New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 19, 1930, Page 8

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Progressives. They are too valuable to the Democratic party New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connectlcut Issued Dafly (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street LONERGAN AND PAONE Former M. SA or Paonessa of New Britain remains the leading avdwed candidate -for the nomination {o Congress from this district, although $3.00 & Year 1%y Three ‘Months friends of Augustine Lonergan are . 78cea Month | rying to induce him to come out and as a candidate for SUBSCRIPTION RATES declare himself the nomination. We prefer Mr. Paonessa, although Extered at the Post Ofce at New Brifain a8 Becond Clzes Mall Matter. . TELEPHONB CALL8y Mr. Lonergan proved he had plenty 925 of good pdints when he was con- gressman once upon a time. The only proftable advertising mediam | In the place, Mr. Paonessa, in the City. Circulation books and pres |\ ot room ways open to advertimers. both first | would be a live arned He reputation for hidin, ishe); and regard- has never his wire. Member of the Associnted I'ress The Assoclated Press Is exclusively en- | titled to the nse for re-publication of light all news credited to it or not otherwise | credited in this paper and also local | Bews published therein. |n oi a behind a b all he ant public issue. less whether folks agree im or not n imp Member Audit Bureau of Clrculation The A. B. C. 1s a national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- | tisers with rictly honest analysis of clrculation, Our circulation statistice &re based upon this audit. This insures pre tection against fraud In newspaper di tribution figure to both mnational and local advertisers That is one prime requis times for public men. TROUBLE IN “CARRYING HOOVER" Republican leaders in Wiscons The Herald 1s on sale dally tn New | 'C'InE the o Newsstand, Times | Newestand, Entrance 42nd Street. are anno formal®mh ed as having held an in- el Contt: cting at which they came to the conclusion that the defeat of Walter J man . PRINCE OF GOOD SPORTS Sir Thomas Lipton again failed to lift the yacht ingly has despaired of ever it done. “We canna win," old skipper. This after the * registered four st the “Shamrock V,” lenger. Governor mil- liondire Kohler, for renomin- having | cup, seem. | Alion was duc to having advertised “Hoover's ‘man,” an of the national adminis- on,” and “the whom Pre deng Hoover would like to see nterprise governor of Wisconsin.” aight wins ag the British ¢ Koliler has His adn atien has of “a busi- And it was a Eighty years Americ en a glowing examp lifted the cup from the the Isle of Wight. yachting American possession ago British ness man in politics.” z06d istration in general but Wis. wants a businest The emblem of nir suprem body exactly denied that, onsin evidently dministration plus something eclse 1 by younger brother of America admires oma ‘h as ne|that can be provid Philip L Follet sportsmanship qu is admired in I alibis, no explan: He either win s mu He no ngland. has no Rob r"J 1 Follette or doesn't 1t try to build another | for Gove | l.a Follette EXCUSCS. Ra | ions, is an especially at KoMer in that Phil capital Kohler lieuten- win- nasty defe goes home nor yacht. ~ But challengers to made abundant out of th that the days of . building claim of Sir Thomas are about new | ants the governor wasany up- holder of President Mr, L Hoover. Follette over. He is going to Jet other ishers take up the grand where he left off It can be said of he made the world he tried. Young a and his exactly was a spiked gun in the campaign. Sir Thomas 1 him while | WE RECOGN Wi IN HASTE or s0 ago said tha ew Wi nition hington American Tecog- THE LITTLE With right has the trio ball games concluded hetween Brooklyn Dodgers and the Cardinals in the National been termed the I.