New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 1, 1930, Page 6

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EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 1 T debris be left untouched. But after with m‘rc!u!nn;“grrnl deal of alcohol; much more than was used for beverage pur- hie bay, of a snappy | PO3¢S before prohibition. There is I no practical denaturant except wood With | 41cohol that cannot easily and com- warkable, thought the | pletely be redistilled out. It is| jon. Then the|wood alcohol or mothing. It alco- | i hol is not denatured then potable | 5 told 3 | alcohol can be bought without re-| striction for a dollar a gallon. | civilized country would dare winter bore down S82858255502580588 5802 —THE OBSERVER-- Makes Random Observations On the City anc Its People SFEOEPETISTETTIERICTTCITISTITINIFINIGRTTIGY LSS8668888988, | (1t there train ‘The Yankee Clip- @|per' for the New Haven road, 1 go: all amed up about it. I didn't know but I might cven be able 1o zet John to support a nice snappy for that brindle heifer of mine that I've been trying for such spell to give a nom de plume, something, to. You see this seemns to be durned intellig everythir she deserves a real i’.l}'v])uu‘.li\c judges who have not their appointments at partly—sometimes New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britaln, Connecticut the coroner left the scene workmea | vehemence. | from seized upon the wr owed least —to political considerations. Such | exclusive- an airline company | This winter t s k with axes, ropes and | hour noth- e skimmed over sesvs Tssued Daily whatnot, and within an At Herald Bldg., (Sunday Excepted) 67 Church Btreet Jointments, by the way, are usual- “'stepping nsidered stoncs in| ing remained. Newspaper photog- | vounger would get ttempted to such | genera 54 or heifzr t ani | Journal got its fiies and about some other instances. One hundred SUBSCRIPTION RATES §5.00 a Year 2.00 told it th Small differ | raphers we adly hurt” take picturc 299950258825 Judge Gaifney. nominz and elected o such OERPIPVE arties years ago the y | alternative Entered at the Pos! as Second lass Muil Matter. 13 his court only profitable advertising med i the « 1 om Member ot the Assuc t s Asuclated Press ed to o for newa the s excl e-put oy offic do with 1 of T thoughts. political be said o at alert mitted No mo 1 not pat} probler nce. ved with law, ewspaper uded riend of scarcely b In common cause of tha a with om the bench We v WHEN THE JUDGE RETIRLS Universal regret throughout t pending G city ia expressed tirement of Probat Having A : In announ confidence, and of the city 1928 50\ ¢ the 1 earning nothing est praiss for his administ offi ord s ery city in public offi could ing nment of Waterbury | - the an age he wis! Depart merce closes with r Judge A grea the hat Jud unreast limit, mu nable elector- *poli re s hetic T me ter 15t politics t machin. made ticu- s own court or I com- tendered. public gen- Gaff- law retire has graced for h devoutly that | be found to enable JE CITY BOOKKLEEPING nancial statistics | marks of nd. The pl | om- aimed at | is simple process of accounting which would cnable the department o secur An peirs 1 it parties as o he probate be nominee for cities, both united Gaffney breakable habit fact T0th parties until it becam Dos h! he i Rath ine not have f his milestone during his Bl beconies neces- the m, when by law to relinquish ved the office, is quite p: at son for the judge’s decision to 1e- again nated after He could be i actabor con i go- | colipelled to ng into offic would be forced to com fetire within short tir ply Lo ¢ . m keep count of this , finances, tha t tion. ds so badly tarm the judge thi 1t one down beforc that is ncces regrettubl although of prime logic. keeping all Oviously, the Jud tully that he rem No rad one knowing Ju o Department of s hsatal inow eryone | the subjec duties with | it knows that I per ¢ that \d : regard- or his robate administ which reliable appears Wa government sior may nd a seem impossible Jusiness Leep gov a oth cities Commer io; collected since the diversified accou ting me: showing AYIHE dign brilliant) and Y{nd zoing i oint atood steem” ts arve that politic more in the appointmen: It is difficult to name many of | fou | | P | 1 AN 0 have t bu department 1t constrained to u In other ords, ernment gives the impression the way 1 in s yeen the vublic institution accurat ry evide urate crs partment of Commerc n of ov¢ 1 citics offi nts done (AN account up fle is self-evident. | « n in to citie of uld sr boolis. curate dat ap- ome im- otherwise ould | rits 50\ W al ng was made