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| Last Monday it was stated by the | less | New York Times that President Hoover approved the placing of manganese on the free list on the round that the duty on the import- windy weather . The air mail in crossing the Rocklies, and not compromise went by the board when she actually did compromise to the extent of accepting 75 or 80 per ‘ | they are doing it | the air mail planes reach Utah and [ must traverse passes | ed alloy might be saved to the con- sumer. This, at least, is what the Re- New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY planes find trouble cent of her demands. every day. Before | Issued Dally (Suuday Kxcepted) At Herald Bidg.. 67 Church Street AL SMITH'S TOWER with a considerable | that are at least 8,000 feet above sea ; this is the highest | level negotiated by the Union Pacific. the Nevada the must be that 1t SUBSCRIPTION RATES shock $3.00 & Year SO0k $2.00 Three Months | Hooverites discover that the Hon. Al 7%c. a Month | = without being on the payroll of the publican leaders are saying. A bit of history: numerous stalwart |level—at least, Just before the clection last year when President Hoover was on his Smith ean make a good livelihood | In order to avoid crags and peaks while the railroad follows the | N Entered at the Post OfMce at New Britaln way'to California to vote he stopped a» Becond Class Mall Matter, at Pueblo, Colorado, and | state of New York. lowest terrestrial pathway the planes he made which They W saying last fall, it will | must go several thousand feet higher | be remembered, that Mr. Hoover was ast campaign speech, in ngin nd that Mr. ad done noth 10 b NE CALLS in order to provide a safe passa TELEPHOM LLS Business Office 21 Editorial Ruoms e er @ Smith | This height might be followed by a | said g to distinguish him- | Zeppelin, But not if the commander “There is hardly a product of your whole state that is not depending on | the tariff for its very existence. Of | your minerals, zinc, tungsten and manganese, could scarcely be pro- | duced except for the protective tariff."” identified with | could find a lower passage ™ a more | The only profitable adyertising medium In the City. Circulation books and press room alwsys open to advertisers. roundabout way. The Zeps are light- | but not much { lighter than rarefied air that is from | politics [ We have actually heard Hoover than air, that 50 very men say after the election d E nothing else Smith would be good for | one-third to one-fifth as heavy as air by Mr. Member of the Associnted Press Alfr The Asociated Prems ls exclusively en- titled fo the use for re-puuiication of all news credited to it or ot otherwise credited In thls paper and also local of news published therein. riving a truck. at sea level. Adventurous airmen the have passed top of some of our 1t is true. B Since then the United States Stecl Bethlehem | Steel Company have agreed with the iith has been “out | for eight months, during |right over Corporation ved some golf and job™ and the which ti plé high peaks. It is scarcely worth while ited from the recuper campaign by | considering the altitude climbers in | agent of Soviet Russia, it is said, to these com- Member Audit Burean of Circulntion The A B. C. 1s a uational orgauization Which furnishes oewspapers and aduer: Toars with a mrictly honest mpalysis of Sirenlation. Our clrculation statistics are Sased upon this audit This insures pro- tection agalost fraud 1o oewspaper dis: eibution — figures to botb mationul and local advertisers. writing his autobiography for the | this connection as where special | supply manganese to | Sat a higher rate per | oxygen tanks are necessary the ele- ; panies. It is said further that this is or of But | much doubt | * wor agraph, column ment practicality vanishes. the reason why the steel companics ssued orders to tion, He other public offt there cun scarcely be the administra- as the Democrats are fond of that airplanes are able h gr though ial ever commanded. to traverse | ew directora \ mountainous territories with | putting it, to put manganese on the free list. The agent of Soviet Russia in this deal is said to be connected with of the Bethlehem | wck 1o work ater freedom than the Zeps, al- | All he of ts on sale dally in 1 now he is going 'k At Hotaling's Newsstan :: 1o Newsstands, Eutrance Grand Central. 