New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 4, 1930, Page 8

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New Britain Herald WERALD PUBLISHING COMPANT New Britain, Coasecticut ——— Issued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bidg. §7 Church S8treet SUBSCRIPTION RATES * Year 32.00 Three Months | 5c. & Month Eafered at the Post Ofice at New Britain 28 Becond Class Mail Matter. TELEPRONE CALLS Rusiness Office ...., 835 Kditorial Roomy .... 526 The only proftable acvertising meditm | in the City. Circulation books and press | Toom siways opea to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press | The Amociated Press s exclusively en- titled to the usd for pe-publication of all news credited tojft or mot atherwire credited jn this paper and also local news published theieln. Mamber Audll Bureau of Circula The A E. C. ia & mational organization which furnlshes newspapers and adver- tisere with & strirtly honest a of cireulstion. Our 'circulation statis: are based upon this sudit. This intures pro- tection againat frawd fn newspaper dis- tributien Agures to both national and local advertisers, i The Herald fe on' dally in New Yorksat Hetal Newsatand, Time: Bquare; Schults's)Newsetand, Entrance Grand Central, 41nd Street. Mr. Quigley's “record” as Mayor | for three terms is proving to be a | happy hunting ground for Mv.; McDonough. The | publishes the Mayor's messages and | oth municipal daia, and som times we have wondered whether this was not a waste of money. It | now turns out that the main value of these publications lies in vielding an opportunity to the opposing can- didate when a former Mayor runs for office. Common Counci! agaia NOW LISTEN, GEORGE—— One of our candidates for Mayor, as most everyone knows by this time, is George Quigley, thrice Mayor be fove. Another is P. T. McDonough, who is also probably preity gene ally recognized about the city. Mc- Donough has never been Mayor be- fore and he wants fo he. What kind of & Mayor he will make, if elect- ed, we are unwilling to forecast. But as for Mr. Quigley. That busy and ordinarily loquacious individual is having a wonderful time poiniing “to his record in previous administra- tions as the prime reason for elec- tion. Of course he has also promis- | ed to reduce taxes, but they all make | that promise. But to return to the record. Mr, Quigley had the good | luck to be Mayor of New Britain during some war years and we arc somewhat surprised that he hasn't] made that popular claim of nations | and branches of the military service, a claim that gave rise to the familiaz | question, “Who won the War?" We had the fin they had it elsewhere, but are concerned wtih New Britain. And | now George is pointing o the epi- sodes connected with the event vulh! pride. New Britain certainly did it- | selt proud in for its sick. Women ran themselves to the drop- | ping point caring for such cases as | they could; doctors, nurses, citizens | in an admirably efficient organiza- | tion gave what relief they could, un- | here in town, we caring questionably saved many lives and | eased the situations of the families | whose breadwinners or homemake " were ill with the disease. It is to the women of New Britain, primarily, that the credit belongs. Quigley Mayor, but he is no more entitled to | s Croix de Guerre for fighting the | epidemic than he is to blame for | the appearance of the disease in the | first place. The ice house, the potatoes, and the rest of the ballyhoo, satisfied to let the candid out between themsclves. T was we ar: s fight do ey not appeal to us in the same light | as matters of patriotic moment such as the epidemic apd the dr: But while we not help recalling “Weicome Home Week," “buddies back trenches. 