\H-; The After regarded as a cer of the governments Tsolivia “naturally h idence that St. Louis Teagiie evidenco, it Ars, Ppo peciyi sovernment vorld series. forthcoming iaily in having th result been | | fact that ovr tain pennant win- | could not be expected to permit the ner for oklyn shoved Cardinals Brooklyn. “~The excitément ily, in Church st chancing to extraordinary was going on the few days needed only substantial fans in front of the Herald's hulle- tin board. The Dodger strect—: some time, 5 rivals to stéal a march 1o second th % v extend- American busin win rccognition Where sthere will there is a re®istered heav \ Anyone not | that reali anything DA PUNISHES US da the politicians last | | to note the gathering of baseball | Jiplomat are telling the American. newspapers the hoist- ed Canadian tariff duties are not fans along Church | meant to retal inst incre AT B emingly far in the majors rican duties such cheerful chatter deceives It Canadians ity—had a sad wee no vone is known to everybody not that would have sed Smoot-Hawley la FENN BOWS HIMSELF OUT When the Republican district con- | thought of incre: ariff had the *not been vention meets in Hars{ord Monday it will have one point less to discuss, | Congressman E. Hart of ‘Wethersfield having howed himself out of the race for renomination be- cause of his health passed on this side. It how we Fenn is pure retaliation; cannot blame th | Canada buys more goods from us other nation and deemed * of befter of method han any worth treatment the con- | herself Clarence W, Mr. Sey- It is almost cetain that than the shabby verition will nominatc Smoot-Hawley law Seymour of West Hartford her in the our has of pledged delegates and is a pop lar fellow Manufacturers who have becn do- n overwhelming number |ing much business in Canada and lose trade the who are likely to can in the part A. Britain was reputed to have an Fenn before A oGl A B igley Sriaraw L) troubles upon come to | MIF with C essman be- quit agreement the congregsman THE I 1 have 1 HOOVER DAV came ill enough to desire to We en accustomed 1o call- 1t appears that all agreements now Yet M. eight delega Now Dam for a 1 are off. with at Lyman W least hime Quigley ir, s instrucied interior is rey d disincl make a Seymour fight agais From this it ca uce Mr. S the nomine: Wyoming Quigley defeate ) i1l effects at a prir nt convention sident yL101 of Colorado What will still ich is something clse we do not, know INSURGENCY ON UP GRADE Insurgenc PEDERAL He TREASURY SLUMDPS scems 1o be on the dtion ev throughout orryi country in the T We in Conne not muct have ¢ 1 1 o i has resulted in r 8t and Progressive are generally sounding victories Repu Iping federal 5 is an import knowrf, primaries. re the masquerading 1 Republicans .n n Republican label came All five Senator Couz for re Addir up nominatio won ns in senator being tinged witl the victories number s Some of these Progt it at licans may crats in the ions, I on Democratic party i try very hard to defeat any ol inside information ot . in the election and it clect®d, ! t with | has never straddled | e | period of 1 primary, | No- | that such a claim | in | statesmen- | sed | duties | accorded | Ad- | New | the | CONNECTICUT FARM VALUES Connecticut and Rhode Island are the only two states in the Union in moderate to fresh southerly Satur; day. y Forecast for New Haven and vicinity: Fair and slightly warmer tonight; Saturday increasing cloudi- ness followed by showers. Conditions: High pressure covers the middle Atlantic states and New England. X Slight disturbance is over the Gulf coast. A narrow trough of low. pressure extends from Houston, southwestward to Amarillo. Rains were reported from the south- eastern states and light showers from a few scattered stations else- where. Lower tetmperatures pre- vail in northeastern districts. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather followed by increasing cloudiness. Temperatures yesterday: High . T4 76 76 66 §2 78 84 66 80 78 .. 88 . 