in Waterbury. is docs raments. Some of the De d. desirability of uniform booi- cal changes would be neces- | For instance, here is what the e says on itics but | s this | s om- per- | v prope rces o di- hreats made; all they go pictures the samec. Too think they are c What would ti many airplane sceutives bove the i, ars and law. : fter an automobilc accident, the representatives of automobile manu- facturers carted away all the wreck- in order to hide defects in he discovery of ssible the mobiles? FHE WETS AND SENATOR WALSH a curious de S. Boston H. a political clopmc Attorney Trederick 1o make A SHIGH Je comes (o ihe de- Republican party of isetls and besmir Democratic w conside It sctts this has come to be one 168 ttorney. Tt is to be Mass followed clsewhere, party that A scems in of ¢ s, {uties of a loped that Lchusclts pre- cedent is not When ks one finds that the only point es Mr, Tarr's re. o quence he makes is that ohibitionists contributed $74,- 000 the to Senator campaign Walsh, If that it is at leas cspenses of is true, then e instance wher Democrats had t out the vote.” Ind enough mo ed, M ney to admits Association ion Amendment and the Con- stitutional Liber! for League are doing cause of modification what the Anti-Saloon igue did for t cause of prohibition. not to mention some other organizations which have identified ith prohibition Both tspes of organ been propaganda. Za- tions have the liberty to propagand- content, raise and utilize funds to help can- didates the favor, It is astonishing mo n a legitimate manner indeed to tind Massachusetts Repub- | licans finding fault with the use o money for legilimate purposes in a the campaign, considering that use of mon has been one of the | suits of the grand old party. in Pennsylvania, if will Mr. include il sm 50 Smith of Tllinois, not o 10 other gentiemen have had the advantage of moncy in politics. el worthy of a better also 13 reported to d Demo- chusetts are instigat- paign against President loover and the national Republican platform. If they were {o institute a campaign for the President and the Republican platform it would hot but isn't even surpr be news, not otherwise. It ising news. he trouble in Massachusetts ap- pears to hinge upon the fact that a large number of former Republicans supporting the Democratic candidates. That, th dress wa perhaps, is why title of Mr. Tarr's political ad “What is the Matter with the Republican Party in Massachu- is too many Democrats in ng number bute to And an increa moncy to cont I'HE JOKE EDITOR ch to commend od o ne Howe, colun arillo, Texas, in filling his ted space ng wit. The spar g son of “old Howe" of Achison Gilohe in thc ered thit follow- Lis would appear in fodder was ravenous | the editor would d course concerned duc in the shows over trom other which were born gencra- it would seem that the 1 be o srand- PIITLIE COLD DAYS and cd consideranie ong the presen neve- readers by referring to what spened 1o Narragansctt Bay days “good old o the | in publica- | when | an 1t would cconomic and moral ruin. *Poison aicohol” is just another foolish phrase used to stir up futile dis- content. S (S To Mr. Paonessa’s statement *T | (o | iave never been a candidate on any | platform of hostility toward the 10 { liquor law.” T cun only say that a 200d many of us got the impression | that the Mayor's specches, pro- rouncements and agitations against liquor law were somehow con- nected with his politieal career, but t is interesting to learn t it a mere coincidence. RALPH M. WHITE, Rescarch Secretary for the | Iact-Finding Committee for | l.aw Enforcement in Connec- ticut. Haven T'ranklin could mean on account of jamin b 7 conditions B were . the upper bay being frozen olid as far south ut, and many persons skated ¢ Newport Pru { droped hers sleighed d. The thermometc 5 degrees below o was official or just a cur {hermometer i3 not stated. 4 must ha rat Boenife s only t In was again frozen from shore to| But it took a quarter o te thiz feat nature, Not until reury going fo 15 de- iplice by New happen 93 did it es below zero. There was thet hiatus of 25 years before the port : Factsand Fancies | By Robert Quillen : One who delights in an unimportant tt mn a imporiant WA osed again—in Tebruary 1018, to 14 below mobiles plicd over « T'olitic doing n went v the ther ter At nom ro.’ At this time auto- 5 I very way National problems seem new they all reduce themselves to aze-0ld problem of finding honest but ¢ recapitulation of bl | pells of a century” : remarks the Journal—"it would not appear that the climate i3 chang ing, at least insofar as the periodical recurrence of rigorous conditions is concerned. Rather it scems (0 indicated that the weather stri fairly depend er periods of time.” | “From this b tlie bitter cold Headhines are mere entertammens. { The great questions are: “Will they | { renew the not and, "Will Bobby | passy” bie avera E = Of course movies are punk. And Shakespeare might have peterad | | out, too, if his audiences had rc- | | quired two new ones every weel. This may be all very well during : a century. Let the Journal figure the | possibilities of climatic change in. = ! ! . I n w the automobile 50,000 years. According to the sci really needs is a railw jthat will eliminate the car | ehminating the customer. business crossirg | without e changes move slow is relatively no more tists, climatic e and a centur) moments in the | ua) than a few Aviation hasn't arrived y The clouds aren’t cluttered up with cap- tive balloons giving the distance o | Joc's hot dog stand. (“ommissions and White's Rejoinder to Mayor | Jmay yvet convince wise to let sleepings dogs lie. Paonessa’s Letter { | | of the average indiv COMMUNICATED | npecial M Mr. Hoove Dear Editor: \Without wishing to undul Two willion Chinese starved while | ith v g 1 pro-! 1 a 5 controversy, 1|America wept over her surplus of ong a Tsy, WE | o i il £ would appreciate the opportunity of [ Bialn and Hln‘aN avhrn" o' | oftering ‘a fow! rejoinders to)several| efticiencydand oup charities. ¢ Mayor Paoncssw's last statements.| - A 3 1—.l his last \Mr. Paonessa| ©Old Cain wasa't such a bad scout disclaims association with any move- | He didn't claim that he stumbled, | ment looking toward the nullifica- | OF that Abel tried fo get away. tion of any law of the land and| = justifics his opposition in the 15th| Americanism: Geiting all het p amendment by stating that he wants | Over pucot questions mentioned in 5 headl thinking more ser “modified along constitutional | the lfnes. set up in the b ous questions unimporiant because the day's news. t ¢ law of our| i country.” llaving gone so far, he|thcy aren't in should state exactly what modifica- | tions he has in mind that would conform to the constitutional clause which absolutely prohibits the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors bever purposes Tt cannot wine and know that such a law, if it permitted | An an appreciable alcoholic content. |is worth would be instantly voided by the su- erel bad eggs preme court. “Light winc and beer” | be worth that is merely a meaningless slogan for | rallying those who are dissatisfled | with the 15th Amednmer Doe: he mean to repeal the amendment? | That too, is only a phrase to be printed on a campaign banner, for it is absolutely hopeless as a prac- tical program. It is casy to content; to tell ne P n | letter nee ere must be literal fire in heil. 1t wouldn't be hell with no ashes to tote out resort is o those | And nerely o li fashionable “this darned place ¢ there all the time. the sale he must be by be | of the extinct greatl but there are n Chicago that would | much estinct. | 1t isn’t hard to tell the denomini- tion of currency in the dark. Only the one-dollar bills are fully coatzd | nith transmission grease. o35 o | Sometimes you think tie | 1caders mean, and the; fan the fires of dis-|you have cheerful moments nen that they are|you think they're just stupid. deprived of their liberty when they ( are cut off from thelr drink, but it zood public policy to &tir up re-| | sentment whan there is no rafional or lawful program for satisfying their discontent? When T painted the compe ations the better ordercd community d sher stundards of living enjoyed Ly those who have been deprived of their former liberty to drink, h tes that he docs not lLnow the sources of my information. Let me | say that for the most part they are the collection of volumes entitled Municipal Riecords of New Brit published annually Mr. Paonessa and 0% his own city word's | agam | when | ct bull of unearthed at 1t must vidi, viel.” times Vs most pe has N the Geographic nder to beat “Veni anci 1 be be M own out to in his i the s mankin can't had cit destroy to inkabitants hen she e Genius alone can't make a joie successful. Tha jokester's hiver anl your liver muat happen to function perfectly on the same da in Correet i this senter disappointin | “full of murder and di-| {ories, and not a word about | ituatior | 1950, Publi | yndicate paper 1 Fook ute the | flapper acts figures vear i mueh |y ront In by 2y phian s crime ners of he a connt 1 PUPILS WILL LISTEN T0 EDUCATIONAL BROADCASTS Starting Neat Tues- | nillion prople aln d cnouzh fill ner Whe 1 diseascs relat d dropped more not have