New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 18, 1930, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, 18, 1930. New Britain Herald COMPANY HERALD PUBLISHING Exceptad) Street Tamusd Daily (Sunday At Herald 6 IMPROVING WEST $10.000,000.000 CONGRESS? THE DANGI SPORT Two stor T o elimbers 1 ROUS prints on terred the first © mounta were from Ne story referred to attempt by a youth Whitney mountain in cont States. The scale the peak on its "z to clir n nia, t youth his s a rule will play a lit- | their makes due The favor of and | roll politicis tle politics along with other accordingy mistakes. South Poles | efforts | aver- | antic | allowance sImost is strongly in public age citiz age has | e service” i. But untains on all nice items that from the tongue during a political he has learned from | discount ch of during times. that he doesn't . but that he would be politicia npaign; but xperience to i he This doesn't e hoys seriot he such mean as his troubles and obliged if the ns at- to their own ed with his own o find eno: business while issues of h money to keep ith the Joneses e has shown, too makes a kick to 3 statesman—the ef- depends alto, e size of the vote the v to rep sent. No one nstance, that the Ci Owners' Assoc poli that ed claim intere in ong oppor s splendid crops are h can ation-wide co- is a difficult . and the Farm At et el ng exactly the type of frequen 4 been anticipated by t this with the mental is government and men to represent 10 bought his land years ago »t land were compara- and who did not mo 2 the boom in order ighbor high- priced ar better off than He his co at least has no which up his profits and causing him to work solely for heavy or to ) scarcely be expected 1o v Britain. Not satisfaction of a healthful lemen elected to of- ramifications of | Peing GEs But they days roll on are bound to turn many a farmer will receive this = year. ge citizen more getting. He i9 as NO MORE “For New WATERED STOCK ressed with the weight rate-making purposes” the rsonal problems and Haven railroad wants its entry sed if he fails to under- | into the Grand Central Station in y detail of a question that | New York valued at $50,000,000, n the semi-professional politi- and its entry into the South Station in Boston valued at $25,000,000. he Interstate s frequently give evidence of What ge citizen understands fully Commerce Com- to all the and completely, however, is that | claims of railroads, 18 not inclined not comprehending evry well the av mission. however, wise Ll\'efl York paecescaccas 84 o permit the $75,000,000 to its capitalization for rate-making purposes. The 1. . C. contention is correct. It is, in short, that rentals paid for the use of terminals not owned by a railroad are part of operating ex- penses and as such must be deduct- ed from gross revenue before net in- come can be figured. The New Haven would have terminal such charges capitalized and rates charged on the watered stock. As long as the L. C. C. is actuated by common sense and insists upon bookkeeping practices the Chinaman's All that will es for its lawyers: y are added to lozical New Haven hasn't a chance to attain its end result are Facts and Fancies t Quillen) that has (By Rob Heaven is on t viscera Places that P pay f the conductors to go. Hoover but it isn't Thele cer h way are better. T vears doesn't s kept wait- Long engagemen queer, and no p & tree guffawed at t man who got bald on the rething, per e conscience Observations On The Weather some portion ton south a Forecast lantic states exten Lake This pressur over most of t he Rockies bring northward again reported ¢ Atlantic sta cather cleared durir ons in tha favor cloudy change in temperatur ure the 1 re en South weather tial re4| 4, Atl Bosto! Buffalo Chicago [ De Dul Hatter l.os Ar Miami Minneapolis Nantucket . Nashville New Haven New Orleans . New Haven to add | 63 | Norfolk, Va ... Northfield, Vt. | Pittsburgh | Portiand St. Louis 5 Washington ... Me. - Questions and L 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, 1322 New York avenue, Washing- ton, D. C. enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and al advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be under- taken. All other questions will re- ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Editor. How « a chamois suede suds to s been ion about 1 tea- t of water. Do not retch it to shape and toads live isted in rock? for for decades hornd lived for 1e of a court- i 5. subs vouring its o ong and wide {s en walking down the dithe 1 should follow the scort comes after cost or commons. also applied to . or the body of istituting a power nct from that of the recog Are zed politic Ameri- and Virgin Q. How U Coast re in G € v b3 t the close of the fiscal year wer in 74 oyers, picket breed of some more nches substances form clouds of white ck smoke? mmonium heated a dense clof wdered ros duces iraft of th source expressio for an eye and a tooth for a tooth?" | A Exodus 21:24 Levitic 24:20; De 19:21. ‘Wt quoted in Matthew Q. What is the States ten c. A Itis cents | Q. Near t city was oil first| discovered in Michigan? A ginaw When for the us | iteronor ated 18307 sed at 10 to Q was wood pulp paper st ma A The from wood pu at Interlaken, Ma Q. How m for education In tures for ec estimated a first r was March 5, 1867, Monaghan Concedes His Opponent Won Election Helena, Mont., Ju 18 (A—Joseph P. Monaghan has conceded the nom- ion of John M. Evans, his op ponent for the democratic congres- sional nomination the Montana Monaghan, who campaigned as a polled 11.432 11,544 in 415 of th the district 0. H. P. Shelley lisher, with 21,150 votes in 1.4 cincts out of 1,493, conceded the nomination of Albert J. Galen. jus- tice of the supreme court, as United States senatorial candidate on the republican ticket. Galen's vote was | 43,366, wet ytes 442 precincts in Red Lodge pub- 2 pre- —Q.OMcintyre Brussels, July 18 — We left Paris in one of those slashing cat-and-dog | rains staged only in France and Ta- | hiti. Despite the earliness of the| hour, all the boy and girl employees