86 70 T4 i 78 66 which farm values tcday are high- ey than they were the year before the is the chearing informa- tion provided by the U. S. Census | department war, Thus, whereas Connecticut's farm land valuss increased by 2.2 per cent since 1912-1914, and Rhode Island's farm values increase by 3 per cent since that time, farm lands in such an agrarian state as Iowa decreased 47 Kans 2 per cent, and Illinois 43.1 per cent per cent; , 26 It must be' remembered, too, that « Low 66 62 56 56 62 50 58 50 68 60 78 62 60 55 70 62 70 44 52 58 ecrease is from the prices for | Atlanta .. Atlantic City Boston Buffalo .. Chicago .. Cincinnati Denver . Duluth Hatteras ..... Los Angeles .. Miami Minneapolis .. ntucket .. New Haven . New Orleans | zages have not been foreclosed. N Fenesss Of Northern states Indiana h:lfi;:\'[,r(o]kv Va. had the most precipitate deflation in | Northfield, Vt. . farm ‘values since 1913, the census | Portland, Me. . Washington . farm land curreng before the World | War. The prices for farm from land decrease the peak 1920 has been vastly more precipitate. who *soid | in Those western farmers out” their holdings during the peak are mostly living off and the sunshine in California, | successors on the farms are yelling for farm relief—those whose mort- their mone Southern while their port stating the decrease in values 50.3 per cent since that! decrease since id to be been The he peak period of 1920 i ‘Hn.w average Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN Lockey room modesty: The tim- of a man who knows he has holes in his socks. “Filthy lucre” is any sum of | money possessed by the other fellow close sccond, with a #duction of | in excess of your pile. | 9 per cent | — | Two men killed in prize fights ge- | cently. Evidently the bear isn't the closely allied | only one whose hug is fatal. value of farm lands. The | | farmer who agrees to pay an inflated [ more than 100 per cent. But the champion state for farm value deflation is the South Carolina, where da decr: since pre-war | 54.8 per cent of Georgia is a has re; neighboring stac Farm prosperity is | with the It 18 possible o develop a peflect | husband if yow'll begin when he’s’six and spank him for pouting. | price for land is entirely devoid of ood fortune when the prices of his _ Soon the professional players will quit the spotlight and we'll pay four times as much to watch amateurs. Toubtless a party is called a blow- out because it leaves you flat, | products bring what they do today. | When farmers say the price of wheat | | omany other farm product is below | the cost of poduction they must in- clude mortgage hayments and simi- lar financing in the cost of produc- | 14 jsn't correct to say people “own their own™ homes. The bank owns them. ese put an army of them into | the red, if they keep books. A farm | that ha | “But him in the nos classic in origin. ZJ'he old rame for gladiatorS was arii.” been “in the family” for may be Roman “bustu- 50 yea nd was paid for decades | ago probably can be operated at a | profit if (e investment cost s | on the actual L A “larger sphere of usefulnesg” being translated, means a job that pays more mone: | figured investment rather than upon the reproduction | | cost. Jailing men mails to defrand; | Americanism who Whil e arm value increase for Connecficut the census reports a slight | use low of | since “before the war™ there still re- | of fake advertising. | mains the fact that there has been a | BT o hasbeen &1 pefrigerator: A place where'thg wife keeps scraps until she is ready last | to throw them awa, | substantial drop in the the number of | farms in state during the .| Moderns aren't such a Twenty-nine members of | five years. 1 bad lot. It wa the first s last August that the cen { bureau reported that there were 17 431 farms in Connecticut, a reduc- | their own pockets. tion of 5,759 in five years, or 24.3 | i | I the supreme court can usurp per cent. Only one { authority to declare an act of con- New England—New Hampshire— | gress void, surely it could claim the | reported a greater drop in the num- | Fight to annul laws that are silly. other state in ber of farms than Connecticut. This would that \donditions in Connecticut have been of | Youth | age that | coupe. | is relative. It means any indicate enjoys having seven in a farm below the expectations or hop | There two kinds of Americans: 145U} Thoge who can say “Bravo!” without deflation of | feeling silly, and those who don't| | give a darn abbut tennis champion- ! ships. : nearly 6,000 families during the five years; yet in the ! farm land values Connecticut, as