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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connecticut Tssued Daily (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg, 67 Church Ftreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES 4800 & Year $2.00 Thres Mont! Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office . 925 Editorial Rooms ..., 825 The only profitabla advertising medium In the City. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press The Associated Press is cxclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it not _otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published therein. Member Audit Bareau of Circulation ‘The A. B. C. is a national organization which frunishes newspapers and adver- Users with a strictly honest analysis of circulation. Our circulation statistics are based upon this audit. This insures pro- tection against fraud in newspaper dis- tribution _ figures to national and local advertisers. in both The Herald is on sale daily York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Square; Schultz’s Newsstand, Grand Central, 42nd Street. in_New Times Entranze ARE WE REPUBLICAN ARE WE DEMOCRATIC! It has come to our attention tha a gentleman reader of our harmless comment has come to the conclu- sion that we are more Democratic than independent when considering matters political. “The Herald may be independent,” said the valued reader, “but not ac- cording to its editorials.” All the same, to spellbinders and rally-rousers both political parties, advise against anyone voling straight ticket, at this or any other the in we strongly contrary a time. belief that straight-ticket voter who it is the makes it It is our NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28, OLD AGE PENSION AND POOR HOUSES A few counties in Connecticut, so , are proud of their alms or Mr. Rogers s poorhouses, houses, county farms, or whatever they pre- fer they mean the same’thing. or to call them. Under any name This being the case, so Mr. Rogers reasons in rather a bald and ribald style, Dean Cross and Mr. Lonergan are hard put to satisfy these counties stem. kind with the old age pension Which m-;:umrn:‘ In the first place, counties referred to of is a peculiar an these Rogers tainly the citizens as a whole have who in Mr. e proud of their poor house by not been consulted as to how proud they are about them; and certainly those in them are not likely to be boastful. Probably, it there time in which to make an investiga- tion, it be found those possessing the pride were the Repub- were would that lican county officials, who are proud about anything that the central or- ganization wants them to be proud about. The discussion about the old-age pension system narrows down to The Republican spell binders endeavor to is that such be costly. How The The a basis of co argument that the make a system would costly they do not say ts are easily obtainable. United States Bureau of Sta- tistics, ter a nationwide survey which included Connccticut, found that each inmate of a poor house costs the state an average of $334.64 a year. No doubt the costs in some poor houses are less and in others more; the Government's figures are the average for the entire country. In Montana, where an old-age pension system has been in effect for nearly seven years, the average cost of maintaining a person under the law is less than half of this sum. IFor instance, in 1928 the cost was easy for the politicians to run their rackets. Political racketeers are both major parties. Usually we can find more of them in the Republican party than in the Democratic party because the Re- publicans happen to have practical- ly all of the offices in this state. And the only Democratic office holder who hangs on through th and thin is Richard T. Higgin chairman of the Public Utilitic Commission. He is “appointed by the General Assembly on nomination by the Governor” for stretch. We are against Mr. Higgins' | found in six years at a | reappointment when his term expires | in 1935, dnd if he were running tor | the office on the Democratic ticket we would oppose him. But he doesn’t need to rum, being considered “effi-: cient” where he is by Mr. Roraback. There are plain politicians running | on both tickets. But in our opinion the Democrats are trying to devote more attention to the humanities than the Republicans, whose chief boast is good finances, taxes and the like. We are more interested in the welfare of the common people than in the welfare of dollars. Dur- ing every campaign the grandold- party makes the same appeals, most- ly involving money. The verbal per- tdrmance gets tiresome. Incidentally, the Democratic party | in this state has shown more cour- age in tackling the paramount issue | of prohibition. The Republican party has straddled, and no amount of word-juggling releases it of this charge. This ought to be enough to cause anyone pre- spousal for or by its party organs | ferring a clearcut against an issue to look with dis- pleasure upon the straddlers. ue, that | | In another important iss of unemployment, the grandoldparty does cven worse, Its spokesmen ul-% tempt to tell its dupes that the de- | pression is worldwide and therefore | the Republican not to blame. The plain fact R publicans promised a continuance of any “ifs” or party is are the prosperity without “buts,” and nothing was said at the | time the promises were made that if [ \ | | a depression existed clsewhere there likewise would be a depression in this country. The promise made was jus 1he regardless. of conditions would aiways smile upon the lace In people kept power. And to help along of the full dinner pail the party pass- cd the Hawley-Smoot vhich was to magically perity as a dairyman ma contrary—that prosperity popii- so long as the clsewherc this country the loldparty in this theory tarift law, create pros- ses cheos out of milk. On the question of old-uge pen- sions the Democrats the Republicans ar: nis modern method of providing for the needy aged—as was to be exg We are not sure what will happen in this state; the Democrats at least are regarded as having morc than the customary chance of winning; but throughout the nation as whole there is scarc any doubt that the Republicans drubhing receive R A drub- the whale of a licans admit some kind of a with In opinion the G. 0. P. is entitled what it is to receive. It intelligent man hing, on disagreeing Democrats upon its extent. 1o has becons iifficult for an continue swallowing The cnough to aim straight when it pre- its empiy pre- S public s intelligent res to wallop. | upon the | without the pension, | ceive | 3468 a to | $165.73 per person; and in that ycar the cost was less than in any of the three previous years. the * been found cheaper the there being $224.35 per person. And overlook is that in the poorhouse the In Wisconsin law has also than thé poor house system, average ycost an important aged person is wholly dependent county, while under the pension system he is free to do odd jobs suited to his strength, and the | income from these contribute to his support. He may also have contribu- tions from friends and relatives, in themselves not enough to keep him | but added to the pension enable him to get along outside of a poorliouse. under the old ag a person would a pension from the which he would be entirely depend- The idea that pension systen re- state on ent is erroneous. He would obtain from the his state in consonance pension to aid with needs—enough add to what he can carn enable receives from relatives to him to maintain himself in' decency and respect. The proposed pension Connecticut calls for an income all sources of $3 weekly in ffrom or In the and five Canadian provinces having such year. ten states laws applicants must give proof of the right to a serving aged his character and pension, and only the de men and women—deserving through misfortune—are aided. The present poorhouse system is a dumping ground for the sick in body and mind. A census report showed that in the nation's poor- houses were 2,052 insane persons. 12,183 ble-minded, 1,066 24 deaf, 3,045 blind, and 15,415 crippled All these he in special institutions devoted for cpilep- inmates. should persons thus aftlicted, Th respectable, sane and the care of and not in poorhouscs. This practice of throwing decent unfortunates in the company of the discascd, both bodily mentally, is a common practice wherever poorhouses exist STATE BUREAUS EFFICIENT REGARDLESS OI' POLITICS One of the stock arguments per- 4 by organization spellbinders wicked Democry should win the state clection would mean the ruin of the cfiicient operation of the various state de- partments How explained this would come apparently is merely a bad sumed 1t if Dean ted Governor he would he of his first acts man and one would ¢ the turning of state bureaus into horrible examples wastefulness 1 incfliciency. How this calamity would brought about, we surmise, i csent officials and 1 the ployes 1 be summarily discharg- Jaces given over {o wh Mr. Bryan termed “de Democrats n Cross, to our knowledge, has 1de no su 1ssertion suspicion b s looked upon | however, that the Democrats, ot control, would provide better for | some of the state's great bureaus and in the past; espo Demo- crats have been making « point not to | 3l age | bill | and | it | about is not | tims that | some departments were not being properly. looked after financially. bu- to Instead of doing worse the reaus—especially those aiming look after the unfortunate and the ill—might do better. How about this, spelibinders? LFEWER POSTAL SUBSIDIES WOULD END DEFICITS Postmuster General Brown seems intent upon pushing his unpopular idea of increasing the first class, or letter, mail rates from 2 to 21 cents. Such insistence deserves analysis, although there is very slight chance indeed that Congress would consent | to such a method of changing the deficit of $90,000,000 in the postal ast year to a possible profit. would g so effective! the v national Administration as a tax-gatherer in ds subsidics that the postal department order to provide for the various dubious has been made to provide during the | Hoover Administration. According to the bill signed last | June the postal department for the be forced first time will to submit an annual report it lected had free or reduced- at also the excess cost of aircraft serv- showing the amounts which would have col- e mat- ter been carried normal rates; ice over the revenues from airmail; {and also the excess cost of carrying ocean mail at mileage rates the cost if ch mail were carricd on a poundage basis Until such a report is forthcom- ing—and it turns out to he a frank and honest statement of the condi- tions—there is no need to talk about ! the public a letter. paying 21 cents to mail Consider the 1931 items total- | ling $29,500,000 for the transport of | foreign postal appropriations for These carried mails (including the mer- | chant Jones-White development mari subsidy under the ), $6.£00,000 for the of foreign air mail | service, and $15, for 000,000 domes- tic air mail service. All of these are it possible for the enterpr ng mer- chant marine and air mail companies to operate with the help of the gov- | crnment. These subsidies, it they must be given, should not be loaded upon the cost of operating the mail service; they should be regarded for what they are—gifts from the pub- lic treasury to “develop” the mer- chant marine forcign and domestic. Then therc Watres bill, which pounda was the enactment of the the ¢ rate basis for payment of air mail companies in favor of thew mileage basis. The ‘of Iamounts of airplane | new system contracts for ace to be paid on a milcage bas $1.25 smaller lished inot over ing a mile.” Contracts for umounts of space on estab- passenger air lines {o cost authorized. Postmaster General | Brown himse although favoring the change, admitted the new sys- tem would increase the deficit operations to $9.000,000. Yet in cxisting $7.- | { 000000 annual in air mail President Hoover had declar- ed 1929, mounting postal ¢ July, that “the rapidly icit must be postal establish- duced;"” that the ment must be operated “as a self- ining Dbusiness organizatior that be of the service and the cost should borne the persons who receive its benefits and not by the 1 he probably is, why did taxpaye the President’is sincere—and he sign the y opposite effect? 1f the borne by th costs of the service the se who then why should there be receive benefits, | subsidies to the numerou# steamship concerns which refuse 1o go into the and unless shipping business until hey have a government mail con- tract to run their lines? 1t the postal department is (o be organization” all run as “business there is no reason at why it hould be made the goat for air mail nd occan mail subsidics of this na- ture. They amount to an appreciable their defivit it not climinate it entirely, especial- as well amour pereentaze of the deficit; elimination would reduce the ly if other wa practices were liminated i1, thou lit subsidies; The cost of m hen compared with these d it notable that the deficits not run into the aston- ishing totals until the a of subsi- dizing through he seryice d in process of that wili 10ugh Government 5 Lo the fue 2 build- lions of dollars. I program which has been in- ugurated resulted in no discovery L the adver- | in the nature of subsidies, to make | and the air mail, both abandoned | method is a | fixed | s “not extcecd- | 10 cents a mile were :Al.so‘l re- | subsidy measures which have exact- are to | of mil- | mall meaus- | sy, QUESTION AND ANSWER SERIES . D0 YOu KNOW CONNECTICUT? Compiled by THE CONNECTICUT CHAMBER OF COMMERCE, Inc. 410 ASYLUM STRLET, HARTFORD | Q. To what country covery? A. To Hotland. ind o/ Adrian Blok in 1614 give records of this regior. ™ Q When does the Connecticut years. Q. A. Approximately $20,000,000. Q. Q Q. What are the leading expor How many How many newspapers are did Connecticut once belong by right A. On the Wednesday after the first Monday (Answers to these questions will be published in Wednesda of dis- Accounts of the voyage of Henry Hudson in 1609 the first description which history legislature convene? of Jan ary in odd What is the value ¢f Connecticut livestock ? s from Connecticut? ail groceries are there in the state? there in Connedticut? paper.) quarters. 5 If postal rates for letters increase, | a large part of the public will come [ to learn that it costs less to send a postal card than a lelter. Questions over ! 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 I marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be under- |takee. All other questions will re- ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- quests cannot be answered. All let- ters are confidential.