42nd Street. -_ Herald AR isn't truck driving that fact does not detract | is to become dent from the Building o pr other advantage one Corporation, high pire dirigibles. | ofricials. largest office — — FOR LAWRE the i The result: cannot sy A citizen is the around waitir he boys take site of New AN ADVANC It necessary examp | land, to CcE | when orld on the Manganese mines in Colorado and which could supply halt the needs of the n market and all of the needs if developed further, will be faced withgextinction it Congress puts manganese on the tree list. i 1 around e coping around A oria hotel in has been custom, Montana, monum e "4"\ v“"""l" s to be 80 stories to point out a horrible Ameri Selopldlng than the of hard times in New Eng- s cont let-the bootblack single out the city of Law- etts. The lroubl(:i poss: the happy |rence in Massachu Rl 1l chief voice with mere $60,- will be bank- 1 have in Lawrence has been that it grew ' \ that the six or cight millions of dollars a year, which e 2 genuin ecarthquake ol : to be a textile center, and when the | carrying out will cost His e : And nobody imagines were o vis ociates textile industry hegan adopting the e o8 vho ha i | the city capitalists and similar gentlemen | symptoms of a drunken sailor the | represents manganese, | Am duty on | passed to the can consumers of steel. If the tariff is to protect toddling American industries it would seem | that the little detonations bla another big acoustomed to the - retion and enterprise. o Wniwent to ol tons Businaic D Lal dent to quarr ould mis- take it for just came so bad in Lawrence the » structure will be known offi- i) unoficially that even as th State building; millionnaires and 1pire discuss it But New which threatens to preferred not to i ‘ we here now If this might possibly save a life are glad to print Hub AL Sltha tower in England even a city | manganc comes under that cla it: Official re- e industry — £ become THE ARABS DEMANDS For a le like an sitice shown that | ification. the porfs every year have Labor Day peak in automobile accidents. Watch | abandoned mining | town does not | have been count- | reach that finish. There is always a | made upon the Brit- | Kick left somewhe provides seaso ek th | re and Lawrence | vhitt you're doin LR rmment relative 1t demands to be to Facts and Fancies the | 15 beginning to stir around like an | | ) AEEE Palestinian mandate. has taken | ©ld man finding his second youth. | | Down in West Haven, where citi- zens defeated the adoption of a city thls lone on heard | The wise men who have been try | By Robert Quillen | You can tell an American abroad. When he sces a public ‘ouse, he | looks for a back door to sneak | through. | | from an Arab council as well, which | in& to rehabilitate the wastes of the charter, a resident of £0 years ac mitted in public he went to the polls and voted “no” without knowing or the fuss was about. | lly has given its side of the wag- | €ty have struck a rich vein of pos a e sibilities by inducing a concern oper- in the | ating plants in New Yerk, New Jer- The | Sev, Pennsylvania and elsewhere to sign up for a grand removal to Law- rence, where all the diverse interes a These ¢ | mands appear to he caring what all AR . nature That's an exampie of the true New of self-determination. People feel sorry for {he poor monkey stared at in the zoo, and yet life guards seem to enjoy it. The real problem of the Allies is | to get all Heinic can pay and yet [lcave him enough to buy their which greatly | products. It turns ouUK and will em- | ploy 5,000 persons in Lawrence. The | mec Arabs ask for a Parliament in | | the Balfour ts ion | Of the concern will be brought to- { gether for the first time in its his- spirit. Or is it not? = aand spl | Palestine, . | D Once a woman' went on a virtnal revocation of eclaration, and into the territory This probability it the non-adm hunger strike in order to get thin, while her fat husband got thin worrying about her. But most times that doesn't occur. The husband eats | though, will create o order. Tn all | tory: The concern is not in the tex- tile business, either, | large will not be granted. | ‘plv:AS\fl Lawrence. — Endurance records don't scem re- markable in a land where almost cverybody has kept at it until he found a parking space. Refusal to accede 1o the demands, ol additional hard | Mechanical creations Arab population the wife's share and grows fatter. | feelings among the i anical workers will receive con- ble more workers, and probably serve as a source of | future clashes :SMC Britain to wish it | | had never heard about the mandate. | It and incre popular, as everyone knows, to make cldcks state the right time by having is possible asingly ¥ | 2 irritation to stimulate pay than textile | I'or that matter, there is bribery and official corruption in the en- forcement of the law against 5[(‘;\|v‘ ing. | and cause Great This will be an instance of a great | concern New England. | editors take due them hooked up with electric sogkets | ; i P G he religious disturbance in | moving to | Let the Southern | action regard- | "Otce: Arablan or Zionist | | way is forcefully —provided, of course, that they are the right kind of clocks. But this modern Palestine can be permanentl 7 Other endurance rvecords don't impress the man whose neighbor has a pup that gets lonesome, ut] night. | eliminated by decisive will the which oppose one another, | according to V. Gabriel, adviser species of efticiency never be 100 per cent perfect until POST OFFICE LAND the government ing either poli | | obtains its | illustrated in the | 5, one can do that with one's watch. Edmond How The young people aren’t as quiet as they were in your day, eh? Well, would you care to be as quiet a the old people were then? “QUITTING THE RHINELAND The wéird situation in the Rhine- British financial and’ ad- ministrator of Palestine in 1915-19. | ¢ 3 negotiations under way for securing | is worth while | at this point to | the Davis tract alongside the New | ¢hich Americans who digested . | R ich americhos who die Britain post office building, which is | needed for the addition to be built. The project $250,000 and no more., ize how the present impasse came about. Early in the World war attacks were made the Locarno pact, Some people think they are rush- ling to the defense of Lindbergh | €08t | hen they are just bragging about As the govern- 4 xnowing him. | the meaning of Kellogg pact, plan, and various other good will items, had begun to regard as an in- Dawes plan, Yo BY thelTurks or entire is to | Moslems upon the Suez canal, which though unsuccessful, ment already | $65,000 is said {o have paid Cadwell tract, on indicated to at Britain the importance of hav- Arabian that IRl el oioussiatilansth promuises How superior an American tour- ist feels when he tosses comns on the ground for Arabs to scramble tor! And when he comes honie and competes with his own kind as the | Arabs did i : for the o evaporate. A Drotectioniein which there was a three-story build- Uncle Sam, sensing that something ing, the sum of $185,000 remains for | ction of the post office addi- | his further afoot the way ridiculous was pulled heriff of territory the purchase of the Davis tract and Mecea was found | the negotiate with the British, Ari all other things independence from the Turks. The | troops out of as the in best to avoid Americanism: Thinking the it the addition is to be | gyoaker a great man if he flatters with the pres- | us; thinking him a dangerous crank the it he tells us the truth e since the bs ired above tion. idemtification with foreign entangle- 1 above Manifestly rhe wisdom of this act 1 cts ments. ion was agreement made with the | anything in harmony Mecea proven by what follow was whereby the | ent fine building government | if he and the reparations settiement it is probahle that British, troops would the Jn spite of all the e 4 independnce | cannot pay very much for the Davis | 0 o ¢ nouc Lroducers: 1t would be interesting to hear a dog talk, but it would become tiresome it he didn't say anything worth while. B for protection in the Suez|tract, on which there is an old Irench and Belgian | bsequently the Arabs nobly | building. Conscquently, negotiations | have Rhineland been that Great c nued had force: to re- 1 the | British at the government's figure having | main in it not end of th | been 1 provided ar Sic unsucces Herber! national [ ful, the government | i will start condemnation proceedings | | and | Britain — B airoscing aneiwoutiine Now if somebody had sto'en railroad from the Chinese, wouldn't have been news. a It may be that the owners of the that the territory rather pronto, followed for the Jews in Arabs obje Davis tract are asking too much for | the property or by a similar de cted by I i cult laration the government is | offering too little. But there is no . 4 ; They have beel . As’was expected, French diplomacy wve been A fanatic is a man who thinks you a narrow-minded dry or a wicked wet if you don't cheer when | he talks nonsense. Their demands immediately faced a dif condi- Their demand: : e AT ooy | way of bucking the government once tioh and the upshot is a Brenarelionaniicd Lo shad | the government starts to have its | he present situa- mgreement to vamoose from 1 WD TR " 2 T | e ntl wn way. is true that a price paic 7 as quickly as possi iently to price paid Modes dr ty: A man's ss in the locker a hole in onc reluctance to room when his socks. |as the result of condemnation dings is one regarded pro- ven so it takes tr cec as fair by | but that Zeppeln | it is in con- | | formity with what the owner thinks evacuate a territory | ok an impartial tribunal; surmise, tl 3ritish an THIL AMERICAN AIR ROUT! i How times ze! The near-nak- ed American, swayin 1d stamping and yipping in a wild dance, no lerger is called a savage. doesn’t necessarily mean who to thrie a hurry not hiekarttnant in s to Lakehurst control | it is worth or what he might obtain | s the ican | from other h Amer | some | Rl Birth : little pro- = | hee you an tell The upshot of all such deals is tha ieupshot of all suchideals is that | Gy an one witlibe . chlld