of the hotel were lined up in the hall. And they can take the look I gave them and carve something pretty out of it in nice cold marble At 8 a. m. we made our exit through the Porte de la Villette in the direction of the Belgian frontier. he driver-owner of my hired motor car is a lean young Russian named Raymond. Durin interl fast driving he turned in his s inquire Do you t to b Mclntyre, the write I fairly beamed a gr ve, and if Will Ho own unrented car 3 him up to it— did—Raymond 1 be real buddies. Rural Fran ways delightful. Poppy fields were wet wash red ing by holding B teful affir vho is in his b nd cyclist were ght fla brellas. opened um- ivery farmer in sudden ed fou white crosses, fois gras, for d. Soissons i s in Europe And of cour hick &§-column he re T downed the but taking in m it al- a lot of villagers were Am funny ed to eled wo h in m nd I celebrated it by making with a can our y believe motorey pictu Toft folk Bel sort of vari bowling s are set Country a primitive nine-pin game- green. Four p roadside 2 en balls about Women and children as well as play, at giggly The Belgium of con was Mons, »h call was for a time German head- | quarters. It has been practically re- built, and offers the spic and span newness of one of those Kansas prairie stops on the Sante Fe. Mons will fill a niche in my memory as | the last stand of the old-time livery stable. I came across it in prowling up a side street. It offered all the | old familiar odors, a side’front of- fice, a whip and harness room and is the on ion I ever saw of | its kind that sported an electric sign. In Mons, as in all other Belgian vil- | lages, there are no front yards. All the houses are flush on the side- walk. You get the idea Belgian wives are real housekeepers. There was a great to-do in Brus- sels upon our arrival. Everywhere the national colors were flying, ads playing. and from thousands of throats came the cry of “Vive la Belge!” I misinterpreted the cry at first and was very embarrassed. I thought Brussells had turned out to pay respects to the results of my uncheon time shot of bi-carbonate of soda. But it subsequently devel- oped all Belgium was honoring the centennial of its independen r if everybody entering at some time or other does of Edith Cavell mar- d English nurs American Professors | Will Sail for Chanak ] oy, July 18 (P — professors arriving at Is day aboard the steamship P 11 sail toni for Turkish village near the site cient Tro. They will land row and hope to have honor the illenia ion of Virgil they will t gs of Aena Crete, A ntually to C s from Troy to Mytil Corfu . and ev hage and Three Women Become (Chicago U. Professors icago. July 15 (A—Announce- ment of the elevation of three wom- bers of the University of Chicago faculty to full professor- ships was made today in the univer- sity record Dr. E Rickert ofessor of Ph. D. has nglish: Dr. Roberts, professor and the n of the department of hos Miss Gertrude Dud- ley, professor of physical culture, Including these three. eight of the | 200 full professors are been m Lydia J chairma economi d women. There is a total of of high United States of which £6 es are surfaced vsin the ered | COMMUNICATED Naming the Parks of the City New Britain, Conny July 18, 1930. 1 have read with considerable in< terest and some apprehension the various items that have recently ap« peared in the columns of the "Hers ald” in reference to recnaming some of our parks, particularly, Wil« low Brook Park Where is it going to stop? The name “Willow Brook Park' has a good American sound and taste, and as a citizen and taxpayer, I am strenuously opposed to any change in name. After all, this is the United States of America, and I, for one, prefer to have my children brought up in | an environment as nearly American as possible. When immigrants come to most wonderful country in the world” to make their home, they, tacitly agree to become Americaniz« ed and to accept American aims and ideals; let them accept the names of our public parks as well If the parks are to be named after “War Heroes,” we have plenty of our own to choose from without gos ing into foreign fields. I sincerely hope that the.time will “The soon come when the naming of tha be arks will in the hands of tha park hoard which case we can feel assured of American names for American institutions After ail we, American born, have some rights in the matter, and T bee lieve it is high time we took a def« inite stand lest wake up soma morning and find ourselves with a list of p that will read like a “Cook of Continental Europe.” I trust our city we s Tour that every will voice this movement “American” in his opposition ta 1f parks are to be named after prominent men, let them be proms Americans of whom we hava a great many AN AMERICAN, 25 Years Agb Today Stanley Works and Hart & Cooley nines will clash at the picnie of the latter factory at Savin Rock Saturday Two tho Walnut Hill hear a band vointed wt to make The and people gathered at last evening to but were d the musicians failed appearance. A mixup the cause of tha park concert their o Britain Elks made plans to attend the grand ¢ to be held in Denver, Colorado. The picnic to Saybrook bandoned After the was recent this city seem purgatorial exs a temperatura t almost cool. The desired trolley extension in northern part of the city will be held up for some time becauss of repairs being made by the sewer depart The New club held at Cosey g Britain Business Men's a very successful outing beach yesterday JE CROP DAMAGED Rio Janeiro. July 18 (A—A cold wave during this week has seriously damaged the coffee crop in Sao Paulo State. More than 6,000,000 trees are reported to have been cov« ith ice. COFF —_—m CAN YOU SWIM? — == — — — =CLIP COUPON HERE 1 r NAME I | | l | The Toonerville 'VTVrolley That Meets All the Trains. By Fontaine Fox, FARE ON TOP, THE SHKIPPER HIMSELF USED TO ALWAYS COOL OFF THE ROOF FOR THOSE WHO HAD TO RIDE UP THERE. made | | | spent annually United States? total expendi- all kinds was | to Evans'| | T CFontaine Fox. 1930 ez

Other pages from this issue: