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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING OOMPANY lesued Dally (Bundsy Ezeepted) At Herald Bldg.. 61 Church Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 o Year $200 Three Months 5c o Mootr Entered at the Post Office st New Britain as Second Class Mall Matter. TELEPHON! Business OMce Editorta)l Roome CaLLs 926 936 The only profitable advertising medium m the City Circulation books and pree room slways open to sdvertisers Member of the Associated FPress Ihe Amoctated Press is exciusively e titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited n this paper and also loca iews published o Audit Buress of Circulation s s oational organizativi cewspapers and sdver Member rme A B C which furnishee sers With 8 etrictly boneet anaiysis of | circulation statistics wre ! ased upop this audit This insures pro | ulation Our n pewspaper dis both uational asd tion ngamst fraud The Heraid ts on wale daily 1n_New o Hotaling's Newwtsnd. Times Schultz's Newastande Bstrance Central, 423d Strest g liquor aboard an is supposed vessel receives mention than all steamers combined. : gives us the im- ng staged many a 1g but one shy on laws, may be t as wel PLAN THE DEBENTURE ¥ he r plan as a & the farmers is in It is not a part of m relief measure administration, ioover has given ten scs de- nty tersely ment bo! rs of farm pro- a bounty equal v, For ins is 42 exporters of wheat e a 1 cents on his method large production for tain the do the world would mean th rs would be g form of a bou 1 order to sec support in al bounty of two cents ton 1s provided— being no duty on cotton, he debenture plan has met with approval in the senate agricultural E no Low- robably has . Should, the debenture r farm relief bill to a The even more objec- M certainly lead President Hoover. ture plan is than the of last year. THE $500,000,000 FARM 1EF BILL : be in a tight place but they propose zett anding the farmer a cool $500,000,000. Ob- viously, no such gift is contemplated r stated, ing out of it b; orthodox administration farm relief bill before Congress, but that is to be the appropriation, accord- Washington to be information, made available bilizing corporatior capital to enable them to . store, merchandise or oth- crwise dispose of farm commodities se corporations will be cooper- o associations and the like. The would decide he money. The point will the T paid 4 » observers of bility or part of it may never osed farm board 0 is, money ever back admit be returned, especially if the stabi- Son lizing business does not function as is anticipat Another ¢ e of the bill is that what some call “stabilizing” others call “speculation™ in wheat and oth- er crops. it ng {s strange that Congress zoes Others bluntly term market.” or these things today when many a bill has been passed to make such activities criminal. The farm bill is peculiar, too, in professing to minimize speculation; then ft goes on to show how the co- of dealers, are to do the apeculating. The farm bill, even without the debenture plan asked for by the Na- ops, instead the wicked grain tional Grange and opposed by Pres- ident Hoover, goes farther into the realm of government in business than any legislation ever passed by Congress. If passed it will be a land- mark in coupling government with industry during peace times. Yet some of the most able men in both houses of Congress favor the meas- ure., Some of these from the first, however, favored the McNary-Hau- gen bill also. that will cause soil-tillers to feel grateful. Unlike when the McNary- Haugen vetoes halted the procedure, the present scheme is favored by the adminisiration and probably will not be ve‘ord unless the debenture plan is added. They favor anything as | | ns for No matter what kind of farm bill is passed, it will mean that dwellers in the city are to pay more for food. Of course, there are many of us |living in the cities who are willing |to pay a fair price for edibles when | with the payment of the cost goes the knowledge that the men who ‘raiscd it are receiving enough to likelihood, too, that city dwellers may prosper more themselves if the farmers of the nation turn inte bet. ter buyers of goods made in the cities. The §5 00,000 experiment— | sure to be tried—leaves city dwellers !at least hopeful. Their fears may be groundless; farm relief may mean {no more than wiping out the wastes between farms and cities, yielding for the farmers !without appreciably increasing the |a greater income cost of food to the consumers. All of which, hewever, is a “may proposition. That is why the {farm relief plan is such a conspicu- be” ous experiment. END OF A NOTABLE MAN During the late unpleasantness, when every day saw thousands of ;casualuoe. the Rev. Charles Coppens of this city led a congregation made up of the races which were in the k of the war. To the unbounded credit of the pastor of St. Peter's church, good will and brotherly love predominated among his par- ishioners. Himself born in Belgium, he had among his charges former Frenchmen and former Germans. When the war broke out there were those who thought the pastor would | have much trouble; instead, he had Inone at all. By his attitude he im- pressed hia parishioners that there is and re- gardlcss of the various races repre- sented in the parish, Christianity must continue to prevail in their hearts. It did. There was no war discussion at or near the church, nor imong the parishioners, The Father Coppens could speak Belgian, French and German ntly, as well as English. And he was a man of peace in every lan. Under the kind adm tions of the priest we rather think the various races of his flock under- stood the need for applying Christian no nationality in religion b3 guags. principles to such a time better than many who were contributing to the | melee of discussion elsewhere. The city deeply regrets his pass- ing. He had a kind word and a hearty handshake for all. He was that type of man which makes the worid better, ‘CHlLDm N WHO SELL TICKETS We are disposed to think that the man who told a boy that he could not sell ticketa to a church concert and social without a license was im- personating & police officer. He was in plain clothes, but sported a shiny badge. which the boy might have police badge, probably w while it some other emblem. in reality People wear 0 many emblems now- adays that it sometimes is difficult for a boy to tell who is a police of- ficer and who is a lodge officer. The incident in the West End did some good, however, in bringing to the front an official declaration from |the police that children can sell all e tickets the want to without go- | ing through the ordeal of obtaining peddler's license. Any other po- lice department verdict would have aroused tremendous opposition. For the efficient the no compunctions about children are most ticket-sellers in world. have going from door to door in sell pasteboards for some organiza- | tion in which they or their parents ced feel angry at being asked to buy a tick- may be interested. Nobody et for something or other. | when the solicitor is a smiling child. | The modus operandi usually is that | when the child sells a stipulated |number of tickets—usually ten—he | gets in free; and that is like going | to the circus. | We are glad to learn that the po- !lice department is really a friend ,of childhood, telling children they must obey some useless and impractical law about getting out licenses for the there s a great deal of selling going on with- out licenses. We should like to know. for instance, whether the army of book agents upon us to sell us tomes calculated sale of tickets. Besides, who continually call to enable us to write better edito- | rials are relly required to get out they licenses before can operate. Probably not. Perhaps even the po- | lice chief receives calls from book agents now and then, fellows who try to =ell him volumes guaranteed to increase his efficiency as the bors of the bluecoats. And even police- men have been known to buy such things on the instalment plan in or- der to become better cops. Whenever that happens we wish them well, and not inquire too pointedly whether their benefactor possesses a license to elevate the world. THE ACCIDENT SEASON Automobile fatalities in Connecti- cut register from half a dozen week up. The “up” will increase as the preity weather advances, ‘ Nothing so spoils the lure of prosper decently. And there is the | They | effort to | ecially | ’NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL beautiful day as being compelled to see the outcome of an automobile accident along an important high- way. To mix blood with scenery quickly erases the memory of the isylvan dales and the concrete rib- |bons of winding roads. They are nightmares to all sensitive motor- ists. It is said that on an average every day sees 75 people killed by auto- 'mobiles in the United States. And every day on an average sees 2,700 people