wonder and the nd | carn a million in the the ross the buyer at the some quit ir 20 of the ontrol Ause high | other time. kes it there gress never s nee commiss government gets its way; movies. impression is sometimes wide- = = tell Willie, hut the wonderful only lished t spred flock of cann Don ancient mathemati- survivors of the join to El Paso, Scotch- the unschooled ones ; <o the route | MCN &re running it | BINGHAM AND HOOVER Why his comn governm valley of the known oosing this route p —_— When a sick husband his whining prayers and begins to cuss Lis wife knows he is oug of danger. BB i ation of e ofiow Senator Bingham reversed | stops t vote on the manganese the It from ed a bad politica him | | tariff becomes clear from his state nt he did Hoover German officials the mountains SO ment that 50 becs Presi- | Correct this sentence: *John still obeys his mother in all things,” said { the wife, “but T don't feel resentfy | Copyright, 1929, Publishers of | Syndicate looked pffice Tt to or especially for advised the change. the senator's statement puts the light campaign lent Hoover in 1s come B e ing lightly with whe exh contend- 0 Young eon promise MeMAHON LEAVES HOSPITAL McMahon of Farmingtor injured several ago Bt a pound [in an automobile accident in Plain- At that moment the hig ville, left New Rritain General hos- | which pital yesterday. His brother, Patrick Metropolitan Muscum o York been broken ago Ject n and threat bt emacy George who S Originally Mr. Bingham had France demanded the 5 Vol the g ‘ was days evacuation of t duty of one per ce ore Gtic corpor unless there use h vented their ¢ wa Wi foon 1 1 not = upon the division X rd | hospital, having sustained reparations. from n they g in the accident France seems non . Mr. Roc placed on Missouri is said to have the low- state property tax levy of free I point, while Snowden's or vy, althoug ist ir Senate version of the | any | ) d statement that Britain would wholly due to | Hawley bill. | state, | lean lad wearing running shorts and | banging away while his counterpart the piano s derby | close-cropped |a contract | There's a happiness, T find, in cele- | know what time it SHHSSSS3883598508 9588 —THE OBSERVER— Makes Random Observations On the City anc Its People TEPIF And They Wondered What Papers Would Do for News. The writer recalls that soon after the close of the World War he was asked by a friend, not without a slight touch of malice, “What will you do for news, now?" Since then a decade has passed. Observations On The Weather forecast Fair Sunday ‘Washington, for Southern New | on the east coast Saturday; partly cloudy and warmer. Forecast for Eastern New York: Fair Saturday and Sunday; slowly rising temperature followed by showers Sunday afternoon in north. | portion. Conditions: The outlook is for: showers on Sunday in the upper [ 4 0"; and 2HHH9255808 Sendd all communications to Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. | sometimes on commission sometimes on outright sale. M's a strange thing when news is sold, sometimes like secrets of diplomacy. | Newspaper men in Paris have cre- ated this condition. In this world. there are stock markets, cattle ex- | Ohio valley and Lower Lake section changes, but the queerest of all, is and for Joeal eho *r&;:£d1‘§°?|:;{ Vi 7 e ., | Sunday in ortions of E With the exception of the war per- HMB “"‘2[ :;,?;;:Ch;:fi? 2 ”,‘; Atlantic s(‘:lr‘s. Elsewhere the iod, there has been more news than | g 0 ¥ weather will be fair Saturday and at any other time in the hlltori of | d Sunday in Washington forecast dis- type. Readers have broadéned their | $ triet. smeres. A remarkable awakening |Book Agent’s Blush Temperatures Wil rise in the of interest in subjects previously | Main Sales “Argument | Ohio valley, the Lower Lake region considered in the field of specialists| The age of super-salesmanship is und in the Middle Atlantic states. is noticeable. i:cre‘(an?‘ the average business man [y Prior to the issue of Liberty has to listen in on one or more | [ Bonds the averago person was un- |Sles arguments a day. The nth| D& Years Ago Today familiar with this means of invest- | degree of salesmanship has to be ment. The fortunes made in stock | resorted to by book agents. There —— speculation during the war quicken- |15 one book agent, plying his trade| . 