has been suffered own, nothing in | comparison with western states. Now the weather sharps 100n causes hot waves. We've seen a little moonshine make the sweat | pop. From these figures we might ol tain a conception of why there has 80 much and demand for farm Westgrn insur- | been = =0 What if a constitutional amend- ment does represent minority opin |ion. The constitution itsclf repre sentgd only one voter in six, and it | has done very well. relief, why cy hps been increasing THREATENING US WITH BACKGAMMON Folks like Novelty wins. Then when the novelty a change. al-| Maybe the ancients prosecuted o | home-brew cases and tolerated rich | bootleggers. They straincd at a gnat off the trend 38 | ang gwallowed a camel. novelty. Anything | a new thing wears | for some other Correct this sentence 0, said dad, “this family won't spend a.cent for new tires until the groccsy bills are paid.” to keep us from being bored Now we learn excellent that the mon is coming back on au- thority game,of backgam- | This is & game | | that our grandfathers &nd grand- | COP¥TIEht 1936, Publishers Synd | mothers played; but for generation BUYS FMCER AND it was only for the checker board | a name The wvever, have always con- in games | most of us ikers, h 1ed placing a backgammon board | inside’” of the checker |Jioliday, Once Famous on Track, although doubt did not know most people no i .| Saved From Ignominy of Draw- what it was ail thought m»i back- species of about. Possibly they ing Grocer Wagon peculiar configurations of the Evanston, IIL, Sept. 19 horse “Holiday,” which descended from the high estate of stceple- chasing to the miserable chore of hauling a delivery wagon, has been but to death. David Malloy of Lake Forest, who once paid $2,000 for Holiday trode him in many of the North Shore socicty gallops, recently sol.l him to a riding academy. “Holiday however, was unequal to the task of transporting portly dogagers in no | feare h of more svelte lines {along the bridle paths, and had t rson Who CaR . “501q (o the humble [un'.«u"l:{ n‘; | delivery service. gammon board was a modernistic or futuristic decoratious. kgammon is played with dice, the game is not necessarily | gambling. One can wager and what one the however; and 10 do when backgam hold happens mon craze takes is entirely one’s own business word it por puzzles 2 s what is like cross niggature and mmdh. The nappap afler t on it likely to win a | Malloy saw “Holiday" yesterday, [ging th® grocery wagon town. He felt that such toil was {unbecoming an animal which had | hurdled hedges to the cheers.of the very best people | “Holiday” back | words to a police |and now “Holiday" around Observations On The Weather Washington, Southern aturday armer, 50 he bought some gun, whispered i with a is dead opt. 10— Forecast England: IFair partly cloudy and moderate southerly o tonight, slightly winds Forecast Incre | tonight showers TO STUDY INJURY Worcester, Mass, Sept. 19 (Up) ].A,:my plates were to be studicd today by St. Vincent hospital physi- to determime the scriousness arm injury suffered hy Francis J .H Saturday north he mide a flying | portion Saturday alternoon; rday's scrimmage | gentle variable winds, 1."omu\g‘(':o S @ for ew York: varmer 4 by cians of an tain {when ve clondiness Cap. Garrity tackle in t Holy probably giving al| mailing rate to magazines full | | congress used public money to flll‘l HAS §IM PUT TO DEATH| |head high but step uncertain, drag- | QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to ahy ‘question of fact or’ information by writing to the Question Editor, Néw Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washing- ton, D. C., enclosing two cents in | stamps for Feply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended taken. All other questions will r ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Edftor. Q. Does the president of the Unlted States receive a pension from the governmeit after he retires? AN e = Q. What name? A. Lou Henry Hoover. Q. Are the so-called “deadmen” in crabs harmful to eat? A. No. Q. What was the value of dimes minted in 1804 and how many were coined at the San Francisco mint? A. A. The totatl