New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 8, 1930, Page 6

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P R A UM 3 “New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britaln. Cobnectlcut Tssusd Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Hersld Bldg., 67 Church Street R 3 SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 & Year 4 $2.00 Three Months T5e. a Month ;< Eutered at the Post Office at New Britam . 28 Becond Clam Mall Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Business Ofmce 925 Editorial Rooms 3 The only profitable advertising mediam s the City. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisera, Member of the Associated Press The Amociated Press i» exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of 8l sews credited to it or not otherwise ., credited in this paper snd also local " wews published therein. . Member Audit Bureau of Cirealation The A B. a pational organisation ‘which furni: newspapers and _tisars with a strictly honest anal; clrculation. Our circulation statistics re based upon this audit. This insur tection against fraud in newspaper dis- tribution figures to both uational and local advertisera. The Herald fs on sale dally tn New York at Hotaling’s Newsstand, Times Square; Bchults's Newsstand, Entrance Grand Central, 42nd Street. Mayhap there may vet be so many gasoline filling stations in the city that a motorist anxious to do the unusual can leave his home, obtain a drop of gasoline at every station he passes on the way down town, and have enough by the time he arrives . at the Center to travel 100 miles. Aviation interests probably would " like it if the President of the United States traveled by plane occasionally, like Governor Trumbull does. But as “ long as the President can board a special train and be whisked from ., Boston to South Carolina over night - and part of a day he need mot be overzealous about assisting the pres- tige of the airplane industry. Our idea of a red hot editorial is one like that printed by the Bed- ford Record, of Bedford, England. ,.headed “Indictment.’ It left little to the imagination and the observing Associated Press immediately cabled it to America. And {t throws more _ light on why the R-101 went down than anything printed in the London dailies or in the news columns. The - casual reader sust be obtaining the impression that the British were too eager for some sort of air supremacy 10 exercise proper mechanical skill and navigational caution. In other words, Chairman M. H. " Horwitz of the garage commission , must think the city ought to run its - garage in as uptodate manner as the Connecticut Light & Power Co. runs its garage on Curtis street. Anyway, . it he doesn’t think so, he ought to. The Curtis street plant, instead of being a detriment to the neighbor- hood, seems to be an asset. The same cannot be said of every large garage or store yard. TIME FOR ACTION ON MAPLE AND ELM HILL No desire by New Britain to in- * flate its population total through the “ unnecessary addition of contiguous municipalities lurks behind the movement to incorporate Maple Hill - and EIm Hill within the city limits. The wish to be added to the city comes from the. suburban = towns themselves; and these, be it added, are largely populated by former New Britainites who continue to possess a loyalty to the city and would be pleased to be numbered among its inhabitants. A large part of them are employed here or naturally think of New Britain when shopping, and thelr children attend the local schools. No two municipalities anywhere have more in common with the near- * est city than have Maple Hill and Elm Hill with New Britain. When the question of annexation was brought up recently we unhesi- tatingly seconded the proposal despite the fact that certain ofcials at the time suggested that annexa- tion would create an ex “ lem to the city. This problem is one " o extending city conveniences, in- cluding police and fire protection This angle didn't impress us then and it doesn’t do so now. The city is constantly on the alert to add im- proved realty to the grand list so as ~ te increase its taxable income, frequently costing money—with no other ob- ject in view value of property ment. Here are two tow ing vistas on the landsca a delight to the eye farers between New Hartford. They thelr future lies with Nev and projects are started— than or its improve- Britain and realize Britain, rather than with Hartford, and are | cusively to the upbuilding of char- | Buftalo . virtually demanding entry city 80 as to share the advar such annexation. They surcly should not be rebutfed merely will cost the city a little money to have them part of it. Hartford, we would not hesitate for because it feel certain, any similar reason. Mayor Quigley seemingly has been tully converted to the idea of an- technical the nexation few difficulties town debt of Newington financial accoutrements. despite the regarding splicing These are sive prob- | to stimulate the | to all way- | and such details that should worry no one. They should be gone into thoroughly now without delay, so that the Legis- lature in 1931 can have before it a complete annexation bill to be pass- Fed into law. We feel confident that the city of New Britain will never regret the addition of two such natural suburbs as Maple Hill and Elm Hill. It is remarkable indeed that they have been left to roam alone as parts of the town of New- ington. Now suppose no action is taken. What will happen is that in a short time Hartford, afflicted by metro- politan mania, will gobble up New- ington, including Maple Hill, and; | Elm Hill. Hartford, we feel certain, will not hesitate a moment over the incidental financial “problems.” New Britain cannot afford to hold back in this matter. Its prestige and reputation fdr progress is at stake. It has never lacked courage to pro- fest duty to itself and its neighbors. THIS QUIGLEY-BENGTSON BUSINE! Nothing eclse of importance being on tap politically in this city, therc the party racket call a *red hot fight” between the followers of Wil- liam J. Quigley, cousin of the Mayor. and Thure Bengtson, for the legisla- | tive representative nomination, with William Lange thrown in for good measure. We have known Thure for a long time and he has never done us ill. We know little about the Mayor's cousin, being informed that this is his first thrust into the political arena. The Mayor naturally backs his kin with 100 per cert of his moral support, and any other kind/ of support that comes handy. This nettled Thure so much that he can- celled his trip to the American Le- gion convention in Boston in order to mend political fences in this scene of his political disturbance. we are not jumping headfirst into this political family quarrel. The Republican party would pay no at- tention to us anyway, we having criticized it too frequently in the past. And the Quigley-independent. progressive - insurgent . populist - radécal wing of the party would not heed our counsels either, we having | openly questioned some of its capers {in the past. The logical thing for us i to do, therefore, is to hang back apd | sigh, or smile, placing a quiet bet on i Thure as a Viking who can rely upon | a first rate Republican record of conformity with the established principles of the grandoldparty and asking if, what, where and how young Mr. Quigley would improve upon them were he nominated and elected. It will be a hard fight, no doubt, and tomorrow is the day of combat, or the day when the duel of auto- mobiles takes place. There may be a World Series game the same day— it it doesn't rain—and after the telephones quit r‘lniln: with In- quiries about the 'score perhaps somebody will call up to find out how the City Series between the pair turned out. If so, we won't be in the office. TWO PUBLIC BUILDINGS CERTAIN FOR THE CITY Readers of the Herald the past few days have had visual presenta- | tions placed before their gaze as to how two new public buildings to be added to the city's assortment will look when completed. Best of all, both buildings—the addition to the post office and the Hawley Memorial Library for Children—will be con- structed at an early date. That sounds and looks like prog- ress. The post office additlon is destined |to make the local plant capable of | | caring for the needs of the city for many years; and the very fact that the Government regards such a i puilding as necessary demonstrates | what is being thought in Washington [of t Jio the city’s fu library for children will be ond of its kind in Connecticut, } It comes to the city as so it is said a result of the wishes of th B. A funds in his will. | The city will have reason to point with pride to both buildings, and let no caustic critics from the direction | Hawley, who provided the | Hartford claim behind the times. The post office addition will serve one having to trade. The will possess are in any a utilitarian purpose “]O with business and ion to the lib one nt aspect, atering to th ceds of modern hildhood. | such a structure, one devoted ex- ter at