0o B and I left this i - mil. | among university students to whom 5 i cd the public mind and today mil- | ) ¥ i v morning for Manassas, Va. The men lions are investing in stocks so that ‘;‘““""‘v"“h:’ee:‘h‘e""nk";dl' jvature | vere clad in ne - sults of khaki. Wall street activities have become H‘“hf‘]"" s e f‘ h°h being able | Ty ing pictures will be shown ot first page news. Lo blush at will, Which he uses for| nna's armory on East Maln |all it is worth. His method of ap- | People have become science con- or lraet 9nroay J proach is worked out s0 that the . scious. New faventions and thelr | | oor hasn't o chance. He dresses| 1t 1S expected that the formal developments are discussed at soclal | othor poorly, weighs about 250 observance of the installation of zatherings as well as in academic | oinds” and, taking it all in all, |the Corbin chimes in the South halls. e T e acan Ap. |church will be held on Sunday, Sep- Aviation, still in its infancy ten | proa nine 4 student In his room, he | tember 18 vears ago, Is a subject on which il | wil| at once launch into his subject| BOOM'S p read. Public attention has been |taking the attitude that he doesn't|De the attraction at fastened to the conquest of the air |care much whether the books are |Park on Labor Day by freak stunts, no doubt, but read- | hought or not. At the right time| Over 5000 people attended ths ors are also curious about the day |ho will say, confidentially, that he | iy, HEl s Wliie Cale Yoo to day progress made in this branch | has Balzac for sale. His hand will | y_afternoon. Over 300 babies of science. The Graf Zeppelin's voy- |go to his face and he would pro- entered. Ernest W. Olson age around the world has been onc |ceed to blush a peony red from ear udged the handsomest baby of the most important factors in the | to ear, saying that the books are a [under 18 months. ; development of interest. bit risque. The trick works to per-| Parker & O'Connor have Radio and sound pictures fection, and the student is signed |awarded the contract for news. up out of curlosity to see what on |the orphan asylum on Automobiles are news. street. The New Britain Gas Light Co. i\vill lay a new main through Main street next week. The present main has grown inadequate to meet all the demand earth could be in the books which Hibm s amey: would make a bird like that blush Multifaceted science is developing |and feel ashamed of himself for new wonders every minute and read- | selling them. Thus, being able to St e At e blush at the right time, a giftlet | Rather than slump, newspapers |from nature, has been instrumental | the 1 | have taken a new grip and have | In making a livelihood for one book | There is expected to be some Timidly, the freshman opened the | joen forced to add to their equip- |A8ent Who loves his work. pretty lively campaigning for the door and entered (I)rlron;n_] Inone i yent for bringing news, all the —_— 0"‘“‘]‘”',""5‘ selectman at the com- corner tout youth clad in al fpireaden o 5 (A et e the republican state convention will vote for the renomination of Gov- ernor Chamberlain, It is rumored about town that an application will be made during the winter fo secure a place for this ing the mandolin. By his side, &|{,5ucunds of tons of logs into papers city in the state baseball league. Nr Harny - which go into the homes. News @Mflfik&n agencics, like the Associated Press Hae ye heard this one ? land United Press which serve the | Herald with information on events Another Six from Aberdeen Aberdonians may not be supersti- originating in other cities near anl | far, cannot depend on the old Morse | tious about “12” but they certainly watch number one. WaB | (16 but flash their messages, us you read them in your pape A Granite motto—"Don't spend money in drink but keep a cork-screw handy. newspaper offices at the rate of Free parscs to theaters were first Humorists Deserve 'Em! We believe in pensions For soldlers tried and true, But to the folks who make our jokes Why not grant fun-sions, t00? bar ve Ingredients! Jess Chey say Larry is travel- ing some pace now. Lee: “Yes, he's got some pre- | war liquor and a post-war wife!"” Ac R will Oal; onpareil company White been' heatinz, Orange are | | | | Above Suspicion? I Rah—Paratone! M. Rah, Rah, By Sophic Gray . Old Central Park Won't Seem the Same Like the old town pump, the cor- ner grocery store and all the other pathering places which are at once associated with the memories of | cities when they were fowns, the monument coping at Central Pa went out of existence this week as | the principal headquarters of the greatly mixed assemblage of the tired, the lazy, and the just-don't- cares. Chief Hart of the police de. partment announced that the loiter- ers must loiter elsewhere. It was a hard blow but like many another of its kind, it- can and will be softencd Ly the passing of the days. There is no disputing the fact that | the coping, lined with human rail- birds, could hardly be classed as at- tractive, still there was something about the crowd that assembled there that was colorful in a strange way. Many a strong man, it is true, | whiled away hours that should have been used in profitable activity, and undoubtedly passersby were often justifiably provoked at the sight of the crowd loafing in the very cen- ter of a veritable beehive of bu: ss, but it was never an offensive