1hat with pride or disd Mr. Quigley. Remember it are at it we can- the famous fo the No one has vet pointed to ziven the from in. not even Geor of the high spots of the week acrnival—ons o vasa ¢ traveling 1tio b th lady, the merry-go-round ing of prom nvaluable free ould mot even p clse, The profits, or he receipts, we have forgo! rxact details, were to go to harity other themselves. But despite the fact t the carnival about the country things which or o sold was accustomed paving for it got fr presumably m money, ther was nothing forthcoming show in this city from and the park a mess which it cost pair. Remember When one money to re at, Geor starts waving the flag ithe time has come Everyone pride, no one a r But it Mr. Qu Wrapping to call a has a to patrioti he bunting abou 1 callad upon to ask tha of the just e holora o0 i ones that fit THIS QULSTION s w r Mr o Mi McDonough whethey and i Quiz has askhed in { Republicans [ 1ots | the Senate he ever did any legal work without charging a fee. Unfortunately Mr. McDonough would be disbarred from the legal fraternity it he performed his legal work fees, although without charging perhaps some of them have been “uncollectible.” By the way, fees, real estate com- missions, commissions on ticket sales, and commissions on insurance are among the realities of life. Mr. McDonough could very well Mr. Quigley whether business for profit. ask his health or But we fail to see where fees, realty commissions, commissions on ticket sales and commissions on in- surance have anything to do with running ihe city eMciently during the coming two years. DEMOCRATS AND Senator THE Indiana mad a good point the other day when he cited the ioll calls on the tariff bilt to show that virtually all Democrats voted for high Watson of 1ates on products produced in their own states, In the last presidential election “Al” Smith told the people that he would not tinker unnecessarily with | | the taritf rates; and it became evi- | dent duing the campaign that there | was no vast difference between the two major parties on the tariff issue, But in Congress there still re- mained Democrats who es—on products riof own states. In this were favor of low rat produced in thei respect 1hey in Congress, only it happens that most northern states, where the majority of Republicans enmeshed in the fortunes of the greaiest num- come from, are ber of products, I oughly the South ever becomes thor industrialized Democratic southern senators and congr men will be a unit with the Repub- licans for whatever tariff rates that iare considered protective. IN MASSACHUSETTS the Court Massachusetis set its face against of baby democracy in DEMOC Although General repeal the Volstead aci, thanks to more the Day state than in many another— including not Connecticut—that does end Due to the initiative law in state, the backers of the petition to | repeal {he stale dry act need only | to obtain when ,000 additional signatures, will be placed on the bal- in the n election. In other words, a referendum will take place, there being no doubt that the ditional signatures to the petition will be easily obtained The General Court is supposed to represent the views of the people; everyone knows, is but as on som2 questions that not the case. Chere is litile Ma pealing but doubt efts is in favor of re- enforcement in the House action was 1 the vote against such to 110 and in 11. That an accurate Te- 26 to at least does not indicate flection of public sentiment. There are Masachusetts, One makes does aws in it unlawful to sell liquor but { not concern manufacturing it, im- The | porting it, or transporting other, adopted by rendum 1924, makes it unlawful to manu- facture, import or transport liquor. The latter is the law which it is de- | sired to repeal. Tt this is done, 1 would still be unlawful to - quor under the state law; and ihe federal law would still apply. In Connecticut the Roraback m the sell does not Delieve in democracy of referendums. There 1 chine a good reason. DPRYS FROM WET DISTRICTS Recently the second Massachus trict clected an out-and-out wet to Congress. The straight-cut vote with prohibition as campaign the leading issue. Massachu- the In the Legislature of setts—usually referred to as Gener: other 1 Court—there w day on the st Volstead act. azsachusetts represen ratio of 5 to clsen here Generag to Conz DM rous EXIFANCOUS i5sUeS MiX- Massachuzetrs certain urately sented in by Volstead act voue THID WORLD'S MOST TRAGIC SPORT people attemp! mountains? this moment rclays of moun are making preparations to Kanchenjunga, the second the world, situated Himalayas. Professor Dyhren- is at the the espedi- 230 port frecly he has been | for | TARLFF | in | were no different from | in | the | ad- | that sentiment act, | wo liquor enforcement | in | was a | 25 a vole the | slopes of | NEW BRITAI mountainous state. From above the tableland jut the peaks, of which 75 are more than 24,000 feet high, and not one of which has ever been conquered by man, although there have been many attempts. There are hundreds of peaks in these moun- tains more than 20,000 feet high, and these, too, have withstood the pretensions of mountaineers. Pike's Peak, 14,000 feet high, is dwarfed many scores of times along the 600 miles of the Asiatic highlands. | Mount Kanchenjunga has been at- | tempted three times. Four lives were | sacrificed in 1905, when expert Swiss climbers tried it—and they only ched 21,000 of it 28.000 feet. Last vear an American, Farmer, was Factsand Fancies By Robert Quillen Brother, hurry, or you won't wear out in time for your widow to get much fun out of the life insurance. There's still hope for a country while those who pay cash are numerous enough to be called “‘common,"” They say the meat business is go- ing backward, and no doubt you've noticed that shoulder has become ham. It exercise promotes health. why is there so much {ooth trouble in land of gum chewers? lost at approximately the same alti- e, and at about the same time | the same heighth and survived, al-| Bavarian sts reached though some of them were crippled frost. The | cesstully | Himala tragic by | list of climbers who unsuc- attempte o conquer the the is van peaks is long. and ends of some of them | blood-curdling reading. Particular | unfortunate have been the attempts | | to scale Mount Everest, which now, | | as before 1921, is immune from fur- ther attempts until Tibetean tribes. | men get over their suspicions regard- | {mg the objects of strangers in xms.,; | Just what happens when human | heights of thesc | must combine | ing these aitempts, beings’ attain the | mountains and then | extreme exertion through the snow | {and ice with the excruciating battle icient air, is de- | | scribed in books written by surviv | against lack of suff lors. At 23.000 feet every step (ansf‘s! | ner experiences at the end of his panting such as a marathon run- {run. ery movement is pain. The | normal pulse of rises to 108 while perfectly siill, and 10 144 with the | siightest exertion. The heart pumps [ with « speed only equalled at ths | exhausting foot race. | | Memory and reasoning are impair- ed; and sunstroke com= end of an frost bite | lat the same moment. Taste and hear- | ing are gone. Raw throats, double | |vision, snow blindness, and an im- | pairment of bodily functions result. | Meanwhile the thermometer is cus tomarily at zero, terrific blizzards, with the wind blowing 100 miles an | | hour or more, harass the brave men | | defying nature. To climb a few hun- | dred feet in a day is a herculean un- | dertaking. | Yet Professor Dyhrenfurth and his men are happy at the prospect | of Kanchenjunga, 1f | anyone were to tell them they were | would | | attempting committing suicide they | laugh Perhaps the spirit of adventure, all, most pronounced inl mountain-climbing in the Himilayas. | atter is he has | i Man has flown to the Poles, flown across the Atlantic and across continents, he has ‘conquered dis- | tance by speaking through the aiv| over thousands of miles. But his vanity is piqued and his cgo punc- | . tured because in Asia there are sev- | eral hundreds of peaks which have | He | sacrifice himself | | consistently defied his assaults. continue to uniil he has trod world. will the roof of the GLIDERS Tt is cignificant that some of our st known aviators have taken up | the glider craze: and some of them, | 1o why they have| :aonc so, have declared that it will | netp aviation. outspoken as Aviation, it appears to us, requircs exceeding amount of assistance of one sort or another. Fundamentally. The idea is that they will liding is a sport. if people take 0 take aring around in the sliding begin ta <ing 1o s and the next step would fly, ihe he the de- sive to 1t in an airplane. is same principle as that | having to do with mouth organs. A | youtn wno begins playing a mouth |organ, or other musical instru- | usually any [ment not quintessence of art regarded as the| will in time be- come diszouraged about I hilities of Ito better the possi his instrument and ta meanwhiie having love for music slider which hezan making the continent has astuts ank aid (o ha Tmted tha the entire en is done for | publicity reasons. Newspaper editors are supposcd to dislike publicity stunts, but no when they involve gliders, airplanes Which publicity reminds uz