an impressionable time. Its resources will be available to all | children of New Dritain, and judging by the popularity of the present re- | stricted children's division in the a far. the library 1 to have flung influence moulding ‘ charac | FAILING TO DEDICATE THE HARDING MEMORIAT, Magazine and ne ter of future residents. wspaper articles increased that out at called at- fact, recently have Itention to tne ceed in the carrying out of a mani- | Tt should not lack the courage now. | must come along what followers of | Much as we would like to do so, | 1t is a fine thing indeed | fully that | 1o realize that the city will possess | Marion, O, stands a magnificent $800,000 memorial to the late Presi- dent Warren G¢ Harding and Mrs. Harding. It is said to be one of the most magnificent piles of marble in the country memorializing the life and memory of a dead man. It vies in splendor with Grant's Tomb in New York and the Lincoln Memorial in Washington. | Now it is sdlf-evident that such a specimen of magnificence, erected to the memory of a departed President, would under normal conditions be dedicated with pomp and circum- stance, with the President of the United States and membegs of his Cabinet and other Government=offi- cials cager to be present. The President every year attends much less important gatherings than | a dedication to a pile erected foy the memory of a former First Citizen. Yet the Coolidge administration, when the monument was completed | two years ago, and the Hoover ad- | ministration since Mr. Coolidge re- tired to Northampton, have carefully refrained from signifying a desire to have anything to db witk such & dedication. | Neither have other administration officials, or the head men in the srandoldparty, evinced any desire to participate in a grand dedicatory | ceremony in Marion. Many of them would like greatly the opportunity to deliver an address for nationwide consumption at such an event; but not at Marion. The reason for such reluctance, of course, can easily be determined. The memory of the oil scandalg dur- ing the Harding administration have not died down, and there ap- pears to be a feeling that for the administration to participate in such a dedication would be accepted.by too many voters as evidence that the party approves the scandals. In fairness it must be said that no such assumption could be entertain- ed by logical minds. But the admin- istration of Mr. Hoover, like overy other administration, kows full well that logic does not always sway voters, nor that it does so even on the average. It it did perhaps we would have different kinds of elec- tions, or"at least we would be con- fronted with sounder and more rea- sonable electioneering. Now the Nation discovers that the dedicatory ceremonies have been in- definitely suspended. «Harry M. Daugherty, former attorney general in the Harding cabinet and himself remembered as a stalwart lieutenant for the defensé in the oil scandals, himself makes the anouncement. Mr. Daugherty, remaining loyal and firm to the memory of his former chief, adds a bristling statement that pos- | sesses elements of truth so far as| faflure to properly honor a dead President is concerned. President Hoover, believe, could have journeyed to Marion and couched his language in such care- fully chosen words that nobody but a halfwit would see anything in his participation in the dedicatory cere- monies except proper honors paid to the memory of a departed friend and former President. Mr. Hoover could have done this graciously and with effect, had he willed. 1t was due to President Harding that Mr. Hoover was placed in the Cabinet, which proved the route to the presidency. Thoughtful persons cannot help concluding that despite all the trials and tribulations | of the Harding regime, its mistakes, its uncertain record, there should have been no holding back in per- forming the duty of the living to the memory of the presidential dead. we Observations On The Weather Washington, Oct. 8.—Forecast for | Southern New England: Cloudy to- night and Thursday followed by showers Thursdey afternoon or night; slightly warmer tonight, ex- cept on the southeast coast; fresh northeast shifting to east winds on Thursday. Forecast for Lastern New York: Cloudy, followed by showers late to- night or Thursday; not much change | in temperature; moderate to fresh east winds shifting to southeast on Thursday. Forecast for vicinity Cl and night; Thursday showers. Conditions: High pressure covers the Atlantic coast from Newfound- land to Florida. A ' low pressure system of unusual extent covers all | the country west of the Appalach- | and secondary developing | the Gulf of Megico. Rains| were general in the Missouri and | Mississippi valleys and the upper on ons favor for this vicinity cloudiness followed by New Haven and warmer to- | yesterday High Tatl Atlanta | Attantic | Boston City g0 | Cinein | Denver .. Duluth | Hatteras . 54 60| 45 Nantucket | Nashville | New Ha | New Orleans 74| New York 5 : 54 Norfolk, Va . . 50 | Northfield, Vt Pittsburgh 62 | Portland. Me, ' Washington ... 54 46| Factsand Fancies By ROBERT QUILLEN Darn a slow doctor. You feel so cheap if you get over it before he gets there. Fortunately, there are still a min- ority who will vote for a yellow dog because he's dry or wet. Go ahead; let the child develop i's individuality. Somebody will un- develop itwith a bric \ And yet you never see a bronze statue of a man who was afraid of the pronoun “L” The tobacco-chewers ~may be rcugh guys, but you never read about one of them stealing the or- phan asylum’s funds. Love Is the quality that makes a girl Wonder what such a wonderful | man has in tcugh friends. common with such Primitive women weren't at Il!\l like moderns. They had to make their own beads. Short biography of man: Stomach ache; back ache; heart ache; most- ly ache. You can say one thing for war times. The man with three medals isn't a bum just because he has no Job. Americanism: Hooting at silly savages who have faith in witca doctors; spending 400 millions a year for fake nostrums. If a state taxes each additional chain store at a higher rate, that is unconstitutional; when it taxes each additional thousand of income at a higher rate, that's all right. Atlanta’s new ordinance provides a fine for playing a loud radio after 11 p. m., but unfortunately it does- n’t mean any time within ten years after. ‘What is glory! Scores contending for the right to caddy for Bobby Jones, and nobody offering to hold Mr. Hoover's hair shirt. The army of unemployed seems to include those who stand in a group beyond the sigi Men Work- ing Ahead.” The wind may not to the shorn lamb, frocks and coats are vear. be tempered but ' ladies’ cheaper this The cotton planter is safe. His cotton will fetch enough to pay for the ginning, and he can get a job al the gin. Now approaches the season when people again discover that garage doors haven't sense enough to get out of the way when the car starts racking. If she's young and well and child. less, her expectation of alimon sufficient proof that she doesn’t de- serve it. Correct this sentence: “I can't pay you back right now, Bill," said the friend; “But I'm going to pay cYery cent if it takes the shirt off my back.” Copyright 1930, Publishers Syndicate 25 Years Ago Today Connie Mack and his Athletics battle McGraw’s Giants in the first game of the world series today. Many people from New Britain will | attend the games in Philadelphia. The Y. M. T. A. & B. society made its first payment today on the mortgage. At present the society has a membership of 510 and the cash balance in the treasury is $912. At the Center church services yes- terday, announcement was made that §20,000 had been relized for the new addition to the chapel. Work will | be started in the spring. Eva Tanguay. famous actress, is appearing at the Russwin Lyceum this week. The annual excursion to Boston will take place on October 14. A special express will leave from this city at 7:30 a. m. President A. Sloper of the New | Britain National bank left today for Washington where he will the National Bynkers' convention. attend association Tug Seeks to Rescue Freighter From Rocks Milwaukee, Wis., Oct. § (®—The tug Welcome manguvered with tow ropes today to free the freighter Burlington, aground on a shoal in Lake Michigan, off Cudahy, Wis. The Burlington, 2,029 ton vessel, commanded by W. J. Flanders and carrying a crew of 23, rammed her prow on the rocks as she nesed through fog from Gary, Ind., with cargo of steel for the A. O. Smith corporation, Milwaukee. ,The crash stove a hole in the forepart of the freighter, but Coast Guards said there was little likeli- hood of the ship’s sinking. The Wel- come carried extra pumps for trans- fer to the Burlington and by their aid Captain Flanders hoped to pump water from his ship and float her. The Welcome then expected to tow the freighter into port here. |Dr. Fauver Deni;:rhat Game Will Be Cancelled Middletown, Oct. 8 (UP)—Dr. Edgar Fauver, head of the depart- ment of physical education at Wes- leyan univi ty, denied rumors to- day that Saturday's scheduled Wes- leyan-Columbia football game would | be cancelled because of the infan- tile paralysis epidemic here. Columbja authorities have not requested such action, he’said. al- theugh last Saturday's Aggie-Wes- leyan game was abandoned at the request of Connecticut Agricultural | college ofticia Nearly one-third of Coach Jim Oberlander's football squad has de- serted college until after the threat | of paralysis has subsided TOR BEST RESULTS USE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | there were 767 Questions and A QUESTIONS ANSWERED \ You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editok-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 extended research be under- taken. All other questions will re- celve a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Editor. Q. How can a rug be resized? A. Strefch it tight and true, and tagk it at frequent intervals face down on a floor or some other flat surface, where it can remain un- disturbed. Sprinkle it generously with a solution made by dissolving 1-4 pound of flake glue in 1-2 gal- lon of water, in a double boiler or a container = surrounded by hot water. The rug should be allowed to dry for at least 24 hours. If it is light weight, care should be taken not to put on so much glue that it will penetrate to the right side. Q. How old is Ramon Novarro? A. He was born February 6, 1899. ¢ ¥ Q. mean? A. It is an Indian means “spring flowing ground among the pines.” Q. How can zinc be cleaned? A. Stir rye bran into a paste with boiling water, and add a hand- ful of silver sand and a little vitriol. Rub the zinc with this paste, rinse with water, dry and polish with a cloth. Q. When did Walt Whitman die? A. -In 1892 Q. How is detour pronounced? A. It is pronounced de-tur with the accent on the last syllable. Q. Do all the states have laws against lynching? v ea) Q. Is a great uncle and a grand | uncle the same? A. The terms are used inter- changeably in the United States. Q. What is the value of a United States trade dollar dated 15782 A.+ It is valued at 80 cents (proof only). Q. Where does river rise? A. ‘It is formed by the confluence of the Clinch and Holston rivers, which rise in Virginia and unite at Kingston, Roane county, Tennessee. Q. Where is the Lindbergh beason light? A, On top of the building if Chicago, Ill. The beam is five feet in diameter, and there are two lights, one mounted above the other. The_lower one has 1,100,000,000 candle power and the upper ! ome 2,000,000,000. The beacon weighs 2,700 pounds and is twice as powerful as any other in the world. It is supported by a steel tower incased in aluminum rising 65 feet above the penthouse on the building giving it a total ele- vation of:600 feet. The light cost $50,000 and will ‘be serviceable to aviators within a radius of 300 miles. Q. What is a mahistick? .« A. A staff, one or more yards long, With a leather or wooden ball at one end. They are used by paint- ers to support and steady the right hand while using the brush. Q. How long did it take Captain Hawks to fly from Los Angeles to New York? A. Twelve hours, 3 seconds. Q. What is the color of jasper? A. Usually red, brown or yellow, due to the admixture of iron oxid. Q. Who played the characters of the lovers in “He Who Gets Slapped?” A. Norma Shearer Gilbert. Q. What is the total area of the United States, and of the District of Columbia? A. The total area of the United States is 3,738.371 square miles; and the District of Columbia contains 70 square mile: Q. How many students are there in colleges and universities in the| United States? | A. In the school vear of 1927-25 ' .141 students in col- | [leges and universities of whom 280,437 were in public schools and 486,704 were in private institutions. If to these figures were added stu- | dents in junior colleges and teacher’s | colleges the total is $78,085. Q. How many/Avoman preachers are there in the nited States? A. There are 1. ordained woman preachers in United States. Q. Is there an Army-Navy foot- | ball game scheduled for this year? A. No. What does Quitopahilla and the name from the Tennessee Palm Olive 25 minutes and and John the Two Theories in Fall Of Persky From Hotel New Haven, Oct. 8 (UP)—Two theories were offered today to ex- | plain the fatal fall of A. Eli Persky. 28, wealthy New Havener, from a seventh story window of Hotel Taft yesterday. One belief was that he was seized with one of his frequent spells of melancholia and jumped to commit suicide. Another theory was that he fell from the window while try- ing to get fresh air after feeling & sudden dizziness. Persky, a former Yale and brother of City Corporation Counsel Samuel A. Pers | killed instantly when his bod the roof of the Quinnipiac ‘While Persky's body wa ling to death at the rear of the ‘hotr'] his wife and mother waited ‘Hn\pmiently for him in front of the hotel. They lived at the Taft student P s | RUTH M. HUM Teacher of Piano 1394 Stanley Sf. Phone 802 Belvidere Section New York, Oct. 8.—"“The Rocke- feller Cathedral,” as megaphonists of the yap wagon call it, is com- pleted. Gracing a slight rise on up- per Riverside Drive, near Grant's Tomb, its soft grey facade shoots up into the most restful “spire in town, a spire comparable to any of Wren's in London. In my opinion it is the only re- ligious edifice outside of St. John's and St. Patrick’s in New York that world cathedrals such as St. Gudule or Rheims. The entrance is a rep- the whole effect is a Gothic master- piece. The official name is Riverside Baptist church and it was built by the elder Rockefeller for Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick and his congrega- tion, The exact instructions are sail to have been :“Erect a fine church and send me the bill.” The cost is estimated at from two to ten mil- lions. The new church completes a triad of distinctive religious struc- tures the past year—the other two in the-trinity being the Temple Em- manu-el and the Church of the Heavenly Rest on upper Fifth ave- nue. The execcutive offices of the Drive church will be in the tower. And an interesting varn is spun of the tower furnishings. Every- thing had been installed. The elder Jehn D. on his way to Tarrytown one evening stopped in to look things over. He clucked his tongue and shook his head. Next morning workmen descended and removed everything in waiting vans. Mr. Rockefeller had decided it was not nearly fine enough for such a. magnificent exterior and that gives a general idea of the lavish manner in which everything has has been done. The Rockefellers— father and son—have shown unusu- al interest in every detail of the construction work. The senior Rockefeller visited it scveral times a mont, strolled among the workmen to chat, ask questions and cncourage them. He has an expert knowledge-of stone- masonry. The son was a daily visi- tor. This scrupulous attention doubtless contributed much toward the marvelous result. But the biggest Rockefeller local improvement is, of course, the Ra- dio City struggling for shape in heart of town. Progress at present i3 only shown in vacant storesy across from St. Patrick’s and tem- porary parking spaces and runt golf courses where buildings once stood. The section will have a “hard times"” look for many buildings are untenanted waiting destruction. Scores received big bonuses and moved out immediately. T recently heard a simile attri- buted to the Elder Rockefeller, which is as good as I ever heard. He spoke of something being as “plaintive as a lost sheep's baa.” There are no fuss and feathers about young John D. He walks up the avenue window-shopping = leis- urely every evening he is in town to his home around the corner in West 54th street. Many in his neighborhood do not recognize him. His home is not particularly pre- tentious, Around his doorway or loitering nearby are always two guardsmen in plain clothes. Mr. Réckefeller often stops to talk to a venerable street sweeper in his block. He is seldom seen leaving his home after dinner. is the most dutitul of sons. He phones his father wherever he may be daily. He visits the family home at Tarrytown twice a week and Toonerville Folks I has tRe sublimity and warmth of old | lica of the Chartres cathedral and | Those who know say John D. Jr.| father and son take long walks te- rether about the Pontico Hills es- tate. A Pike's Peak in tonsorial luxury is hung up by a millionaire in Oyster Bay. Daily he sends a car to New York for a certain barber and pays him $10 for a shave and $15 twice a month for a shave and haircut. Sign snooping today I snagged this one in the window of a Broad- way automat: visit our other places.” ‘\Jfr do I understand what it is abolt me that attracts coocoos. Walting in a theater lobby for my wife, a haughty gentlemen stepped up and said something like this: “Tell me, peasant, what theater fs this?” T replied it was the Mans- field. He was thoughtful A moment, shook his head sadly and exclaim- d: “What is to become of us?” And walked slowly away counting off his fingers like a priest piously telling his beads. “You may not know it tele- graphs Miss D., New Orleans, “but you are wonderful!"” “Allah, another believer! (Copyright, 1930, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.) ALCOHOLIC DRIVER 1S ASSESSED $100 Arrested After Near Colliion With Motorcycle Poligeman Leo Jagloski of 27 Lyman street paid a fine of $100 this morning and heard execution of a 60 days Jjail sentence suspended after he had pleaded guilty in police court to the charge of driving an auto- mobile while under the influence of liquor. Hhe was arrested yesterday after- noon about 2:30 by Officer David Doty who barely escaped being run dewn on his motorcycle on Wash- ington street. When Attorney Monkiewicz, coun- sel for Jagloski, stated to the court that his client had never before been before the court a shott_re- cess was ordered by Judge Saxe to investigate. The man's record card showed that he had been arrested in November, 1920, and had stood OLD MOTHER N. What makes the “Northern Light is a meteorite? Why is a comet? W the & “Will o' the Wisp?” What causes What {s meant by a “mirage?” Why is Jightning, cyclone—a hurricane—a tornado—a W wind? Why does it smow? What makes the leaves fog. clouds an” mists, change color in the fall? It you can answer all these satisfactorily to terssted in our Washirgton Bureau's WONDERS OF NATURE—but i#-you some or all of them, better fill out th tin, It will add considerably to your steck of knowledge. = em o= o= = CLIP COUPON HERE =—— == == == = NATURE EDITOR, Wachington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin WONDERS OF with five cents in coln, or loose, NAME STREET ANL NUMBER cIrTy I am a reader of the Herald. colors o thy sunset? Whera does a rainbow come from? Did you ever see uncancelled, U. S. postage cover return postage and handling costs: trial in the police court for the same offense. At that time he was fined $25 and costs and the case was re-opened in January, 1921, at which time the charge against him was nolled. Upon this discovery Judge Saxe to be considered as a first offender and imposed the minimun fine. Driver Overloaded Truck Clyde Munnill of 20 Royal street, East Haven, was arrested at 7:30 o'clock this morning when he was discovered by Officer Hayes and Doty driving an overloaded truck was granted a continuance until Thursday morning upon request of his employer, who telephoned to the local police during the court session. Mannill was driving a truck on which were supplies for several large chain stores. Drive Without Licenses Gordon Whitcomb, 17 of 46 Lau- rel street, Hartford, was fined $5 when he pleaded guilty to the charge of operating a motor vehicle without having obtained a driver's | licerrse. He was arrested on West. | Main street last night by Officer Thomas Blanchette whose attention was attracted by the course of the car which he was driving. When he caught up with the car he found the youth changing places with an- other man who was in the car. After questioning the boy and re- ceiving the answer-that he was not under instruction he placed him un- der arrest. Bertram Arbour of 56 Whiting street was also assessed the $5 for driving without a license after he had been arrested last night by Of- ficer Joseph Curry. Louis Casertano of Town Farm road, Cheshire, was discharged on the count of driving without a license when he presented his cer- tificate to the court this morning. He was fined $5 on the charge of failing to displ®y the maximum ca- pacity and speed of the truck he was driving. Casertano was arrested yesterday morning by Officer David Doty as the result of a complaint lodged at headquarters that a man was ped- dling fruit in the vicinity of Migh street without having a vendor's license. COTTON BARELY STEADY New York, Oct. 8 (/ — Cotton futures opendd barely steady, un- hanged to 6 points lower; Decem= er 10:21; January 10.36. Uew con- | tracts — October 9.96; December 10.20; January 10.31; March 10.51% May 10.71; July 10.86. GLASSES on CREDIT. QuALIT Lenses and. b 282 MAIN STREET ATURE'S WONDERS 52" What are “Shocting Stars?” What t makes the sky blue? What causes a volcano? An earthquake? A geyser? and thunder? What is a hiriwind? What causes hail and sieet, yourself, you won't ba in- comprehensive and interesting hulletin are curious about the explanation of e coupon below and send for the bulle- ATURE, and enclose here- stamps to ‘ \ I l I —_—_— By Fontaine Fox FoR “TomBoY TAYLOR, THE “MELANCHOLY DAYS ARE HERE WITH A VENGEANCE ! remarked that Jagloski would have ' [ « A «

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