New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 26, 1930, Page 8

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING OOMPANY New Britain, Connectlcut Tssued Daily (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 61 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Year @1.00 Three Months 160, & Month Entersd at the Post Office at New Britain a8 Second Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONB CALLS Business Office 928 Editorial Rooms The only profitable advertising mediam in the City. Circulation books and pres room always open to advertisera Member of the Assoclated Press The Amsociated Press is exclusively end titied to the nse for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and aiso local news published therein. Member Aadit Bareaa of Circulation The A. B. C. is a Dational organization which furnishes newspapeis and tisers with & strictly homest analy circulation. Our circplation statistics a based upon this audit. This {nsures pro- tection againat fraud in newspaper dis- tribution figures to both national and local advertisers, Newsstand, Times Bquare; sstand, Entrance Grand Central, 43nd Street. Mr. Sharkey, in refusing to per- mit newspaper cameramen to take his picture after weighing in, evi- dently thought the pictures would show that extra fat. It lynching In the South deterre from crime it seems to us that there would have been™no more lynchings long ago. need for Mr. Woodcock, national tion commissioner, suming that no matter how wet pub- 4 be in New Jersey, prohibi- lic sentiment ma citizens of the state do not condone the slaying of Finiello, the dry ' agent, recently. But it is the prohibi- tion liquor traffic that creates the bandits who did the slaying. Heard on the sidelines: “The less the Republican party advertises the unemployment situation the better for the Republican candidates. Why | work for the Democrats?” Down in Bridgeport the are caustic over the announcement that the state will build a new bridge over the Connecticut at Hartford at state expense, this after Bridgeporters helped pay for two drawbridges for the benefit of Post Road traffic. Along comes a further | announcagent that the state may or three bridges at is papers construct two Hartford, Possibly Bridgeport 'fully justified in complaining such “gross favoritism at Fortunately the City Charter is not like the 18th Amendment; the “leaks, in the estimation of the cor- . poration counsel, can be plugged. It was said after the stock crash of nearly a year ago that many busi- ness men as a result would have more time to attend to their own business instead of watching the stock tickers. That must be why golf playing has taken up so much time this year. * A new industry that has popped up is getting rid of the lcaves, Dry Republcans in state are acting as dazed as if they had taken a shot of rum. WE PRINT A FABLE The more publicity the folloWing | include England ing extolling the pleasures of VisSiting | o mainspring of action. fable obtains the more good it wili is right in as-| New York | | bushel! | six pound bushel! That's dirt cheap dentally he hammered the system of second mortgages and home financing, calling it ““the most back- ward segment of our credit system.” It is evident that the President, who claimed in 1928 he was fight- ing a Dbattle for the American home, was not intent upon telling the building conference only such things_as they liked to hear. AGREE TO DISAGRI The French are perfectly candid regarding why their experts at Ge- nuva did not agree with the Italian experts regarding naval parity. It is all a matter of politics, says Paris. Mr. tige by the French agreeing to plans and no French politicos could | risk agreeing to the Italian plans. Thus both to nothing unti later, when the political situ- sides agree ation may change. GRAIN CHEAPER THAN DIRT “Cheap colloquial- ism. as dirt” is a The financial editor of the New York Herald-Tribune, a telephone conversation in a finan- cial house regarding the cheapness overhearing of rye as compared with the higher price for a bag of dirt in New York, the hunch to and that gave him make inquires. is selling at 46 cents a Torty-six cents for a fifty- “Rye youw'd have to pay more for & bushel of first class dirt for your flower garden than that!” the broker was quoted And so financial scribe started on | his own tour of investigation. we resolved to tain the truth for ourselves. Good top soil, our inquiry revealed, is worth in New York City about $3 a barrel, and a barrel contains about 200 pounds. Our broker friend was right. As a matter of fact, he was not only right, but conservatively so. At a cent and a half a pound, high grade dirt is valued today, not only above rye, but above corn and wheat as well.” “Intriqued, But the dirt they know in a New York political less than the which campaign is worth high-grade top-soil variety higher quoted at prices than grain. WHAT THE DRYS WANT No strong objections having been organizations to the made by dry modification plank in the Republi- can state platform, one is led to conclude that there must be a rea- son for it. This reason can be found by weighing the attitude of the drys i New York state, assuming that their | attitude is likely to be much alike. William H. Hill of Binghamton, dry leader in the New York grand- oldparty, let the cat out of the bag with the following statement: “. . .The drys are very acceptable to a ‘moderately moist' platform just as long as there is no mention of repeal.” . From now on it will be possible prohibition platform but to which are “make no mention of repeal.” spot the “moderately moist” “IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE” For years British inn keepers have been sorely displeased over the fact that nine American tourists out of ten going to Europe went to Paris and points on the continent, over- looking the British Isles altogether Perhaps they are afraia of the fogs. During the early part of the pres- the British bethought ent year | themselves of a plan to change the | intineraries of American tourists to do. Being in the business of scatter- | ing sunshine as well as more or less | critical observations we hasten to do our bit. Here it is: naturalist divided an aquarium with a clear glass partition. He put a lusty bass in one section and minnows in the other. The bass would strike every time a minnow approached the glass partition After three days of fruitless lunging, which netted him only bruises, he ceased his efforts and subsisted on the food that was dropped in. . . . Then the naturalist removed the glass partition. The minnows swam all around the hass, bul he did not strike at a single one. He was thoroughly sold on the idea that business was bad A HITLER HUR Hitler and his German F frank. will Adolf is perfectly He tear up the peace other treaties if and when they win s an cle First, however, of tion must be a majority an election won, and therc be over all th partics a working agreeme with others, munists have shown sigre of or So far only the ing to work hand in . with tne German Jascists. What wiil happen to the Communists if Hilter should get into power is something else HOOVER ON HOME OWNERSHIL President Hoover strikes a homce like chord he buirding conference that should own their own he uttered a startling truth when oe when a home; and treaty and the | must | Copious advertis- England began to appear in Ameri- can publications. Result: 58,683 landed at British ports the first half American tourists of 1930, an increase of 4 per cent | over the previous year.And it must e [ vear be remsmbered that the present was not so hot in trade, and that 1929 was a boom year. | would | had a bad halt | came | that when tourists d averred that it is easier to borrow | $5 per cent on an automobile and pay it back in instalments buy & home on that basis than to Inci- n | from | ness there the Without the ertising have been a big loss, Britishers admit. Incidentally, h aling with tourists a Fr tradesmen a o joining In a chorus of lamentation. They year, with fewer who too, as they tourists and those Th American spent less. realize over, have been doing, that there arc nt places in Europe be- the other plea sides Paris French tourist trade is likely to drop. the their Brit- adver- Another result is that ish intend to multiply tising THE MILLSTONE ON RECOVERY It evi- is becoming increasingly that the millstone i low price of wheat is of returning pros- e At a time when other signs pointed to a recovery the slump the sagging price of the nation’s leading cereal r with the low prices of other important agricultural duct thrown a fit of nervous- the financiers, tors. What into ranks of particularly stock specu happens in the grain pits, the fore, is reflected in the quotations of of stork little whether nearly r It difference 1d this moment make very at leading corporations were to an- Mussolini could not lose in pres- | ascer- | the tourist | have | nounce attractive financial reports. So long as the agricultural situa- tion is at such a low ebb profes- sional bears are aided in their aims. The effect of low wheat prices is to enforce a low buying power among the agricultural classcs, politically, the result is a vast dis- content and millions of farmers,| will likely listen with ready ears to the verbal bandishments of demagogs. Chairman Legge of the Farm Board insistent that farmers feed wheat to stock as a means of most is reducing the surplus. This sugges- tion, it is said, is meeting with selves. His other suggestion that farmers in future plant less acre- age to wheat as a means of avold- ing a surplus meets with less ap- proval among a rather individua istic class of the nation, most farm- ers going no further than being willing to permit the other fellow to plant less acreage while they continue as before. But what they do next y this fall in the case of winter wheat has little bearing on what drags down the prices today, and inci- dentally is the millstone on other «’n\ch\‘O.rx. The problem of the farmers has become of vital impor to industrial sections of the country, too, which are discovering ar or tance {hat a large consumptive area for manufactured products has curtailed through a reduction of buying power. 1t can no longer be said, in a manufacturing area, that the hard luck of agriculture is of no interest to industry. Our experi- ence lately has tended to be a hard teacher and tells us that industrial prosperity is difticult if not possible when a large element in been im- the population are having difficulty in obtaining enough money to pay the cost of producing grain, much less provde a reasonable profit on ther efforts. One point stands out prominently, and that is the relation of govern- mental relief in theory and prac- tice. The administration dallied al- most delightfully with “farm re- lief” for than a year and finally hatched a la coupled Mh a tarift law, that was all but guaranteed to be the proper med- icine. Instead of providing the con- tempated relief, farm conditions went worse since the law was pass- ed, and one of the mean duties of the Administration is to cxplain to farmers, if possible, just why the great relief plans failed to relieve. They hard to convince. more new say farmers are THE METROPOLITAN DISTRICT The new city directory of Hart- ford is out, and it includes the far- flung metropolitan district. It covers the towns of Hartford, Wethersfiela, Windsor, Bloomfield, Newington, West Hartford, comprising a popu- lation of 229,521 That sounds quite impressive, 288 Hartford's citizens must swell with pride, ° This is the first edition of the metropolitan area” directory . Are future editions to include Maple Hill and Elm Hill? It's up to New Britain. GETTING ENOUGH TO EAT writer once said that be- politics, state- Some hind all systems of craft, diplomacy ‘and human activ- ities generally there was paramount the effort to individuals, races and nations to obtain shelter and food; matter how modern and that remains and and no civilized we become, the chief topic of discussion In other words, political econ- omy remains the world's most im- though consideration of submerged the portant study, it may be in other subjects. We are reminded of some of this by a trenchant paragraph in a New York World editorial: ....The fundamental fact in the present situation is that there is a surplus of wheat all over the world. There is not more wheat | than mankind could cat. There is more wheat than mankind has the money to buy at prices which will vield a profit to the farmers. In short, the wealth of the world is so badly distributed that multitudes is food that exists and that they | would gladly eat. As a consequence, we face a situation which, next to war, 4s the supreme evidence of the numerous | crop, | pro- | disorder and backwardness of civil- ization; on the one hand the pover- ty of thosé who are too poor to | buy, on the other the poverty of | those who have too much to sel.” l NOT A | Wwe b at becomes of cemeteries. has been bury- it arted the ma- PLEASANT SUBJECT wondered e often as 1o | wh The its human race dead | racing toward eternity, y ever since ing | ing ot of cemeteries one knows ity about date back only for )\Irnd a few hun- years; most of the popular burying grounds in this country are much younger. A ; minated When more often™ ru- el no cemete ve like everything filled placed is it is to capacity dead are therein, giv- to ing newer cemeteries a chance | become popular. Meanwhile the | older cemeter remain through i generatiohs of men | weil, what really is the final end until— lof a cemetery and its some support by the farmers them- | lack the purchasing power to buy [y forgotton | 1930. dead after, say, one or two hundred years? An incident in New York might be a clue. The other day a steam shovet was at work excavating a plot of ground alongside a public bath in what is knowp as Green- wich Village. Superstitious work- men were horrified to discover that the steam shovel was raking up a cemetery that had long beep for- gotton. Then it was learned, after offi- cials duly thumbed over old rec- ords, that once there had been a widely known cemetery at the spot, hallowed ground for no lessa venerable institution than ola Trin- ity Parish. It must have been that of the first settlers of Manhattan were buried there. Elaborate grave- stones had been erected to memor- ialize their upright lives. For gen- crations the graves had been re- membered by their descendants. But these seemed to have gradually left the scene; and afterall, a great- is mot many great%great-great-grandson usually occupied much in remem- bering the grave of his great-great- great-great-grandfather. Thus the once widely cemetery Greenwich Village turned into a “plot of ground” while th> populace paid no heed to the gradual change. Not a per- son in the vicinity of the raked up known in | ever being told that the land along- side the swimming pool had ever really been a cemetery. But the steam shovel told its story, Along with the bones of old settlers of Manhattan it raked up tombstones, so old that the epitaphs had been obliterated: With a kind hand the city took charge of the bones, reburying them in potter's fleld. True, sparrows are noisy ani worthless, but suppose some power should decide to kill off all people of that kind. Politicians aren’t the only ones who can’'t make up their minds which side to stay on. Look at mo- torists. Nobody suggests that the weather men were agents of Al Capone. The annoying part of stopping for a hitch-hiker is that you never know which of you is going to take the other for a ride. Maybe Stalin has 100 million de- posited abroad. Dictators always e: tablish a new aristocratic line or a new bee line. You can tell an American with a placid temperament. He doen't chew fast enough to make hisgum pop. Ah, well; boys who can sit for weeks and do nothing will later make excellent vice-presidents for some bank. ; Many men think the defeat of Ma Ferguson will end ‘petticoat rule” in Texas. They are bachelors. “I flatter the swells and they lap it up,” says a noted cynic. Evident- 1y this is the lap of luxury you read about. Americanism: Men jealous of their freedom resenting any meddling by Congress except in support of their pet idiocy. The first primary always more good than the run-off. eliminates more politicians. does It The outlook brightens. son predicts rising prices. remember that stock slump vears. Mr. Bah- You will his prediction of a was fulfilled in two Dry agents’ cars will wear signs, thus giving you the comfortaing as- surance that the man shooting at you isn't a bandit. These modernistic dining tables with no open space beneath will at least save the shins of married men who use the wrong fork. »Now that Mr. Mencken has mar- ried a Confederate, we expect hira any day to acknowledge that there sia. What a world! The harshe:t movie critics are those who have never seen a movie, and the peopl: who say Prohibition is no good arc he ones who never have tried it. Still, a metropolitan mayor must be pure in heart since he never is aware of graft until somebody els: points it out. How strange that people pray for rain and yet in January, when the poor are freezing, never pray for a nice warm spell. | Correct this sentence: “This back- ward district needs constructive cri- ticism,” said the candidate, “and I'm not going to lull the people to sleep by flattering them.” Copyright 1930 Publishers Syndicate 6TH CONSECUTIVE YEAR THE RAY GAGNON STUDIO — of — FRETTED INSTRUMENTS Now offers FREE musical ins(ru- ments. pert instruction on Tenor Banjo, Mandolin, Ukulels and Tenor Guit A demonstra- tion will convince you. Private Lessons Only Studio — Room 218 BOOTH'S BLOCK Sat. afternoons only e 1| Evenings and cemetery, it was said, remembered | The destruction of crops is unique. } are civilized people outside of Prus- | 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 | marital advice cannot be given, nor can ¢xtended 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, Q. How long does it take turtle eggs 10 hatch? A. The time of incubation de- pends upon the weather conditions and degree of heat. It is probably | a month or so for most of oury North American species. Q. How can bricks been spotted with cleaned? A. XKnock off the lumps of mor- tar with a scraper, scrape off the mortar spots, where they are heavy and remove the residue by sponging with a mixture of equal parts of commercial muriatic acid and soft water. TFinally wash with clear water. % Q. What is the distance bélween | home plate and first base and from home plate to the pitcher's box on an official baseball diamond? A. From home plate to first base is 90 feet; and from home plate to pitcher's plate is 60 feet 6 inches, Q. Who is the head of the Fed- | eral Farm Board and what is its purpose? A. Alexander Legge is chairman and the general purpose of the board is-to study agricultural con- ditions and devise means for farm relief, and to looan money to farmer co-operatives. ’ Q. How many games Philadelphia Athletics win ‘World series of 192 A. Four. They won the first] two games, the Cubs won the third game and the Athletics won the fourth and fifth. Q. Why are a widow's mourning garments called “widow's weeds?"” A. A weed is defined as a gar- ment of any sort, especially an outer garment; hence, garments in gen- ral, especially the whole costume | worn at any one time; commonly | used in the plural, and chiefly in| the phrase “widow’s weeds,” the mourning dress on a widow. Q. What dogs run fastest? A. Whippets. Q. What is the theme “Border Romance? A. “Yo Te Adore” (I Adare You). Q. What are the five oldest col- leges in the United States in order of their establishment? A. Harvard, Cambridge, Mass., | 1638; William and Mary, \Williams- burg, Va. 1693; Uniyersity of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1740; | Princeton University, Princeton, N. J.. 1746; and Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., 1749. Q. To what lodge of Masons did George Washington belong? A. He was an honorary member of Lodge No. 39 in Alexandria, Va., in 1748, which had its charter from the Freemasons in Pennsylvania. In 1788 it reorganized under the Freemasons of Virginia and was known as Alexandria Lodge No. 22 Washington was master of this lodge for 20 months. s Q. Did King James of England make the translation himself of the version of the Bible that bears his that have | mortar be | the | the | did in seng in |mame? A. Tt was translated by scholars who were paid by the king. Q. How many bank occurred in the United 1929 and 19307 A. There were 437 in 1929 258 for the fitst two quarters 1920, Q. mean? A, A literal | | | failures States in and of | What does Noblesse oblige | translation is “no- | bility obliges;” the connotation being that nobility of birth makes a cer- tain standard of conduct obligatory Q. Could a man born in England of English parents who afterwards became naturalized in the United | States, ever become president of the United States? A. The Constitution says that only a native born American citizen may become president of the United States. What is the official national anthem of the United States? A. There is no national anthem created by act of congress but the Army and Navy recognize the Star Spangled Banner as official. Q. What is the nationality meaning of the name Linwood? It is a British family name, derived fro ma locality, and is a shortened form of Linden-Wood. Q. Who played opposite Lillian Gish in the picture: “The Letter?” A. Lars Hanson and 25 Years Ago Today | The New Britain club will hold | the first of a series of luncheons Wednesday evening, October 4. D. McMillan trustee of the Methodist church for a term | of three years at a meeting held last | evening. A man attracted considerable at- tention on Main street last evening | by beating a boy with a horsewhip. | Police interference was necessary to |save the man from an angry | crowd. New Brit the races in Granby. The democratic nomination of candidates officers will be held this ¢ Hanna's armory. Nearly 300 men are engaged in| sewer work for the city at the pres- ent time. The sewer department is following out an extensive program. The girls at the high school have raised $25 for the benefit of the toothall team. | | in horse at the re entered in | agricultural park | caucus for the for fown ening at jsatinize: | riding academy instructors. And sh | reaches for my typewriter. | and lemon yellow. New York, Sept. 26 — Thoughts while strolling. A policeman holding a white faced pick-pocket, poor devil, for the wagon. Travel post ers of Singapore, Bangkok and Ba- tavia—and washed-out city dream- ers idling before them, entranced. Bernarr Macfadden. Turn your head quickly and spell that name without looking again. Cosmetic sign: “Face cream that Tra-la-loo! Pewter ware in style again. John McE. Bowman grows grayer and looks younger. A Tth avenue cafe that changed names 12 times in a year. The bigger the sign the punker the movie. Wonder what , Turkish bath rubbers do on days off? The Chrysler tower not filling so rapidly. But neither did the Heck- sher building—and look at it now. Bruce Barton somewhat resembles Gene' Tunney. Zit's Rolls-Royc Leather-footed Bill Robinson scems the most popular negro performer on Broadway. Deservedly. Neysa McMein, a Quincy, ML, girl, who made good in the city. Her name was selected by numerology— the real one being Moran, Always a cinema celebrity or so in the lobby of the Warwick. red-tongued puppies in. that stuffy Gth avenue window. What happened to the ginger snap business? * An airplane misses fire, dips, but shaots up again. And gulpity-gulp goes three sticks of chewing gum. It you think a Scottish terrier cannot fight—how are the folks? What that policeman said to a chauffeur! Won- der where William MacHarg, the old recluse, keeps himself? Ursula Par- ret, the “ex” authoress. That new St. Moritz hotel. Ultra- continental and what ho! British repairers in braided uniforms. Men's autumnal hats in lizzie shades. They never thought out in Youngstown, 0. Harry Warner wowdd control a big slice of Broadway some day. New York's creeping sickness—the growing traffic congestion. A post- man suggesting Charles Evans Huhges — open face with Airedale trimmings. Wouldn't it be funny to inquire in a chain drug store if they sold barbed wire. ‘And if they did yank out a pistol and shoot yourself. All right, think up one funnier. A gentleman disappointed over a favorite editorial writer being sup- planted by another writes me thus: | “A great fire has gone glimmering and a nonentity with a tallow dip is trailing a mental tropical sun.” A bird expressing himself so superbly will get a broken arm if he ever On a Broadway corner last eve- ning a pitch-man after a breezy talk reached into his grip and offered for a half dollar: A gold pencil, a| fountain pen, a cigar lighter, a cigar cutter and 25 cents in change. I hesitated only a second and walked right on. Whence comes such will power, hey, hey! In gregarious moments I ilke to Grift over to Broadway where shops are“still shops and not satiny salons. When I enter salons I have a feeling I am about to step on a cat or that something pvill go off with a mighty bang right under me In one of the salons recently a clerk sporting a lapel gardenia told me a shaving lotion I was about to purcha would “youthi It somehow made me madder than fury | and Mike Hogg wanted to slap him down. Then there is the baking salon—you'll die at this—with color- cd bread for the kiddies. The wheat | is tinted with harmless vegetable | dyes and the bread comes out of the | oven orange, strawberry, green, pink And those panting | | has moved northeastward A philanthropic new Bowery lodg- | ing house is to have a dollar a day room | will have the privilege of a book a | night from a library of 5,000 books. | Many Boweryites are prodigious readers. | Ring Lardner has {wo homes in New York—a town house and coun- |try place. But he works in a hotel i room on the noisiest block in mid- | town with a radio squawking at his [ side incessantly. But he has fur- | nished so much discord for sour quartettes it doesn’t bother him at all. From Miss S. in Hollywood: “I saw a post card you sent a friend of yours from Munich recently. I ex- | vected a bright epigram, but it was just another inane bromide.” I'm just one of these X-marks- the-room-and-wish-you were here | hounds. (Copyright, 1930, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) - Qbservations On The Weather Washington, Sept. 26.—Forecast for Southern New England: ers tonight and Saturday; cooler Saturday; much cooler Saturday | night; increasing south shifting to | west winds. | Yorecast for Eastern New Yorl | Showers tonight and probably Satur- | day morning; cooler Saturday night; | increasing south and southwest winds becoming fresh, possibly strong and shifting to westerly Sat- | urday morning. Forecast for New vicinity: Showers Saturday showers, and cooler. Conditions: which was over Haven and late tonight; followed by fair The Kansas disturbance yesterday | and is centered this morning as a storm of marked intensity over Wisconsin. Temperatures are far above normal in northern districts,. from Illinois and Michigan eastward but are de- | cidedly lower west of the Mississippi. Rains were reported from the Mis- sissippi, Missouri and Ohio valleys THE HART STUDIO Tnstruction in Musical Art PI1ANO TIARMONY ORGAN THERON W. HART 259 MAIN STREET Telephone 4895-M QUICK WATSON, Do you know Sherlock Hol spector Bucket, Sergeart Cuf: bille, Father Brown, Dr Thorndyke, P tives of fiction. Poe, Lickens Wilkie Green, Gaston Leroux. Gilbert K. Ch Huntington Wright, anc a host of oth ideal detectives of fiction. Our Washin solved thelr mysteries hew they rese other. The bulletin also contains a gul you the way to many thrilling hours Telow and send for it: - — — = — -CLIP COUP FICTION 1322 DITCE. New Britain Her: I want enclos» stamps, a coj herewith five cents in coln, to cove mailing and handli NAME STREET ANL NUMBEP. cITY i am -~ reader of the New Brit e e Toonerville Folks with bath rate and patrons|N Show- | ? Have you met C. Auguste Dupin; or In- Monsieur Lecoq, interesting bulleting on GREAT DETECTIVES OF all about these creations of these authors, what they looked like, ew York Avenue, Washington, D. C. v of the bulletin GREAT DETECTIVES OF and the Lake region. Conditions faver for this vicinity fair weather followed by local showers. Temperatures yesterday: High Sirah 84 .. 83 .70 80 80 . 58 64 86 T4 . 86 . 66 78 86 .. 84 .90 84 92 . T4 . 80 . 84 .. 84 . 96 Low 70 70 62 64 68 70 36 44 78 62 8 46 63 T4 78 76 70 72 Atlantic City . Boston Buffalo Chicago .. Cincinnati Denyer . Duluth .. Hatteras .. . Los Angeles Miami .... Minneapolis . Nantucket NasHville s New Haven . New,Orleans .. ewYork .. Norfvlk, Va. Northfield, Vt. | Pittsburgh Portland, Me. St. Louis . .. Washington . SOCIETY WONANS BODY DISCOVERED Miss Grace Newlin Probable Suicide, Coroner Says Philadelphia, Sept. 26 (P —Discov {ery in a patch of woods near Mal. vern, Pa., of the body of Miss Grace DeLancey V. Newlin has ended the search for the young society woman who disappeared from her home in Bryn Mawr Tuesday. Two partly emptied bottles, con- taining different types of poisons, were fyund near the body and Core |oner Herbert C. Ford, of Coatsville, |said he was convinced she had com- mitted suicide. A small amount had been drawn from one of the bottles [and a table tumbler containing traces | of poison was found near her head. | A motive which would have led Miss Newlin to take her life had not been discovered toddy. Members of Miss Newlin's family |said she had been under great ner- vous étrain because of the illness of her mother, Mrs. DeLancey V. New- lin, and her childhood nurse, Anna Dowd. Spokane, Wash., health ‘ author- ties estimate that from an inch to an inch and a half of dust settles yearly in homes on unpaved street | NOW IS THE TIME TO i THINK OF \WEATHER STRIPS Let Us Estimate N. B. Screen Mfg. Co. Rocky Hill Ave.* Tel. 5147| | -i THE NEEDLE! Mr. Gryce, Joseph Rouleta- hilo Vance? They are all great detec- Collins, Conan Doyle, Anna Katherine esterton, R. Austin Freeman, Willard er clever writers have portrayed their gton Burcau has prepared one of its FICTION that tells you how they mble and how they differ from each de to Detective Fiction that will show of good reading. Fill out the coupon 0N HERE G R ) FICTION and | uncancelled, U. S. postage I ald, or 10o: ng costs I J — STATE - 2in Herald —_— - . e - — By Fentaine Fox JUDGE TOMPKINS WANTS THE COMMITTEE TO INSTALL @Y SOME' OF THE FEATURES OF MINIATURE GOLF ON THE REGULAR COURSE

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