alcoholi a “bum” in the from alcoholism | themselve: column= il stiat (hs from drinkinz 1 did in mind. Only station house dies Others who drink to death die of dilatation [of the heart, cirrhosis of the liver, | Brights or something else | that the doctor thinks will look het- ter in a death rtificate, An amination of death rccords from these canses show a dropping off of | more (han 1? Bt 15 1n the liscases th censioned or wated by % habits that ! found of ¢ J1ior h halt, 2L “Ether Scries, Vil Be Heard in Schools Here disea. With practieally all the New Brit- ain public schools equipped with radios the majority of the pupils will able to “listen in” for the ecdu- cational broadeasts that will be sent |out from WABC of New York start- Tuceday. uperintendent Holmes said ot at the Senjor high school well on account of c ex- | | ¢ d [ the that sreatest bene Duri siloon veal that Connc more heavily cvery tde in for tuberculo {he not building He nstanced the Nathun | ranklin, Washington and schools as having cxceptional 5t the | & ~hen the f vorking the “ticut darinking Hale, | Lincoln | ¢ zood AT, 110 Progras 13 the death rate Pneumonia was startlingly on the increase, Jol- [5€1S: lowing the prohibitory law deaths| He is looking forward 1o the| trom these diseases have fallen off | Proadeasts with much anticipation. | al?. | expecting them to be of great value t drop of|to the pupils. The teachers, too. as of | Tule are in a like mood so that| New Britain can be counted on :m; | and | be | furnishing its part of the great un- school audience when he s start Tues | {was reduct | The Mayor cxplains th: | the death rate i Rt “modern preven medicine seientific discoverios 1 glad to be informed of medical innovatic o 1s would t what itific d the produced cent i | eren broadca CALZA WINS MATCH York. el 1 (UI)— of ltaly threw Andre IR in 18:47 n wer o u betw d 1921 drop vears o and v orse Zia~ the sudaen r of 14 of the York i viin bout Iy wr show at coliscim ot night FENN ILL IN WASHINGTON with | Washington, D. C.. | 1. Rep- pur- | tesentative IFenn of Wethersfield ) of addi od alcohol in|recovering from a digestive disturh- order fo denature industrial :Alnnlml_ianu‘ thit confined him to his apart- what would Mr. Taonessa sug-|ment and put him on a diet for the Modern industry requires a|last week. | Tiritain be IPaoncssa t ore prohibit not satisfiod Ing the statement e o 080 {in { knowing when | dling of the traffic pri | Tohn O'Donnell, | Joseph | the | force at the same time. on. | | ana ctirement Claims cteran Policeman. A real policeman—( —unpinned his badge and 1 Lis billy today, after long orabie service. In the ranks of the pensioners he must go to the mut with a sterner he has yet encountered, in a for healt!, and he will be cheered as he {ights by the realization that he has the best wishes of the public in whose interests and for who safety and welfare he has spent the best year of his life. Gus Hellberg was something moce han a policen He was a institution. New Britain has had some fine men in her police depart- mient. strong men with stout hearts nd zood minds, willing, loyal and honest least of, them was Badse No. 1 e lice officer, their way about throuzh alleyways thick mud and decp snow they would to the test azainst uneven odds. Ha went through the various stages of reorganization which have brought the department up 1o a manual aling of the traffic problem and all of the modern facilities for the 1 tection and prevention of crime. and the enforcement of statutes and or- dinances, not to mention the han- slem ad all the other demands that progress has made on the important branch of the city government, vet he never lost the distinctiveness of polic - man who was on the job when - wost every night's duty tazed the strength and the resourcefulness of he whole department Gus Ilellberg did police work with the late John Rowe. Adam Seip:l. Thomas Shelton, John Sloan, Fraix English, Captain Patrick Lee. ¢ {ain Thomas W. Grace, Captain Clarence Lanpher, Captain Flannery. Chief Joseph R. Johnson and othars whose graves are marked with th department insignia. He a 1J. Cosgrove, also a pensic: were appointed to the vcgular R Al is Hellberg nd hon- foe battle just brave and and not the wearer of typified the old school of po- the stalwarts who made a darkened city, and over fence never be Tatem, 1 Mic er, For several years as night doorm-n police headquarters he brought in hundreds of prizoners. some oOi them helpless and submissive anl others fighting and unruly, but rever met one who as more { his match although not a few o them tried him out before they wer