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S against rried life?" objection remalns general it llm-ou:!”um- “The explanation is|as theugh the learned men of medi- quite simple. The arguments that 1leine were splitting halvs aver; & mat- have advanced are the conventional |ter of ethics decldedly more Rarrew arguments against marriage. Are they [than their profession, train abud nog ™ ability warrants, First man: "I suppose so." Phere are certain eperations whigh Second man: “Now I see that you ! for matters of pelicy gheuld net be are a man‘of considerable intelligence | published, There are others, where it and you will see that these old trtie | would not be geod judgment lo Use trying with all her strength to pay the debt she owes and which can be paid Bhe will ows & debt always that never pald==the debt to the world | inourred when she plunged the werld But Justifying every his best judgment act because it meets with popular ap New Britain, Herald ory case, and that only popular approval for s justifica | proval is net proper in ey be | no should taken has | oan be Makes Random Observations ‘the City and Its People HERALD PURLISHING COMPANY (Tasued Dally, Sunday Bxcepted) At Herald Bldg Ohureh Strest, tien Moodshed On | A newspaper, anxious to please its - | | regders, has this same difficulty to A P OEM OIN Jan cateh |4 dector's pame. But & simple opérs SURSCRIPTION RATES LR $2.00 Three Monthe, The » Menth. face, If it is honest it will at times protest against a “popular” measure I its honest belief is that such meas. ure will not benefit the people in its course, If rabid prohibitionists desire to . “Salary increases seem to be going bring the Eighteenth Amendment into | through witheut much contempt they are d““"('“‘ the proper | remarked Crackerbarrel An example of what ean be | the Observer the pther day, opposition,” Charlie to while most astonishing amount of dirt in thest cars" IPirst man: “1 like to get home and take a hot bath-eat a well cooked meal-—" heavy-sounding phrases and words against marrlage not enly mean nething but are entively false. You have heard them so often that the reghashing of them must disgust you ation, such as the removal of Bn ap- | pendix, & skin grafting Job, or the | reducing of & bone fracture has noth- ing about it which justifies being put :umll-r a ban of “No name pleass’ The writer gnee saw & very remapk- fulnla operation, A surgeon had & pa- tient whoe had Jost the fleshy part of his heel in a railroad accident, The surgeon strapped the injured fool to expected from radign! reformers is both were occupying chairs In & o arm restaurant furnished Ly ex-Cdncilman Severin | wip nun we replied as we_ tried Johuson of this eity whe had a bill| to juggle a piece of blueberry pie on introduged inte the General Assembly | the end of a fork with one of the which, would make it compulsory for "“‘;’ prongs "'."" i hiaas patlll oy b N 3y “Suspect anything?" asked Charlie, every police court juldge' to impose a “Only that I'm going to lose this Yy person who is piece of ple,” we answered, arrested for intoxication, | " he in- “Wall, 1 suspect somethin; In their zeal 10 make America as|®isted, “Seems sort of strange to me dry as their own imagination, prohi- that there isn’t more of & hollbr from bitionists are going a step too far. '|‘m~' the majority about the dear people being robbed, If you recall other reaction s setting in and the tide of | years, you'll remember what a howl vesistanee will grow stronger as the | used to rise up from the powers-that- _—y 1 be whenever any of the poor culprits reformers continues (o propose legis- 0 for Iation which the American people will| O the ity payroll used to ask a ralse” refuse 1o swallow “What do%ou suspect?” we asked bused upon this nudit, Thix auto-airplane whidh he has| “Clap ‘em in jall” would be a proper | still juggling with the ple, ::m'::;‘nn“;nls:. -Y‘x:xuf..-x':: national and In- | Invented travels 25 miles an hour nn"lflnu for the reform el nt, If .M:J:.:' lh':i" '“M, 'U:::lllk“hl:l_l::]l:‘l‘ el aiivertisers. the road and 756 miles an hour in the | People walk on your front lawn, off it's ."d:'.p ln’l‘n‘:"::l‘ol against Mayor air,” | to the gaol, If they bump into ¥ou| paonessa. Y'see, Angelo's a demo- The thing has wings and wheels| on the sidewalk, give them a dose of and the man in the pilot's or driver's| confinement, If they run the player- and at the same time bring home this slippers, with newspapers and a good book at hand uml’nfw of the most :"::':‘.':‘:‘:";::::lo‘:.:":‘::g::fi'."' 4 :’:“..',::;Lm~ people in the world lf‘ talk First man: “Well, old man, 1 eateh Second 1 | "You' od 2 your idea, Its mighty elever of you.|the ealf ef the other leg and left it g man: “You're married? Bo keen that its bound to have {thege until it grew fast, then carved rst man: “Yes, To the best little | o0 spoue for whom it is meant.’ |another heel out of the flesh of the ."‘"‘“" In the world who keeps every- cond man: “I'm glad you appre- |leg, A reporter was present al @ hing just right and is always think-| ojate i1, 1 thought ydt would," clinle of surgeons in & big hospital ing of my comfort, First man: “I'm getting off at this and saw the result of the operation, Becond man: “Well, you're lucky, | station but before I leave 1 want (o | But the surgeon flatly refused o pers Most men lead a miserable married| confess something to yo: [ mit the story to be released for pub- life, ‘They're so hen-pecked, YSecond man: “Yes" lication, First man: “You married First man: “Well, "1, lled to you. | 1n another hospital a man fell off Second man: “No," I'm not really not married it all, I'm |3 pew building under construction and Pirst man: “That's teo bad."” a bachelor but you have convineed |sustained an injury to his head, He 8econd man: “Now 1 don't know," | me." 3 |became paralyzed, deaf, dumb and First man; “Now I do. You ought| Second man: "Have I really?" [rapi@ly was going blind, A famous to settle down." First man: “Yes, You hace €on-|surgeon operated on his brain, Three Second man: "On what?" vinced me that I should remain &|gays jater the writer interviewed the First man: “On whatever salary you [ bachelor, patient and two weeks latgr the pa- gov" Goodbye," |tient was out of the hospital, second man: “But two or more can. But the surgeon who performed the not live as economically as one. operation raised a great fuss m‘ll 0~ First man: “Why of course they can endeavor to ascertain who had if they pull together, lated the ethics of the profession and Wntared 4° the Post OMes at New Britain & Focond Class Mail Matter It would be Hecond man: “Same here," much easier for the public official and to follow publie sentiment and thus try to make him fut that is not | practical working out TRLEPHONE CALLS for the newspaper Mee Pooms ”e Tusiners 9”e Sditortal self or itself popular e enlv profitable advertising medlum N (he courageous way the Ciry, Clrculatian books & room Aiways open 1o advertisers, Member of Tue Assaclated Pre: "he Asscoiated Press o exclusively entitled 10 the use far re-publicati ¢ eredite) to it or not othe In thir paper and also loca Wahed hereln. jall sentence on ov AN INTRIGUING PICTURE. photograph appeared No, it An alluring The Herald the other day allurement not the ! which was human; was new: picture of an auto-airplane under states - there was the simple It roads are too rough William W, Bradford, Jr,, of can leave them very eds- of Cirenlation arganization adver of Momber Audit Purea or e A B C. which furnishi tirers with » striet] Baltimore, elreulition, Our elre ment tomal pewspapers and honest analysis muddy, ily . . . . Fthics Is ethics, That short sen- tence tells a muititude of facts to the professional mind. There are ethies G, W, KLerr Tudge £ crat, Most of the others are repub- licans, Angelo's inside, The others would like to have a man of their JUT resignation G The W, Klett, presented to the State nute | seat looks quite contented, He should piano later than 9:30 o'clock at night, @ long term behind the bars, party in his chair, So they're letting that Second man: %And since the nine- yesterday, is not unexpected in view of the appointment which he probably | the same Attorn will receive next summer, being that of U, 8, District s Th Judgg evidently Is satisfled, in hix | that the appoint. | forthcoming Alcorn | instan own mind at least ment will certainly be and that the protests of Mr, (he is “Mr.” Alcorn in this | and not State's Attorney Alcorn we| believe) and certain church interests | on file wiil be unavailing, Doubtless the prospective District | Attorney has received 4 rances from | quarters which are in in the Department of Justice llible as long | as Connecticut remains as strictly and | as strongly Republican as it has been, he need have no fear of not gaining| the coveted position. What the next | move of the oppesition will be is not known, it may be satisfied with the | statement in the pa | true. look that way, Driving this machine no road-hogs could trouble him; he! would simply rise in his might uu.l{ sour over them, No wind storms| would distress him; he would simply | of the alr and run along terra firma, The possibilities of this machine are limitless and we would | like to know more about it. Th drop out | e the thing must exist, and there is the | per, 8o it must be The only thing that casts a bit of doubt about it is the popularity of | the werd “auto” at the moment, but, | although Sir Conan Doyle asserts that he has seen photographs of spirits no one has yet declarcd that there have | been photographs “auto-sugges- | tion.” ®o, probably, or his| desciples had nothing to do with this but