New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1927, Page 6

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- o o H d}an_\one having the time and inclina- New Britain Herald .5 &2 von. euring con reaiis HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY prove to himself that this is a high o percentage of gain. Few cities, large 1 | or small, can equal it for any length | Tt is agrecable to note, too, that the town retains its fine residen character as it grows. Its reputation as such is high and it intends to re- { — | gardza as one of the smaller towns i TELEPHONE CALLS {of the state. pauee to realize i it that there are sections of the coun- { | try where a town of that size would { T . . Irate as an important business, com- o the Cits.. Circulation ad piess | mercial, and distributing center. In | Eom Alweys o i ALY | many western states the large towns 4 3 are few and far and if Newin i : gt Apciatass were put in the center of Montana, ; or fnstance, it would be head- quarters f trading extending 60 | miles around. But to us in Connecti cut and New England generally a "town of 5,000 makes little of an im+ pression except as a place for sub- llers i¢ it happens to be ar larger cities. | Good tuck, Newington | COUNTRY RAILROAD STATIONS Recently the New Haven railroad |in announcing the discontinuance of o ents at three small i = , announced that business at : A back seat driver is someone who | the points had fallen off 90 per cent loesn't get bl i for the collision. | since 1924, EAEET Perhaps the decrease of business 1t you think you hear the honk of |4t these towns was greater than the + wild goose it may only be a wild | AVerage; on the Whole, however, all | ey country town stations have suffer- ARG, ed somewhat similarly, and the rail- 4 { road must be hard put to know what § i jpeed to he sl Tt I"_‘M‘ly‘”( |to do about the situation. Covlluge had a reputation ol L e diregtienacetiy Matne recently placed all the blame R £ upon the private automobile, this It Mrs. Grayson had taken &lapior a previous statement that the steamer she would have been there | pqinees wag “coming back,” due to and ba inabllity of autoists to find parking H T space. This may have been truc in i “American wives tyramnize hUs-lho metropolitan centers, where it said a headiine. Especially | peraing casier for suburban dwellers when the time comes to turn OVer |4, sommute than to drive to the the well known pay envelope. {large cities and find parking space; i =5 but in the country towns and small H That western college alumni as- cities, the situation grows' more ] sociation which wanted a new coach | oute a1l the time. H «nd half a new team after the !n.\wl i A Ao Rt At i one game shows what Kind of qua)) station down the line had 1 sportsmanship often goes With mod- | unough work to keep him quite | ; ern education. busy. He was the chief agent of the | i e e railroad in the community, and at- { A good modern dancer is 60me-|yongeq to the details of freight trans- { body who wonders how people once | portation from the point as well as i had sufficient brains to remember | occonvore: he likewiss was a tele- i all the turns and twists of the old-| rarhor and nad to he busy at the| i time quadrille and'lanciers. ceys a considerable part of the time. H e Nowadays the passengers have all | A politician doesn't need 1o side |yt gisappeared, much of the short i with his inner principles to be Uc- | jaul freight leaves town by trucks, cessful. A1l that is necessary 18 10 4ng even in many cases the tele- run on the Republican ticket In a!zrain has been superseded by the 3 Republican district, or on the Demo- | telepnone, 1t is no wonder that rail eratic ticket in a Democratic district. { o0 g ave finding it difficult to main i T . tain the counfry agents Eversthing depends upon the, One wonders where the decrease point of view acquired. A New Brit- jn ghort haul railroad traftic will ain working man, Who now finds | «ton That part of the public which bimself quite weal Is one of the | i} travels on the trains for short most conservative individuals in | gistances demands good service, yet town. He 15 In full agreement With | (era rarely are enough of them to Henry Ford and John D. Rockefel- | fil] the couches. It is for this reason AR |that the Boston & Mainc last year| - - | wished to abandon a large mil A NEW OIL SCANDAL New Hampshire, an attempt that “I'tom bad to worse” is a verdict | wag not permitted by the state on the that threatens to be applicable to the | ccore that the branches were neces. I7all-Sinclair ofl scandal. Nothing | regardless of their non-paying more odorifcrous could be added m‘\,,h,”.w, r, and that it was the busi- he lengthy list of episodes in this|ness of the main lines to take in amed—or is “infamous” the Proper:enough to operate branch lines. than a mistrial on the | The gasoline coaches being oper- of jury tampering. ated by the New Haven on some runs Honest men, who have nothing to | over the Waterbury branch line scem i empt to tamper With | to be successtul and satisfactory. It irfos. In this case it is charged in|is true that a gasoline coach re- tMdavits that Sincl hired a bat- \}qmr‘ s an operator and conductor for lctectives 1o shadow | one coach, but they are con- *eon men” to : vevances for the railroad on run: ces With those | where travel s light. As serviee is g0 ryien w seen 10 fmuch of a factor in catering to th ak in their off hours. O public, it appears that t s said to have de- ¢ democratic | gasoline coaches run over would appreciate three separate llow and it he didn’t own an auto nvenient intervals to a greater ex- ngbile a block long after the trial | tent than one steam train with three was over he would he much sur-|coac The total of passengers that could be accommodated would he I-Doheny trial, | about the same, with th was not locked | with the gasoline coaches as to sery rmissions of the | ice given, nw self-cvident that this | The gasoline rail coa offer to 15 2 mis ; the Dist Iroads an opportunity to go o f Columbin, o s, 10 after some of the short-haul pas 00 it stake | PLANES IN THE FUTURE 1 with pted For 10 and up one can buy a Ho is 4 v fiivver airplane—with due cmiphasis off m ot e 'on the “and up.” Then one can hir termed yet he s an air pilot and be rcady to cor loing 1o mo 1any otlier lawyer | mute between where one desires 1o P «c idavits point The aivpianc industry has bee vorked n effort to | fignres at hand there is little likeli : z mething on” 1 rymen &0 hood that there will be as many l:v to nt them from giving a | planes as sutos within the average e outraged moral sense of the| Ior examples 1 there were nation has been acutely tried in#02 planes made in the United ruption to the Washington trial will | 1 there were 78; in 1926, the outrage the national scuso of honor o5 stood at 1,238, still more. T ot figures are ri but there pride in t of lLis cour 1o get wildly excited about cannot No industry the incidents tha roused pub- |60 vociterot lic indignatior | dustry, and when an occasional edi- | tor shows signs of being critical 1 THE GROWTH OF NEWINGTON [ fs immediately dubbed as lacking in With a population of between 4,- | the progressive spirit, if nothing 500 and 5,000, Newington has shown | worse. The newspaperimen which a gain of 500 the past year—and would rcfuse columns of free space NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1927. Britain lined up as fol- arrived. Everytt Captain Cryne, Mangan, re; Wainwright, the airplane ind bad weather otficial order for tion of Co. nd has call- o Fun Maxsow. d all commun; old members others intere approximately be forwarded to —_— Are Tmcky November skies New York. Facts end Fancies look | t is called “the open road” shut up to i arment put on at | gown worn all night. e drank too mw rawling under the And then he shook the im home in & 1 everybody required to make proportion of a large crow get aboard the d Hearing 1s Believing! probably happily married Spfcesoooln the same tooth paste. ctively as a ocean's brine, and de- behind us little where traffic is Licld up in t certain political party clephant as an o S the trough, wiation advancing so rapid won by the that can control the we planation. But up at the present there is 10 stop on the s 1o scll him Lyceum to High stre stretzh, and especially noteworthy in lat in the r t impromptu 1 kind you can learn 1o love after rt from the you get over “being in love. bus stops are appra mately two to a A Vivid Description! and somctimes mor “Harold,” asked rich adopt the new things | > trolleys siop and the plain people own, of course, there will be traffic interference, and when the to accommodate passengers “Doughhoys” en go signal is on the tion is partic 1y happens, that by Four-Leaved Clovers. Tlorseshoes, sengers have Plack Cats? red stop lights and trolley HURCH LAND fea of a sport is a man v with his last breath, “Sign- she'd throw supied by un 5 Beating swovds keep on beating history into the ities and tates twisted versions of licads of children. When you smash into a road Yoj lying there. This is a point upon which ther is plenty of room for dis land occupied by a church increascs as well as ot} stays there increase. Let o dowr occupy a choicr tury and in that somehody invents al times the el reproduction | * chuckled the land, especially the increased val loinoss de ] suggestion | made is to permit churches to occupy | PASTOR their land without y HEALER” REPLIES swers | mother ing such occupand An hour lat sell out, to tax them for the “Great Scott!” T coming here public New York Calvary | forgot to mail was to postpone her visi wcopating Celery! my unlucky law is debata 4 line at Baptist Church, unearned increm tax officials much Roach Straton to 10 resign bec Al Christian methods “to stop | exhausted, | disciplinary services with meetings are Commodore Guests Sleep as Fire Burns will he two year 7 > 1ol this Thanksgiv stel Commodore 0N would liawve been 50 left theiv A watchman discovered the fir ator car on the top floor Exceptionally 1 night manager and hotel being boosted ing b Interpretationt lypaschia gliplangiin. “When our colle " boasted play 11 What's the ‘A. M.'?" asked Saun- extinguished The top floor is oc- little difficulty. cupied by service shops. Manhandlers.” when they returned after 1 % ‘pm_w.,g my college team they were |that of the Mohammedans. police today for the driver who 11 P. M." smiled Saunder: Q. Is New Year's day a general | failed to make himself known after “How come the ‘P. M.'?” | holiday throughout the U. 8. and its | running down two men late last “Eleven Partially Mangled! | possessions ? | night. The injured men were re- ) —Mary Kostant, A. Yes. | pairing a tire on the rear of a e Q. When a note falls due on parked car when another machinc 0 Let's Get This Straight! | Sunday or a holiday when should it | crashed into them @nd knocked { She came in to view the celebrity. | be paid? | them to the street. The men in- o When the celebrity came into view | A, When the day of maturity |jured were John Souda, 37, who is B was glad that she came to view |ralls upon Sunday or a holiday, any |in a hospital with possible internal | the celebrity that she came in to negotiable instrument is payable on |injuries, and Shaken Hazjar, 35, who { view, the next succeeding business day. | has a fracture of the left leg. Poor thing, she didn't know that 2. What is the Aurora Borealis? he eelehrity that came into view | A. It is a display of light in was not the celebrity she came in 10 |the upper regions of the atmos- Observahous view, but another celebrity who phere, seen in the direction of the came in to view the celebrity she |north magnetic pole and sometimes | 0 T’, W ,' e in to view. She had gone by | called Northern lights. n e eather The aurora the time the celebrity she came in | is usually a broad arch of light with | | to view came into view! | streamers above it reaching toward | Washington, No: orecast for t cheery thought | Claire B. Castro. |the zenith and often suggesting | Southern New England: Cloudy, A t. 1027, Reproduction | tongues of flame. The color may |probably light local rains and | Forbidden) be white throughout or it may be |colder tonight; Thursday fair and oy shot with brilliant hues of red, yel- | colder; fresh south, shifting to west . Tow and green. The auroral line of | winds. the spectrum is green and is appa Forecast for Faster New York: ently always present in the sky. | Cloudy and colder tonight; Thurs The rays or beams of light pro-|day fair and cooler; fresh southwest ceeding from the arch are really | winds shifting to northwest tonight. parallel to the dipping needle, that!| Conditions: A disturbance is cene is they follow the lincs of mag- | tral this morning over northern On- netic foree |tario and pressure is low over the Q. How mary pounds of water |Lake region, $t. Lawrence valley, '0 the acre are there in an inch of | Ohio vailey and southwestward to in? | Texas. Scattered showers were re- A. A rainfall of one inch over |ported from Oklahoma northward ic acre of ground would amount to |and northeastward over the Missis- 640 cubic inche valent to | sippi valley, Ohio valley and upper 3.680 cubic feet. A cubic foot of | Lake districts. Areas of high pre: pure water weighs about 62.4 pounds | sure prevail over the North Atlantic, and the weight of a uniform coat- | Kansas and Utah. Temperatures ing of one inch of rain over one | continue unseasonably high in the QUESTIONS ANSWERED i surface would he 226,512 Atlantic states but are much lower f pounds or 113 1-4 short tons. The | from the Ohlo valley westward to H You can get an answer to any weight of one 1. 8. Gallon of vure | the Rocky mountains, stic t or information bY | water is §.345 pounds. Consequent- | Yreezing temperatures prevail riting to the Question Iditor, New |1¢ g yginfall of one inch over onc over the northern plains stafes. rliin Thiold, Woshinglon Bhucel | aore of svound wouls ne 97143 eal| Gondlilgns Tavor fos thix oiniie New Sfons svanie, Wiaskimetonilion s or waler MR Sq tvaientito)| ot it col loeal s il . C., encle Mg LWo cents in Stamps | 6o3 parrels of 45 gallons each. cooler. | for reply. Medical, al and marit Q. What are the functions of the | Temperatures yesterday jadvice cannot be given, nor can|ymerican Red Cross and how were : High Low Mtended vesearch be undertaken. {0 SR | stiantic cit 60 A1 % dLEeLions Sy acoelyoR e (WA ST Operatesiundent & charter | Boston 56 personal reply. Unsigncd requests|gyonieq ny act of congress of Janu- | Butaio. .. .. [ jemmiol Be muswsed; | SUSIRIS GEC )y b ne0s ip el wolfiiertd Grlees 40 cenfidential.—Editor, aid to the sick and wounded of | Cincinnati ... | Q. Can an alien who was ad-| armieis In time of war in accordance | Denver ... mitted to {his country as a visitor | With the convention of Geneva; to | petroft | who overstays his visit without [2ct in matters of voluntary relief | puluth sthorization beeome a citi- | a0d in accord with the military and ! Jatteras T naval authorities as a medium of | Jacksonville .- .. | communication between the Ameri- | Kansas City can people and their army and navy; | Tos Angeles He is not a legal resident cannot become a citizen unless : ’1 . 0 ‘H i it tto continue and carry on a stem | Miami e s eith tne immisration | Of national and international reliet | Minneapolis in time of peace and to apply the ck: | law ar the requircd time y A the Nantucket same in - mit ting the suffering | New Haven thereatter, {caused by pestilence, famine, fire, INew Orleans . {0 Vhere a when was Henty | ioods, and other at national | New York . Ford born? | calamitics, and to devise and carry | Norfolk | A, He was hom on a farm atjon measures of preventing the | Northfield | Grocnficid, Miehisan, July 30, 1863, | same. | Pittsbursh | Q. What is the address of the| Q. How many members of the | Portland, Mo. | American Civit erties Union? | Marine Corps of the United States|St. Touis ! A, 1uh Fifth Avenue, New York |during the world war were entitled | Washington - feits |to the rederal honus and how many | . Who won the national motor- japplicd for it? | SViih Tie a2 A The number entitled to ad- | A, RRobert Sarke an won the 25 | justed compensation was 78,3 2! | ASTOR PIANOS| ile race in m s, 21 seconds | by October 31, 1926 Syracuse, New York plied and 59,204 were certified. | 5 Q. What is the largest scarch-| Q. When and by what states||| Uprights, Players, Grands used in the United States |w e the first Mother {" A, The Mobile 60 inch anti-air-i A. The first mother's aid laws| REBUILT USED PIANOS t searchlight developed by the |were passed in Missouri and Illinois | pension laws | Est. 1768 O Corps of Bnginecrs. It has 1 .um.-“m 1911, | $50 Up o et dietatd s otiie) Al \Worcester After Il Walter H. Kovel " A, Marland, OKlahom Hit-and-Run Driver Tuning and Repairing |« on was the first subway | Woreester, Mass, Nov. 2 (®—A || 38 Rockwell Ave, Tel. 228-2 constr ind where? | general alarm was sent out by the A, In London, England, ir | | L two track road from g = Cross. Irom this TFOR THE BEST was fina pro- | Ietropolitan Dis- | . greater part of 1 prior to 1870, Main Oftic Phone 2798, Yard strand 1 24 Dw B e SREee i) trance Strand Theater. 24 Dwight Court. for the tenance of public chools in the in 1880 and in 1925 | A, Tn 1800 the fotal expendi- THAT BATTERY as $140,506,000. In 1925 it 946,10 fizures are | you know how to treat it? Cold weather {s coming: some day the s will balk—hecause you haven't treated the battery right. 1c night when a particularly interesting program is coming over aker, your s:t may go dead—if you havew't treated the bate 1 from the report of the Nation- {al Industrial Conference Board pub- | lished in September, 1927, Our Washington Bureau has compiled an interesting and Informative e e bulletin on batterics, the theory of constructlon, thelr care and operation. 2. @ E Fill out the coupon below and send for It. It may save you a lot of bother, tima and expense. | the earth ave entirely devoid of ——-——— - CLIP COUPON HERE = == == o= | ELECTRICAL EDITOR, Washington Bureay, New Britain Herald, New Britaln Herald A. The point at which bodies on Q. Did the ancients begin a new year in January? 1522 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. A, The Athenians began the year T want a copy of the bullctin BATTERIES, and encloss herewith fl\al in June; the Macedonians in Sep- cents in loose, uncancelled, U. §. postage stamps or coin for same: tem the Romans first in March STREET AND NO, and afterw sians on Aug Mexicans on ards i 1 January; the ila the an \ry 23; the Mo- | ; e o ST e Tuly. mhs Ohin I am a reader of the Herald. B D et T R —— vear, which begins late in January or early in Febru: is similar to Mickey (Himself) McGuire, Grapho logist. By Fontaine Fox. g MCGUIRE DEMONSTRATES THAT HE CAN READ A PERSONS CHARACTER FROM A SPECIMEN OF THEIR HANDWRITING

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