crowd, and in all probability there was less trouble given the police there than in any other part of the | city where men congregate for hours at a time. v blazer him on the guitar. Various groups lent more color to the assemblage. Here was a hand- some adolescent playing the phono- graph; at the piano another accompanied tortured a saxophone in a singularly unconvincing manner. On top of at a pretty girl showing much animation and a wealth of silk stocking with rolled tops. In the center of the room a tango was in progress, though from the scarf wound about the middle of the male (in plus-fours) it was not to lw‘ taken seriously. His partner's | hat, perched rakishly on | curls, strengthened the comic effect. At the sight of the freshman, music stopped and the musicians | swarmed about him, giving him a lap on the back that sent text- hooks flying. A girl produced a| faskgand spcienr i ';":’(”' Lr:";)‘:t(cal water board. The cande, hewn Toshinat &) STINALT MRy I L | from a solid tree, is 14 féet long, i a i vere a wed P ing and drinking were not allowed |4q g0 far, it Fas averaged two ar- | in 5. Sl Z als | guments a ‘foot. tnd the tobacto. Slow)y the room |covered the craft well packed -in grow hazy, vasue. The freshman |the preservative mud of a small decided he an ostrich—one with | Pond. - It was' dragged to dry land With the Ballet Russe,|2nd minutely inspected by every- He danced—oven as an ostrich that | P04y around. = Sure, it was an In- had a contract with the Ballet Russe | d1an canoe, the workmanship was Vouldl dance.. THen theve came a|crude; but executéd by a skilled ock on {he door that sent the|hand such as the boys who used to othors scurrying fo cover. The |Pester our forefathers had. Rea- doop opened. It was, the Deant |S00S aplenty were advanced why it The Dean was in the Dorms! Wwas an Indian rellc. What kind of a cock-cyed college| Years back there must have been e Sl |a large lake around there, and the It was the very best that could be | [ndians used it to teach the young- conjured up by the brain of a mo-|er clement just how to paddle be- o tolbtira avastor | fore they were allowed to go out in one of those risky birch bark hunting boats. Just as it was de- cided that the canoe was a Red Skin trophy, Chairman James Wat- “Yep. Had one |Son pooh, poohed the idea, saying, the fish got|Dy the way of snap judgment, that NHew |it was made by pale face youngsters e who had used it a couple of gener- ations ago. The more Watson look- ed at it the more he was convinced that the water department workers had allowed themselves to become too enthusiastic about their find. | Even the argument about old Vik- ing ships being preserved in the mud for thousands of years failel bration {to budge the chairman, who is get- Of the problems of my husiness|ting so he feels strongly about the and my art. matter. As a siggestion to the two When I cannot get different schools of thought, the a card game | Observer would like # see ths And there isn't anyone canoe exhibited on the green in to call, New Britain for a fortnight so that Then—though many think citizens could decide for ourselves. labor is a hard game— If nobody claims it. it belongs to T don't mind a bit of slaving—|the city and not to the water board not at all! it's our money they are spending, there. | nearly 60 words a minute with the help of automatic telegraph-type- The world, actually, may not be revolving faster on its axis. But its inhabitants are thinking fa more things and the press forc step faster to fulfill its mission. hibit Canoe {on At Central Park The canoe found in the mud of a drained pond on the New Britain water shed in the Wollcott moun- tain has started a good natured dis- pute, between the workersgf the lo- Why ireen Ci | given in Aberdeen so that the local If the imposing wells the | shopkcepers could attend. monument could but talk! What | INSERT CUT S o stories they could tell. 'What plans | [ikewise “frec kicks® were in- must have been unfolded to the | yented by Aberdeen football nolsy rhythm of the clanging trolley | manager to encourage his forwards cars and the rumbling motor trucks, | (o score. softened and sweetened by the tin- | Cigarettes were never really popu- kle of the flowing water from the |jar in Aberdeen until tips iere fountain that always scem to af-|,qded to them. ford a coolness that was comfort- able on even the hottest day. What problems were decided, what mo- | mentous topics discussed and de- | bated. | The crowd will amble up the hill, maybe, to the spacious park on West Main street,* but it will not seem the same. There are no street cars up there, nor do many motor vehicles pass through by day. It's going to be too spacious, too still. It’s never going to be as home-like as the old coping down below. of an Some Fis| Summer Boarder* have floods here?"” Farmer Brow