value of all dimes issued was $205,099.60 and only twenty-four were coined at San Francisco. Q. How do you read the number $0.2018? A. Twenty and dredths cents. Q. Is there a w. is Mrs. Hoover's full eighteen to remove the yinegar barrels? A. Fill the barrels with milk of lime and let stand for several months, then rinse out well with plenty of warm water, and steam the inside of the barrel for half an hour. with acetous substances that it is practically impossible to render them fit for the storage of any other sub- stance. s Q. Who played the parts of the three brothers in the motion picture “Beau Geste?" A. Ronald Colman, Neil Hamil-| ton and Ralph Forbes. Q. 1s there a state church now | in Germany? | A. The present constitution of the German republic provides for entire liberty of religious conscience and there is no state church. Q. Ts “I feel bad,” or I badly” the correct expression? A. "I feel bad” is correct. | Q. What is the water content of milk? A, About $7.27 per cent. Q. s husband my feel research be under-1| hun- | odor and taste of vinegar from old | They may be so impregnated | | zines. New Yo while sjrollin heels-click, clic! Sept. 19—Thoughts Manhattan's dainty click! Those float see Framcine Larrimore soon the Yule logs will glgw. ing a person will miss like popular- ity. 1 Y., boy, who made good in the city A new hotel furnfshes continental breakfasts in rooms free. lunch kit that becomes a table. No city sound has the charm of a sid vard bumble bee in a small town. Black and ,orange | Gay Nighties! Why do frozen-faced men such joyous wives? {ory, writer of western tal broiled*black seashore boys begin to pale. Howard Thurston, cian, What would New York revues do for material wihtout the good old | Folies Bergere? Barney back from a swing around the Ori- ent The melancholy odor of leave the Tifth anymore have burning Avenue skyline—the pale anyone likes broccoli without sauce? You don't have to ans . % really wouldn’t care a lot. They don’t name girls Lulu anymore. . H. W. Hanemann is wriling ex- cellent humor. And I wish Rin: Lardner would do more writing. A stops his roadster §p light a cigar- ette for his girl, takes a swig from his flask and ghoots away. Anyway 1930 love is different. Mark Leusch- er's as young ing. The Alger books were interesting than 90 muck tod hang far per cent cf mera th onto auto doors to sell maga- And smudge up the windo Poupon who gave away his red ink” cafe when prohibition ar- rived, And now peddles lace. Cr8wds around broadcasting stu- dios to see favorites. —And look ashed and sclf consciou® when ar. Overheard: “Just as | vas going to sue Mim for breach of promise, he wants to marry me. The icy hauteur of mannikins, And old bucks who paddle at their heels, Toodle-00! husband’s brother-in-law? A, Your sister’s husband is your | brother-in-law but not of your hu band, except by courtetsy. Q. When was Prince Henry, son | of King# Gebrge of England, created | Duke of Gloucester? | A. March 31, 1928. | Q. How.long has Brooklyn been | part of New York city? A. The two cities were united in | 189 | Q. Where is the continent known as Lemuria? | A. It is a hypothetical commom‘i in the Indian Ocean, supposed to be- | long to a: former geologic age, and | postulated by certain zoogedgra- | phers to account for the cthnological | unity of the human family. The| derived from the fact that car and the islands of the an were included, which | is the home of a genus of mammals known as lemurs. | Q. Can a fur ccat/bought in Canada be brought back to the | United States free of duty? | | A. It a tourist buys a coat in| Canada valued at no more than one | | hundred dollars, the amount of the exemption allowed, it may be | brought into the United States free of duty. Q. Are ers in the now? A. Those remaining are mes of the St. Louis Cardinal ck Quinn of the Philadelphia Ath there major any spit-ball pitch- baschall leagues | Burleigh | G | this | who to circu: orators are in fine form at their open forum in Ciecle. Thgy deery the Soap box forens Columbu 1stines “the cru enthusiz sembling hing heel of capital” to tic crowds. One today, r« George Rector, made a ound point. Said he dy to submf to rules of society, but each should be gharanteed the right to ecarn a living. Until ar this country has no equality r Few of us are satisfied with our jobs. When I was crossing t's and kicking commas out of reporters reporter nothing looked so grand the job of special writer. And 0 on. Soap box orators are recruit- cd from such restlessness. We keep on kicking until we kick ourselves out of a job altogether—or become columnists “The other week 1 saw the Rath Brothers after ten years. They are ”mvlmn acrobats and as such have cen “stopping performances.” In the show world the acrobat is the lowliest of “performers—comparable to the contortionist in the follk suzgests th Vaudeville’s unholy curse is May all your children be acrobats! circus. nake The Rather Brothers, {dic-gustian manner, are an example of the measure of success that comes in letics, Urban Faber of the Chicago White Sox and | the New York Giants. Q. What is the duty on import- ed cocoa door mats brought into A Q rupee Ten cents per square yard. What is the value of an Indian in American money? A. About 36 cents. Q. When were Martha Washing- fon dollar bills i February 28, August 4, | 1856 e o | 25 Years Ago Today The expenses of | vear as announced today by selectmen were $206,584.33. | W. C. Hungerford of thes city | charge of the horse | the Berlin fair. A. J. Sloper has | entered his rac ctor.” At a meeting of the building com- mittee held last evening, it was de- cided to enforce the new tenement law, The American started on a nine ule, six days a week City Clerk Thompson | coverca that ihree clerks ous sV fons of the countdy bear the me surname as himself. He has written letters te taem extend ing grectings. The football betwe-~ New Britain high and ‘he American School for Deaf resalt ed in many disgraceful girawls Much criticism i: beirg at the new - pavement on Main street. ft is a very poor substitut for the Alt blocks the town for the has day program at Hosiery Co. has hour a day sched a has in dis- vari game last Saturda » PEAC ¥lorence, Colo., This city does not know what crimé wave is. Nearly two' months passed without a single Not cven a traffic law violation was re- ported. ST RESUITS HERALD CLASSIFIED 'L PLACE Sept. 19 (U'P) arrest LSE ADS rence Mitchell of | 7 this country. | copy I ached to be a reporter. When | ‘\ntl prattle ‘along like | the ed- | ing opal pendants. The halo wealtn }hour pro gives mediocrity in this town. Never [night Frolic. Noth- | revues. M. Boomer, a Poughkeepsie, N. |but an acroba A motor | sleeping shirts. | John M. Greg- | The | the magi- | Gallantg . And that glow from roofs of | amber of Haut Sauterne. Wonder if (oo oy youth with aeroplane wing shoulders | as ever. And as oblig- | Persistent urchins who | to humblest workers \when they }s(i('l\' to it. I first gaw them when erving as one of those fresh-every- agents for the old Mid- Acrobats had never |before been featured in high-priced They had a polish and made the grade. I wager neither |ever had an idea of being anything I am told they |have never missed a day rehearsing since they first appeared on Broad- way. My wife and I were talking how | dogs so frequently begin to resem- ble their owners. The discussion | was carried on in a cafe where we went to dinner. A woman came in carrying an umbrella with a dog's- head handle. And it looked so much like her that, while my wife stuffed a napkin in her ntouth, I rushed out in an alley and let go of a six foot whoop. “Get wise to thing “Nobody wears brown {more."” NoboWly but a few of us old time |gravy spiller 1930, McNaught Syndi- cate, Inc.) LIPTON ABANDONS FRUITLESS QUEST {Trish Sportsman Will Not Try for Cup Again writes D. G. vests any Newport, R.. I, Nept. 19 (#—De- | fetited in his fitth attempt to regain |for Britain th¢/ America’'s cup, Sir _|Thomas Lipton has abandoned his [ fruitless quest. , | finish, yes, the finish,~ 1 | | | of their fate and lampoon | “Workers are | As the horns tooted and the siren shrieked signaling, anothe® Ameri- can victory, the S0-year-old Irish sportsman said: “It's the end of the race. It's the shall not challenge again. 