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Times Square; Schults's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central, d Street. ————————— After all, who pilots the local grand old party is not as important as what candidate gets the most votes. Ten years from now citizens will point' with pride : té the auditorium in the senior high school and ecom- mend: the school board of 193$-29 for its perspicacity and foresight. e It Secretary Mellon assails that $24,000,000 dry fund once again we will agree with certain citizens that he is a wet. What must we think, however, when Congress passes it and the President vetoes it? —_— The uniform traffic bill in the state senate, we take it, has nothing in common with the type of uniforms the traffic cops are supposed to wear. Down in Washington & citizen got out of serving on a jury by answer- ing, when examined, that he did not know there was a national prohibi- tion law in’the District of Columbia. Being honest, he merely judged by appearances, ¢ If the Legislature changes the marriage law so that Naugatuck is torced to cease being the Gretna Green of Connecticut the town will be compelled to think up & new slo- gan. A cover charge usually is some- thing that covers a multitude of sins. Depending upon what one orders. If the new senior high school is to be a theater, it is doubtful whether it ever can put on shows as funny as those at city hall. This is the week for perfect at- tendance parades ia some of the school grades. Justice also demands a parade for parents who struggle successfully every morning to get the tots off to school on time. Whether to combine the milk and meat inspection services of the city is something for the constituted civic autherities to thresh out. The only thing we are certain about is this: That under no circumstances must. there be a let-up in efficiency. What the people get to eat needs to be thoroughly watched at all times. SALESMANSHIP NEEDED The board of health has import- ant items in its budget. Some of them are new items. Doubtless it would be in line with the ideals of a pro- gremive city to go through with the entire budget as suggested. But in order to make headway in this direction salesmanship is need- ed. Tt is the business of the board of health to convince the Common Council and others whom it may bs necessary to convince that its sug- mestions are reasonable and neces- sary. This cannot be done by writing the items in the budget and then making no insistent effort to push them through city hall. Getting things in the budget is only one-third of the work. Every city department puts budget that it ddes not hope to get. All budgets look alike to the students of economy in city hall, and unless items are explained and fought for they have slight chance of being realized. The board of health wants to re- | open the sanitarium at a cost of $25,- 000; it wishes to open two clinics at a cost of $8,500. It these things are worth while—and we have no doubt about it—they are worth fighting for. THE HANDY SNOW ACCOUNT It scems merely a matter of luck for the snow removal account at city hall that there has been no downfall of two or three feet of the beautiful. 80 far nature has worked in harmony with the city, there having been only one snowfall and that nothing 1i those remembered by old-timers a having ticd up traffic in these parts. But cven this little snowfall cost the eity $3.000, and it has been necessary to procure the funds from accounts other than the one set aside for the purpose. That is to say, the snow re- moval account was hors-de_combal 1 items in its’ The snow and ioe appropriation for the curreat year was only $5,000 to Begin with. The city evideatly was a 00d forecaster of the kind of winter we were to have, beating the U. 8 weather bureau 8t its owa game. and in this manner: Whereas the U. weathéer sharps do their forecasting only a few days at a time, the city last February opined that only $5. 000 would be need for snow and ice removal this wint On this basis the department would atill be $2,000 ahead. But that is not correct. We have already ssen that the first costs of the first snow removal bee had to be obtained from other funds. What we get out of all this is that the snow removal fund was “busted” before winter began. The snow removal funds, of course, ‘were sadly depleted by the purchase of the loader, the most amasing con- traption in the possession ef the city. There is no objection to possessing up-to-date machinery, of course, and to pay for it out of snow removal funds instead of getting the where- withal otherwise is at least one way of obtaining the machinery. But there would have been money left| in the account if "it had not been that & draft was made from the snow fund to pay, or help pay, for the dedicatien day bills. 1f there is more snow “‘something will have to give’’—perhaps another account. POLITICS AND COMMITTEES Thirteen Democratio state senators and 40 o@d Democratic members of the lower branch of the Legislature indicate the sensational trend away from the dominant party in the state. Thanks to the carrying power of the Al Smith book in the state, the Democrats possess more than a third of the membership of the senate, and can defeat any motion requiring & two-thirds vote; they can block the cherished suspension of the rules when the majority desires to put something ever; they can force a roll call and thus put everyons on rec- ord—a species of publicity which is frequently disliked by the majority. Not sings the halycon days of Simcon Balwin have the Democrats had so much power in the Legisla- ture. But the Republican majority plays its cards with subtie ease. It is never found nepping. If the Democrats are stronger in-the Legislature than they used to be, then hold them down re- gardless—this is the motto. The first place where the political policy is brought to bear is in the virtual exclusion of minority representation from all the important committees. Thie is more important than it looks on the surface. It is in the committees that the burden of work is dome. If a bill can be killed in committee that usually ends it in the Legislature. At the final jam there s little incentive to do much about bills that the committees 46 not favor. The majority party this session ropresenits only a ' little more than lml} the people. By (ignoring the representatives of the remainder it allocates te itselt the right to dominate legislation minus the voices of the minority. In the emotional words of the New Haven Courier- Journal: “By excluding from their consid- eration in committce members of the General Assembly who represent nearly one-half of the populatien and are possessed of as much ability as their associates recruited from the dominant party, a practice has been adopted in the control of tie state which is vicious in its philosophy, mischievous in 1ts operation, danger- oOus to the welfare of society, and reprehensible in its assumption of superiority. . . ." CHANGING JUDGES “It Connecticut citisens are dis: satisfled with the way in which a judge exercises his direction they have their remedy in appearing be- fore the judiciery committes of the General Assembly and asking that they nominate a judge with a differ. ent temperament, who believes in im- posing more severe sentences, to serve for the next term.” Thus spoke the Rev. Ralph ‘H. White of New Haven, research secre- tary of the Anti-Saloon League. The judiciary committee of the Legisiature receives no such re. quests; or if it does, no changes are ever made as a result of such hear- ings. The right to a hearing ‘beforé the committee in theory gives to complainants an opportunity to_help shape the type of judicial tempera- ment that sits on merely listens. We a that is just.as’ well. 4,000,000 CONFUSED VOTERS Simon Michelet. president of the Get-Out-the-Vote club, is heard from in Current History, and in a m: that induces us to be more vinced' than ever that the electoral choosing pedi- dents is a fraud. At least, According between three and four' million people were defrauded of their votes by getting confubed over the necessity of voting for elec- tors instead of for their choice for college method of to this expert, president direct. For instance, the and counted for the bench. As & matter of practice the committee not sure but total. vote cast electors, according te the final computation of the Amso- frees, was 30,798,069 But Uniapovertura in Chiga _could not have votes counted and thowe actually cast marked,—this being possible because in many atates the electoral boards are required to .keep both sets’ of fgures—the expert makes his amas- 8. | ing estimates of the aymber of peo- ple who actually threw their votes away because of confusion over the electoral celiege ' pussle. In other worda these ¢,000,0 weat to the polls expecting to vote for either Hoover or 8mith, and sud- denly discovered that the names of the presidential candidates were ab- sent from the ballots, but in their places were those of a horde of electors whose names were unknown. It is idle to say an intelligent per- son would not be fooled in this man- ner. The fact is, many an intelligent person, but lacking the time or in- clination to make themselves a quainted with the situation before- hand, is thus victimized. Especially is this easy to understand in view of the millions who voted last Novem. ber for the first time or the first tme in many years. “Adoption of a constitutional ndment”—says the Waterbury Republican—"providing for popular election of the President and Vice President would greatly simplify matters and would also cohform to the principles of demecracy, a thing ‘which the electoral college aystem not énly does not do but was never intended to do.” But 30 out of joint are the times that the person who talks constitu- tional amendment just now is likely to be regarded as a bolshevist. WHEN METROPOLITAN FAIL TO SHINE It is with & fair proportion of amusement that we read of the ex- perience, of Waterbury in connec- tion with the employment of a Metro- politan Opera singer to furnish some artistic entertalnment in the Brass City. ‘The experience in Waterbury was this: Miss Grace Moore, a charming star from the Metropolitan, was bill- ed to give & oconcert in connection with Gieseking, the famed pianist. Miss Moore got her pictures in the papers, und the advance. publicity showed without a doubt that a great treat was in store. Mr. Gieseking, be- ing & mere pianist, and also a mere man, did not share much in the pub. leity, ‘When the concert took place, how- ever, the intelligent Waterbury audi- ence learned something—the same thing that has been learned in this town: And that is that a ‘Metropoill- tan star for that reason alone can- not make the welkin ring It on the same platform is an artist ime measurably’ better. Here is how the Waterbury American told about it: STARS “Last evening Miss Moore was un- der a marked disadvantage. She had to appear on the same platform with Mr. Gieseking, a planist of majestic power and brilliancy. It is nothing to the discredit of the young singer that she was quite over-shadowed by the gifted virtuoso.” “Perhaps there shouid be a law to prevent Metropolitan stars from be- ing shown up in this manner, but Congress 18 too busy to bother about it. Yet if our infant industries nced protection, our Metropolitan stars need it just as much. ‘'SMIPMENT OF ARMS The supposition is widespread in some circley that arms manufactur- ing plants in the United States sup- ply the equipment for all the world’s revolutionaries, from China to Nicaragua, Indeed, there are some observers ‘in Connecticut who seem to be of the opinion that Connecti. cut arms manufacturers do & land office business whenever shooting starts somewhere. How far from the truth this con- clusion is is indicated in the last statistics 1egarding arms exports, as compiled by the League of Nations. Thees ato for the year 1926. In that year Great Britain provided 25.5 per cent of the world exports of arms and ammunition, the United States 18.1 per cent; Czechoslovakia 14.3 per cent; Germany 12.1 per cent; &nd France 10.3 per cent. The figures don’t run so very high, tariat reports, arms and ammunition to the value of $55,762,154 were ex- ported from all countries; although the figures for represents the value of arms and governments but illicitly sent to indi- viduals for revolutioniry purposes. China, for instance, that year. It must not had- accumulated in the imported only $375.231 in arms; in 1928 its imports had jumped to $7.- figures reported by the Chinese gov- ernment, not necessarily tycoons who were fighting the gov- ernment and Iagd to buy their arms on the quiet. These have now be- come the Natlonalist government. Without the arme-from -abrbad the but net ceunted becauss improperly | either. In 1925, the League Secre- imports that same | .year totalled only $45,244,457. The difference of $10,500.000 presumably | ammunition which were not sold to was seething be overlooked, 100, shat at the close of the World War ‘great stores of arms and ammunition various. countrics. THese were disposed of as rapidly‘us possible. In 1921 China | 199,438. That only accounts for the by the been achieved, as there i3 no manu- facture of firearms in that country. The nations of Eurepe have been carefully. restricting the expertation of firearms to the nafives in lands under their flags. Even before the ‘World War the Brussels Act impos- o4 severe restrictions upea the ex- portation of firearms to the natives of. Africa. The: Convention en Inter- national Trade in Arms signed at St. Germain in 1919, but subsequent- ly net.ratified, would have greatly intensified the restrictions. The St. Germain treaty, subse- quently taken up by the Assembly ef the League of Nations, met with ob- jections in the United States. This led to a succcssful effort to meet American objections through the Temporary Mixed Claims commis- slon, which placed a treaty draft be- fore an international arms confer- ence at Geneva in 1925. American delegates were Theodore E. Burton and Hugh 8. Gibson. As finally sign- ed, the convention prohibits the ex- port of arms and ammunition to private individuals, but allows the export under conditions to govern- ments. The convention, however, has not yet been ratified. Under this plan the United States ‘could not permit the sale of machine guns, cannon or armored cars, etc., to private individuals in China, Mexico or elsewhere, but can allow euch sale to the various governmenta. Under such an international agree- ment the revolutionists “in these countries would be hard put to car- ry on. We are not certaln whether this is a good plan. It certainly up- holds all the established govern- ments, good and bad; but if the Chinese revolutioniats, for instance, could not have obtained the where- withal to shoot the rotten previous government would have been able to maintain itself. The rule, in such a case, would have " prevented what amounts to progress toward atability and an improved government in the greater part of Asia. Facts and Fancies Age has compensations. You feel no urge to go bare-headed or wear floppy pants. Women may be equal, but a man doesn’t persuade some friend to go with him to the barber shop. If only the intelligentsia would say or do something to prove its super- fority instead of just registering scorn, ‘War has its Insect pests, and peace has iis critics who knock every show in an effort to seem fed- up and superior. 5 What & world! You wonder how a man so worthless got & Wife like that, and why a man #0 able picked one of that kind. Women grow up to wealth, but there isn’t much more a man wants after he reaches the level of a clean shirt every day. And yet, alas! the metropolitan who boasts of the superiority of city men can name only one, Spcaking of war, many of those killed last year by automobiles might have lived through & year oftrench warfare, ‘Wives of great mesr 0ft remind us we can strike & pose sublime, but the one who sews our bhottons will sce through us all the time. Americanism: Sick people taking nothing because they are poor and ignorant; well people taking “health- builders” because they are adver- tised in the magasin: Massachusetts’ h the. flu epidemic ‘is t a national panic. Still, @8 & gencral thing mere panic doesn't make you spank the children. M. D. says ‘That 8yracuse professor is right. When you don’t nced swear words, all of them are too strong; and when your need: is great, none is adequate. It might be well to replace Mr. Mellon, it only to show the people that the government can keep on functioning without him. Woman may be less efficient than man, but she can dress withe out fastening thirty-two buttons. 1t's still a hick town if its citizens are proud of their traffic problem. About al you can say for Feb- ruary is that one of its nights sees the last Christmas toy stepped on and kicked into a peaceful oblivion. Modern progress isn't so impres- sive when the laundry doesn't come and you try a bath with paper towels, Correct this sentence: “Indeed, yes, Madam,”. sald the salesman, “Our smartest coats are in the larger sizes, 40 and 42." Copyright 1929, Publishers Syndicate The Christmas trec was known. perhaps common and pépular, in Strasbourg. Alsace, as eatiy is 1064 pan, Along with us all black and' blue From falis on icy walks we gloat That January's skidding too, Good riddance—Winter gets our goat! Story of Mankind! Gaites: “Mankind has come long way since primitive times. Hendricks: "“Yes, from all- to plus-fours!" CURBOSITIES! By Irvine D, Feeder make a good speech, ¥ And nobody cheerg me; make a bad break, And everyone hears me! write a good song, And nobody tries it; turn out some trash. And everyone buys it! dance rather well, And nobody's boasting: slip en the floor, And I'm in for & roasting! dress & Ia mode; And nobody truckles; wear an old hat, And everyone chuckles! work like a dog, And nobedy praises; slack up & bit, = And T get the blue blazes! do as they wish, And I'm all on fhe level; do as T please, I'm & son of the devill! Some Cook! Mrs. Gorman (to new cook:) “Do you know anything about cooking utensiis?" New Cook: “Do I1? Say, I can cook ‘em s0 they'll melt in your mouth!” —Leon Mercade Frequently” when two young per- sons think they are one they are as if they thought they were every- body! It's Usually the Oase! After-trying -for several hours to g¢t George, Jr. to go to slecp, . his mother, on hearing the church clock strike ten, remarked: “Just listen! It is 10 o'clock and you are still awake.” 'Well, T have to be awake hefore T can go to sleep, don’t 1?" asked Junior, —George McKamey Why Loonard stood at the head of his class! g BRIDGE TABLE TALK Overheard by J. C. Fraser SCIENCE AND INVENTION (As sent to The Fun Bhop) Henry: “Say, Joe, why do they al- ways put astraw on fresh concrete?” . o o (And how other contributors viewed itde Soothing Tt! * Visitor: “I noticed as I came here on the boat & large amount of straw floating on the water.” Long Islander: “Yes, that's deaden the Sound!" —Eleanor G. Smith to Sy Why It's Donet Harper: “What's the idea of al- ways serving a straw with a soda?” Clerk: “That's to tickle the palate, of course!" —L. M, Paulsen (Copyright, 1829, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED' You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents ip stamps for reply. Medical, lcgal and marital advice cannot be en, NOr can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—Editor. Q. What is the proper seq day, month and year in w date? A, The general practice is write dates beginning with month, followed by the day of the month and then the year. For in- stance, January 1, 1929. If the day of the week is to be included, it is written: Tuesday, January 1, 19 In using such terms as “Christmas Eve"” and “New Year's Eve” does the “Eve” refer to the whole day before Christmas and New Year or just the evening of the day before? A. The dictionary defines “eve” as “the evening, and sometimes the | day, before a church festival or saint's day; also the evening before certain other dates and events”. Following the latter definition, Christmas eve is the day of Decem- ber 24 and terminates at 12 o'clock midnight; New Year's eve is the day of December 31, ending with midnight of the same date. Q. What kind of & game Bunco? A. It is a gambling game, played with dice at Tia Juana and other gambling resorts. There is also a card game by that name. Q. When and by whom Manhattan Opera House in York City built? A. It was built in 1906 by Oscar Hammerstein on West 34th street, New York City. The seating capa- city is 2,800, * Q. Was the moon cver part of the carth? How docs it compare with the carth in size? A. The moon is a satellite of the earth and revolves around it. It is much smaller than the carth, It is believed that at onec time the moon was a part of the spinning earth, and that the hot body of gases which formed both the earth and the moon broke as it spun, into two masses, one of which became the earth and the other the moon. Q. Who is the national indoor woman's ico skating champion for 19287 A York. Q. What unit of measurement is a “perch” in land sugveys? A. The term “perch” or “pole” is was New Miss Elsie Muller of New the | “We had a terrible time with Grandma iast summer. She doesn't know French or Italian, and would go chatting along pleasantly in Eng- lish to servants, salcspedple, and %0 forth, and when they idicated they didn’t understand she began to shout at them, under the {impres- slon that if she sald it louder they might get it. Another finesse gone wrong. “It certainly was hot in Tiome. 1 swore to old Mrs. Tewksbury before I loft that I'd place a bunch of flowers on Keats' grave for her. We drove to the English cemetery in an open carriage, and by the time we got there the posies were s0 parched they looked as if they might have been left over from his funeral. But the -cards scattered over the grave made the trip worth while. Such inscriptions as ‘“the tender thought of Mrs. Isadére Stein, Cedar Rapids, Towa,” didn’t coincide with the camellias, some- how. That's game! “I've never thought much about relncarnation, but the other day we were talking about what we should like to be if we ever did come back, and I've made up my mind that I want to be clever at the piano, have naturally wavy hair, and speak per- fect French from the day I'm able to talk at all. Don’t look so disap- pointed—I never raised you once. “8he Joes everything she can to keep her age a sccret, and so she certainly ought to know better than to tell about her fathet's having brought some grapefruit home from New York when they were children and their having been allowed to play with them but not est them. 1 simply can't hear losing that finesse! : “They decided they’d play anoth- er rubber and stay in town all night —mustn't it be awful to regulate your pleasures by the railroad ?—so when they registcred at the Commo- dore without any luggage, the man- agement prescnted them with two large paper cnvelopes, and when they opened them, each was award- ed a rough nightshirt, a tooth brush, etc., just like convicts. Did you ever hear of a hofel's doing that befo Count your cards, Bave only Twvilve.” everybody. 1 I is sometimes uscd instead of rod. “Suitcase” Simpson tha, Migheet: avick | slghts 1n west_and_Borth 19272 fair and many memberships are |night. Q. Who was the engineman of engine “999" on the New York Cen- Where is the engine no Charles Hogan was thé én. The 999 is now stored gineman. at Utica awaiting the time when will be placed on exhibition at the|Detroit ... colder; moderate shifting winds becoming northwest late to- Conditiens favor for this vicinity unsettied we::&er followed by fair and alightly er. , Temperatures yesterday: High . 52 34 34 26 4“ Low 40 18 20 16 10 u Atlantic City . Boston | Chicago .. it| Denver . Grand Central Terminal, New York|Los Angeles . City, or some other suitable place, Q. What is the nearest town te| the site of Boulder Canyon dam? A. Les Vegas, Nevada. Q. Where is the highest moun- tain in the world? A 1t is 29,141 feet high. Q. Will ordinary light through the human body? A through the human body. Q. How many stories has Woolworth building in City? A. The observation gallery is 58 There are ground. Counting the observation gallery as 61 storiea above the street. three stories below the the top story the building stories high. Q. What countries America were asked to join Kellogg Peace Pact? A. Mexico. is and Balvador. Q. Is bigamy or plural marriage legalized in any part of the United Btates? A. It is prohibited law. Q. What is meaning of the name Marcella? ATt means languid. Q. What are “line squalls”? A. The term is used for nox, particularly equinox. the Observations On The Weather Washington, Jan. 31. for Southern New England: local snows this afternoon or night; Friday generally fair winds becoming fresh possibly strong on the south coast. Forecast for Eastern New Yor Light snows this afternoon or Mount Everest in Indo-China. pass Ordinary light will not pass the New York in Central the Costa Rica, Guate. mala, Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama by federal is from the Latin and storms that occur at the time of the equl- Scptember Forecast Light to- and somewhat colder; moderate shifting northwest, to- Miami . Nantucket -. New Haven New York Norfolk, Va. . Northfield, Vt. .. Pittsburgh ... Portland, Me. . St. Louis .. Washington . 25 Years Ago Today Rev. Father Bojnowski read hiz annual report to his parishioners in the Polish Catholic church yester- day. The parish numbers 2,800 souls. Principal Marcus White will be one of the speakers at the annual banquet of the Business Men's as- sociation, The Meriden High school made rings around the five representing the New Britain High school yester- day afternoon and romped off with a victory by 52 to 18. 5 The annual meeting of the Unibn Laundry Co. was held last night. Among the directors clected were J, H. Kirkham and James E. Cooper. H. Horowitz was finally given per- mission to build a one-story bulldll: at Dwight and Fairview streets la night after a lengthy building corg- mittec hearing. Neighbors had pro. tested, claiming he would deal in trash, but he said the building would be a nice onc and he planned to rent it for a drug store. . Fire cscapes are being ordere for the Tabs' building on Beaver street, Lafayctte block on Lafayette street, Hanna's block, McCabe's block, Lee's block, Ward's bl 3 Holmes & Hoffman's block, G. A. R. hall, Preston's block on Main streat, Ward's block on Arch street, the Corbin box shop, the Casino, and Turncr hall. Improvements are al- s0 being mada at the Busswin Ly- ceum and a result of the investiga- tion madc by the autheritics to pre- vent New Britain's sustaining a ca- tastrophe like that of the Iroquois theater in’ Chicago. ‘New Semester Starts Monday, Feb. 4 Day - Night " Phone 207 WHAT MEN HAVE BUILT You have often wanted to know delails of the famous buildings and structures that Capitol Building; Statue of Lib: S B about teresting_bulletins calle tains many intercsting det: below and send for it: ou rcad about from day to day: the Washington Monu ty in New York harbor; the Woolworth Building; the the White House, the coln Memorial; the iffel aj Mahal, the Sphinx, the Pyra- ent; the the mpiled_ono of its_informa and in. UILDINGS AND STRUCTURES. It cone all these buildings. Fill out the coupon - eme == = CLIP COUFON HERE= === o= oms o HISTORY EDITOR, 1322 New York ‘ I want a copy of the bulletin FAMOUS RUILDINC and enclose herewith five cents stamps, or coin, to ccver postage and handling costs: NAME ... STREET AND N | ciTy Washington Bureau, New Britain Ierald, Aveuve, Washington, D C RS TRES, 8. postage ' in_loows, uncancellec, ' 1 am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. “4SuITcASE™ SIMPSON ((HAVING THE LARGEST FEET IN THE ~WHOLE TOWNSHIP) HAS A LOT oF TRoUBLE WITH FoLKS STEALING HIS SHOES AFTER A /HEAVY SNOWFALL . (* Pontaire For. 1 yo- e