we should like to of Coue auto-airplane, see one, The Johnson measure is absurd, Ridicule alone will Kill it, As it de- serves to be killed, It is a zealot's scheme, deserving of being dumpgd without consideration into the nearest and |'are plel wustebasket, cause It reveals a cross-section of the reform crowd’'s mind It is hidden away in a jungle of hysteria, | When will the orgy end? i everything go through hoping the tax rate will be 5o high that the voters will want to take the demo- cratic candidate at the next clection But it Is dangerous be-|time I think I'm right.” And we, to where we wanted it to go, agreed “| that Crackerbarrel Charlie might be is the photograph for all to see, so| Waft of air from the dismal swamp | pot far from wrong. The proposed charter hoist him into oblivion, - Thing's going along too easy. I'm sus- ous by nature, I'll admit, but this the having conveyed pie amendment | by which the city clerk could select a deputy without receiving the sanc- tion of the mayor is generally regard- Factsand Fancies ed (8Y KOrERT QUILILENI. “I've got 4 any Conservatism: Radicalism: “Gimme Life is just a slow and painful pgo- cess of accumulating tax receipts. v clerk may recommend a deputy but |/ all the tme the hapless husband is the appeintment must be confirmed | wishing and praying that he was at by the mayor. There is no logical rea- | home.” as a political move. onessa seems to believe that it was| aimed at the young woman now deputy city clerk. is true or not, it is difficuit to under- | poor husband to some lecture on poe- mine.” | stand where the change would work [try by a quasi man who will talk for who is Whether that advantage. nder the present system, the city Mayor Pa- ' teenth amendment has been passed we are beginning to find that two cannot live politically as one.” First man; “That's silly." Second man: “Not at all. In a few | years some of our more progressive | states will be granting divorces on the | grounds of diversity of politics of hus- | band and wif | First man: “That's a crazy idea.” Second man: "And the interesig or | modern life have become so manWold |'that a husband and wife seldom have | anything in common. The wife will vant to drag her tired husband out ome night when he gets home to ear some high brow concert by a !long haired pianist. First man: “Why-—"" Second man “Or she will haul the |a couple of hours about trees and breeze and flowers and showers while First man: 'Such a difference in in- of the legal profession, there are ethics of the medical profession, there are ethics of a school teacher's| profession, of the mechanical engi- neer's profession, Kthics is defined by an authority named Webster as *“I'he morals of a profession,” and no one 1s a greater sticklg@for the ethics of his profession thaf® the trained newspaperman, But sometimes cven ethics can go too far, Morals have been carried to a point where they ceased to be moral. Ethics can be carried to a point where they cease to be advisa- jcaked” to the newspaperman, He {never knew how the story got out, An amusing incident oceurred last Tuesday afternoon at the Methodist church, Readers of The Herald wiil {remember that two weeks ago a vest- ¢d choir made its first appearance in this church, Every Tuesday after- roon the sewing sehool maintained by | this church and conduoted under the | wuspices of the City Mission meets for | Instruction, The school consists of young girls who are on the member- ship rolls of City Mission and who have had practically no experience in services in the other ble. cal profession more. than else, This often happens in the medi- attending anywhere | (hurches, vested choir. Thus they never Baw For physicians to advertise them- selves as being able to cure certain ills, advising to “Bring your troubles to Dr. Doe,” ., would be cheapen- ing the profession. Many physicians never advertise at all, and beeause of the nature of their profession adver- tising men respeet their desires and let them alone. But when it comes to a case, as occurs sometimes’ in New Britain as Tuesday afternoon the young wom- fen of the choir met for rehcarsal in | another part of the building, at the me time the sewing school was in cssion, The choir girls had occasion |to walk into the room where the’sew- ing school was meeting, wearing their surplices. VMuch to their surprise members of the sewing school misun- derstood the costumes and, with one terrifying shriek “Ku Klux Klan,” simple act of registering the protest, | several young girls grabbed their hats well as other places, that_a medical So Tempers are seldom lost except in[son why this arrangement should be | its bitterness may be carried still fur. ther un the Republican machine s there is sufficient power in THE DEAF H Inventions that brighten the outlook squash | of the afflicted are always worth call- | to any further disturbance from the re-| calcitrant sources. It cannot be said, from a Republi- | can standpoint, that Judge Klett is| undeserving of the honor which he is about to receive. 'His work in the| city, his faithfulness to the party and | his loyalty all circumstances | should bring him some recognition. New Britain, being one of the few larger cities remaining in the Republi- can column, is deserving of far great- er honors than the High Mogul has seen fit to bestow in the past. A per-| sonal favor to Judge Klett cannot vet be claimed by the town as its own. Possibly after political complexion be- comes more dubious it will gain more under although we grant that patience and Klett's case rded at last. perseverance in Judge will probably be re “POPULAR APPROVAL” | The Mayor justifies his stand on an important matter by asserting that it| meets with the approval of the poo<§lfu5‘ has accomplished purposes f;lr:disnml place where they will never ple. Of course he has other arguments | beyond the imagination of the inven- have a chance to snub anybody. in favors of his stand, btu this “‘popu- | lar approval” is the matter here con- sidered. The Herald believes great common sense the people. | Deliberate consideration by all the people of some matter when they have knowledge of all the facts and can| comprehend everything connected | with it will result in a wise ce by the people as a rule. They go straight to the heart of a matter and strip it of nonsense; they know how a plan works out in their lives and in the lives of their neighbors, But the | people have something to do other| than study intricate question of city mapagement; they elect and pay | others to do this for them and place | those theirs where they learn the fa devote their time to study of the sit- ! firmly in the | of agents of in positions may s and | uation. Those agents, the public of- ficials such as the Mayor and mem- bers of the common school committee and others, try to please | the people who are, really, their em- | ployers. Those public officials are apt | to take the unconsidered expressions| of individuals for “public sentiment.” | . Moreover ingividuals are apt to be- lieve they speak with authority on a | matter when, as a matter of fact, theyi do not and they themselves might| alter their opinions were they to be placed in positions which would give | them time to go into the matter under | discussion, with thoroughness, Probably one of the most difficult things a public official has to do is to favor a move which, he knows does not meet with this superficial public approval, or to oppose a meas- ure he knows is backed up by this superficial public sentiment. Often he knows he ought to go inst such apparent sentiment because he realizes | that his knowledge of the situation, not possessed by those who clected him, shows him he should do what seems to be thé unpopular thing. If he has courage fhe will do that thing even though knows he will be eriticized for it. | Often, of eourse, his own opinion coirftides with that public sentiment. The fact that an official does the popul thing, therefore, is council, | persons ing attention to. They add to the sum | total of the world's happiness; they | give courage, and courage generates strength to add to the wealth of this world. This, quite aside from the hu- man aspect of the matter, Some years ago it was noticed that Alicted with deafness could hear over the telephone when they | | could not hear words spoken directly | An invention came which allowed a deaf person carry an “acoustican” which made it possible for him to hear much of the conver- | tion about him. Now, by means of powerful amplifiers, deaf and dumb children in | the public schools of Cincinnati are x . | hearing the human voice for the first | to them. to radio [ time in their lives and tremendous | possibilities for teaching the deaf and dumb are suggested. This is but one | instance where an inventlon, first the telephone and now the radio wppar- | tor, in all probability. As the primi-, tive man who constructed the first’ shelter in the woods never dreamed of | | the tremendous sky scrapers of today, | 50 the inventor of some small appar- atus today cannot picture what won- | derful things may result from the ingenuity of his mind. | NY MUST PAY | Some months ago a well-known and | well-informed resident of New Britain | returned from Europe and made the | emphatic that Germany | should be made to pay every farthing It was the statement of a | statement she owes. conservative business man not in the | habit of giving an opinion without due | thought. | France has entered the Ruhr, Her occupation is costing her something | francs a day. The rep- | | arations payments are not being re- | No one doubts for a minute | like 1,000,000 duced. that the cost of this occupation must | eventually be paid by Germany. If the latter country had been strugzlin‘g; to do the best she could to live up to| her agreements it might well be said that France should not have added to the burden Germany had to bear. But done this, believe Germany has not even though may that! France's action was not wise, no one can say that France had no right at| taken, the | some all to take the step she has Man, people that | France The one fact remains that Germany, hav-| she perhaps the majority of the world, was perfeetly of believe ustificd ing evaded every respensibility could and having shown bad faith wherever possible, is continuing in that course where a direct reversal of form and an earnest effort to produce as much as she can and to pay what she can would reduce her debt It is time the plain, fundamental’ question was brought Germany owes; she is making no et- fort to pay; because of her attitude her indebtedness is increasing daily. The expression from this and other countries should be made strong and emphatic on this basic point so that there may be no misundefstanding of our attitude in the German mind to the front not always a fgn that he is not courageous t§at he is not following Whatever has happened, whatever is happening, Germany should go about the vicinity of somebody the loser can lick. That lack of harmony in the con- cert of nations may be attributed to the loot. Unfortunately, however, scizing the Ruhr won't increase the French birth rate. A comp is 2 man who re- sents the of a decency in which he has no part. . When our cyes rest upon some of the new ties, we wish men still wore long whiskers, Knowledge is power. Jut the knowledge that you have made an ass of yourself leaves you powerless. Hell, for some people, will be a Germany appears more keenly in- terested in pairing with Russia than in repairing France If a man devotes enough energy to| his own job, he hasn't much time to| pick flaws in the work of his betters. | = | A rural enthusiast says more of them should be called Farmer-Con- gressmen. For that matter, more should be called former Congressmen. All a woman wishes to know about | her fur coat is that it cost more than the one her neighbor wears. | In a hick town, a prominent family | is one that keeps a cow. | Apparently all great men die while their wives are away from home. They have last words. | A wife is a person who wonders what | you did with that ten-dollar bill you | had this morning. And yet the corn beit’s f‘n(hu.‘linsm‘ for a ship subsidy equals that dis-| played by coast cities for a guaranteed | wheat price. Insurance companies say most fires are unnecessary. They may be neces- sary, however, to the people who hold the policies. If you are lazy and eelfish and in- different, your chief pleasure consists in cussing those who are “trying to run things.” 2 e s 25 Years Ago Today|| Taken from Herald of that date) | - The Hanna estaté has engaged ar-| chiteet W. H. Cadwell to prepare| plans to alter the armory on East Main street. The work will commence about May 1. The New Britain team was left out of the list of teams in good standing with the A. A. U. It is thought that a mistake has heen made changed, in the mind of the writer, unless it was in the interest of placing more patronage in the hands of the means the adoption of friends city clerk at the expense of the mayor. It would result in the robbery of Peter to the advantage of Paul and would probably have no effect on the equanimity with which the city conducted. Perhaps if the mayor happened to; be of the opposite political faith the proposed amendment would not have been heard of. . . . The observer welcomes a clever contribution to this column from the pen of Attorney Donald Gaffney. It| is entitled olte-1"ace” and is as fol- lows: (A smoking compartment in a Pull; man car. Seatad on heavy black cushioned chairs two men in their early thirties are talking) Fire man: “This travelling is awful- ly tiresome.” Second man: “And one collects the is | | terests is trivial.” Second man: “And marriage always yous wife's who are usually #readful bores." First man: “I think that its pleas- jant to meet people outside of one's ‘Yarticular business. But tell me what other arguments you have against marriage.” Second man: “Where is the woman | today who can cook? Sew?" First man: “Your asking a childish question.” Second ma talking about. First man: "“Do you?" | Second man: “Yes. I'm married. I | deceived you when I told you I was single." Itirst man: “Then I take it judging from what you have said that you would like to be single.” Second man: ‘No—absolutely not.” First man: “Then why have you been making all these arguments “I know what I'm — shop on Church street yesterday aft- ernoon. » lidward Sheehy entered the-employ of the Park Street Grocery Co. to day. Lieutenant Colonel Thompson unable to attend the eighth anniver- sary celebration of Company I last evening owing to a previous engage- ment. A letter explaining his ab- scence was read during the festivities. Miss Jennie Riley of Canada is vis- iting with Mrs. John Higgins of Ceme- tery Lane, Dr. Kelly was elected past coun- cilor of M Chosen Friends, at a regular meeting last evening. Tdward I, Laubin will preside at the piano at the 22nd concert of the Ahilhormonic society in the South church this evening. wus AN EDITOR’S (Apologies to Edgar Allen Poe) Once, in a newspaper daily, which was printed well and clearly, Where the news of weddings was mixt with that of sickening gore-— To offset some of the hangings, surely then there came a banging, As of someone wildly banging, bang- ing at the Sanctum door; s some reporter,” I stuttered, “banging at that Sanctum door— Surely this, but nothing more."” The editor well remembers how the poets of many genders— each separate trying member leancd its hulk against that door. IZagerly they wished to enter—invade the Sanctum, to its center, To the presence of the Mentor, Men- tor of that host galore— Of that raw and flippant bunch writers whom we editors ignore, Noisy now for ever more. How Then the banging, wild, unpleasant wrangling of each irate writer Chilled me, filled me with «infernal clamors never heard before; So then, to start a beat in my stop- ping heart, 1 stood believing; “Tis a bunch of cub reporters seek- ing entrance at the door— Smart reporters with their news boo! crowding hard the Sanctum door, There they are and awful sore. Presently my fear grew stronger; fearing then to hold them longer, “Sirs,” said I, “or mad men, explain your impatience 1 implore; Surely 1 was near to dropping, as so roughly you came knocking, With your noise, so truly shocking, blocking up the Sanctum door, W. A. Kinne severed an artery on his wrist while at work in his bicycle That 1 hardly dared 1o face you, yet 1 faintly pushed the doer”— ¢ Britain Council, Order of | of ! Scribblers there and nothing more. Down into their physogs glaring, long 1 stood there shuddering, staring, Quaking, thinking of some tortures man had never known before; But the silence was soon broken by the words that then were spoken “Publish this, and publish thaf and when that's done we'll give you more."” 3 Then I stammered, and the crowd re- peated my only word; *“More"? All of this, and yet, some more, 1Bnck within the Sauctum jumping, my old heart within me thumping And confronted by a Jingler with his pockets full of lore, o said “You must surely print this | jingle—make the Herald tingle." | Then T tried to tell him the town was jingle sore, But he would not have it so, "Of jingle give the public more— I've some jingle still in store.” | Wh | Once, in vain, J tried to mutter when, with many a bhff and sputter, tight there stood that Bish K. Ibble, of a fame of dgys before. Not the lcast concession made he—I must print or I would flayed b with might, and bulk of body, rooted firmly to my Sanctum floor | IForced upon me, yards of jingle, just behind that Sanctum door— | “Print this quick or I'll sore.” BARTLET P. AIR So, be ; APITOL | JOKES ¥ BY EDWARD T. TAYLOR U, 8. Representative From Colorado, Fourth District HERE isn't any- thing essentially funny in spending seven months in any army hos- pital with death from heart dis- cast just around the corner every minute. Such was my experience. But thére is a grim sort of hu- mor among the patients and ut-l | tendants In such ! TAYLOR a hospital.. When 1 first was brought in 1 over- heard one of the other new patients | ask the orderly: ‘What's this ‘M. D. U, 8 A’ that's printed or painted on all the ®Sup- | plies arpund here mean?" | "Oh, that means, ‘Many die, |shall also,” the orderly laughed, Monda y—Representative | Goldsboroughwof Maryland. you T. Alaa society takes a physician 0 task be- and coats and fled from the room. cause the Tatter's name is used in a [news story stating that he performed a certain operation, as long as the ludly frightened were-they thit there is a feeling it may be a.long time be- fore they return, EVERETT TRUE TheHartfordArtSchool 280 COLLINS STREET —Special Fv ning Cl lasses— { 2 nights a weck. PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN DRAWING FROM THE CAST DRAWING AND PAINTING FROM LIVE AAAAAAANAANAARAAAANARA ~—Saturday Morning Classcs— DRAWING AND PA INTING FIGURE SKETCHING .CERAMICS (POTTERY BUILDING, GLAZING, FIRING) AN NN —Regular Day Courses— 10 Courses. —2nd Term— BEGINS JAN. 29th. EN Office no‘l open for registration daily DS MAY 20th and Mon. and Wed, Eve, AN AN 38 Students living in.New Britain now enrolled in this school P -— AND, AS AN |INDUGEMENT FoR CASH, WS ARC OFFERING A BEAVTIEUL === OTT | Z 000 o000 MING AROUND TO SGLL SOMETHING HIS SooN ArTeER CHRISTMAS I