1¢s no use. We cannot win.” The victorious Enterprise clinched the series by covering “the 30-mile “course in the fourth race yesterday in three hours, 10 minutes, 13 seconds, the fastest time ever made in the 60 3 since Britain first challenged for the cup in American waters. She beat Thomas' Shamrock by five and 17 seconds. \ Sir Thomas immediately after the American yacht minutes |race sent a radio message to Vincent Astor, aboard the Vara, as to convey to Harold S. V skipper of the Enterprise, crew “congratulations on y merited victory.” ing him anderbilt, and his ur well- Sir “I want them to know right away that I have no hard feelings,™ he txplaingd. “Although they've heaten me again, T could not havehad fair- er sportsmen against me.” Aftef a rest of a day or |aboard the steam yacht Erin, Sir Thomas plans to spend a Wkek n |New York on business and then sail for home. f i Vanderbilt expressed himself as well-pleased with the performance of his crew and boat and said he thought his British opponents “the finest ®t of sportsmen” he ever raced against. o The men who build boats are unanimous in the contention that a metal boat, all other things being equal, is faster than a wooden one. Enterprise is bronze plated; Sham- rock V mahogany planked. ¢ Enterprise is cquipped with a va- ITiety of mechanical devices for hoist- |ing sails and trimming shéets. Man power is Tequired to work those winches, but they accomplfh their style gear of Shamrock. Shamrock’s mast is of wood, but it is a ton heavier than Enterprise's hollow metal spar, and weight aloft is a most serious handicap to a sail- ing craft . ~ It was believed that Shamrock, with as light rigging as Enterprise, would have given the American boat very close competition. There was some discussion of amateur shippers compared to pro- fessionals. Harold S. Vanderbilt, a millionaire and one of the most capable yachtsmen fn the country, sailed Enterprise to victory. He taok | orders from nobody. | Ned Heard, *whose life has béen {spent largely on the sea, skippered | | two the defeated challenger. Captain Heard is a professional sailorman, working for a salary and was an- swerable not only to Sir Thomas but to several advisers in and out of the |emplovment of the aged Irish baro- |net. Sir Thomas leaves details large- ly to others. Many would have liked to see Captain Heard sail a race ab- solutely on his own. As to the seamanship iffolved in the series just closed it is difficult to make comparisons. There were four races and the rival skippers cach | started in the windward berth of two |races. Enterprise protgbly was step- | ping along a bit faster at most of the starts. Enterprise showed an ability to sail closer to the wind than Shamrock, but that was not the fault of the crew of the green Sloop. Snterprise wa3 to retarn to her birthplace at Bristol some time to- day! She was launchgd there April 14 last and she will go into winter quarters there. No one scems 10 know what Sir Thomas will do with Shamrock. There are reports he will take her home . in the spring, and that he will sell her here. FIRST HOLDUP ATTEMPT Round Lake, N. Y., Sept. 19 (I'P) —A record of 56 yéars without a holdup ag Round 'Lake was, broken when two men attempted to rob Mrs. George S. Wilson, proprietress |0¢ a drug store. Up to that time {there had been no holdup since 11874, when the village was founded. BOWLING ; FOR '} YOUNG AND OLD AUCE FOR THE GOOSFE— sauce for the anc. samce for the mea ureaa has ready —desserts, fish, your collection g1 der, valuable addition and send for it to COOKERY EDITOR 1322 New York Avenue, Wast I want g copy of the bulletin SAUC in coin, or postage stamps, NAME STREET ANL NUMBEP cITY reader of the New Brit too of recipes. but sauce for the fish won't do for t doesn’t go for the dessert for yYou a comprehensive bulletin on meats and vegetables. It will make & Fill out the coupon befow Washington Bureau, New Dritain Herald, gton. D. C. o and enclose herewith five cen‘sy to cover return postage and handling costs: ain Herald. e e e e e \ IThe Too | | | | diver tec | nerville Trolleg; That Meet s All the Trains. By Fontaipe Fox.

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