New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 21, 1930, Page 8

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P New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connecticut Tssued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At _Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street BUBSCRIPTION RATES .00 & Year $2.00 Thres Months 7ic, & Month ciency in connection with this insti- tution. It is to be hoped, on the contrary, that they regard the gen- tlemen trying to show that the school was well operated as being rather prejudiced in favor. The verdict of been, we feel certain, their own | the public has that it only one-quarter of the allegations con- school are true the place was badly managed and needs thorough house-cleaning cellar to garret, with criminal | arges placed against somebody. | Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter. cerning the TELEPHONE CALLS & from Business Ofce 921 Editorlal Rooms . LN 5 . 926 The only profitable advertising meditm in the City. Circulation books and pyess ; S e Toomm always open to mdverlisers ¥ TOO MANY DEFECTIVE BRAKES | Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is excluaively en- 3 e titled to the use for re-publication of of a neighboring city recently 2L mews credtted to it or hot otherwlte | charged that two automobile acci- | oews published therein. | is ot a coincidence that the A | dents in one day were due partly to e | defective brakes. hrakes Member Audié Burean of Circulation | " o The A. B. C. 18 & national organization | hat fai ergergency may not be the primary which furnishea newspapers and adver- there can be Although to work cfficiently in an tisers with a strictly honest analysis of circulation, Our circulation statietics are | based upon this audit. This insures pro- tection against fraud in pewspaper dis- tribution figures to both national and ) local advertisers. cause of an accident, no doubt that they fail to prevent many a tragedy. One of the mysterics of the auto- mobile trade is how so many drivers will pay little heed to the efficiency One of the chief ed with pilot- in_New Timea Entrance n male dally York at Hotall Newsstand, Square; Schultz's Newastand, Grand Central, 42nd Street. The Herald f» of their brakes. | considerations concer machine tod 405ay a |ing a powerful over ing irritated at a 40-day detour | il e 8 highways and through traffic is to of traffic on account of the construc- tion of a possess “‘relia brakes ne Black Rock bridge lice in virtually every city report | with 1 the | yet po- | sions is the suggestich ofa consul- tative pact between the five powers when an emergency should arrive above the horizon. We instigated both the League of Nations—then refusing to join it—and we originat- ed the Young Plan and the Kellogg- Briand pact. Why should we hesi- consultative pact to no more tate regarding a which would amount | | than a pledge to consult with the other powers as a means toward preventing war. At best, it would be gesture; but in certain emergen- a gesture has the effect of and staying the a cies evel illing passions dogs of war. our London it is | from representatives at opposed to any such pact, believed, upon instructions Washington. The fear is uppermost | minds of the Administration in the the afproval of the Semate, which would have to ratify it. Still. there is an element of doubt regard- | ing this fear; the isolationists and irreconcilables may not be as MSong as they once were in the Seitace. So far as the peace of Europe is [ to be insured—by sanctions if neces- | sary—a pact with teeth in it is neces- Kind of teeth that such an emergency involving the right of blockade of an offending nation. From time immemorial Great Brit- ary, The only would those bite in are seems unreasonable. 