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6-0 New Britain Herald HERALD PUBL COMPA PLAYING BOND SAFE WITH IssUES sas & HUGE POTATO SURPLUS. AN IAMBARGO AND DISAST sewhere lide, go to T¢ ds 1 sition of gaming with luck ZONING ENABLING ACF COVERS MUCH GROUND is e enabling act which lle the zoning system in Britain was ndpoint of 1 fust how the ried out. One of the chict remain angles of impc t sundaries of the estimation of most citiz be the most {impo: position. is being | | | | BRANCH LINES YIELDING BEFORE AUTOMOBILES railroa NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1924, | 1 prolits of CHILDREN OF “POREIGN RN AND EDUCATION not persons hor em have g about at the oppor ipon cvery side In this ¢ > intent that thelr cjildren 1il take full advantage of them. | often frequently surpassing na- and glrls v ose ancestors | Yocabulas S Fact; and Fancies BY ROBIMT QUILLEN but man or until . much if n the murder” attribute iilty. who has the uous after both imagination and silly thuse « cross Xf you la word puzzles s untry for g ior is no reason Ivantages should 1 as hi; is as lass as in the ts inevitable conseque ag proportion of rough high school and to colleg is the AMERICAN DYES CONTROL MARKET GETTING PREPARED FOR AIR TRAVES 00 FIRE LOSS Wint No t beral Observations On The Weather refus- | | : p <] i A New Year's Resolution 1 veurs gone by, I've always made it of ons stald; sworn o smoking clgarcttes, \ saying “Darn!” and making bets, reso) hardly would the day go by 1'd be told by some smart guy, cun’t; 10l bet a palr of shoes 1 would say Y re on And one would ste I'd say “Darn lorn; after dinner light and p 1 that one To change a hahit So lest 1 overwor! 1 nover will p upon my corn, ' with fuce for- must ¢ or a trait; my brale resolve again Ward Luck = at college. | heard of your son's condi- rear axle. 8. Fuchs, Jones Girl, Catherine! Miflicent: “Are sables much worn ad this cason, Catherine?" Catherine I don't see any as much worn as yours, dear!" Bdward W. Barnard. Nice, ab Out of the Mouths of Babes— 1A, trying to teach my little girl the henefits derived from clean- iness, and asked: “Elsie, dear, Why must we always be careful to keep | our homes clean and neat “Recause company may walk in at any moment,” was her reply. —Mus, W. Diehl The trouble with most fellows keeping company with a girl is that they want to form a holding cor- | poration Wally Ang the Mystic i Your Questions, A Happy New Year, one and all! | 1f any problems fret or gall Just Let me make the write new ths chock full of mirth 1 cheer, Twelve m A Special Case Wher the cs in | with and My sweetie says he gets a kiss, What say you Very N Proper Miss My dear, but once a Dear Very year! 8o, while the By comes atmospliere 48 stirred icard. whistles isses can’s be A Pro Wally: avious Resolution Dear about 1 resolutions gi What a Pity! Thy Sting! ota ] Record Holders The Fditor's Gossip Shop Shingles icentrate | 1 must shingle my roof, Says the young lawyer: I must hang out my shingle, Says the ipebriate hubby: I wish I w'ash shingle m'self. —Mrs. B, B, Blume. The Last of 1921 King: "Why did you quit smok-, ing and poker-playing?" Kenworth: “I'm rehearsing my | New Year's resolutions." A friend in need is a fylend no longer, . (Copyright, 1924, Reproduction Forbldden) COLD CLATHS ONE " HAN OVER SUNDAY {New Yorker Frozen fo Death- Low Marks Registered New York, Dee. 20.—With warm- or weather predicted for today, N York city and the states along the | castern seaboard were still in the | lgrip of fcy temperatures ea this | morning. One victim, and unidenti- |fled man of about 45, was claimed by the cold here yesterday, | Upstate and in New England there {were little indications of immediate | |abatement in the record cold snap of |this winter. JThe thermometer here fell to 12 |above zcra yesterday morning and | {hovered around 15 degrees for most | lof the day, making it the coldest | | December 28 of 50 years, with two | 1.~\_m»pnnnp | | The mountainous scetions around | |Saranac Lake, N, Y. registered a | temperature of 20 helow zero at one |time during the day, and a lower point was reached in other Adiron- dack districts, with indications of further continued extreme cold for today. For the first time {n years there |is an ice jam, estimated to be 16 feet thick, in the Niagara river be low the falls, at this period of tl winter. 1t extends from Horseshoc Falls almost to Ontarfo. Iee also covers the wharves at Lewiston, Queenston and Niagara. The St Lawrence river, more than a mi and a half in width, 18 cempletc frozen across fn many sections, ac- cording to information from Odgens |burg, N. Y., where the thermometer fell 1o 20 degrees below zero yester- day. Boston with a lowest temperature of seven above zero was almost the {warmest place fn New England yc terday, with Lewtston, Maine, re- norting § below, Woodsvil Ho 15 below and the hill districts of Vermont 20 degrees belos Patents Issued to Connecticut People | List of patents issued to the citi- of Connecticut for the wee December 16, 1 fur- M. Schmidt, solici- 59 Main street zns ing nished by Loui tor of patents, No, New Dritain, Conn. Arthur H. Adams, Florez, Pomf D! Greco wing to the H. S W working machine, 1 B, Jlarps ymputi Hurd New th £hous: MeCollum, Jr., Mans Antiskid Nero, New Arvrow Eicetric Britain, DIt flush ns- ctrie (€ al switeh , Fairfiel nors to the Fuller Brush | Hiandle for mops, N g dc Greenwich. rwalk. Trade “The Ycllr(‘)\-\-'rml\'ri;l” Is (Caught in Chicago Dec. 29 ph We ¢ in con- eard, pany v hose arging him with Warring semann, German sts uding Kutter d in a nat i cell, belng released 1 1 bonds. ym bungalows. GETS PRIZE OF The Landing of the Prilgrims HREE hundred and four years ago the Pilgrim fathers landed on our bleak shores inwintry December. Little did they realize the great natural resources that lay beneath their very feet. It was some years later when coal was discovered in Pennsylvania, yet it was through these pio- neers that “OLD COM- PANY’S LEHIGH COAL” was found and eventually mined. <! The Citizens Coal Co. Yard and Main Ofice Court, Serlin Yard opp._Berlin_ station Tel 2635-5, Uptown Uffies 101 Arch St Tel. 3266 D3 o &7 &3 SRS ament, Viscount Cecil was enthy- slastically received by the la u- dienge, w h included Mrs, Wood- row Wilson. He is stuying today at the home of Thomas W. Lamont, wh Viscountess Cecfl are belirg tained ¢ ng their visit in 523000 IN GoLD Viscount Cecil Also Is-Awarded eme L . 820,000 Damage York, Dee. of Ch re than diplor New Done to Palais N W — Viscount i | Royal and Otiicr Establishments in in 1,200 presen of m diners, repre- | finarce Drass City, senting ey, W timated mo Xny terbury, arts and pro ceived a by rd in comm nz th troe He Looks Satisfied we of William Green of Coshoeton, O American Federation of Labor. It wa iately follow clection by the |executive council as the late Samuel M. Gompers' successor mime ing 1