convinced. Supernumerary Officer Thomas 7. Riley drove the patrol on the night shift for several years with Offic Hellberg “in the back.” and thair by-word was “Drive on, Riley.” du- rived from the veteran's cheery cal {o the driver as a signal that their prisoners were safely in custody and no time was to be lost getting back ta headquarter Tivery T siznal box in the circuit has had th 1gon” drive up to it with Riley front and Hellbers in back, anl in recent years with Supernumerary Ofticer Michacl Brophy at the wheui. Gus never sought the plaudits of the multitude and he cared not i he did not get them, From the vevy first night he donned a uniform as a supernumerary in 1891 to the last night of his service he held to <he W in g | principle that a policeman should he a policeman in fact as well as in name, and anyone who sought to 1 otherwise had no place in his regard. Whether he was sent out to investi- gzate a family sq abble or to bring in a wagon load of intosicated fig crs, he looked on the assignment s part of his duty. and he could ! ¥8 be depended upon to do tlv right thing. regardless whose 1o presented themsclves for stepping He made friends who nev passed by an opportunity of demo:i- strating the fecling they held for him, and it pleased him to know of their regard, but as between duiy nd good fellowship he always loyal to his se Gus Hellberg will {he police station. not men with whom he worked, fortunate whose failings es brought themselves charge while they awaited ar- in coi Many have vice be missed alone by the but by nl o the w mist Tis raignment an who might not the h eyes of some hard planiks reched throat v ter G oy P wor in ) othe n i nore casily cell afic oistened rought him time long nizht wore on aze of cigarcttes was slipped thronza grated doors to the cager lip3 of a “down-and-outer.” When thev were in the mood for it, he liked to refer to their quarters as “the best room in the hotcl,” but none of thein were ridiculed or unduly shamed at his instance. That the strength that was once his will return is too optimistic a hope to nurture, for the strenuous work he chose to do has taken toll of his vitality, but the rest anl quict attendant upon his retirement are counted on to improve his gen cral condition. In his family circle, re most of his will pent. he cannot but be cheered and ter many v with p time as a . time he hanges now going on there. | oo glad that he was able to stop | few pithy statements out of the uniform he wore with credit to himself and the depart- ment, leaving behind a clean record taking with him the memory that he was always what he bound 1self by oath to be—a real policz- man. Traffic Delays Reported Costing $2,000,000,000 Annually Tvidence that the public is becom- ing tired of spending large slices of its precious time sitting under red traffic lights while nothing moves by | in front/is cropping tons of the country ports compiled recc Deris. Some v up in many aceording 1o 1o aly b ffic nec believe unrest ia he- ation of of these n ) impetus 10 tae b t publ of snnounced by the National Con- ference on Sireet and Highway {y. Traffic congestion and delays are causing an annual national loss of £2,000,000,000, according to the con- ference report. Sccretary of Com- merce Lamont followed this up with a statement that the damage “mav i o 3 siven recer afe- aid aside | put | May 1, 1894. | high toned name. I can't very weil {call her “The Yankce Clipper” be- cause if her hair ever does get too long I expect to clip ‘er myself. Now maintenance of the Connecticut| Y3t happens? Why I find Joha ate Highways Department, also is| .C e¥en in the train naming busi T {ness. I'm plumb disappointed and i “Traffic is becoming more critical|!'d know it would turn out this wa ard intolerant of unnocessary delay. | Sure would have ct more cup cake | This is a definite cost to the com- |3 Nis wedding. [Eniini it whion more ot e I was real amazed to sce all the o i S e s e gowns the girls in town are wearing, public in general has ified might in_your paper, antl TG s GRS G ar i sort of zlad 1 didn't bring m | willingness to accept o Gos ughter, Berlyn, with me. She has | financial responsibility. To those in |48t 2ot past the Lobble skirt stag | command the opportunity offered is| oW, and I'd hate to jolt her five or | urlimited. six years ahead. I will say, though Vditorially, the 1 ver- | that when she hcars about the short Dispatch deplores present methods|Skirts and reaches tiat perjod af | pointing to “cities and villages which | {2shions she'll look mighty ni | put up lights which hold up traffic | Nary a spavin nor a blemish on hey