injured. The newspapers, of course, do not give accounts of a twentieth of these fatalities; they would have room for | nothing else if they did so. The {newspapers give attention only to {those accidents within & comfortable radius of the home office, and when | printing the grewsome account of some distant catastrophe it must be |out of the ordinary. such as six per- sons of a family killed at one time 'at a grade crossing out in Towa. At | |other times the lowa accidents— the singles—gain no attention ex- cept in Jowa. A headline the other day had it that it takes 900 automobiles to kill 1one person. That of course is be. cause there are 25,000,000 autome- |biles in use—when they are not in | garages. There are only half the ac. Icidents in winter, when halt the machines are stowed away, than oc- cur in summer when all are in use. 'A statistician, therefore, could fig- ‘ure it out that in the summer time !it takes much less than 900 cars to !provide one accident. We ourselves haven't time or inclination for such superfine figuring. { The small state of Connecticut is {no more jammed with automobiles | per square mile than many of the |larger states. Indeed, some of the ! western states of magnificent dis- |tances possess as many or more au- tomobiles per 100 of population as (Connecticut. Some of them also lead | |us in the accident ratio per popula- tion or per car. The ratio, let it be !unostentatiously added, depends {upon &peed and carclessness. It is to be hoped Nutmeggers have |learned, or are learning, that care- |lessnems doesn't pay anybody but the hospitals, the doctors and the undertakers. THIS MODERN PAVING Streets in New Britain are begin- ning to be much the worse for wear. The spring thaw has done its worst, ,and even some of our “best paved’ streets are proving to autoists that good springs are handy things to i have. Obviously, one must expect some 'such development each spring. But there is no need to let the holes ree main longer than necessary. Just as soon as this April shower and rain into the rational kind we can weather begins to blend mora in Ma expect there ought to be a concert- |ed attempt by the public works de- | been deluded Into thinking was a | partment to get rid of the holes In a hurry. WHEN BERLIN STARTED IT | From the chase columns of Col- |lier's it is lcarned that in the early 'days of Connecticut industry “two Irish tinsmiths named Pattison ap- peared on this side of the water and set up in business in Connecticut, the paradise of the trader, in a | small village called Berlin.” The Pat- |tisons turned out tinware, which was sold throughout the country by | peddlers. | Which proves, of course, that in those early days peddlers were nec- cssary. That is how the early man- ufacturers of New Britain—or what dis- tributed their goods. It was the only is now known by that nam way it could be domne, for the simple reason that stores virtually non-existent during that early day. | There were no stores to speak of be- cause “the country was very short on towns and very long on prairie.” The merchant prince of the day was the peddler, who at first went on foot, then carrying their boods on horseback, then with wagons. In due time the greatest merchant prince {of the age—one H. C. Carter—had of gaudily painted wagons traversing the country, each wagon {drawn by four horses. When villages began to spring up more thickly. and “country stores” became com- I'mon, the development sounded the ' death knell of the huckstering busi- liness on a large &cale. From that [time to the present Connecticut goods were sold from shelves rather than from wagons. | When Berlin started as a “manu- facturing center,” back those days when distribution was through were rather than gruffly | leots in peddlers’ carts, the outlook was for a great development in the future. That came in due course; but the part of Berlin where it cropped up was that part which to be known as New Britain. Indeed, we would be willing to bet a dollar to the hole in a doughnut that the tin- was ware products which the Pattison | “4n Berlin” | brothers turned out ,more than 100 years ago was the be- |ginning of the bigger and better joutput in that line of goods—and many others—which centers in New i Britain today. i Every nowly born female baby has an cxpectation ef life four vears Ilonler than that of a male baby, 'Facts and Fancies Truth isn't like an oil-well pro- motor. It lies at the bottom of a | well, not at the top. The old man's son is willing to be- gin work at the bottom. That's where the firm's letters are signed. Happy thought: You can take l' ! mashie and knock garden weeds to kingdom come. Maybe some accidents are called unavoidable because a born fool ican't avoid driving that way. If the hero seems a fool and falls into trap after trap. it's because that kind of novel makes a more thrill- iing movie. Good will tours are a confession, when a man is especially attentive Ito his wife, he's been up to some- thing. 0ld Jackson invaded 8panish ter- ritory to catch and hang two Brit- ish outlaws, but he didn't depend on other nations to help enforce America’s laws. German kultur triumphed, after all. The righteous nations are fully {converted to submarines and poison as. One reason why a great man scems 80 great 1s because some no- body writes such excellent speeches for him. Americanism: Giving the children castor oil, although you won't take it yourself; trying to enforce laws | that way. How Calles would enjoy hunting | deer if they were huddied in a pen. All wars are much alike, and the poor ignorant peon butchered In Mexico may think he is dying to make the world safe for democracy. | It Mr. Hoover wishes to purify the | ! Republican party in South Carolina, why not persuade him to attend a revival meeting? It requires a great love of liberty to rejoice in your triumph over re | strictions while applying cold towels to your head next morning. Why are laws violated? Well, {there are 400 million Chinese; and | |when a white man learns he can | (abuse 40 of them he doesn't fear | one more. | | | Funny man! Standing st lnd} holding a hose to sprinkie the lawn | is work, and chasing a little ball four miles to its hole is play. Apparently there's no way to de- | prive a dry Congressman of his | llquor—unless baggage smashers can be bribed to drop it harder. There are now 346 “harmless” | concoctions to remove superfluous hair, none of which has decreased the sale of razors. Correct this sentence: “Henry | gives me five dollars a week,” said she, “s0 I never long for my old job ,and my own spending money. Copyright, 1929, Publishers Syndicate 125 Vears Ago Today | Charles Eger of this city has se- cured the contract to furnish music | at four of the dance halls at Savin | | Rock. { O. F. Curtls, defeated mayoralty candidate, has filed his election ex: penses, His defeat cost him $49.2 The gas company plans to lay | new mains this spring in East street fro fmalley to Pleasant and in Prospect, Highland, Star, and Clark | | streets. | The High school scniors yester. {day afternoon voted to hold their { class banquet in Farmington. T. B. Sperry has been appointed superintendent of the local parks A meeting of the soldiers' mon- ument committee will be held to- night in Plainville. The fund now held by the selectmen amounts to $1700 and it is hoped to erect a lfl!!lng monument. It is doubtful if {any town the size of Plainville sent more soldiers and sailors to the Civil War than did Plainville. New Britain has 2,288 citizens i~ lable to the $2 state military tax. C. B. Cadwell has received the head, antlers, and hide of what must hav€ been a magificent speci- men of the caribou family. The ant- lers are over three feet in length. Recently Mr. Cadwell received the head and hide of a Rocky Moun- tain sheep. Officers elected by Phenix Tem- ple of Honor and Truth last night included Charles J. Symonds, W. V. T. and A. L. Thompson, W. F. R. Theodore Wilson's store on | Church street was burglarized last | night by someone who tried on sev- !eral pairs of shoes before stealing some of which fitted. At the annual city meeting In | Turner hall last night the sum of | $127.700 was appropriated in 15! minutes. i The wale of the Panama canal to the United States was ratificd at | | Paris yesterday. | DOG BITES BICYCLIST | While riding a bicycle on Hamil- |ton street Saturday afternoon. Ken- ineth Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Nichols of Black Rock ave nue, was bitten in the leg by a dog. | The wound was cauterized by a phy- sician. | _Attempts to discover the owner- |ship of the dog failed. Dog owners | ion the street were unanimous in de claring they did not possess animale which would bite anyone. Kenneth, excited at the time he | was attacked, could not identify any jof the dogs later shown him. The dog warden was notified. FOUR KILLED IN AUTO CRASH Greensboro, N. C, April 22 P— Four persons were killed and two | children were injured in an automo- {bile accident near here yesterday. |The dead were Mr. and Mrs. Walter |Burgess, their daughter, Mary, 16, {and Mrs. Mollie Hudson, all of Ram- seur. The injured were Virginia Durgess, 11. and George W. Durgess, Jr. 10, both children of the de- lceaud couple, l Grnd afl commanications o Fus Shop Extitee, care of the New Reitain Hersld, and your lettes will be forwarded to0 New Vork Our Peace Gun-parleys make sore, the They hate to give up guns that roar, But fun-parleys would cheer the earth, If they must roar—why not with mirth? Poor Girl! Larry: “What's the Mildred ?” Roger: “Poor girl. temperature antithesis.” Larry: “What the that 2" Roger: dickens ‘Cold-sores on hot lips The Pi Eta Sorority Meets! HAD I BUT KNOWN! She was about to be marricd and | then . By Janet Desser 1 was an innocent country girl when it all began. But alas, it was not fated to endure. My father, a fashionable poultry farmer, had pledged my hand in marriage to the hired man in lieu, as I afterwards discovered, of fifty cents in back wages. He was a veritable beast. My face went scarlet at the mere thought of it all. 1 hated him and his country ways. Bo I left home and sought success among the bright lights of New York. Soon I became head buyer for a large department store. Then I met Ralph and my trou- bles began. He was a traveling sales- man, a drummer, with a face like a Greek God. He offered me love—and compan- ionship. And I, poor butterfly that I was, how was I to know he had a wife and seven children in Chicago? He spoke tenderly into my shell- like ear, whispering words of love. I drank in every syllable. He breath- ed my name. Then he exhaled Our lips met elegantly in a refined kiss. 1 was lifted to the heights. Happiness came to me on the wings of the morninz. I had loved as only a woman can. The afternoon sped by 6n golden wings. Then my babe was born, Ralph vanished into thin air. I was disconeolate but soon dried my tears and sought solace in my work. During this time I had become and | part owner of the department store in which I worked and found many matters to occupy my attention. I put on a mask of gaiety and was much sought after for among the soclety folks of New York. They were real kind to me and often asked, “Janet Desser, But I laughed at their solicitude and refused many a “catch of the sea- son” while they marvelled at my cynical indifference, Then Jim, good kindly Jim Bar- ston, swam into my ken (he used the Australian crawl stroke — and how!) and the ashes of love were rekindled by a miracle. He was an itinerant fruit dealer in an exclusive to burn. Our regard for each other was mutual. but on our wedding day the neighborhood and had money Heavens fell. 1 had gone for a walk nations it. parties why don’t you marry and settle down?" in the moonlight and there blocking my 22, 1929, | twice, eight eggs the third time. S8he raised two little onea. When they | were only ten days old she left ,them and in 17 days they left the ‘mest. In four weeks the male s ainging. last year she laid 2¢ eggs.| A. A mechanically constructed Her daughter !aid six for the first time. I can prove this to be true. 1 am only an amateur, G. P. W. You are, but she isn't! Solution! “Why so gloomy, “I've just come from the doctor and he gives me only ten days to live." Walter: “Great Guns! Isn't there anything you can do about it?" Archie: “Well, I can stop running around with his wife!" —Scott Frederick (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Forbidden) matter with She's got is | QUESTIONS ANSWERED _ You can get an answer to any | question ot fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New | Britain Herald. Washington Rureau. 11323 New York avenue, Washington. D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal ar.d marital {advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All| other questions will recelve & per- | sonal reply. l!/nsigned requests :an not be answered. All letters are| confidential.