last year. One wedged in the “Do you ever ADMITTED Budapest, Hungary, Aug. 31 (A— |A newly formed organization of parents of 6,000 Jewish students excluded from study at home uni- | versities and forced to go abroad to | obtain higher education have drawn up a petition to the minister of ed- ucation to increase the quota of New Britain Has Record |Jews admissible to home colleges Of Friendship for Neighbors, 1in order to enable their sons to New Britain as a municipality, is [return home and complete their most certainly friendly to its neigh- | studies. bors, one man who attended the banquet which followed last Wed- nesday's police baseball game ob- served. . Each year, a series of {wo base- ball games is played between teams of the New Britain and Meriden po- lice departments and when all s cver the police, city officials and friends of all groups sit down (o a banquet followed by a mutual ad- miration gathering, he went on® by | way of explanatio This city furnishes water to Plainville, Berlin and a section of Maple Hill and there has never been any wrangling over prices or extent of service, not even in the present dry spell when local property own- ers have been urged not to pou water on their lawns, while no such request was made of the surround- ing communities served, he contin- aed, warming up to his subject. The fire department responds to calls from the town of Berlin at a | price entirely satisfactory to the neighboring town, and when the municipality was urged not to can- | cel the contract this year, the re- quest was granted,”the home town booster went on to say. Continuing: New Britaln's expres- sion of willingness to cooperate with Hartford in the development of a metropolitan water system served to iron out the wrinkles of legislative frowns when that proposition was broached at the last session. And, so that it would not appear that any institution of the city gov- crnment was withholding its privi- eges and conveniences from its neighbors, he climaxed with: “Why. even the city lock-up receives and | houses prisoners from Berlin and | Newington.' Could anyone ask for more? of river —k The Passion for Work! By Harold P. Epps Oh, T truly love to practice vocation, I'm awfully heart; my IFor industrious at ITALY FIGHTS IDI Rome, Aug. 31 (P—Premier Mus- solini today authorized an expand- ed of program of public works in Italy totalling over 300,000,000 lire ($15,900,000) the project is designed to combat winter unemployment. BURIED | TREASURE brought tragedy to one man—Ilove and happiness to others. DEATH TREASURE by A. A. J. Walling LSS a golf game or on whom that s { 50 When T've finished with my ncighbors, my phonographic have been played, I can plunge into the middle labors With a spirit ifraid For T hate the v shirking, that “Labor conquers know is true, And you'll always find cusly working When there’s absolutely clse to do! all my gossip News Exchange Establi Among Paris Journalists Harry's New Danou in Paris hed And records York bar on rue| is the rendezvous | for international journalists and es- pecially free lances from America, Cocktail hour will find special cor- respondents from many of the United States metropolitan dailys gathered swapping :lories of news | value. One man may have a story | which is of interest to citizens of Deluth, Minn,, which one of the others wants; he'll lay his cards on the table without fear of a breach of ctiquette and the story will go to the highest bidder. Stories are thrown -on the open market, and | there are many correspondents w'o | never leave the place except 1o sleep and eat. Some of the men have rived from Budapest, Russia Madrid. They, of course, havi fund of information which others are regu- | Pick on for their home town news- lated by Western Union,”*answered | Daper. The tips for newsgathering e i |are placed on the market and the “T should think.” said the lady as|tips are passed around at will, she turned away. “that *s would | be hig enough to regulate its own | clocks. | of my that is wholly thought of :my{ And all” T | ‘ nothing Parting Shot! A lady accosted a floorwalker in our leading department store last week, and demanded brusquely to he floor- e clock | after| alker and said two." “Are yvou sure snorted the lady. “Our clocks, madam howed toward a Twenty mir Iz just ar- or it is " correct?” | A Thrilling Romance Starts Tuesday, Sept.”3 in the New Britain Herald h thing that you ought to have. Farmer: “What is it?” “Book Agent: “A Poultry Guide." Farmer: “What for? The chickens ain’t going anywher who mix- A will ture fortune invent for the awaits the man good anti-fre movie theaters! a 70 | In 100 years Lake Michigan has eaten away 10 miles of land along | the shore between Evanston, Ill, 2nd Menitowoc, Wis. —Russell Fish. (Copyright, 1929. Reproduction forbidden.) Useless! “Now here is Book Agent: