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' Vaam mmw - AT POISH MEETING W0 Misd Raly Uoder A - o of Rpabecan Gid : " Approximately 600 Polish-Ameri- ‘can citizens were present at Y. M. T. ‘A. B. Ball last night to hear Stat 'zu.m Frederic C. Walcott, repub- ‘Noan nominee for U. 8. senator, re- port on the work Herbert Hoover bad done for Poland during the World War and afterward bringicg relief to women and children. Wal- cott, who was a member of the Hoover relief commission and apent considerable time in Europe during the war, much of it in Poland, in their own land while two armies {fought for military supremacy, with | 1the result that thousands of women and children became victims of hun- ger and devastation. It was the ap- !palling sight of children dying from starvation which prompted him to! send a long cablegram to Hoover who at the time was in England asking him for aid he said, and within rcasonable time received a short reply from him in which the ipresent republican candidate for |president stated that he would do 'anything in his power to help the 'Polish nation, Walcott said. “What Heever has done for the ;Polish’ people is history lojuy," he said, “with the ald of the American ipeople and American money he ‘brought to Poland as he did-to Bul- glum, food and clothing to relieve the sufferings of your people. Were | it not for his help and his untiring lefforts, many bf your children, your relatives and your dear ones would Inot be living today. The Polish peo- iple always Rad and always will have 'a great fricad in Hoover and rela tions: between your mother country lan@ $he" country of your adoption | will forever remain friendly as long | as Poland has such strong friends as she has in Hoover and the Ameri- can nation.” Fenn Speaks On Tariff Congressman E. Hart Fenn, who was called upon as the first speaker of the evening dwelt at length of the | importance of the November elec- tions and the importance of selecting “a man of integrity, of good stanc ing, & ‘humanitarian and a leader” 88 the next president. He said that Heover ‘was the only man who can 83 will continue the even tenor of prosperity in the country. He rapped the democratic stand on the tWrift question, claiming that a re- lauction on tariff would bring serious | iresults to the American wage earner and that only through high tariff {rates can the prosperity and equal opportunity for, advancement be protected. Here he cited the conse- quences of lowering tariff rates which resulted during Cleveland's administration, when hundreds of thousands of workingmen, mostly toreign-born were compelled to leave'the shores of their adopted country and go back to their native land because of lack of work and low wages. He further explained the stand of the republican party on this question, stating that only through high tarift rates can the prosperity among the wage-earner continue, “America does not wish her soul, the common laborer, to suffer the consequences of low tariff rates” he said, “the republican party has ‘been and always will be for the iprotection of the common people 1and thelr rights and the importance lof preserving these rights lies with !the election of a republican copgress in the coming national election." 1 Here he praised the work of ‘Hoover as secretary of commece, jstating that this department, at one [uno only an honorary position in the president’s cabinet became the most important cog In the administrative wheel through Hoover's work. Dr. Lekston Speaks The final speaker of the evening ‘was Dr. Roman Lekston, who in the ‘Polish language explained to the . @sthering the meaning of a low tarift (Tate and paid tribute to the republi- can party’s candidate for president. “We iPoles owe this man a debt iof gratitude for what he had done {for our people,” he said. “There is ino question that the democratic icandidate is a friend of the Poles ,and can do a lot of things for us, 1but here we have a man who has al- ‘ready shown his friendship towards tour peomle by bringing aid to our idevastated country at a time it need- €d help. - We Polish-American citizns 1are indebted to him and the only iway we can and should repay our !indebtedness is by helping him with ,our votes to become our next presi- dent and thereby assuring ourselves prosperity and our mother country an everlasting and warm friend.” The speaker also touched on the @importance of becoming citizens and .the nower citizenship exacts. He urged everyone who is a voter to cast "their ballots at the coming elections no matter which way they intend to vote. “The selection by both par- ties this vear of men of ability, puts us Pelish-Americans in a quandary, but after studying both candidat.s, | there ean be no question in onr minds who we should vote for. There is only one man who can assure us continued prosperity, the man to whom we owe a debt of gratitude, Herbert Hoover.” | Traceski Presides | The meeting was sponsored by the | Polish-American Republican | apd it was presided over by J. Traceski. The program was other- wise featured with campaign songs by young ladies known as the| “Hoover Songs who art of the Women's Republican club of | this city. | Another guest of the cvening, | who helped fill the program with | vocal sclections, was Noah Swayne, grandson of Noah Swayne, justice of .U. & supremn court during Lin- | -coln’s administration and himself xl‘ ,distinguished orator and lawyer. He 18 & close friend of Hoover with whom he was associated in the de- | partment of commerce as adviser on ‘ wholesale markets ! Nettles sting brcause on their | leaves thers are fine brittle hairs| contalning poison which enters the | skin when the halrs—tubes, really— | are broken. I |cause for police action. {sprung so that the truck could not {in time to avold the INTO FRONT OF GROCERY Loses Comtrol ¢f Sedan om Greem- wood Wrost and smeshes Agaiast Bulkling. Malile Mancarella of 91 Rockwell avenue lost control of a sedan which she was driving south on Greenwood street about 2:20 e'clock Baturday afternoon and it went over the side- valk and into & yard at 162 Green- wood street, damaging the veranda of the house and smashing a show window and a screen door in Alex Cohen’s store. The bumper of the sedan was ripped off by the tmpact. Ofticer A. C. Walincsus reported that the driver wouid pay for the dam- age, and there appeared to be no | As Dr. S8amuel J. Chernaik of 87 | West Maln street was driving north | on Arch street about 11 o'clock yes- terday forenoon, a truck driven by Clarence Avery of 234 Glen street came out of Locust street and was struck by Dr. Chernaik's car and was forced against a telephone pole on the northeast corner of the intersec- tion. The radiator of the truck was damaged, and the front axle was be driven away. The right rear fender and running board of Dr. Chernaik’s car were damaged. Offi- | cer Delbert Veley reported that Avery did not see Dr. Chernalk's car collision al- though he swung to the right as far as he could as soon as he realiz- ed that the crash was imminent. A touring car owned by Frank Mularz of 45 Squire street, Hartford, and driven by Sophie Haduk of 165 South street, Hartford, was going west on Chestnut street about 6 o'clock last evening and a touring car driven by Carl Anderson of 167 Hart street was going south on Elm street when they collided. The rear right fender of the Hartford car was smashed and the front bumper of Anderson’s car was ripped off, Of- cer Veley reported no catme for po- lice action, Willlam F. Werner of 24 New Britain avenue, Hartford, was driv- ing east on North street about 6:30 last evening and misjudged the dis- tance to an open space as & west | hound trolley car approached, with the result that his coupe struck a sedan owned by Emanullle Olosio of 265 Washington street, which was parked in front of 137 North street, There was slight damage to both cars, according to Officer John O'Brien’s report. 50,000 ON STRIKE Hamburg, Germany, Oct. 1 (M— Fifty thousand shipyard workers went on strike today over a wage dispute in Hamburg, Kiel and other German ports. Work in the yards was continued with skeleton stal of foremen and apprentices. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS THE WORLD HAS | night, that the south had kept within | sured his listeners that with victory | solid as the rock of Gibraltar,” on MISSISSIPPANSAYS Cong. Wison Scathingly Ar-| raigas Republican Record Reminding an audience of several hundred men and women who gath- cred at a democratic rally at the Y. M. T. A. & B. society hall Saturday the democratic ranks, had gone down to defeat with the democrats time after time, Congressman T. Webber Wilson of Mississippi, as- within reach, the south will be “as November 6, election day. Several minutes of cheering, hand- clapping, stamping of feet on the floor and other evidences of ap- proval and enthusiasm prompted the rally committee to make immediate negotiation to bring the congress- man back for a later rally. He was unable to give a definite answer, but t it it is found that he can come to ! New Britain again a larger hall will be engaged. Arraigns Republicans In a severe arraignment of re- publican officials, past and present, Congressman Wilson named off a lorig list of men in high office un- der the republican administrations against whom graft had been | proved. He contrasted conditions with those which prevailed during | the World War when Woodrow Wil- | son probed through his rival candi- date for the presidency, Charles Evans Hughes, the first whisper of wrongdoing, and it was found that not a single public official had been | dishonest. Taking the Harding cabinet one | man at a time, he termed one “a | vacuum-head from Detroit,” another | “that crook from the Harding door- | step,” a third, “the echo of a great mountain,” while a fourth “would have received a portfolio after spending $1,000,000 of his private fortune to ¢lect the republican can- didate, had it not been for the fact that an outraged woman shot the Hell out of him, and Harding couldn’t put a dead man in the cabi- net.” Hoover's First Vote At 48 Congressman Wilson ridiculed Hoover for addressing a gathering of newly made voters last week on the advantages and the privilege of voting in America, “Why that man Hoover d1dn’t vote himself until he was 42 years of age,” the speaker declared. Speaking of Coolidge's refusal to ‘sacrifica Attorney General Dough- crty on the altar of public opinion,” when demand was made that his appointee be investigated as to scandals which, Wilson said, were later proved, the speaker compared Coolidge with King Canute who at- i A NEW 7 Advanced Six “400” Sedan |a briet discussion of religious toler- iman who holds it against Governol | governor, criticised the republican |absolutely improper in itself. the state to further his owa ends. Notice that there are no restrictions, no reservations, no guarantees na cost. laims Legislature Puppet “When the public lands of this state were opened to development by settiers, they paid the state for thein, When the public water powers of this state are opened to developu.ent by J. Henry Roraback’s friends, they are not even asked to pay for them, It is common knowledge that the legislature of 1927 was merely his puppet, the governor a tool whose 1ips were snapped like the catch on a purse when he accidentally men- tioned a thought of his own that did not tally with the Roraback polic The only‘Justification of such a gov- ernment by one man lies in the an- clent doctrine ‘The King can do no wrong.' But our forefathers had spirit enough to declare that doc. trine to be false and when a George abused his_powers théy ended his authority over them. Can the Con- | necticut people of today depose their Henry as their honored forebears did their George?” Attorney Thomas F. McDonough, candidate for senator, and Geuige | LeWitt, nominee for secretary of state, were the featured local speakers. Winchell Smith, play- wright, of Farmington drew rounds jof applause as he assailed the {publican candidates and laudad rese. Governor Smith. Mayor Paonessa Lok, e Jreowning Lo asabiusn: tiat acted as toastmaster. Mrs. Mary T, the government should be the ideal 9 l ye iCrean, opened the program singing, employer, and he suggested a change |“Star Spangled ner s in the retirement and compensa- | - v i Vi favored later with, “Put On You tion systems affecting governmental |\ gmitn Derby,” and the “Sidewatia agonls. of New York." Charics . Morra, nominee for 0 Aflm ™ IRON OUT FAULTS 'Navy Is Tripped Up by Surpris- ing West Virginia Eleven New York, Oct. 1 P—Now is the time for all good football coaches to jron out some of the kinks made painfully apparent in the gridiron's first general skirmish of the season on Saturday. With one cast's major tempted to sweep back the waves. “There never has been guch a foolish | ruler since the days of King Canute!” the congressman shouted. Continuing his discussion of the republican administration, the con- gressman declared Collidge's silence reminds him of what his mother used to tel him: “Webber, if you don't know what you're talking about, keep your mouth shut!" That's just what Coolidge is doing, according to Wilson. Hoover was termed “a Britisher,” and Governor Swith was character- ized, “the first citisen of mot only the Empire state of New York, but also of the United Btates.” Remarking that he is a Presby- terian, and Governor 8mith a Roman Catholic, Wilson entered into ance, conciuding with a declaration. “The man who holds it against me because I am a Fresbyterian, or the Smith because he is a Roman Cath- oli¢, is not it to live under the pro- tecting folds of the stars snd stripes.” Lonergan Suggests Reforms Augustine Lonergan, candidate for United States senator, spoke at length on suggested reforms in the immigration laws and in workmen's compensation legislation, which he promised to sponsor if elected to the scnate. With reference to the lat- party nationally and statewise. He charged that republican prosperity is a myth, and insisted that republican politicians are being protedted in their wrongdoings. Shoots At Roraback Particular criticlsm was leveled against J. Henry Roraback, chair- man of the republican state central committee, and official of the Con- necticut Light & Power Co. Speak- ing of the legisiative enactment of 1927 which gave that company great powers to harness the streams of Connecticut for the development of power, he sald: ¥ “I submit that such =a blanket grant of nearly everything in sight is | That impropriety reaches the proportions | of a scandal when the grant is made | to himself and his assoclates by the man who has seized on the power of ‘I want to tell Minneapolis, Minn.—*I want to tell 6ou how much Resinol Soap andOintmenthavehelpedmy skin. It was pimply, the pores were en- larged, lmr at the same time, it Wwas 8o dry and sensitive I had to be very careful what I usedonit. A friend of mine was sure your lfll%olnd ointment would help me, 32Iboughtsomeand was delighted with the results. 2 tigned) Holon Shebet are few cases of rash, ec- zema, itching or chaf notable exception, the elevens success—fully how they helped my skin ot be relieved by s few appli ti%nl of R:sinol %)intmen.tpll.’ndc.l. continuous daily use of ol Soap. Thousands testify to the QUYCKNESS with which Resinol acts. Try it. At all druggists. - For free sample of each, write Resinel, Dept.27,B M. Resinol whichwill [VERY WoRrp you hear aBout the new Nash "400"is a Goop Worp / LOT of talk about the new motor cars, a lot ofthings beingsaid both*'pro” and “con"'— But every word you bear abeut the new Nash 400" is good! And no wonder! The “400’ has won the eyes, the hearts—the entbasiasm—of all America. No one can look at the sleader grace, the smart modern style of the new “400" Salon body without a feeling of genuine admiration. And the new Twia Ignition motor! Here is the engineering marvel of the year. You'll ‘be amazed at the difference between this and older motor types— 9 Sedans from $585 s $1990, /. 0. b. foctory There’s real dash and spirit in its get-away, sur- passing smoothness at every speed. Easy steering, too, in the Nash “400.” People everywhere are saying it's the easiest steering car they ever laid hands on. Aad the motor car industry’s greatest value! Bijur chassis lubrication; Houdaille hydraulic shock absorbers; bumpers front and rear; and a long list of other important features. The whole world is saying—and they mean every word of it—Nash has built the car of the year. Be sure to see it, and drive it, to know what's newest and finest in modern motoring. 8 Coupes, Cabrisien, Victerias from $835 e $1775, . 0. b.factery NASH 400 Leads the World in Metor Car Value IMPORTANT “400” FEATURES—.V0 OTHER CAR HAS THEM ALL Twin-Igaition motor 12 Aircraft-type spark plugs High compression New double drop frame One-piece Salon feaders Houdaille and Lovejoy shock absorbers (esclasive Nash mesnting) Aluminum alloy pistons (fewsr Svat) World's easiest steering 7-bearing crankshaft (beliow crent pins) Electric clocks Bijur centralized chassis lubrication Short turning radiue Selon Bodies Longer wheelbases Totsionsl vibration damper Nash Special Design front and rear bumpers Exterior metalware chrome plated over nickel Clearvisionfront pillar posts A. G. HAWKER 58 Elm St. Tel. 2456 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER' 1, 1928, cleared ‘their first hurdle | although some of them had little or nothiug and [to spare. The exception was the Naval Academy, pro-seadon Bom- inees for possible national honors. The Midshipmen stubbed their col- lective (oo on Davis-Eipfhs and the West Virginians won by a safety, 3 to 0. Thus & sscond glant fell be- fore the well-trained Scarlet hurri- cane coached by “Crafty Cam™ Hea. derson. Davis-Elkins beat West Vir- ginia University, 7 to 0, two weeks ago. Next Saturday the Navy takes on another foe which may prove to be just as tough—Roston College. The outstanding feature on mest Saturday’s card however, will eee Bift Jones' crack Army array facing Southern Méthodist university. The Methodists bowled - over Heward Payne college, 38 to 0 on Saturday while the Army was romping to & 35 to 0 triumph over Boston Ualver- sity, -~ The Haskell Indlans, inveterate train riders, come from Lawrenoe, Kas., to clash with West Virginia's Mountaineers, and Syracuse, hard put to down Hobart, plays host to William and Mary in the other out. standing intersectional game in the Atlantic seaboard. The coming week-end will witneas the opening of the season so far as Yale, Harvard, Princeton and Brown are concerned. The Bulldog's first foe will be Maine; Vermont in- vades the Tiger's lair, and the Crim- son is meeting Bpringfield. Brown meets Worcester Poly. Hobart, which held Syracuse to a 14 to ¢ score, may not fare so well against the high ascoring machine Jess Hawly seems to have bullt at Dart. mouth, and Niagara, beaten de- cisively by New York university, has no hope of galning revenge by trampling Cornell's Big Red squad into the dust. Gil Dobie is as lugu- brious as ever but it didn't prevent Cornell from beating Clarkson last Saturday, Pennsylvania, Penn State and Pittsburgh should get little more than workouts against F. and M., Gettysburg and Rethany but the Lions may be rudely surprised by Gettysburg which scored 81 points against American last week. Just how New York university shapes up should be more or less disclosed when West Virginia Wes- leyan comes north to do battle with the Violet. Columbia has Union on her slate. Most of the other larger college teams should win without trouble. READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS DOMESTIC AND IMPORTED FOODS AND DELICACIES MEAT MARKET SPECIALS- TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY SPARERIBS = 20c PIG'S FEET 3 w 25¢ COMBINATIONOF _. 1 Ib &% BEEF LIVER s BACON SLICED anror 40C ROAST PORK 29; LowLAMB CHOPS n49: 2 | HEADQUARTERS FOR NATIONALLY KNOWN FOODS Foods at the A &P, either imported or domestic, are - selected with the utmost care so that the high stand- ards which you expect from the A &P will in no way be . lowered. You will find your favorite nationally advertised foods at all A & P stores — foods that have passed the tests of . thousands of users — at prices usually lower than elsewhere. . SUGAR IONA. Sound fruit of standard quality! Tomatoes Or Spaghetti — or Noodles — your choice! Ginger Ale Chosen as best by the Byrd Espedition! 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Grandmother's Brea LARGE LOAF o ATLANTIC & PACIFIC =