—Editor. Q. Where is Stanford University” A. The Post Office i Stantord | University, California.” It is near the city of Palo Alto. Q. When should apple trees be pruned? A. During February and March. Q. Is it true that Ireland has no snakes? A. The United States Biological | Survey says that there are no native | snakes in Ireland, and never have been, 8u far as authentic records show. A few attempts have been made to introduce harmless species. but as yet none have become estab- lished on the island. This may be due to a lack of proper environment, climate, disease or other abnormal | condition. The slow-worm or lag- worm, a leglesa lizard which super- ficlally looks like a snake, is native | in Ireland, and may account for the snake stories of that country. Q. Who is “Cheerio” who broad- casts over the radio every morning? A. He is Charles K. Field of San Francisco, a friend of Herbert Hoover. He was a classmate of Mr. Hoover's a Stanford University in 1895 and more recently was co-au- thor with Will Irwin of a Hoover- biography. Q. When did the Third Liberty ! Loan bonds start drawing interest? A. At their date of issue, May 9, 1918, Q. What {8 the minimum age of eligibility as president of the Unit- ed States? A. Thirty-five years. Q. Who officiates at a common law marriage? A. Such marriages are not sol- emnired in the usual way, but are an agreement to marry, between the parties followed by cohabitation. Q. What is the meaning of the surname Galusha? A. It is a Scotch-Irish name, de rived from the Gaelic, and means “a stranger,” a “foreigner,” and is frequently applied to an English- man. Q. How many persons are 1 prisons and reformatories in the United Btates? A. The latest Census figures (1923) enumerated 109,619 persons in prisone and reformatories in the United States. Q. Who is the author of the lines “The glory that was in Greece and the grandeur that was Rome?" A. Edgar Allen Poe in his poem path was—Ralph. He had come back and stood there f ng eyes upon my youth an “Go out of my life, beauty. his Ralph,” ¥ {man who has been | they get too fresh, | them. screamed, swallowing my pride. But he did not go. And then Jim came And now I have Jim no longer. or Ralph either. For he was killed in a drunken brawl a short time afterward, and I have only my babe and my memories. Why do I write this, I wonder? Well, perhaps some young girl will read it and profit and so my life will not have been in vain. 1 hope 50, anyway. And 20 my message to you girls when your parents start bossing you and crabbing about your habits, tell them where to get off. If walk out on Because even {f the Primrose Path isn’t everything that it's crack- cd up to be, home life in America isn't so hot, either. But now my babe is calling for his gruel and | must go. I live for him alone! Ups and Downs of Stage Lifet First Manager: “Why so blue, old man?" Stage Manager: “Oh, bad luck overtakes everything 1 undertake. My low comedian is laid up with high fever and his understudy has broken down from overstudy!” —Alden Romaro Inquiry FAitor of The Fun Bhop: T would like to hear from some Lird man if he could beat this rec- ord of & canary. She laid five eggs “To Helen.” Q. On what date did Good Fri. day fall in 19142 A. April 10, Q. What is Esperanto? language using voot words that are common in the languages spoken by the majority of Europeans and those of European stock. The purpose is to create an easily learned means of internationa:s communication. Q. What is the natural color of Ermine ? A. The fur of the weasel (Er- mine) js white in winter, and is sometimes called “White Weasel.” In the summer the fur is’ a tawny- brown shade and is called “summet weasel.” Q. What is the average length of a game of tennis? A. It is difficult to estimate the average length of time required to play a set of tennis, as it all de- pends on how closely the games are contested. In a game between aver- age players the sets would probably average 30 to 40 minutes each. Q. What is the meaning of the German family name Hoen? A. It means a “Hun.” Going fur- ther back the origin is mythological and the meaning is a “giant.” Q. Who is the author of Lovingood 7" A. C. H. Harris. COMMUNICATED Objects to. Naturalization Proceeding Dear S8ir: I wish to take advantage of your paper, through your communicated column, to express my views on the action of Judge Saxe and Naturali- zation Examiner John Davis in ad- mitting at least two men to eitizen- ship who in my opinion should not be permitted to become citizens of this country. In your paper of the above date, “Sut you mentioned one man, who has| been a resident of this country for twenty-three years and could not speak the English language, but was admitted to citizenship. You also mentioned another man, who was also admitted to citizenship although he could not read. In my estimation these men should not have been granted cit- izenship and as an American citizen I protest the action of Judge Saxe | and Naturalization Examiner John Davis in admitting them to citizen- ship. If any