New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 27, 1929, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY losned Dafly (Sunday Excepted) At Horald Bidg., 67 Church Strect SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Yoar $3.00 Three Moathe T6c. & Month tered 6t the Post Office at New Hritain a8 Becond Clase Mall Matter Editoria) Rooms .. The only profitable advertising mediuin City. Circulation books and pres- room slways open to advertisers Member of the Associated P'resa Ihe Amociated Prem is exclusively en titled to the use for re-publication of all_news credited to 1t of not otherwise credited tn this paper and elso local iwws published therein. Member Audit Bureso of Circulation e A. B. C. ' ® national organization wiich turpishee Dewspapers and adver: timts with @ etrictly honem Analysis of circuiation. Our eirculation statistice are based upom thie audit This lnsurer pio tection against fraud in newspaper dis- tribution figures to both national wnd local advertisers The Hersld fa on sale dally in New York at Hotaling's N and_ Times Square; Schuitz's Newsstanda, Entrance Grand Central. 42nd Btreet. Names may be deceiving: and if 80, the Miami bout tonight will not be between a shark and a stripling. education is What ¥ worth weighing. According to Georse we y for i | D. Strayer, a professor of cducation. says the people of the United State 2.68 per cent of their income for | pa education, The nation is able to save 15 Columbia professor, | per cent of their incdie, says the 1f your mind becomes befuddled at tiese figures | please remember that there is a vist W tanes difference hotseen incone paid. The price of eggs have troubled the good houscwives of 1he it | 0 not more eggs on the market to have | at they can now fake heart. re are | caused prices to drop—at lvast ale—but the of whole pronise larger supply is getting in its dead- ly work. Warmwer weather is affect- | ing the hens. | MAYOR G Hotn OF GOOD ISSUE Mayor Paonessa is to be com- mended for his determination to re- | duce the city's interest rate on over- due taxes. We should bank or cther institution try to ex- act such usurious ratess how quickly | like to see a the state would be down on its| the first then 12 Who per cent after six then 10 per the first | menths; nt; | oroeent after year. wver heard of such interest charge excopt in the case of the small loan law ? The law on licn foreclosure is good After five taxes properties can enough as it stands, yeurs | of fallure to pa be foreclosgd. The law used to be 15 years, and that perhaps was too long a period. Now, however, there is a move on foot by the the period two years. The state Is | the present | state to make | amply protected under five-year law. The mayor, the corporation coun- scl and the tax collector scem to be in accord on the interest and lien issucs. It is to be hoped they are suc- . ature. The only | trouble is that the issues are so good | that it is doubtful whicther the Ite- | publicans in the Legislature will | o get| credit in starting such reforms, | | permit the Democrats REALTORS was when they de i was a sign upon the suid “Real - Estate words in the langa, Time were real estaie Iy door 1 all it No as much was two ge said in as little spice. Anyone could go into the business by fice and having «d. From then on he would have to renting an of- letter heads print- work up confidence on the part of | the public, and of them did th school of accomplished ! any and grew w in the Then the real process. estate dealers arrived knew considerably about the their more science than predecessors. “They possessed property value filos, were bears—or sharks—with stati knew than about values. They not tics; nore anyons c waited until somebody called 10 buy proper- 1y, but they t out and sold the carth to They bought & m into lots we ready clients with money and turncd m Pullman 1 ogidewall i [ Not a man belonging to the frutirnity who did not think he other gpins of the bus was as good professio vastly mors many of them were in a prosperous state than the avern 1un of professionals In spite of all this Senator Peasley of Cheshire, t Judiciary commitice chairman of of the that te senate, is not convinced realtor by nature, environment and 1 professional man. education is a professional title of they