1t's the satisfuc- | tion and convenience after the struc- | that to be quickly for- | that to find a plenitude of defective | brakes it is only necessary ture is built will cause the gin making tests One mind. period of deto gotten, trouble be a stat That in seems to mental attitude is of that even some liability iusur: will have to pay the damages. ase of accident company the Senator Brookhart had a debate with Clarence Darrow, but he didn't enjoy it halt as much as he does u debate in the Scnate. Debating with Mr. Darrow is no job for a senator. nce ;\I’_\' to discover what proportion of | reckless driving really is due to this | knowledge—that if something hap- | Mr. Quigley says Mr. Bartlett lacks hedetéstivaton experience in conducting fhe city’s affairs, Once upon a time, when Mr. Quigley first began running, the same thing was no doubt said about } pens the owner of badly be anything out of managed car is not lwely te pockeL. A HUMANE DECISION Mr. Quigley. | Judge Newell Jennings of the 3 Superior court was confronted with | The municipal election campaign will not be a success to residents of | Barnesdale until there are definite | statements as to how the candidates stand regarding a new fire station in that part of the city. a case the lenged other day which chal- of to the flavored with the an ideal serivee community yet w necessity of making an attempt at reform of an individual without running the risk of contaminating the person by placing him into con- tact with hardened criminals. Even a coal dealer enjoys mild spring weather; but enjoying it doesn’t make it pay. 1t is agreeable to report that the judge mot the exalted stand- ards of jurisprudence. He made decision that was filled with that human kindness that is an essential of most a Some towns in the world never get on the news manufacturing a first class rumor. The best rumor town is Riga, map except by court practice, It appears that ars, orphan, a youth of ]G‘ an while making Senator Wesley Jones of Washing- | his way to relatives in Boston, be- ton, author of the five-and-ten lav, | came hungry. He had no money. Rather than beg—which was against | the law—and cvidently not realiz. that he might have gained a lodging by appealing to his desperation like many another prohibitionist 'finds fault with the newspaper ‘The only way all the newspape could please Mr. Jones’ |00 caliber all the be foll i tic i ishi a pstitute | ] . i 2 quit publishing news and sub | him to break into a house in scarch | |ing men of time would i to be- | We wish sonie investigators would | |is no aid of consequence to be e | pected from Britain so long as the ain has been the nation able most cifectively to provide the blockade. But the Amecrican nation for a hundred years las insisted upon her right when a neutral state to deal | with all others, including belliger f-evident that the chief agreement Itis weapon of a Buropean to force an offending nation to keep | the peace—the blockade—cannot be utilized cffectively Wwith the United ent States reusing to concede this right of bLlockade. With the American navy on a parity with that of Great Britain this power of ours to chal- is more pro- than at any lenge any blockade nounced and effective time in modern history Y¥rance, for instance, realizes fully that Great Britain, confronted with |2 European emergency, will not risk | war with the United States over a blockade. Regardless of whatever understanding there may be between IFrance and England, the statesmen on the Seine realize fully that there risk referred to exists, It may be claimed that during the early years of the World War England insti- tuted the blockade while the United States was still a neutral; but there were grumbings and complaints in the United States and there were claims registered against the Brit- | ; ish government, claimis which were | strongly as might | under other American Ad- ministration at the time being in- clined to give Allies the “breaks.” A similar situation might not pressed as have the e heen circumstances, the the dry propaganda instead. of food. | he pleaded to a| which would | As we understand it, jay-walking | on Church strect again becomes pre- now that the one-trafic rule Caugh guilty charge of burglary, | ed him a term in statc's | not realized | have | carious, | has been abandoned. prison had the judge that such a disposition of the case, although «in strict conformity with By the way, what does an autois think about while he is waiting for | o o i hy | the red light to change at an mnr-‘ Titet nnse Lallomed detyoth o section and no other cars or pedes- v Ao Do :‘"d\ trians are passing the intersection? G e e | took the bo; The Camp school is described as| o0 " | the youth was given sufficient funds | It was build- ; iy }v, travel o his relatives in Boston | on a train, with a little additional hav- | i money for food the law, would ave been a rank in- his