Tittl gets spec- such like. that ordinary has news but when it tacular enough it becomes news. SALESMEN'S BAGS STOLEN, 10SS ESTIMATED AT $100, & C. Robbed | of Property While Purchasing | L. J. saville of L. F. Railroad Ticket. ¢ and brict case con- icles valued at approxi- o stolen outside the accord- police @t | by 1. J. Sa- the of »: complaint 30 o'clock last 1 ville. a sale aders station to employ Frary & ¢ aid he left the cases down side to purchase o | eig | manufaciurer Don't tell Willie, but the class valedictorian often goes to work for the fellow who dropped out at the h grade. A “gay metropolitan” is a man who goes to bed at 10 p. m. while visiting hicks make whoopee at the night clubs. Success comes easy. once you realize that the *big man'" never says or does anything a bright boy of 12 couldn't duplicate, Tt is charged that the craze for chicken salad robs the country of egg producers, but who ever heard of a calf laying eggs? This latest kind of paralysis caus- ed by Jamaica ginger is news be- cause it paralyzes the feet instead of the other end. Americanism Feeling resentful because that rich family rebuffts all | advances; feeling annoyed because that poor family tries to be friendly. Among the institutions that put new money in circulation when times get hard are fire insurance companies. That critic who says English is | the hardest language to learn prob- | ably heard somebody speak of a Senator worth fitty milliog dollars. You can't relieve the farmers without changing the popular netion that a peanut butter sandwich ai a milkshake constitute a square meal, Almost any nice epitaph is appro- puriale for a cartoonist. if one or two of the words are spelled wrong. So wives outlive husbands. Pos- sibly because the thought of another woman in their hodse makes them 100 mad (o give up. The man who nanies a “spanking breeze” may have noticed in child- hood that a hair brush in rapid mo- tion served as a fan, Can ihe Board raise the price of wheat by holding the surplus? Boy, look up the record of England’s rub- ber and Brazil's coffee, You see, the extr in a size 42 makes more than a size bets vard of cloth it cost $32.50 34 because the the 42 has a rich husband. this sentence: “I'm sor- v." said the rich go-getter's wife “but my music and my reading and my ten children leave me no time for bridge.” 1930, ndicat 25 Years Ago Today Water Commissioners and Kgan made a vis lington water shed today New Britain acrie. F. 0. E., is com- pleting plans for the celebration of its anniversary on May 24 at the Casino. New Britain druggists are not in sympathy with the proposed patent medicine legislation. The trolley company has decided to lay off its force of spare men. Letter carriers and factory workers were carning extra money by acting as motormen during the evenings. The voters of New Britain prefer to take the new charter with a refer- endum A big Copyright Publishers Humphrey t to the Bur- and enthusiastic athletic | meeting was held at the Y .M. C. A, last cvening. The local gymnasium has over 00 members. John Boyle has decided to serve upon the Many property otwners him 10 accept the position. There was little excitement in the ward caucuses last evening. Alder- man O. F. Curtis defeated C. Morey in the third ward confest. Much interest was shown in the 2t- fempt ef Alr. Morey to put Mr. Curt out of the coming election AUTO BACKS OVER FOOT OF requested GIRL WITH DOLL CARRIAGE | Littie Girl on Sidewalk Painfully Jn- jured by Crushing Weight of Car's Wheel. Ethel Milkowitz. ry tained a painful injury 423 Monroe strect and driven Mrs. Marion Fletcher of the address, rolled over her foot about 4:45 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The child was pushing a doll car- | her some distance behind when Mrs riage mother home, striking the smashing it. chld in time to avoid the accident. carriage TARDIEU HAS GOOD NIGHT Paris. April 4 (#—Premier Tar- dien was said today to have had a comfortable night. He probably will rest today and save his strength 1o |ma when | end the senate the Youngz plan fouzh He il fomorrow ratification may was taken suddenly he ot yesterday, |scented as savage and lustful jderived from tax revision committee. | 215 -vear-old daughter of Attorney and Mrs. Har- H. Milkowitz of 17 Vance street, to her when a rear wheel of an auto- wnobile owned by Walter Fletcher of by same | Fletcher backed | pngjish took it from the Dutch they her car out of the driveway of her : and She did not see the QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can' get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New | Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 322 New York avenue, Washing- lton, D. C. enclosing two cents in |stamps for reply. Medical, legal and | marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be under- taken. All other questions will re- ceive a personal reply. Unsigned r quests cannot be answered. All let ters are confidential.