New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 11, 1924, Page 7

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INEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THlJR‘gDAY. DECEMBER 11, 1924, Every Thursday morning is Christ- mas morning for those who receivea year's subscription to The Saturday Evening Post - =a present that repeats it~ self fifty-two times a year. No work, no pushing through crowded stores by the giver. Just send us your check for two dollars and the man or woman to whom you wish tomake a present will receive from the publishers in the Christmas mail a beautiful card announcing the gift in your name. $Q 90 r4E YEAR The POST #2 bill is the biggest two-dollar bill in America During 1925, The Post will publish much of the yeat’s best fiction, autcbiography and special articles of timely and unusual interest. The following will appear in early issues: The House Withouta Key z4zz perr srcazrs Harvard and Boston meet Hawaii and the Tropics, and become involved in affairs that would be unthinkable on the Back Bay. Ancient Landmarks . . . zevames womay New ways are not always good ways; new friends are not always safe friends; as Mr. Williams shows in this novelette. Andrew Bride OT Paris HENRY SYDNOR HARRISON How he began as Andrew Bride of New York, became more French than the French, and was finally Americanized. 'Growing Up ... . ... coramares “I remember, I remember the house where I was born. The little window where the sun came peeping in at morn.” Power . . . . . . . arrHur stemvee The story of a railroad builder who drove through life with the steam of one of his own great mogul engines behind him. Buccaneers of the Bahamas xevvow cxvazzr The Spanish Main in the twenticth century, repeopled witha new breed of cutthroats and pirates. Tillicum . . . . . . srewarreowarowam The story of a young man, sick with the sickness of idleness and wealth, and his discovery of a lost mine and commonsense. SERIES OF ARTICLES From an Old House JOSEPH HERGESHEIMER The author restored it, lives in it, and is repeopling it with its ghosts of the past and his friends of the present. Will Rogers’ Autobiography Not the cowboy’s lament but the cowboy’s apothe- osis. Including the story of his youthful and later Follies. What Radicalism Has Done To Foreign Governments RICHARD WASHBURN CHILD AmericanWives and European Husbands MRS. RICHARD WASHBURN CHILD There are personal as well as national entangling alliances with Europe. Mrs. Child has seen many of them and will tell about them in this series. The Story of Irving Berlin ALEXANDER WOOLLCOTT From a singing waiter on the East Side to the writer of popular songs for a nation is the story of Irving Berlin in a sentence. Mr. Woollcott, in tracing his rise, gives much interesting information about the writing and popularizing of songs. There is no guesswork about radicalism in Europe. . A A It has been (homughgv (rie? ol\:t there. lgdr. Chilg Amerxca 1n I he Alr has at various times been a looker-on in Rome an N W other European capitals. He has been in Europe for _BRIG' GEN. WILLIAM MITCHELL some time gathering the latest data on radical ex- What America has done, what America can and periments. should do, in the air. "1 THE SATURDAY 7 EVENING POST NMore Than Two Nillion and ¢ Quarter Weekly You can subscribe through any newsdealer or authorized agent or send your order direct to THE SATURDAY EVENING POST, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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