A v aside to probe into his | upshot was that “an old ouilding.” built ap proximately 25 years ago. er did a good job. Tt still has m a year to go before parents ing pupils in attendance start mass | any How much better this disposition meetings: of ‘prot of the case was than sending the A STATE SCANDAL NEEDING MORE AIRING By all odds the worst scandal in 1ad to state's prison everyone' will AFT REBUKED Stone the sens of indicate. justice COURT Bos- lee- political WHLEN the state just now is concerned with R the Blackwell, revelations regarding ment of the Co Boys in Meriden. Watching the de- manage- sociological «xpe whose cticut School for upon and ! studies onomy kindred topics arc velopment of this scandal with a critical eye we do not hesitate to sa that cvery effort will be v the in contemporary cou- ecently penned a few lines dtiions zlow menorics of Her to o1 add a William state organization to use the sofr pedal as much as possible rd words Howa ar tory Only the fact that persons hav testitied to d conditions from the outside as Wi 4 Congr sassed mini- law been at- women in th olumbia and the 1 range it tending publicity. pow nced it uncon- otested. M business to Supreme Court jonal, Mr court 1 ono that be could there would have been a minimum of pt which means none at a no law unconstitutional jt of the Citizens have been coached to be- disapproved o lieve for years tl one pleasant things hir were being conducted o mann PROGRESS AT LONDON in the SATTER A PASHION™ was a model for ot orbids taking 100 1 necticut, to hear polit ning the state for other states to be that the other know anything about it The recent discharg Peck, Meriden o farm superintende school, was i the board of truste the criticisms to wh pas been subjected M. better conditions. We Peck’s biring abou no doubt that, it the board of trust 1 witnesses, conc i n reliable school were simply it was a modcl for i tutions of the kind' Tt too is to b» hoped t ¢ Gov- a0 o ollnn o is commi will not of the con desire 1o play all 0 cfli- aed not arise in the future; and in 1812, # will be remembered, there actual- ly was war between the two Eng- lish-speaking nations over that very item of dispute. By refusing to take part in a con- sultative part the American dele- gates perhaps unwittingly make it more difficult to arrive at an agree- ment at the London parley, for the two nations standing in the way of an unanimous agreement are France, who greatly desires such a pact, and Ttaly, which is demanding | parity with Irance. We have had idealistic motives in cntering upon this parley, but we | also have brought traditions bound up with us certain in American difficult for as history which to it is Iuropeans take as seriously we do. FAST STEPPING WITH SECRLETARY DAVIS We admit a difficulty in keeping D with Secretary of Labor Davis's on This thorn in the side of the Hoover Ad- statistics unemployment. ministration needs official explana- tions at every opportunity, and it i3 one of Mr, Davis's duties to keep the | well in control he estimates situation . however, mber of unemployed in The for 3,000,000 is possibly taken to task frankness, he asserts that un- cmployment has been held down to of th than one-halt that of “pre- vious crashes;" states are normal,” and that unemployment is only met with in about a dozen in- dustrial states, 1 One would not expeet industrial nployment, for instance, to be pronounced i gricultural states Consequently, if such unemploymen W concentrated tates, and in the a memployed is 3,000,600, indu number of it is not a situation provocative of of the congressional clec- political satisfaction in view nearness of the t point. we are inclined to ¢ only thing the politi- 1 Presiden Harding called an unemployment conferenc of which Commerce In reported Hoover v the chairn due time the umitte that the number non-agricultural n 4,270 ry un- cmployed in 1921 had be or about 15 out of cvery hundred Of the recommendations of the mployment conferenee, little has cn cnacted into law, | initiated in periods of acute unem- | dollar per will net 90 cents cach. {much worse prison riots would be The conference pointed out: “If 20 per cent of ordinary necessary public works were deferred each year and the accumulation execut- ed in a year of depression occurring once in ten years, the lifting power of public works would