—Editor. Q. What is a centaur? A. A mythological monster, half | man and half horse, which Greek legend localized in Thessaly. Such monsters are very early represented in Greek art, armed with a double headed ace or branches of trees, and frequently in combat with an archer. Two main types may be dis- tinguished. In one a human body from the waist upward is joined to the body and four legs of a horse; in the earlfer type the forelegs are also human, and the hinder parts only are equine. Greek legend knows two good centaurs, Chiron and Pholus; but the others are, repre- They appear most often in battlc with the Lapithae or with Hercules. art they appear in the circle, drawing the chariot of god, plagued by cupids, or in com- pany with satyrs and nymphs. Q. What does cryoscopy mean? | A. It is a term in physies which denotes the study of low tempera- tures, especially of freezing by evaporation. Q. 1Is the expreasion gramatically correct? A. The expression is a colloqui- alism and has no sanction in gram- mar. Q. How many immigrants wer: admitted to the United war and 1 | A. No official records were made of the influx of foreign population to this country prior fo 1820. Al- though the number of immigrants who arrived in the United States from the close of the Revolutionar |war up to 1§20 is not accurately known, it is estimated by authorities at 250,000, Q. What does the pyramid on the reverse side of the Great Seal of the United States signify? Strength and endurance 1s there an A.. The . S. Bureau of Stan- dards says the speed of light is the same for all colors: 156,324 miles | per second. Q. What is Alpha? | The name of the first letter of the Greek alphabet. It is used to signity the beginning as “Alpha and | Omega—the beginning and the end.” Q. mean? A. What does the name Preifauf 1t js a German an o means a ‘“piper’ ‘or a How many civil s are there ip family name pation, and musician.” service em- Washington, . On June 30, 1929 there were 04. Q. When was Coggia's comet dis- covered: how long was it visible and | when will it be seen again? A. The U. S. Naval Observatory says Coggia's comet, discovered at |time in the western sky, and was visible to the naked eye for some time in the westtern sky, and was especially interesting in July when its tail increased in length from 4 degrees on July § to 43 degrees on July 19. According to the results of orbit computations, it will be more than 5,000 years before the comet appears again. Q. From what book was motion picture “The Birth of Nation” taken A, TFrom Thomas Dixon. Q. What is the correct pronoun- |ciation of the vord acclimated? | A Ac-cli-mat-ed, accent on the I'second syltable. Q. Where in the Bible is the | phrase “godlinecs is profitable unto all things"? A. I Timothy | verse reads “I'or |profiteth little; but godliness is | profitable unto all things, having | promise of the lite that now is, and of that which is to come.” | @ What is the meaning | democracy? | A, The term signifies by its de- {rivation, government by the people jznd is popularly contrasted. w monarchy, or the government |one, and iwith aristocracy or olizer- chy, the government by a few modern political science the mg of thé term varies | Q. Where are the hiz in the world? | A IntheB Q. Is there {called hyssop? | AT family ,which rcaches a height of two feet. it has small clusters of {blue flowers and is cultivated in the | United States for reputed medicinal | qualities. | Q. Why does the water line of |a boat risc as it goes from fresh water into salt water? A. Because salt water has greater | buoyancy. | Q- After whom was | named? A. The carly name of was New Netherlands, the a 'he Clansman,” by 4:8. The bodily exercise entire of In mean- est tides of Fundy. a plant or bush New York ew York When the renamed it New the Duke of grantee Q. What is the value of a United Sthtes 25 ceat paper money, issue of York in York, the honor of original In later | Dionysiac | the | difference in the Irelative speed of white light as com- | pared with colored lights? | & score of novels. The desolation in “you all”| | States 1m; tween the close of the Revolutionary | It is a bush herb of the mint | {1874 .in new and perfect condition, | |and portraying a bust of Walker? | A 30 cents. Q Suggest a few police dog? Duke. Rex or | be appropriate. I.l SE. HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS names for Kaiser would a | speakeasy window: ‘‘Hemstitching.” | j windows anymore. | Still New York, April © 4—Thoughts|dam. Another thumbs a dictionary while strolling: Those chunky fel.| —words sugesting to him ideas and lows who sport big diamond rings | situations. and smoke fat cigars in front of chop houses. P. G. Wodehouse's | fawn spats. And whose last name | sounds like baby talk. Sign in a| Three of the heaviest coffee drink- ors in New York are Damon Run- yon, Harry Reichenbach and Flo Ziegfeld. Each is a total abstainer Tailors don't sit cross-legged jn | from intoxicating liquor. Sign on combination restaurant and filling station near Mt. Vernon: Eat and get gas.” Burns Mantle, N. . boy, who made good in the city. The eerie gloom of a theatricai| costume shop. Jules Bache's mon- ocle. Georges, the Algonquin head-| “'What do you do,” queries O. R. waiter, who has been meptioned in | fe. “When you are not writing a column 0. I practice esthetic dancing; match ribbons for my wife and ride up and down in sky scraper ele- vators. (Copyright, 1930, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) Observations On The Weather - a Watertown, \ mammoth fur stores. Bill Brady and his wife Grace | George. A “hand beauty” parlor. And the tiny shop that sells only combs. The cafe with the profane parrot where sea captains go. Who remembers when boys carried but- ton hooks in the sides of their shoes? Charles M. Schwab ‘steps out of a taxi. A jazz orchestra advertisement waxes poetic with: “Pleading violins, laughing piccolos, rumbling kettle | drums and sonorous bass viols.” | X ) h 2 = Vashi Apri —Forecast Emily Post, the authgrity on good | Vashington, —Apuil 4 manners. Fred M. Knwles prowling | 100 !Sg‘f'i‘z;é‘elfi\l’:“"‘gfi;‘.‘lflf;pe,:l?,‘rle about for antiques. Phil Dunning, | BYEF 00 EF (PR N0 T turday e s dircalor. _|fair; fresh, possibly strong north- % storm comes up. Rair | Lot ang north winds, diminishing. Spatters down. Nothing prostrates | " yo;rocast for Bastern New York: New York like a shower. And 1o |00 onight; Saturday fair; slowly ¢lLy responds so quickly Lo 0utdeors | ging temperature in nerth and cen- when the sun pops out again. Silly | {1\ "Fortions; fresh northwest and 10 have to make a living this way. | ooy winds, it beats following a Missouri |"“ioracast for New Haven and |vicinity: Fair tonight and Satur- | day;: slightly colder tonight Conditions: The disturbance that was over Tennessee yesterday morn- |ing moved rapidly northeastward |during the night and is central over ting their summer scrubbing. W. R.|the ocean near Nantucket. . High Coe, the millionaire turfman, who |pressure covers the Lake region. spends fortunes raising flowers a8 a | Another disturbance is developing diversion. |over the Gulf of Mexico. The side entrances of Fifth avenue | Rains were reported from the five and tens. Jor the limousine [South Atlantic and Gulf states. trade. Erlanger's general manager, | Temperatures are above the season- Jack Dillon. The ex-Broadway winc |aple averages in most sections. agent who now clerks in a drug Conditions favor for this vicinity store. Farrar and Rinehart the | fair weather and not much change young publishers. And so ends an-lin temperature. other stroll. Poo-boop-pec-doo! Temperatures vesterday: Hizh =0 plow. You wouldn't know Dr. Rockwell off the stage. He ems fo have shrunk. The blind Negro who r cites Omar and the Ballade of Read ing Gaol. The library lions are get- Tt strikes me—snatching the baton from Paul Whiteman for a moment—that the whistlingist tunc of the vear is “Happy Days arc Here Again! Low 50 36 30 Atlanta tlantic Cit | Boston | Buffalo . { Chicago | Cincinnati Denver . | Duluth | Hatteras 5 |Los Angeles . Miami ... tinneapolis Nantucket | Nashville 36 36 40 Tn one of the big hotels nightly a benign gentleman with white whis- kers occupies a deep cushioned chai in the lobby. tucks a large red silk handkerchief in his collar, napkin fashion, and smokes a cigar. The handkerchief is to keep ashes off his ;‘(r‘fl:;d:l:.r o B crowd always ino ¢ iaven ... ands by, expecting him, 10 doubt. |xew Orleans. . . to take a goldfish out of his pocket | xeow York or something as a prelude (o a sal°¢ [Norrolk, \ ballyhoo. | | Tt is whispered a preity actress re- | cently submitted to the extraction of all upper and lower teeth. A gum infection brought about hy drink- inz poisonous liquor was blamed by the officiating dentist, vanishing figures imes Square life, whose return inzland has evoked columns of comment, is Kitty Marion. lor 12 vears she stood on various corners peddling the Birth Control Review. 1 Although an ardent suffrage zcalot, she acceoted the banter of after | dar drunks with good humor and is credited with sclling more than 100,000 of her tracts. D —————————— 16 you own or drive zn automobi going to drive Across a xtate of them. You wili STATE MOTOR VE! on speed laws, reciprocity provistons, provisions for every state in the Ui send for It Among the of t0 522 New York T want a copy of enclose herewit} the bulletin ST. five cents to cove l NAME 's'rr.l:m‘ ANLU NUMBER ‘cx'rr fo A writing man tells me that in those agonizing sterile moments that come to all members of the silly guild he turns on full a bathtub fau- | cet and the sound of running water somehow breaks down the mental The Toorerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. THE TowN COUNGIL. PASSED A RUL | AUTO LAWS OF THE line some A our Washington Bureaws latest bulletin DIGEST OF ICLE LAWS useful. Northfleld, V& ‘Washington . 44 46 CHILDREN'S HOME T0 RECEIVE $300 Wennerberg Chorus Will Present Check at Exercises Tonight The Wennerberg chorus will fur- nish an entertainment at the Chil- dren's Home this evening at 7:30. The members of the committee rep- resenting the United Swedfsh organ- izations in the city are invited to attend. A check for $500 will be presented to Dr. J. E. Kling- berg for the benefit of the home, This money represents part of th i proceeds from the concert given in the High school auditorium March 16 by the Wennerberg chorus under the auspices of the United Swedish organizations. The complete report is as follows: Total receipts, tickets sold, $1438.2 ads in program, $200; total $1 638:25: expense, $715.53; balance, $922. CLERGYMAN SUCCUMBS AT CHURCH CONFERENCE Rev. Lewis B. Codding Has Cerebrsl Hemorrhage at New Loadon— ‘Was at Methodist Mcetings, New London, April 4 (# — Rev. Lewis B. Codding of Cochessett, Mass., retired clergyman, here for the New England southern confer- ence of the Methodist Episcopal church, died last night at the Law- rence and Memorial Associated hos- pitals from a cerebral hemorrhage. He way 72 years old. Stricken at the parsonage of the Methodist Episcopal church, where he was the guest of the pastor, Rev. Charles E. Spaulding, D. D.. and Mrs. Spaulding, Rev. Mr. Codding was rushed to the hospital. The first hemorrhage was of minor nature, but about 6:45 e’clock last night he suffered a second and more serious hemorrhage and died immediately. Rev, Mr. Codding jvas pastor of churches at Mystic and Noank from 1894 to 1896. His last pastorate was {at Cochesett. He was born at Taun- ton, Mass., September 27, 1837, and was a graduate of Wesleyan uni- Versity. The body was taken by au- tomobile to Brockion, Mass., today. 4 N - Life Depends on the Way You See Things Wear Our Glasses And See Things Right My Specialty—Comfortable Vision Frank E. Goedwin Optometrist 20 40 327 MAIN ST. [ PHONE 1903 4 STATES le—and who doesn’t—you are cerlainly time this mummer—mavbe dozens 1t driver: mion. contains condensed information license Jaws, signals and light Fill out the coupon below and — e v — Y] COUTON. SR S m— .. |- ._] AUTO EDITOR, Washington Bureau, {ew Britain Herald, Avenue, Washingten, D. C. ATE MOTOR VEHICLE LAWS and r postage and handling costs: STATE I am a reader of the New Britain Herald, M i i e e e e e By Fontaine Fox. ING THAT THE SHIPPER ““MUST NOT LEAVE THE CAR To WORK THE GARPEN" HE ALWAYS PLANTS RIGHT OF WAY. CFontaine Fox, 1930 ALONG THE . ’

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