—Editor. Q. Tn what direction docs the Japan Current flow? A point Islands, northw tude 26 where it divide the main part washing the shore of Japan and the Aleutian Islands. Q. Is there a tablet representing the state of Ar in the Wash- ington monument? There is I'rom a near the Bashi it flows grees, on the by a marker seventh landing, presented people of Little Rock. Q. What docs ex-officio me: A, “By virtue of, or becaus office or position Q. Who is the author of [lines: “There’s a divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will 2" Al scene What makes the What is the The sting is caused excreted by the felly fish. It can be cured by washing with fresh water, which dilutes the acid, or by the use of an alkali, such as bi- rbonate of soda. Q. What country produces the largest amount of gold? How much is produced in the United States and Shakespeare in “Hamlet,” Act Q. fish ting? jelly remedy? by acid In Transvaal, Colony and Natal produced gold vafued at $214,041.633. The produc- tion in the United States was $44,- 300; Canada, $39,082,00 Rus- $24,806,201; Mexico, $14,451,721 | Rhodesia (southern) $11.909,292 ! Australiz and New Zealand, $13,07 | Cape | | Q. Does the United Stales assay ce buy old gold? A, Gold in lots worth more can be sold at United States assay offices. Q. How much of the world's supply of diamonds come from South $100 or any of the Since 1866 the South African ficlds have yielded of the total value " 375,000,000, an average of 5,597 per year, which is about cent of the world production. Q. MHow many people were killed nd injured in street and highway trafiic accidents in the United Stat in 192972 A. The total killed and 1,200,000 injured Q. How many people ployed in the automobile A. 2 The tional ham of Comm t 4,700,000 persons 98 per wos i are om- industry? Automobil estimates are directly and indirectly engaged in the auto- mobile industry. Q. How long would it sound to travel around the lephone? Ic travel speed miles second and it would reguire mately one-seventh of a the sound to travel : carth at the Equator *possible. « How silver be United St duty? A, The articles made before 1830, Q. Is there a 1 number of terms a serve as president tates? A, Custom presiderts so f; Q. N take for world by trical impulscs 186,000 at of per “pproxi- second for iround fhe the feat werc ol and before it enter the es, as an antique, free of must jewelry must have been limit rson the may United on of the 2] alone has limited o terms, ar to tv Who wrote the song “Somc ; Stole Ay Gal, 1 wher Lco Wood. it Can an alien ident of the Un No. Is the Tieight peak calculated the surrounding A. , Noj it l1ay Q Mitrs the screen A Cocoanuts,™ first of J »0 Q. Who is | Poland ? A. John Noy Q. What do AL 2 of a niountain trom the level of ground? is caleulated from sci How Brothers” lonz L “Four hae N on the h Willys name Stanley nx distane distance and b” is the symbol for d to lati- | the | ; laay showers 8- persons | quantity, | hence | hene Write to our Washington Burcau { for a copy of the new 4,000 word bulletin Short Story Writing, sending |5 cents in postage stamps for it. FEEL ANYIETY FOR “ROVAL HONEYMOON . Boris and Bride Sofis, Bulgaria, Oct. 28 (M—Some anxiely was felt here today for the safety of Czar Boris and his bride- queen, Giovanna, who, ahoard the royal yacht Czar Ferdinand have run into a violet tempest in the Acgean sea. The royal yacht yesterday with difficulty made its way through the Corinth canal, passage way from the Adriatic to the Acgean, and after- wards took refuge near the shor . Later messages from Greece said the position of the yacht was not then known. The storm which caught the bridal couple is sweeping the entire castern Mediterranean region. While it wus expected that Boris and ovanna, spending their first hours | together, would arrange a slow voy- age to Varna, Bulgarian port of de- barkation, to permit of a more pleasant honeymoon trip, it is now | believed they may have heen delayed far beyond their expectations. | A long delay would upset scrious- |1y arrangements which have been {made here for formal registration of their marriage according to Gree Orthodox Catholic rites next Thur day. 1t was cxpeeted that they would arrive at Varna Wednesday and proceed Thursday to Sofia where claborate ceremonies were planncd. is - Observations ‘ On The Weather 28.—l%oreca! Cloudy, ht and Wed- western strong Washington, Oct. for Southern New Iingland: | probably occasional rain ton | Wednesday; slizhtly colder \nesday in Connecticut and | Massachuseits; fresh to | southwest win, | [Iorecast for 1 | Occasional — shower: | possibly Wednesday morning. | Wednesday. I'resh, possibly | southwest winds. | Iorecast for New Haven and vi- cinity: Showers -tonight; Wedne followed by fair and Yoik: and Colder trong, istern New tonight cooler. Conditions: turbance A well defined dis- central this {over upper Michigan, It {unsettled showery weather in the Lake region and New England. The arca of high pr sure that was cen- Itral on the Pacific coast yesterda morning, has moved slowly eastward land is now central over Idaho. | 2Mild temperatures continue in |sections cast of the Mis: river. Condifions favor for this | vicinity unsetiled weather with mild temperature followed by fair and {slightly colder. | Temperatures is is causing High Atle . Sk L [ Atlantic City Goston .. Low [Buifalo . Chicago ! Cincinnati | Denver I Duluth | Hatters | T.os Angeles . Miami Minneapolis i Nantucket [ Nashvilic New Haven New Qrlcans .. INew Yorl Northficld, V't Pittsburgh Portland, Me | Washington W Roraback Says Cross Once Deserted Party Fear Stom May How Delay, morning | all | Sippi | —The brief g flicker to fame these anxious days | not only puzzles over-night celebri- | {ties but even aston the public | ancing at their ct. This | transition does not solely to fortunates of stage, and ra- | dio but to all forms of “public-con- tect” endeavor. Gertrude liderle, swimming Fnglish channel and*looming ir the headlines for days, along New York strects almost un- noticed to take her train te Rye. where she is a swimming instruetor. The evanishment of air heroes is startling. Not even Lindbergh ties traffic in a knot any more. The Guy Empeys, the 1ddie Rick- | enbackers, the Michael Arlers and others as descrvedly illustrious ar befogged by a volcano of indiffer cnce. The warm hand becomes & cold shoulder. The celebrity is a “ten day wonder” and there he| | goes! Two ladies last night were un- able to recall the exact exploits of | { Ruth Elder. A celebrity today—with excep- tions of course—wears out his wei- come by a careless promiscuosity. 17 he is the hero of some extraordi- nary achievement he is immediately besieged by those who want to traf- fic in his sudden popularity, to capitalize an often hard-won halo. He is asked to prattle over the radio, illuminate the news reels, en- derse cigarettes, shaving soap anl such. He must pose for the tabloids nd rotogravuresf He is invited to \ guest of honor at ‘“celebrity " at supper clubs. And is usu- New York shes clay apply sereen the large passes b nigl ally offered “a week at the Palace If he adopts the theory he must hay while the sun shipes, his nish is usually quick. 1e public yowl becomes a yawn. Nothinz is so { mentally cloying as an overdose of | celebrities. Humanity being what it | {is. gdmiration curdles into a fine { derision over night. | The explanation requires no ana- Uytical acerbity. lebrities fail to naster the obvious lesson of attract- | ing attention by the inverse yrocess of shunning it—so conspicuously | effective with J. M. Barrie, Julia Arthur, and Maud Adams.® Greta | Carbo's big box office draw is her tudied isolation. | | ! But underneath this mushroom | cetebrity collapse is something deeg- . something distic. Lately America has developed a fiendish | flair for flushing mediocre people | {out of obscurity, placing them on a | pedestal and toppling them over to | companiment of hooting huz- | I John Gilbe an example of | Fate's flippancy. Clara Bow another. | The list is long. The celebrity com-| plex swept the nation like a spark in dry 1 many who fell for | its dubious have paid «| tiagic price. The truth is that such | colebrities—again the exceptions had little on the ball at the tess-up. | They burst with egotism and deflat- | |ea like suddenly pricked toy bal- loons. | . | | grass | charms | The people who endure have al- been self-effacing, from the | Master on down the Humility is a lode-stone that dray 1 The closest confidants of great men | are invariably tight-lipped publicit shunners. And what sct me of preaching this way? ways ages. A little stocki subtlet | savaged today from a me [Most men always fall for hosiery | announcements. This one warns | “Adorn your legs with dulinc | dullness that is provocativ You | rather expected it to say something |about, “covering a multitude shins“—and it did not disappoint. 1. | of | works in other countries. The most pluperfectly exclusive and yet the legst publicized social colony around New York is reputed to be that of Tuxedo Pars, which surrounds a sparkling lake at Ram- ho Hills. Incidentally it was th2 it place” where the bob-tailed evening coat, known as the Tuxedo, was introduced to America. Someone writes me of a railroad tective prodding a sleeping tramp along a yard track. The tramp looked about puzzled, his eyes fall- g on a box car with its tonnage mmouncement and exclaimed “Capa City! Where hell that the s Still 2 month Texas T feli for that old one and pronounced a smart-alec’s pelling of c-ka-che as: Bachashee! From Tan: “A gentlen ramed O'Sullivan gives you a jous ing for wearing spats in his Flori- 1 civic magazme~ De you _know him?” No. ately But T wear named ior (Copy things appropri- him. ight, 19 Syndicate, Factsand Fancies By Robert Quillen That advertiser who says moderns get about what they pay for ap- parently hasn't heard of the income Brain work in football? Do yon think a monkey couldnw’t pick up u fumbled ball and run with it? One reason why tonsil cperation s become s0 common is because he wasn't anybody left with ®h appen- The the casier if foundation thing. How much vork would be America first Bl important missionary they'd civilize Railroad travel in lingland 80 that homesick Americans have to stick cinders in their eyes. Silence is your best bet. n tell whether you are :mb or perfectly poised. is ciean Nobods scared Gove True, nment owner But post hip they offices can even their without a run defic Funny land! Barking at Bishop because he bought stocks, yet wish- ing a few million more would do it. a Ford says cvery worker will gel | 327 a day bye and bye. And nothing | to do but play a little harp. | R | .Americanism: Frisking the peo- | ple in ordey to amass millions; do- nating millions in an effort to re- lieye the curse of pbverty. Don’'t worry. 4 world, crisi {us that a crisis is { dcesn't happen. | = | A farm surplus? There is a suc- | plus of money, too, if you 'count {only those wno have too much of it. Sconomisty call thigr and the war taught something that How strange that big business men are the only ones so s&tupid { that their tax returns require a re- fund. minutes you have a loan on Freezing n.eat in 5 seems incredible unless asked some banker for { ycur plain note. | == Why shouldn’t we have laws made by men who don’t obey them? Taxes are levied by men who have nothing to tax. Mussolini’s big problem is to yell ercouragement for the stork with- out attracting the wolf. Scientists agree that noise has a demoralizing effect. Note to the Farm Board: Sh! the number of sgood workmen without jobs doesn't ex- cced the number of jobs without | go0d workmen. At that, Correct this sentence: “The teach- is all right,” said the fond mother: “It’s Harold's dumbness that accounts fo 1is low grades.” Copyright, 1930, Publishers Syndicate | 25 Years Ago Today The Business Men's association ‘& preparing a petition asking for lows er light rates in the stores. A cen- will be held with the light or | ference officials. A. L. Thompson, town clerk, was | one of the speakers at the entertain- ment held last evening by the Fra- |ternal Benefit league. He told o |the advantages of the order. | A target club has been formed at the Y. M. C. A. Some of the finest rifie ranges in the state will be erected at the association. A spirited meeting of the school hoard was held yvesterday. The con- fusion over the beginning and end- ing of terms of various members was finally settled. Postmaster Hicks states that the need of a new post office is grow- |ing more acute with the passing of cach day. He held a conference vesterday with Congressman Henry lurging him to work for a new building here. The selectmen state that there has Deen a great decrcase in the last {two months of orders for the poor. EX-POLICEMAN HELD Cambridge, M . Oct. 28 (UP)— A former Watertown policeman, | George D. York, 2, was under {$10,000 bond today as an alleged bandit. He was charged with chain |store hold-ups in Belmont, Water- town and Auburndale. YOR BEST RESUL 1FTED UsE ADS THL COU 1 the ¥ trope's colonie nd Au's e ready. in all area, ete. Fill The World War changed the mav of territory. Teacher boys ested in our Washingtor Bur AND THEIR COLONIES, now countries and tie'r ment, ruless, popelatio hool < ssicng RIES OF Treaties changed the map of Europe—and 5. dominions, ROPE nossessiofs and s, and grownups too, will Lulletin. COUNTRIES OF 1t glves brief facts about all European parts of the world, forms of govern- eut the coupon below and send for it: mandated e inter- UROPE /— = — — — — (LIP COUPON HERE —— —— == == =y | ko ! 1 | = want RAPHY EDITOR w York Avenue, a copy ol the bulletin Washington Bureau. Washington, COUNTRIES OF lierewith five cents in coin, or loose uncancelled U. New Britain Herald, ) 18 EUROPE and enclose 8. postage stamps to cover return postage anc lLandling costs: NAME STREET A> GITY. I am « reader of the New Bri I O i e tain Herald. - THE WHOLE TOWNSHIP), USUALLY WARNS A STRANGE BARBER NOT TO SWI New Haven, Oct. 28 (UP) — Ad-| dressing 1200 ner last night, state chairman, L. Cro republicans din- J. Henry quoted democratic candidate saying in 1910: i “As to politics, 1 started out Cleveland democrat but since I have found it impossible to follow the 1y for I'he statement, Toraback said, was taken from a letter written for Cross's class anniversary record. CASH ON CREDIT - payment plan hard times. Wt help your credit. Every- thing Confidential Anmounts up {o §: Rates 314 monthly Balance only. Mutual Industrial Service in—Over on Aslites 1892 vaguries of the democratic par- Roraback, | Dr. Wilbur | NG HIM ROUND IN THE 7777, CHAIR ., ©CFontaine Fox, 1930