man cannot speak or read the English language he should be| denied citizenship. I do not believe that there is any good excuse for a living in this country for twenty-three years, not being able to speak the English language, and I do not believe that because a man hus eight children he should be admitted when he cannot pass the necessary require- ments for citizenship. It is not fair to those who have come over and worked hard to learn to be citizens nor to those who will 80 in the future. In my estimation it is time that the American citizens insisted that every man and woman who is ad- mitted to citizenship in this country | must have the full requirements for anything we | good citizenship. If should be more strict, rather than lax. I believe that it is because of cases such as these that we have so many undesirable and unfit citizens today. good | do | —_— e ————— I will be glad to hear how other American citizens feel about this case; Personally, I intend to write to Washington and find out if these conditions should be allowed to exist or continue, and I hope that many other American citizens will also protest this action, or any similar action, for the good of this country. To be real Americans and an asset to our country we must insist that all people who wish to become citi- zens must be able to at least read and speak the English language. How can we expect them to Ameri- canize if they cannot read or speak? We should admit only those who will become good Americans and an as- set not a liability to this, our great country. Yours for better American citi- | zens, Edw. J. Barks Observations On The Weather Washington, April 22.—~Forecast for Southern New England: Cloudy, possibly rain on southeast coast to- night; Tuesday fair and alightly warmer in the north and west pore tion: fresh to strong northerly winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Partly cloudy. Possibly light frost tonight in north and central por- tions. Tuesday fair. Slightly warmer in south and central pore tions. Fresh northerly winds. | Conditions: A trough of low pres- | sure extends this morning from the cast Gulf states northeastward te the Nantucket coast, Nantucket 29.70 inches and Hatteras and Chare lotte N. C., 29.72 inches. Rains continue in portions of the {middle Atlantic states and Southern New England and snow is falling i@ | portions of Connecticut, Massachue |setts and New Hampshire. An exe tended area of high pressure overs lies the Lake region, the Mississippl valley and the Plains states with crest of 30.32 inches at Houghton, | Mich and Duluth, Minn, Trosty conditions were reported from Kansas eastward to the Ohio i\311"3‘. A disturbance is forming | over the Great Basin, Modena, Utah, 29.56 inches, | Conditions favor for this vicinity lunsettled weather followed by fair |and warmer. Temperatures yesterday: High ) 66 42 48 46 62 50 50 Low 62 40 36 38 42 60 40 30 62 54 72 34 38 48 35 72 38 54 32 38 38 42 44 Atlanta . Atlantic City .. Boston Buffalo . Chicago Cincinnati Denver . Duluth Hatteras Minneapolis Nantucket . Nashville .. New Haven ... New Orleans New York . Norfolk. Va. . Northfield, Vt. -, Pittsburgh . Portland, Me. . 8t. Louis .. Washington READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS BULLR AND BEAKS What do you know about the Stock Market? How did it origi What fs its purpose? How does it operate? What s ‘“call mon 18 a “margin” curb market? loans?* How does ome hundreds of other method of trading on the St k Exchange, account? What {8 & “seat” on the exchange? What What are the commodity exchanges? “sell short?" interesting questions What What g about is a the the and the operation Curb Market. and Commodity Exchanges are covered in our Washington Bureau's latest bul- letin. low and send for the bulletin: — - — - - l FINANCE EDITOR, 1322 New York Avenue, in cotn, and or loose. handling costs: NAME STREET AND cry | T am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD, . K N4 (Fomains Pou, 1909, The Bell Syndicose. Inc.) = CLIF COUPON ABRP= <~ == == == = Washington Bureau, Washington, T want a copy of the bulletin THE RTOCK EXCHANGE, CURB MAR- KET AND COMMODITY EXCHANGES and enclose herewith uncancelled U. §, postage stampe, If you want to know all about this subject, fill out the coupon be- 1 five cents to cover pasu-p.-' New Britain Herald, 020 —_— e - — o — — EVERY TIME THE GAR LEAVES THE RAILS WHERE THE TRACKS RUN THROUGH THE ToWN GARBAGE DUMP, SOMEONE 18 SURE " PULL THE SAME OLD WISE CRACK.