exactly as though it were halted by | I s0 she ought to cause quite a traffic jam. Signal lights are h 1 lot of tion down. at .h | 1y valuable where they regulate traf- | 8che fic. Where they tie up motor | i I be equal to our annual expenditures | for the construction and mainte- nance of traffic facilities.” George E. Hamlin. chicf enginc St 5 The its o you say 'm 1 a the “I'm sure Athyletics w We a ot hall Lo s af ther the world series th~ ot a few rumors inin weeks ago about some contest that the YFou T fold th that couldn’t be football, wii® horsemen in 1t. 1t must be polo. | ot mysclf a polo coat a while ba April, I think it was by mail o > then I been interested constantly, they create artificially the delays and costs of h traffic. | vear Traffic lights should be fitted and tos {operated according to conditions.” | biz | In a study made by engincers of | Ho | Yale University, it cstimated | boys | that the city of Hartford, is losing | | about $15.000 per day from traffic| | delays. The estimates place New | | York City’s loss in the neighborhood of a million dollars daily. Another traffic expert part, the following statement “Traffic control is ycars behind | both motor car and highway devel- | opment. The automotive industry has | oliminated waste of time and cnergy | to give us the splendid automobiles of today—and our cities make them | the victims of the lost time and lost | motion beyond computation.” | A statement made by a nationally | known traffic authority to the effect | that—signals should move {raffic and not stop it—gives the correct spect of the entive problem vy Ve Iso n emen were in, but wus i der lin in | S0 sinc “This story about and prohibition in New York souns sort of ‘interesting if true, to m He may say that there is no liquo in New York city, but my nephew Elisha knows better. He went don there on his honeymoon—pigh go run over a dozen times, too, he saii —a few months ago and he got in'o ful mess with this prohibitio ess. Llisha has a little troub! with the nerves around his eye, so vhen he went into a big marbic drus store and ordered up a good mug o* rcot bear to wash the automobi smoke off his tonsils, he sert nked a little, unintentional the chorus girl tha there. made, Mr. Brookha: Like, was workinz | | | Is 1t Possible That Odor | From Washington 1< of Vish? On the surface the proposed | quisition of Jake Walter, U. S. 1 shal, on his attitude toward the 15th amendment and on his personal | likes and dislikes, may appear to be | | on the up and up. But the Observer cannot expel a hunch that there is more abou investization than appears. Marshal Wa renomination | | [ was sailing n a stiff hreeze | ' and there was intimation s would not be sealed, signed and de- livered. Then it hit a reel. Ac- { cording to reports from the national | capital, a “green” clerk amiliar vith history of Marshal Wal- | ter's appointments, uncarthed a lot {ter written by minister cight | vears ago in which Walter was d | clared to be a wet discovery | of the letter, the public was assured | was merely chance. What purpose would en” have in dig- musty files correspon- dence | on incumbent? Tt | ‘as merely onc little tricks of fate, so said Was on For a few days it was belicved that the letter would be placed back in the files where it had lain for near- ly a decade because, apparently, it | had no hearing on the subject today t must have been Jimmic's | But not 0. The document has|brother he got it from. | proved to be the nub of a senate| “Well, [ got to get along home | investigation and Marshal Waiter |and do the milking, so I'll sce yon | will be given an opportunity to an-|again. Mr. Observer, in a couple 7 | swer questions propounded to him |months, when the roads begin to This point should be noted— Mar- | !shal Walter's record is not under Observations | faithfully. No onc has pointed an | accusing finger at him. No one ha i Veb. 1.—Forccast for (ellariewhiely AiTko i dohn: Brown's| oo cin Now Bngland: Jiaip Satux inday Al "K";‘:‘;;‘[’l”l“ him and @ re=| = yeorecast for Eastern New Yorl . Fair Saturday; Sunday increasing | colored | haps Jake Waltcr will be r | | €a”” Bt as the writer looke baek | disturbance has continued to | he | NOrtheastward over the ocean, beir i | crystallized so suddenly, and for no 2 | obwious reason, the nder grows | considerable intensity is centered the Gulf of Alaska, and | ihe official back to private life, The wafted Washing L0 JLes | by the judiciary committec of the | clear up a little, So long.” fire. So far as the nation knows he On The Weather | thundered incompetency 3 e { body, has been mouldering in it S increasing cloudine Perhaps there is aLotored | oudincss with vising temperators i o AN potes Ihe L central southeast of Newfoundland [ whe someone isn't guilty with | : ; disturl pparently 1 laden 1o i e “She served whicl tells me. Said than all my barrels volled into one. Well, surprized when they dollar. but he didn't let o seemed a bit steep and pail turf she had give him wis that he necded the root fcer cven morce than before, ane tried another place. They sort of disappointed that he ant one of ihem drug store | key dinners, or four | sand wiches, bui the minute they got the same kind of little glass out and gave him some mors of this stuff it was stronge well, make a long story shor ti:ey had to stop him from shakin: hands with every policeman he san thinking cach one was Grover Whal en. He ended up in sort of a re freshment parlor wheve they too | the res his money and he | brought home a. souvenir that 1. ¥s Mayor Jimmie Walker himsc| it to him. 1t's a big bottle tha “Johnnie Walker' on it, so the be moss hard W something tasted had of he charg never cider mildly e this + kim a it The irong no that it soeme didn ver he winked a “gr i the ! of those offici o | | a charges c | no coast moy ¢ and ol an or de upper house next Monday. }n‘.h discharged his responsibilities W 1aton, contempt tor oath. Only a | with slowly rising temperature. zentieman in the wood pile 3 ) | Conditions: The Atlantic ApDOint- opposition 1o Walter which X A disturbance of wide extent 1 selfish object of conmiving {o send e veloping over the far southwes! ! of i the tc arcu high ng castward with center st Gulf ther will prevail district ard advance of outhwestern dusturbance will ttended much cloudiness and rain is probable as fai Appalachian Mountains from on TIRLNE ador breezes | mos ir in the nzton for Satu but 1} Newt Britte “Cuorr Wandering cmewhe character | salesmen Comments Laents, on i trom on the far out b evt | a well kno nong local cultiv or and rural mail carriers lappeared in town the other day on a rort of ground hog vi figger,” said Newt, combing a hestnut burr from his luxurious whiskers, “that T ought to come into |town once a winter to stock up o1 |salt pork. The fodder was getting |lew in the back pantry, with noth- |inz but a little codfish and appl sauce in sight, so I made up my {mind 1'd harness up my driving | horge and come clean into town [the day. And here I am: | Tt was with some little reluctan ldhat Newt was persuaded to i on recent af- Cirts itton I The temperature will rvise gradu ally during the next two days alm | generally in the castern slates 25 Ye;rs Ag;}oday Tor the past 13 days zero weather has prevailed in this city. This is the coldest winter ever recorded. The [ thermometer fell to 15 below zero carly this morning and indications point to a continuance of the cold wave. The state championship Middle- { town high basketball team defeated | fairs, since he allowed he was a lit-| New Britain yesterday, 28 to 12. The {tlc rusty on devclopments. He ex- | Cyrtin brothers did good work for plained that the wind blowing down | he lo Middletown had previ through the back pasture piles the|gusly beaten Hartford 60 to 29 and snow in front of his house o decp | Meriden 94 to 14, showing that that he cannot even sce out of th:| Ryitain has a good team. *Jac attic windows and has too tunnel his| Curtin scored nine points. way to the barn, Finally, however.| . 1. Curtis and Charles Morey he consented to give his opinion onwill be candidates for aldermen in the affairs of the day, after readins}the third ward in the coming spring {up for the last two months in thz|clection. Mr. Curtis is secking re- | Herald files. | clection. { “Now that stock market business| The Business Men’s banquet will figger, must have lots of | he Tield in the Casino on Church s spending moncy hada i | sgreet R It reminds me chairman of the com- at happened to 1y v (i e ran J. Sloper will act for de caught o something hes of Unel 1 Johns itt on s for town eler for ax ¥ the salary b Then friends pend elected nd tows 1 raincd clection couldn't dr through the mud, o the taachine' won and all i Lleven deaths were recorded at {2 choice collection of cancelled n0ls | thic office of the town clerk during Ithat he managed to pay up in a yeir| the past week. 8228 7l | The Stanley Works has purchased “This business of naming {rains|property on Myttle strent whila P. ‘m(rrr'(‘! me. When I read a while|& . Corbin's has sought land 20 back that John Coolidge had nam=1| Linwood strect, i mine seems probable due prices of czgs 0 conts a dozen

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