get the while he is at the head of the com mittee it will have to he d oy his dead body like that. The realtor profcssionals have or something | indge try it if he thinks thus lightly: {if s0. how did they get that way? | ! preted. The cops had blood in their | | timism, | simo Sandino, who scems to be ex- . L mously much nationwide if not worldwide advertising would uaccrue state. Yet Connecticut does not want the road; it doesn't like the prin- clp*z of the thing If the same kind of project were | put forward in California. Florida, or no friend in the Legislature in Judge Peasley. Realtors, understand, would gladly pay a license fee of $10 for the satisfaction of being dubbed professionals. They wouldn't miss the money at all. But in spite of all that Judge Peasiey says and thinks is|some other less fastidious common- there any logical reason to deny to|wealth it would go through the realtors the prestige of belonging | l.egislature with a bung. Such states to professional ranks? None at uu_l If realtors, who s they we are not so particular. They favor the that we can sce. advertising. sweat as they build and bulld — sweat, are not professionals in nw;lnuxvnl NES truest sense then we don't know the | The Public meaning of the | New Hampshire may be justified in Perhaps Senator ! think newspaper men belong to any profession. either. Maybe he thinks Let the T DON'T PAY Service Commission of term. Peasley doesn't | its criticism ot the Roston & Maine | railroad. The railroad has myriz :hranch lines throughout the state and is giving terrible service over not a maodern anybody can be a reporter. {them. The reason is we'll bet if he 10 a — travel over the branch marriage or a funeral he would get were assigned | myster: | lines is low. most citizens preferring {10 do their traveling in the more automobiles, Yet half the names mixed the bride married in the wrong church and the “late deceased buricd in the wrong cemetery. By the way. there are the politi- | railroad is expecied to maintain good up and get convenient there ate re some who do not take to the | tired machines and cians up in the Legis Are they | Service. professionals? Tt not, why not? and the This can't be done, und auicker New Hampshire realizes it The | railrod has been willing to abandon of 1} (lines but has been denied the right CHICAGO FOOLS US Our telegraph cditor tells us this ilhu better for New Hampshire, many » non-paying hranch morning that so far as he can de- | 0 F Sl B let the trucks? the lines e termine the most scrious thing that Ljunked tion and people rely on happened in the Chicago el buses and yesterday was that somebody threw | THE WHYFORE OF MERGE The big business age is heing re- X ) S s lacied the 1 as the most quict election it ;' I“ 7 : IRaluo gt CUOI . ergers i the metropolitan centers. held there. the brick. Our telegraph machine, at | this writing, bears him out, the hur- | den of the Chicago dispatches being 4 in of number bank ever I i . | Legal restrictions as to the size of “bloody Z0th'' ward ! had alderman on | loans to any or of | ‘Iw a factor in stimulating these com- industry are said to have a rebirth chances of rem; to 000NN whose N & | binatious of banks. According to this ning alive over the | [ thesis a bank must be large enough lives 1o clection were “about even {to serve a big industr; talls about oo The result. | or times as | 1 such | tnot ohtain adeguate accommodations : nuch money an reason for Chiea 1ew- formerly. industry can- fangled election siyle is self-evident. Droves of policemen were at every rovus of policemen were al €YCIVH g on s favorite bunk it must add | trouble could be ex- | point wher Lother hanks, Thus desirable business | is lost to banks not large enough to fit the industrial canvas. ' There may be other potent r hut eyes and et it be known they would | v { enlarged e Lrook no fooling asons sought on general principl tor the mergers, logical : the forcgoing to remain under cover. It w ; {seems a one, cording to | hood- | and order \ tory of law over ukers, ) L Thus the Trust company The warning by the grand jury < ¥ Lana the National Bank of Commerce was also effective. Among those in- merged into the largest single bank | in the world, a $2.000.000.000 insti- tution. Offic dicted on charges to commit elec- | tion frands was a coroner’s physician of the Steel Corpora- and leading volitician, judg s of election, tion, big railroads and of the Morgan 1 the me nk mergers of consequence clection, and cf i firm stinmulat The have been confined almost exclusive- it is charged, hallot unfranchised racket, hallots, was to make stuff boxes, and al- low persons and re- waters to vote. Indictments have a | . : [ of banks in the swaller cities com- of disconraging such activities, | i ) bining. Tl ‘Bl course, won most of the civic points | y: small banks until able city Thowpson’s henchmen, of now secni o he to serve of vantage, so that the Thompson nto ¢ machine remains pretty well in con- | NEAT 10 During trol of the political pickings. nr cors LI QUERNI O ANSWER orge A. Quigley's three erms as mayor of 8 Lot the alled President Coolidge spoke cloquently | 3 } : | adoption of a ahout our happy Latin-American re- | lations. But that hasn't anything to | iwhich examined applicants for mu- do with the in | e THE MARINES STAY ~Our policy in Nicaragua is rather | on New Britain one t deep. Washington'’s birthday | ( 50- reforms was the civil service system, with a civil service commission keeping Nicaragua. the Nicaraguan marines b nicipal jobs and separated the quali- ficd sheep from disqualified agreement 2 o the | E0ats When Mr. Quigley stepped out = 1 of office the civil not last long, the Under Stimson with the leade vice business did I2. W. Christ being active in opposing the systen. marines were to remain there to in- sure an honest clection. The election has been over for some time. but the | ¢ " ; 4 i We do not intend to discuss the marines remain—perhaps waiting | for the next election. Or perhaps | “ | service system, althoug tive merits or demicrits of a civil the been some talk hercabouts regard- h has they remain there to try and exter- | minate bandits or catch Generalis- | ling a revival of the discarded prin- ciple. What cans matte s us to bring up the other day. it will be remem- | ltue s | promulgation of a scries of questions appropriation Iy elusive. more or less cusual amendment to the bill Congress. President Coolidg and Secretary of | that have been inflicted upon patrol- | men in Boston who aspire to was on the De- | come sergeants of police. Boston, of State Kellogg im- to di- vest the amendment from the bill, so that the Nic T stated course s with 2 service mediately swung into action Soy e contiBiieo thip e Ul ety ive | system. ; The questions are w i« marines could remain in | fieo) UEls Sk Wl 4 S |attention. not only policemen, but the | seneral public. Suppos neatly | & A U Iyou were a policeman and aspire i whyfore by the of this is Waterl Republi- to take an examination for a ser- cun: | geantey. How would you answer the or following question ourse technically at with Nicaragua, It president | is reported enthusiastic “A man is yelling in the street, of- marines, which is | fending pedestr What would knows as well | you do? that if he objected to | “Two men, one of whom cannot his job would not Le worth a pl speak Inglish, approach a police 2ed nickel And so the marines will | man. The English- king man s stay thers, shooting and being shot. | that his friend gave $£10 to an em- imnd in the end Nicaragna will ployment which promised to or their givi ! fina for that sum. The A can forci neither u job nor his The ney refused to ayment but promised it would furnish Bt course 0 he hout nee of the ans. prising sinee e vone clse it a v 6 by him ioh t of way 14 1 that the n protect the ross ne the country vill b money virund it i eng police rines nal aym voting money man ‘ day il vou : i ield 4 man for n is- you wnd Tinbn miall nutior from \ vould or should he information unkman per. sup- A pa nkshop oper- on who is just to g “old to ind coy stol¢ L SYSTEM OPPOSING THE TO i ed roim 0cs to Nir door for the cofiicor d nig toll ro i nd Bostan seoms Iy p New York s | lockir 0 open it by a wtween to too rict 1 for the hiood. Com It you were a wolics et wercial and industrial interests in s¢ vould you in- the patioiman? | “You dos one Connecticut are suid n to be “unani- h Bt 100 feet car strikes a 1 from the would you do in rogar against it. vain away i I moters to 11 w find anvone in favor it the pro-t pedestrinn Wi [ Speoeds Suth ured person : nmiobilist. separ nd cnabling od off | in \ P8O s an hour withont dangerons the world's highway ot u o he gets three Undey g0 d should Penrves or grade wonder would be st Pwhat ditions von him for violation of his parole” How enfirely | 5 | conta he get a jury trial state of Connecticut .’nh]l road of the systems. The road would be a within the to the ' for these the | needing two | Iy to the big cities. One rarely hears | I | their clients without tiying to bulge i , for instance, | should the | rail- | Jonson refuses md the aufo- | 1t is convicted rrest “Lefore what courts can a police- man present cases for triul? “You are ov duty at your desk in the station house in the capacity of scrgeant. An oficer brings in prisoner charged with a erime. You +book him. What facts do you enter the arrest hook? A man because of religious seruples refuses to summon a doc- tor to attend a sick child. Of what crime, if any, is he guilt Any citizen who can correctly an- swer the foregoing is qualified to be a sergeant of police, provided he can also pass some other examinations No. the answers will not be pub lished in our nest issue. Call at the police station for the answers; or ask the corporation counsel; or consult any good lawyer. Facts and Fancies ! ;haps the race is making pro- Eres: Prize fighters scem to get ,more puny with each generation. Youngster's won't take advice, but {have you ever noticed-an adull's re- action to a “wet paint” sign? i iy il | ature is so grand, why didn't ! she know about the electric ice ma- chines If we need an ambassador to the Vatican, it will- be just like some mean republican to suggest Al Another objection to high-hrow uests is that the only stations not owned by static are playing "I w Down.™” -0 '™ When charm consists you can't eat your “it”, too. n slender ake and ! in n have he man who says “yes® when to join the cabinet must cx: peet to keep on saying it. 1's a queer conntry that will de- feat w man for mispronouncing radio nd do nothing about stations that interfere. true scientist is man wouldn't accept that Adam unless he found a skeleton 1ib cut out. A a who story with a Awmericanism: People who hegan married life with a cow and a cook stove wondering what causes divorce lin an age when youngsters begin | with a diamond ring and a coupe. Mr. Coolidge says w owner less advantage fore. s it just on account of the Ith gives the than ever be- scems that way installment plan. A mian knows he's a sucker when he trades in his old r. If hel doesn’t, why does lie about the he got? lie price The in being thematician s enough to antage the | sorld's greatest Miat nobody [prove you ac " has senss are wrong. | Yet sometimes a tew remarks | {from the back scat would be less | maddening than that awful silence. per cent of the people ninded.” S0 that explains extrayagant claims made in sietic ads. Twenty are feebl the o | The secret:of ceess, apparently, consists in being the kind of fellow who will endorse a cigarette if you | pay Tim. he South Pole expedition has proved successful in every way so r, except as an advertisement of dog biscuit, | Why build ¢ 87 Well, it was {the eruiser Lill and not the Kellogg troaty that made England want an- cther disarmament conference. Correct this sentence: “The stock ted paid him a profit,” said . “but he never torments me more tip: fer Copyright 1929, Publishers Syndicate | 25 Vea New rs A;fioday Britain icemen Rotten togetier and have formed an tion which will. control the « in this city, The idea moddlled somewhat on the plan tollowed by the brick manufacturers 1in having a brick exchange. The ic {exe will be located in the cen- ter b it docs not |8 insacted through it. While nee ¥ mean an in- creased the heavy snow this [ winter has made it costly to harvest the ice crop. President Mank H. Johnston of | the City Coal & Wood Co., has ar- vived trom a trip through the bi- fuminous coal regions of Pennsyl- {rania. 1t vas first visit thee gl he is familiar with t} - iracite distriets, 1t is behieved the miners wil Isirike about April 1, Mr. Johnston sand. | The New i the All- ithe Casino tor Lis ritain regulars will ssachusetis team at sht in a basketball | gamn About ling th T the I man up for a mission for relix jin that purt of the city. ‘|used as o paint shop commodate 100 people, The mission of H. ¢ Capen, L. H. Neitie Coats. Miss Mary S E. Dickinson, Johnson. wen from fhe triction Co, is prepared 1o build new hrid sunrise tomorrow or Piper wington junction on railroad tracks. 70 pupils are school now attend- evening People h has rented building at the corncr of Chap- Jubilee strects and fitted ous work It has been and will ac- chu Hyman, Rev. Lym: A : foree of o iroolk the main line near have | and ¢ Berlin | Il i Nesud all com shop Faitor. care o Writatn Herald, and your will be Sorwarded | wity the ¥ n—We'll Say !The postman trulges winter w | Reneath a heuvy load the 13 cause that erop that never fai Spring sonnets. now s in muils! so! the Taking a Cha Dobbs 1 bhet you dollars (o | doughnuts the Democrats win nest “ime.™ ! Balla about doughnuts | . “Yon be must crazy TO AN INFANT By Har-y C. Musco Iufant, fair, ethereal, ne in your cril Scattering your cereal All about your bib, Clear your language may To your doting ma.' But tell me, darhing baby, What you mean by “Blah?" he When you try to swallow Evervthing you find, in part, can follow The working of your mind. 1 can sympathize, too. When you weep and sob, But. baby. put me wise o What you mean by “Mobh." 1L When your maother proudly Claims to figurt: out What you mean, | loudly Register a doubt. Though a hopeless dub, T rind your meaning hid. When you murmur “Glub” I Fail to get you, k Consuming! Haley: “Youug Blaisdell fs tor- ribly in love with that Doran girl.” r: “ls it a consuming pas- Haley: It is. M consumes most of his time and all of his money! —Roy Bessman woinen the persons who keep hospitals busy 'y're sick oftener (han a nor- mal-sized woman, require nore ene; &y to transfer ‘o an ambulance, present twice as much surface to he bathed, and cither have fo be brought twice as much food or they demand twics much falk as to why they don't get it! We Wonder Why! Howard and Myrna, cach were taking ts to their Sunday school teacher's shower. Howard had a nest of glass mix- ing bowls well packed in a box. What e you got for her n hox asked Myrna M, it's just a hox of keep getting littler?” —Alta Oglehy that dishes that THE FAME OF THE AQUA TAMALE | (Letter IFFound by H, F. Hartman) Dear Shirr:® Shince we nesh ve Bashn't been fn bish- long, yoush woush be sur- shed at se fame she Aqua amale Stewdio h o attaine Shince she very inshepshuns, it hash enjoyed she favor and patronage of thish towns thirsh-nighsher, bush now it ish reaching out. and hecom- ing famoush far and wide. Vishitors always are cordial-ly welcome. Bush guesh wno paid ush a vishit h week? Yoush haven't an idea. sh yoush? Well shirr, when Nine, which we fucceshusly call sh speshal train whish docks at nine bells, rolls in, a well dreshed lady steps off she train. Where dish she want to 20? To she Mopagha? To she Astorka? Or to shum usher o our jushly Mumoush hosteleriesh? No shirr! 8he jumps into a banana wagon and tells she driver to driver to she Aqua Tamale Stewdio. Yesh, it wash Mish Willebrandt! Dish we get a padlock? No! hash one alreshy and she coushent get in. Thanking yoush for pash flavors, 1 ish, i old number Yoursh truly, Al Wagner P. She dishent know aboush she Lack door not having she padlosk’ s | | 1 L “say, there has heen | here. some P A the property has Get One! Sanders: *Miss Dradley for a woman of her Bailey: “No: man of any agc! is active A Ten 1t was the most me 1 had ever experienced, 1 w ied of the digusting proe ing. and had alr dete seck the and ace of the world 1 seized a reoluer wis desperate! Just then a came along. iy houndl:ss exquisite oty 1 nd cockid i 1 I wutiful - woman six | Wesh | fire ancholy mood s wear- of liv- iined to | win a man of resolu id1 to go to the limit peration. i the woman! However, non and ¢ Lin my d¢ | So I marri Whose Average? Employer (to applicant for job): | “o you drink much?" Applicant: “Some." Employer: “dow much Applicant: “Well, about the aver- age.” Employer Applic Employe “average? Applicant: How uiuch is that?" Ten glasses a day.’ And you call that the “It's mine!” K. de ( g Reproduction dden) Questions and,Afifiwors ington (Cop ght, QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information hy writing to the Question Editor, New Itritzin Herald, Washington Bureau, 1 New York avenue, Washington Ib. ¢, enclosing two cents i stamps | for ¢ ply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended rescarch be undertaken. Al other questions will reccive a per- | sonal reply. Unsigned requests cane not be answered. Al letters are conlidential.—Iditor. Q. When and where was Pros dent Lincoln shot? At Ford's theater ington, D. C. on the April 14, 18 Q. What is the value of small copper cent dated 1§ A Irom 1 fo nts. Q. What is the citizenship of a ehild horn in this conntry of alien P Wash- of in evening s. a U, B rents Americ Is the n trombone difficult to arn? A. most ni the to Tt is considered one of difficult wind instruments ster, Wlho played the part of Mrs. Bancroft in the Vitaphone talking picture “The Home Towners?" A Gladys Brockwell. Q. low old is Clara Bow? long has she been in motion tures? : A | She entered motion pictur Q. What is the meaning nane Douglas? A I is a Cellie “dark mray. Q. it was (e first steamship {to cross the Atlantic ocean? A The City of Savannal’” com- | manded by Captain Moses Rogers of | New London, Conn. The ship was Jaunched in Georgin, | Augnst 22, 1818 Savannal My . 1819, and Liver- pool June 20, 1819, pro- | pelled partly by steam and partly [ by sail. The owners were Sca | borough and Tsaacs of Savannah. Why are some cities not in | connties? A Lk conferred How | pic- She is twenty-three years ol in 1923, of the name Savannalh, Tt lert reached It was wise the state constitutions upon these cities the me their own charters te from a county. What is the diameter of the star Polari A. The U. 8 Naval Observatory says it not been measured di- rectly. From its spectral type mag- nitude, and the best value of its dis- tance which we have the diameter is estimated between 20 and 40 million miles. How many cges are there | States? | About 145 publicly controlled universities and colleges in the United States and 770 under private control Q. the United States and slons? A. The only active volcano in the United States exclusive of Alaska and Hawaii, is Lassen Peak, Cali- cs and United univer: in the What active volcanocs are in its posses- | I ! Sanhedrin was a court meaning | fornia. This volcano is included in Lassen Volcanic National Park, which is under the control of the National Park Service. Mt Katmal is an active volcano on Alaska Peninsuta 100 miles horthwest of Kodiak Island. It was supposed to be a dead volcano until its outbreak June 6, 1912, which was one of the most violent eruptions seen by man. There were signs of renewed activity in 1914. Mauna Loa, the largest volcano in the world (though not {the loftiest) occupies much of the {central and southern portions of {awail. The crater is in almost continuous activity. Q. What is a love bird? A. That is a popular name for many diminutive parrots of various genera, and even of different fami. lies; natives of the warm parts of America, Africa, the East Indies and Australia. They receive their name from the affection which they mani- fest towards one another, whether | wild or caged. | Q. Who was the first person men- tioned in the Rible as being hanged? i A. The chief baker of Herod. | See Genesis 40:22. | Q. What are the names of the | boroughs of New York City, and what is its area in square miles? A. New York City consists of five horoughs, Manhattan, the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens and Richmond. The total area is 308.95 square miles. | Q. Does a citizen of the United | States who has served a term iIn | prison for a felony lose his citizen- hip? Unless pardoned he loses the right of suffrage and some of the privileges of citizenship, such as holding office or position of trust in Isome states, e does not lose his | citizenship. Q. What was the Sanhedrin men- {tioned in the Rible? A. The name was applied to the |supreme national tribunal of the |Jewish state at Jerusalem, called the |Council in the New Testament, es- fablished at the time of the Macca- bees. It consisted of 71 members called elders and was recruited from the ranks of the chief priests and |the scribes. The Presidentship was conferred upon the high priest. The of justice. The limits of its jurisdiction are not known, but there is no doubt that {1he supreme decision over life and exclusively in its hands. | degrees the ‘whole internal ad- jministration of the commonwealth, as well as its military affairs, was vested in this hod Observations On The Weather Washington, for Southern New England: tonight; Thursday cloudy by rain on the south coast |change in femperature; fresh west hifting to north on Thursday. dastern New York: slightly colder tonight pt in extreme south portion; Thursday increasing cloudiness fol- lowed by rain in south portion; fresh northwest shifting to northeast | winds on Thursday. Conditions: The storm of yester- day moved northeastward inte On- orecast Cloudy followed lexc PRESIDE! day? How m: Who may admf I = '] march of one President-elect? How {| baie? At whose inauguration did the All the Presidents from Ington Bureau's latest bulletin, | 'ms'mnr EDITOR, 1322 New York Av | NAMB I STREET A} | cirx | L D NUMBER FARE oN THE Roo LATEST DEVELOPEMENT [N THE FEUD BETWEEN THE SKIP AND THOSE WHe TAKE ADPVANTAGE OF THE REPUCED DEREP BY THE “TOWN COUNCIL-« F OR = n (“Fostaine Fox, 1929, The Bell Syndicate. Tnc.) not much | = = == == = =CLIP COUFON HERN= == == == o= o Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, Washington, D, C. | 1 want & copy of the bulletin PRESIDENTIAL INAUGURATIO 1789 and enclose herewith five cents in coin, or loose, uncancell lpullns. stamps to cover postage and handling costs: e STATE I am & reader of the New Britain Hersld, | tario and Quebec. 1t produced ge: !eral rains throughout the north and Middle Atlantic staten, More ithan an inch of rain fell in the Hldson valley and over Southern New, Eng-| land. The Arizona disturbance) moved southeastward inte-: the western and central Gulf jons,| 1t is producing unusually Heavy| tains in portions of the uthern! states. Montgomery, Alal re- ported 5.12 inches; New Orls 3.28 inches and Atlanta 2.62. ! Pressure is relatively high iy the interior from the Plains states tp thi Appalachian Highlands and Atem- peratures are somewhat lower but |there is no evidence of a cold wuve, Conditions favor for this vicinity partly cloudy weather and not much hange in temperature. ) Temperatures yestcrday: | High o Atlanta“... Atlantic City . Boston Chicago Cincinnati . Denver , Duluth . Hatteras Kansas City ... Los Angeles . Miami .... Minneapoll Nantucket . New Haven .. New Orleans .. New York ... Norfolk, Va. . Northfleld, Vt. , Pittsburgh .. Portland, Me, . St. Louis .... ‘Washington 500 Catholic Priests Fulfill Mexican Law Mexico City, Feb. 37 UP—Officia records today showed that more tha) 500 Roman Catholle priests and pre lates had complied with gevern ment orders to register their ad J% dresses prior to March 1. Those complying include a numbe of bishops and high church efficlals Two of these, Monsignor Francisc Benegas; bishop of Queretars aa Monsignor Nicolas Corona, bishop © Parantla, in giving their addresse wrote letters to acting Secretary ¢ Interior Canales denouncing th hombing of the presidential spects recently. Monsignor Corona declarsd s unfanatical” Catholics were her rorized by (ne attempt on the pres' dent's life and asserted the Cathell religion did not need to be defende “by such cowardly arms.” READ HERALD CTASSIFIED AD RELIEVED e d QUICII.'} quickly corrects th digestive distur bances, removes th: intestinal poisons, and sick head ache quickly disappears. Your whol: system enjovs a tonic effect, consti pation vanishes, and you feel a re newed vigor. Avoid bromides an( dope they are depressingand harmfu All Druggists 25¢ and 75¢ red pkes INCE 1359 Why does a new President take office on March ¢ Instead of some othes 1y Presidents have bzen sworn in on somie other day? How lung. has the customs of taking the oath in frunt of the Capitol ster the oath tu & new President? Who notif elect that he has neen elected? Which President had the uration ceremony? Why did rifiemen om housetops guard the n in effect? & Preaident. ost gorgeot many Presidents have had inauguia: crowd smash the furniture. china and glassware and ruin the rugs and carpets at the White House? What Presi- dential parade had a procession of log cabine and cider barrels fn ft? These and scores of other interesting facts about the inaugurations ef Washington to Hoo re covered in our Wash- carefully complied from bisterical seurces. You will want a copy. Fill out the coupon below and send for it: h| L e ) 1 —— — ——— —r

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