for transmission to his government. State department officials decline to comment on the nature of th American proposals beyond stating they are similar but not identic to a of |y rn- 1i or so- P has prepar- set Av thepoli m government in rights such fore PRINCE Buch to Policy r how e the | ¢ GOING PARIS Rumania, Oct. 24 (P brother of King in a few da:s he will nd to affairs for a of sub) TO proposals on the same the British government To Adher learned n governt for Paris laid down by Secr T timson in his note crritoriality to the 1t on August 10, 1929 W ady to p fo cot rest, Nicholas, is leaving I. eric wi s 1rol here where rsonal n he Chinesc govern- that th articiy gradual ext 15 1 negot ishmer “cither itorial of jur condition, adual relinqui rocecd side by ients by the Cl 1 the enactme i tive en- ent of laws based oncepts of jurisprudence tions re- nq rritoriul to designated ex to particu- ction.” It was ho that m arcas or as side improve- | or nt Her Physical Attracti Compels Admiration on modern eness 1 was 1 right readin beto he poul STOP WORRYING ! ik casy mey—1 u nd you WO " AYMENT 1 per only 3 plan 1OI the INGMAN up to 83 as SMALL WEEK. 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