be at least one-third the dead weight of such a depression as the present.”” A bill along these lines had already been introduced in Congressiby Scnator Kenyon, but no action was taken upon it. Elasticity in government works, to synchronize with the busi- ness cycle, was involved also in thc abortive Harding plan to reorganiz the government's executive depart- ments. This plan was supported by the 1924 Republican platform, whiie 1924 Democratic platiorm recommended that public works be the vania, and a few cities, have adopted | permanent public works programs. Similar inaction has resulted the failure to provide for a national system, of unemployment exchanges, with the states as operating units. The trouble with Congress and unemployment is that as soon as the cycle turns, and industry starts up once more, the unemployment situ- ation is speedily forgotien, For in- | stance, the President's conference in {1921 strongly wurged public and private machinery for <ouecting data on the extent of unemployment, both full-time and part-time. The last special session of Congress made increased appropriations for collect- ing statistics of employment, and also authorized the forthcoming census of unemployment, but pres- ent data on the extent of unem- ployment in the United States ars still far from satisfactory. | We remain the only important na- | ‘}lion lacking definite statistics on} | the subject. It ficen regarded as important cnough. But this is a census year, and it is probable that, for the first time, there will be a rcal census employment in connection with the in | | | | | | evidently has not‘ of un- census-taking. Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN ‘When the writing business peters out, Mr. Coolidge, cigar butts at a | | tion would put an end to so much maudlin talk. Ther a bright side. Think how if these outside criminals were in there, There's no lack of opportunity. Nobody yet has:the bleacher con- cession for steam shovels. You'd be ashamed to whine about | our little ups and downs if you'd | watch an emotional Adam'’s apple. 1 Then, too, television will let us{ know whether the announcer is really reading telegrams or making them up. After-dinner speakers should de- mand fair pay. A Spanish expert gets $1,000 just for stabbing the | bull. advertis. fellow”, New ethics in national ing: “My dear, the other product is positively nasty.” Fable: The great man is so busy he can't listen to people who wish | to tell him what a wonder he is. Americanism: A firm belief in the second principle of majority rule, until the other side has a majority. set the world afire, | old home town he ornery kid who A man may but to the mains the barn afire. re- | set a| | ans” arc people who think | celebrities like to exchange §5 pho- tographs for compliments. How fo he a champion: First get a talkative manager and then add | set-ups. W If the lower animals can't reason. | how does a4 cow know you can't pass | it she zig-zags in the middle of the | road? | Nearly all colleges ar new courses. They have to do some- {thing to keep the star another year. quarter That Luropean critic Americans don't appreciate should see the crowds drawn by billboard artist. the clection came him aren’t regular troops. But if work you don't get paid for | the proposed plan |is exercise, why isn't plowing listed among the sports? Correct this sentence: ix teeth pulled yesterday.” about it yet.” | (Copyright, Publishers Syndi- | cate.) 19350, 'Mass Civil Disobedience | Planned by Delegates Ahmadabad, India, March 21 i® —Informal discussions which ha 1ken place between members of th all India national congress commit- tee appear to indicate a desire to start a mass civil disobedience the salt tax laws in the provinces on April This is the day whicn Mahatma Gandhi expects to open his \paign in Jalapur. A proposal 1o this effcct probably will be placz1 | Letore the late today. of 6. on committec With United pul States, Australia tion only slightly ) has a I + | ton, | stamps for reply ! marital advice ¢ | i that such a pact would not meet | ployment. Californiz and Pennsyl- |31 | ceive a personal reply. Uns |quests cannot be answered. All let- |ters are confidential.— | mysterious | | mi [ speech. |inches, and Lincoln And everybody thought Prohibi- |inches. How old was John Bunny, the should die, would his QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answed to apy question of fact or information by | | writing to the Question Editor, New Washington Bureau Washing: B 1 tain Herald, New York avenue, D. C. enclosing two extended Q. Is San Francisco pendent city? A. An independent city that i no affiliation with county ment, San Francisco has Q. When wag the firs automobile marketed? cylinders did it have? c an nt: sditor. is s in Medical, legal and | nnot be given, nor research be under- {taken. All other questions will ri igned re- nde- one not in any county, and has govern- a Lined city and county government, Dodge t com- How many They were manufactured first in 1914 ,and had four cylinders. When did the fi Passov Thursday, Q. April 13. st day of the r come in 18117 Is air visible, and why? Pure air < @ heavyweight boxer? A, Over 175 pounds. Q. day fall in 1913 . March 21. Q. No. cold light of freely is invisible because |its molecular structure | mits the penetration of light without | reflection. What weight is required for ad- JOn what date did Good I'ri- Does heat always exist where | there is light? | The glow worm emits a its own. It is one of the problems of science. Lincoln Q. Where is Abraham | buried ? In Oak Ridge cemetary, le and a half north of Springfic A Ilinois. Q. you give an e A. ample? Itis a descriptive is one example, Q. in “The A, Q. than Abraham A, Virginia Vaili. Lincoln? Washington was 6 was 6 Q. movie actor, when he died? A. John Bunny died 1915, at the age of 5 Q. in the same deposits? A, posits. Q. How long is What is a metaphor? figure “He was a loin in a fight” feet fec April one 1d, Can of Who was the leading woman sle of Lost Ships”? Was George Washington taller 2 et 4 Are gold and coal ever found | They arc often found close together, but not in the same de the term of the chief justice of the United States? A, He is appointed for during good behaviour. Q. If a married veteran, who is receiving ment compensation of $60 for wounds received in life, World or war govern- a month action, | widow con- Hinue to receive his compensation? A. The widow docs her hust cligible to a widow's compe Q. Who are the not Unite senators from Texas? |teader; | Earle, an carl, | writers |these characters, adding | Mark’s church today A Mexican candidate knows how | appointetd out. 1f he was | The sala elected, those who are shooting at |NOt been sctiled. Morris Sheppard kana and Tom Connal Q. What is Loretta Young ward Pass”? A. “T gotta Have You." sang in Q. What do the names Katherine, | Per Bustanob, Kenneth, Geneva and 1 A. XKatherine, purc Geneva, lady of Q. writers A. Mo Do the Chinese ern China has have been madc and a {coming into use in China. numeral Q. How is undred written? A 1000, Q. s Lillian livinug A the . Bell, the Yes n, d use rec nd's compensation, but eive is ition. States arle mean Kenneth, a bea of Texar- v, of Maflin. the title of the Fhe song Tor- wty; type- T au adopted an {alphabet with 36 characters. that contain gradually ten thor, 25 Years Ago Today The Women's auxiliary Hartford Archdcaconry met ther over 100 ladles present. of at I the The State Normal school was in- spected b Principal Marcus White in making much airs to the building. . The residents of the city terested in knowing who permanent The Central drawn up a Labor remonstrs of hy neg sewer work donc needed are will fire achief. | ry of the new position has TUnion ag; having contract state officials yesterday has who says | for an appropriation of $6,000 o I art ;usrd a|p isked re- in- D has ainst the and will present it to the common coun- had | said the | department the coming friend. “and he hasn't told anybody |&ITiVing in town. | area nearly equal that of | was undestood the more than | casics but it its next meeting The pipe to b d cil used by Five had reached here today. The time when the citizens of will have to give than appropriation to the strect improvement, The A. took an important part statc New DISCOUNTS TV Tridgeport, N that charges ch 1 the season car water is loads Dritain local branch of the Y. in IDENCE Indicating by ministers M. of o convention at Meriden today o this city regarding liquor law vio d 1 tions were not substantiatc of zal nature president of th yesterday dc 10 newspaper letter number contained little supporting cvidence, ) dencer 1c Wolfe, mission, ormation ministers listed a of Bdward police the men, fron or evi < com- in Tt he BY 0. 0. MCINTYRE New York, March 21—Thoughts while strolling: The heady excite- ment of a Fifth avenue morning. Low, long racy cars. Sinks, jewels, perfumes. Galloping pedestrians — zoing nowhere. Lumbering buses | swaying like elephants. Helen Gould steps from a limousine in front of her home. Something substantial about a father who carries Dbaby in his arms. A clerk from Christie’s in London. The street hawker and his basket of white, fluffy puppies. Fred I. French, the solemn looking build- er. Style copyists making quick fur- tive sketches in front of department store windows. | Arthur Hopkins, a Cleveland, O. boy, who made good in the city. The old Penwick cafe now The White Way Chop House. Morc Mexican | candy kitchens. What has become | the mannish girl with the bachelor clothes. Oscar Iagle and Bsther Lyon. Gallipolis folks. Gilbert Miller's face usually shines {1ike a silk hat. Captain Blancart of | the Tle de | What a crossing T had with him one {time! O boy, I can still feel jt. | Youths who raise those faint beards and sit on the Village parties chestra leader. N G.. Broadway's |showman. And the best in” the | ness. Bdward Ransome, the new | foot tenor at the Metropolitan. The | chestnut vendor re gone. Marbles arc being shown in the Third avenuc Rube Wolf, the or- " restaurant busi- six s in the park. Spring tra-la. | worn: book shop sign: “A good Cellar book Heaven. features @ strolling magician at lunch time. And a haberdashery offers a free cup of coffee to all’ customers. are no short skate. Here are some free commas Share them | among you. Next winter I'm going to have one lof those elpctric log fires. New Chinese laundry heralds: “The slick- slick in town.” J. M. Flagg's 1padour. Elmer Davis, Aurora,In- na’s literary hope, is getting gr Sandwich men sucking at pipes and chirping like sparrows. In our social circle — the nd Central set—they were dis- ng first impressions of New York. Minc was the absence of tele- phone poles and wires along the | streets. A cafteria unger Another outstanding for the visitor is the smallness of theaters and their foyers. The first | theater T visited was the Globe, and {1 could not cnjoy the stupcendous | musical extravaganza for counting |up the house on my fingers and wondering how they made expense Tn those days, incidentally Lorraine rushing out over dience in a swing of roses, was the toast of the town. She tossed fresh [ posies into the and Broadway }\/w‘\uv\v dropped in nightly to sec her. impression Lillian the fow years later Julia Sander- | son was singing *“They Wouldn't Be- |lieve Me" at the old Knickerbock This song also drew a group of faith- ful nightly, among them Louis Wer- ba and this chronicler, who both knew the doomman and got in free. A gayest night haunt in Domino Room at up- with the first and the only ladies’ bar in |town. Lvery night you saw therathe | Dolly Sisters, Diamond Jim, the {Castles and others riding the top wave. And town the was the at the time | Uptown at this period the chaste jarchitectural splendors of the Hotel Ansonia—dubbed “Stokes' Folly"™ his wife, | irrance window shopping. | |and colder tonight with a moderate floor at Greenwich | | | candy stores. Robins are tugging at ind a quiet nook is our idea of | We | | | | | I were being discussed. And the pin- nacle of a Broadway night out was a drive in a low necked lorry to Pabst’s in Harlem for one of those sweating stone mugs of beer. Or maybe two. A dog recently served a subpoena on a New Yorkgr. Most people thought only rats served them. “I would like,” writes~ a movie press agent, “for you to visit the studio and meet the latest in ‘It’ girls. She makes the pulse pump and the heart flutter” Even if there were 16 of them— trained by Tiller—I wouldn't be in- terested. (Copyright, 1930, M cate, Inc) aught Syndi- Observations On The Weather Washington, March 21.—Forecast tor Southern New England: Fair cold wave in northeastern Mass. to- night; Saturday increasing cloudi- ness and continued cold; fresh northwest shifting to north to north- east winds. o Forecast for Eastérn New York: Fair in the interfor and mostly cloudy on the coast tonight and Saturday; northwest shifting to north and northeast winds. Torccast for New Haven and vicinity: Fair tonight and Saturday. Colder tonight Conditions: The storm that was over Ontario yesterday has moved rapidly castward and is central this morning over the Gulf of-§ Law- rence. A strong arca of high pressure is advancing eastward over the upper Lake region. This pressure dis- tribution has been attended by strong shifting winds and sudden temperature changes in the Lake region, Ohio valley, Middle Atlantic states and New England. A few scattered showers and snow squalls were reported. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with slowly Jowering temperature. Temperatures yesterd Atlanta, Atlantic City Boston Buffalo ... "hicago Cincinnati Denver . Duluth Hatte i Tos Angeles . Miami .%.. Minneapolis Nantucket . Nashville 46 o4 68 12 38 44 20| New Haven ........... New York Norfolk, Va. Pittsburgh . Portland, Me. ... ‘Washington . CHEMISTS SEEKING POISONING SOURCE Jamaica Ginger Ingredient Puz- zles Government Officials 52 50 56 54 40 bl 11 Boston, March (UP)—Samples | of poisonous Jamaica ginger such 2s that responsible for hundrers of | cases of paralysis in various parts of the country were being studied by | government chemists here today. | Dr. George H. Adams, chief of the burcau of chemistry admitted the ingredient in the Jamaica ginger that causes imbibers to lost the use of their feet and legs still bafffed chemists in his department. “Whether it is denatured alcohol or merely_bad Jamaica ginger we are at a loss to say, but we hope to solve the problem within a few day. Our bureau is.chiefly concerned. of course, with finding out what this poisonous substance is and-then tak- ing action, provided we can find the source. Source May Be Obscurc “To find the source, however, is going to be a difficult job. If, as all indications point, it is a ring of bootleggers, advsed by skilled chemi- ists Who have prepared this Jamaica ginger and shipped it throughout the country, we shall immediately turn our information over to the prohibition administrator for the New England district Kentucky Starts Analysis Louisville, Ky., March 21 (P—As the number of cases of partial paralysis believed by Kentucky headth officers and physicians to ho rused by drinking adulterated Ja- | maica ginger mounted today to 250 or more, hopes for a scientific diag- nosis of the puzzling malady center- ed here. Several of the victims are to Lo | brought to Louisville city hospital | immediately and will be isolated for | medical and neurological investiga- tlon. Meanwhile samples of the “Jake” as the widely«distributed | mixture is called, arc being analyzed. | Dr. L. L. Terrell of Corbin, where | there are more than 100 cases, said |he had had one brand of ginger |analyzed at Atlanta and was told it contained industrial instead of pure grain alcohol. -Supplies of ginger have been traced to New York, St. | Louis, Cincinnati and Tennessce { points. LOIL DAN CUPID artford, March 21—Hartford po- yesterd removed the head an arrow shot by Dan Cupid T | lice from 30| when they arrested Lawrence Hall, and Eva Newton, | R. 1. Hall is a StcMing, Conn., man, The girl's father complained to state police after Hall cloped with | his daughter. Miss Newton is being |held on a technical charge of breach of the peuce. 16, of Greene, - BRAIN the Did atout nails at get asked about Or about the stecl stretehed walks from end to end of a iey’re all in_our Washington ZLES AND PROBLEMS. You'll find lems that have puzzled you. Fill out you ever solva problem driving a penny the specd of a band to start bullet fired around moving Bureau it TEASERS ola doulite at a man the carth? Or How and is Ann? Or that nail? one Lver train, far the man cach a on a moving how train? bulletin MATHEMATICAL PUZ- full of interesting material on pi the coupon below and send for == == == o= =CLIP COUPON HERE == == o o j (LES 132 T want LEMS costs! EDITOR, Yorlk Washington ow Avenue, ' NAME ls'l'RLlL'T ANL NUMBER I ©Ung b Bureau, Washington. copy of the bulletin MATHEMATICAL Bt A and enclose herewith five cents to cover postage an New_Britain D. Trerald, o rrcs. | 4 handling LES A I am a reader of the New Britain Herald. L is rapidly approaching | something more | casual attention and a small | problem no | THE SHKIPPER GETS PRETTY WELL FED UP WITH STRANGERS ALL MAKING THAT SAME WISE CRACK WHEN THE CAR |5 COASTING DOWN GOAT HiLL . “Fontaine Fox, 1930

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