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New Britain Herald| | HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tasued Dally (Sunday Excopted) At Herald B 61 Church Btroet SUBSCRIPTION RATES $8.00 & Year. $2.00 Three Months, 75c. & Month, Entered at the Post Office at as Sccond Clasa Mail New Dritaln Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS ays open to adve er of (he Associated Press. rosn fs exclusively en- for re-publication of ited to It or mot otherwisa this and also loca hlished } n s a n Ishes ra with a strictl: reulation, Our are based upon this a fonal or pers o honest ana circulation It. Thia ir aud In newsy both nat Entran NOW GET DOWN TO BUSINESS We suppose both political parties are well satisflied over the result of the clity ¢ on held yesterday. The can feel disposed to be eased thetr Council losing Democrat oyful over having | ating in member, the Common by one although one constable and one selectman; while the Republicans can be gleeful over carrying nearly five of the six wards in the city. There heing glory enough for all, iat there be peace and harmony and cooperation for the welfare and progress of the city, and with a minimum of political bickering. HE DID HIS BIT FOR 50 YEARS Fifty years employed by one firm! A golden celebration of loyalty and ual respect and con- To be employed 50 yeare in one anufacturing establishment comes to but few mortals. Golden wedding ies are much frequent. o who a gold Works for his Meehan, wag the astonishing awarded watch by Stanle ngth of service with that firm, evi- has been a etaunch believer ge that a rolling stone s no moss. New Britain and Stanley Works has been his in- ial headquarters for half a cen- He his indust here when the Stanley Works started car was smal its in comparison with prescnt dimensions, when the com- munity was but a dim forecast of its | present status. He has put the toll half a century into the products his employers. He did his bit, ally and the gold watch, suitably inscribed, is a fitting achieve- of well, i token of his remarkable ment. How far throughout the world aro scattered the products of the Stanley Works that he has handled? To what widespread uses have they been put? Could the hardware he has handled be placed in one pile it probably would be no small moun- tain, The Herald is glad to join in ex- ending congratulations to an un- honored service, assuming citizen who has himself by such constant who has complimented his emy 1 so long, ers by remaining with them and who has sct so worthy an ex- ample in industrial relationship. DEATH LURKS ON UNGUARDED VERANDAS How often in New England does ws creep into the papers that as the result of falling rd story ver first accident of the Kin more import ing on upper floors of jan to € exists for sides of verandas. ther pieces of furnitur hox, left on the veranda, can e the means of a emali ch plunging g upon it the veranda wittingly to alam and ge ss is the “PASSING THE BUCKR” IN BOSTON TOWN Suffolk county, Massac that Is to say, the city of Boston— continues in & stew over the clal question incident to charges by the registrge of motor vehi stealinig’ automobiles, runr pedestrians and automobile deviitry generaily obtaing a diminutiv ishment in the Saffolk courts out o all proportion to the nature of the offenses. s that g over it Al il i e L The rumpus has reached the Gen- eral Court — or, in more colloquial 1o the some acrimonious palaver was cre- Anguage, Leglslature' — and | robes, 'he habe pajamas, stk e sher ‘sells the man embroldered bath- cos- | lilac and with sppers metics goes home them, ated at the public hearing over a |the women ‘see them and get jeal- | bill designed to mete out punish- ment to offenders, instead of pot- ting them One of the star witnesses at such motor registrar who took uote of thc in automobilp stealing and He gave aling of a hearing was the himselt, vast increase in Boston vicinity. the impression that the st au- tomobiles is the big outdoor sport of the town, Very few of the thicves in get the registrar \said, because “clever law- Boston cver punished, yers” make use of an old statute on “unlawful Appropriation” which was originally 1850 to Joy borrowed buggies for a ride the block, The passed around the year curb riders who around registrar then let fly this omelet: e trouble he said, a continual the buck from one agency to another. man refuses to arrest he says, the lower judge will let the man go. e lower court judge refuses to convict hecause the district at- torney is too free with his nol pros. The dist attorney re- fuses to go to trial because he ys the juries will not convict. Its about time that all thesc ncies of tt w shiould mind own business, do what 1o law says they shall do, and let the other fellow take care of himself.” It the argument continues much today, there is foreing > police ause, further in old Boston town the time may yet come when a fellow who accidentally s Is an automobile and is caught at it may get 30 days in jail at about the third offense. INVENTOR OF AUTOMOBILE GOES TO HIS REWARD Considering that the automobile is 8o universally beloved as a vehi- cle of personal transportation Uekier d to its died some credit should be vouchsa ostensible inventor, who the other day. To Elwood Haynes, of Kokomo, Ind., has gone the credit of operat- ing the the United has not heen succe He that first “gasoline buggy” in States, and the claim disputed. ssfully manufactured a contraption was propelied by a gasoline v back in 1894, and at- ed of eight it. When he into Chicago engine tained hour a miles an with dro the apparatus unsympa- thetic police ordered him to “keep that contraption off the strects” as too many horees were frightened, alike by the unseemly noi being so0 tot and by its novel a arance, regula- of unlike th v tion horse-dra vehicles and generation. here doubtless are thousands, if not millions, of autoists who think Henry Ford invented the machine. They have read storice of Mr, Ford nkering with an early automobile and driving it on the streets of De- to the population ternation But Mr. late troit, greatly con of the equine Ford's experienents came r than those of Elwood Haynes, and to, our Mr. claimed to h knowledge Ford never himself invented the auto- s that claim mobile — possibly his frien acquaintances have ma But ook it is indubitabie that more eflicien ult of ¥ Hay for him. Mr. Ford of the r did vantage ings than Mr. be no doubt ver, that Mr. vas t in America Haynes operate such a m The no automob children “father is more it his with us by the millio COSMETICS FOR MEN? AND LILAC PAJAMAS? a New Yor professor v mannis more womanie gt the mankind is around 1 with talking of it e are not rom persona ience, but mere- from obser geuerally hat he said to flap around { ous, #0 they invent a new style, go- | ing the man one better, Hence the| revival of the erinoline.” | We nover kuew that women ‘were | astoundingly interested fn the | bathrobes, slippers kind of pajumas, and cosmetics men have begun to | We things were for-private bedeck themselves with, sup- | posed these | consumption. But then, there may | be a horde of well ) matters we are not it doesn't matter; it seems that women | acqualnted with, Anyway, know all about what the sterner sex ring In the privac their boudoirs — cuke-caters of presuming have such now that they even their beautiful skins with cosmeti Anothe professorial slant at the new status quo which got a sonor- ous repercussion in our doddering mind had to do with this: “Woman now does man's work and gets| men's pay. Hence she is easing up That him case up on his efforts.” In if & man is 6o fortunate as to have a wi a good his skull so much about doing the on her man's purse. makes other wor who is provider he necdn’t worry providing himself and has an casier time and more” money to spend — presumably on cosmetics and lilac- It all well; men are going to have a much the than in may colored pajamas, reade very eagier time in future past; to sprnd some the they even be able of their time at fash- watering places while wives to the ionable home the reversed, at attending old conditions remain income. Thus will be of manhood — or mediocre manhood | From the standpoint mere — there is nothing to fear in such a situation. If women want to earn atter they get married, | carning ehekels insist on the money or, after they are in a satisfactory manner, to have a occasional- well | getting married merely hubby around the ho ly, it would appear they can be satisfied to let the “lords of crea- tion” really have the leisure of real has creation” lords, Heretofore man been | termed the “lord of by sufterance, merely because the | term had the professor is right man now It wish to enact the or a cuphonious sound; if n really the married play part. women no longer letting the men work, naturally will not object it the and, role of queen be beos do the cake-eaters reverse the situation the and queens universal the iTn mselves into workers providers while lords” do th The “dupléx as the professor-critic calls those unions | where both man and woman con- tinue at their employment after have but helped to im- it character of ni marriage, “may th has not Y he prove woman helped the says. But despite what the professog bout it, this new-fangled the to increase. method of tering marriage In| first place, economic law, which little relation continues very consideration of wishes, has a say in the matter, Two naturally pro- visions than oae, and a great many/{ providers can provide more pecunia ouples &cem to be of the impres- have car” and flat sion that to 1at real in ‘cultured and refined that “costs lly is necessary is next to impossible to one provider, no matter lLow ambitious he may be. Restau- rants are open all the time and w the restaurant and hotel ey thinks cooks are good enough for Jaundries are overly eager to Jaundering; delieatcssen grocery stores which the canned material in abound everywhere, has provided the woman can reduce igery of housework to the k do at 1 Some our modern e scrm,lo think there is re eft 10 11 work d strong box; and perhaps found that to be a &ure- help swell family o? obt ining new coats, i new hats oftener. there are some of the house who prefer aise a flock from dawn tending ngs do- fef difficuity secms not sufficient and work to th malke Huge Dinosaur Skeleton Found in East Africa April 15.—Prof. University of of a research ex- British museum n , 60 miles north of East Africa, has dis- largest dinosaur orld, according to Wi an., of the Lindi, covered o1 to be| 00 estimgted and 10 height of 20 h of 80 at gt READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS. | FOR QUICK RESULTS un MaxsoN all have care; To talk of yours is hardly fair ; So leave your grouch at home, and smile) You'll find it certainly worth while 0p Jupaz We woes; we all have Who Could It Have Been? Office boy: “Somecone called day. Ross: “Did *he Office boy leave a number? “No, only one bottle.” 3y C. L. Edson Give me a plan to cross-cut ples And make five slices right; Come on you cross-word puzzlers, With all your cris-cross might, T uscd to cut the pie just twice, Slish — slash! — in pleces of four, | IFor kiddies two, and wife and me, | There weren't any more, Another baby came along, And now high; Give me a five-picce puzzie plan So 1 can cut the pie. he's two fe Two cross-cuts make the pleces 4, And three cuts make 'em 6; led now for a five-cut plan; k on cross-cut tricks! Pullman Tragedies gentleman (in Pullman car room): “Going to shave Iirst wash John?" Second ditto: “No, Joe, I think too much of my appearance.” —H. L. Eaperienced Daweon: “Do you know anything about farming?" Loomis: “Well, T've lost a lot of money on wheat,” W. Ridings. Roguish Rollos T Micky Drudy's hair i3 carroty; Drudy’s hair is red; v lives with Widow Garrity; s other Ma Is dead, s temper's quick on the trig- ger; the same, sport. Micky said, “Kid, bhigge But what d'ver say to this here wart 7" i cky Micky Just he's a blame good your freckles is —Joan Benda. 11 The Baby We've got a kid at our house Whose voice is very queer, A kind of rasping holler, Distressing to the ear The time he yells the loudest Is just before he feeds, N T said, “Ma, a Is what that | new needle by necds.” ay Schwartz. Meows from the Campus CAt Dear Mas: I've never met a more capable 1 Nan, whom 1 am visiting the Upiversity of Cali- She is only a soph, but so eible and level-headed . . . . me-ow . . . Last night she ling Bessic, who has the next to h about a young man who had called on her the night before. “Medford a fornia was te room is certainly a worker,” she said. “I asked how he lfked my new lipstick he said he couldn't tell until had tried it, and then he did!"” “My dear,” said Bessle, ‘“what atd you do?" I Jooked at replied, “and are forgefting came back w fast Nim severely,” Nam said, ‘Melford, you vourself,’ and he h, ‘Well, when T look at you how can I think of anyone | else!’ ‘'What can yo like that? It was pouting. “Finally T made him talk serious- ly. He is studying medicine, you know, and he really can be quite interesting. He told me that there was more candy being consumed than ever before, and I said, and less of it given away.'” “Nan!” cried her you're not a g “No," said T will admit little prospecti always well to ground before claim." A nice, sensible Nan, I'm telling you, OW . ¢ «» ME-OW . & & Yours for t Kkindness or any 1 do with a man all over but the triend, “I hope 1d-digger an, refle that I “but do a t's ively, 2 to 1 then Carrie. The Editor's ( is week wi 1 »eip Shop remembered a6 that fa- vere's, Th the h anni v of mous ride of Paul R We will not t ride inchallenged and we n carth something not tell us Ior instance, to tell what happened on morable night than horse! Accordingly time anywhe 1l apy story of Paul's ride, as t hors¢ Who, too, go by un- does ay ven history who s be me- 1l Tiovere's for the first r the by his can comment cur- events better than Wild Willie? t-would n to Paul if he fved in our day will turesque- ly deseribed by Wild And you don't think that Paul greater 1 Doc Traprock, do you? Well, just wait for the story of Doc Trap- rock’s famous ride Listen, my « week you'll hear— happ p Willie. for one moment Revere 1s and this 1l he The Kid's 1dea van Horn: “If Paul Revere ‘had only owned a racing car, my oy, there would have beem nothing to it and.he'd have covered the ground in record time Johnny: “Av wonld have 'l bet pinched the trafMc cop nim fo eding.” s Mrs. H: 8. Goodma es R 8h for Fircmen wood Crossing (The Fire me- | him | nd | he | ‘Yes, | | n are requested not to use | fite truck for hauling hogs or po- | tatoes, | One of the firemen was found | | watering his garden with the of- ficlul fire hose, when the last alarni was turned in, This must net hap- pen again, When running to a fire wateh that left rgar tire on the hose cart. ! Firemen ure asked wot to fight| over who ls to blow the fire whistle, t do not smoke near the | ehemical wagoit. We are not sure what theso chemicals are. . They | might be Inflammable, | 1t Pete Grumwald's barn catches Ifire, let ‘er burn. He's owed the | chict $4 for three years. —Gertrude, Please A Long-Term Investment | Hopkins: “What docs It cost to| an olden: “1 paying for mine. | —Mrs. don't know. I'm still Alfred White, Perhaps it e just as well that| what the wild waves are saying is| not being broadeast by the radio. (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction | Forbidden) , 25 Years Ago Today From Paper of That Date | | amuel Bassett was sworn in as‘ mayor of New Bri ain at 12 meridian today. The ecity auditor, Paul Leupold, Was not prescnt, as he ob- jects to the reduction in salary made his post by the last common | council. City Clerk Thompson re-| ceived the oath from Judge L. 8. Burr and administered it to the other officia | The conference hetween the physicians and executive committee | of the hospital held in the Y. M. C.| A. last evening lasted from 4 o'clock to 6:30. R. G. Hibbard, J. Traut, W. H. Hart, Judge Walsh, and F. G. Platt were the committee- men present, while Drs. Lyon, Bun- nell, and Peck represented the doc- |tors. The latter are seeking repres sentatf@ on the board, but this has |been refused. The regular phy: | | sicians are also worked up because | | homeopathic doctors are allowed in the hospital. | The annual meecting of the Y. M, C. A. wheelmen will be held this evening. | The committee from the People's | | church for the young people’s re- | |coption at the Y. M. C. A. Wednes day evening will be 1. R. Hitchcock, | S. W. Trader, and Mrs, H. L. Taylor. William H, Hart has announced | that he will accept !the presidency | of the Y. M. C. A. dircctorial board. | City Enginecr W, H. Cadwell has | | been instructed to prepare a map of | the whle city and eastern porvlon‘ | of the town, with necessary portions | | of Berlin, and to obtain the neces- | sary levels for the laying out of a complete system of separate sewage disposal for the whole city. Court Pride, F. of A., held a big smoker last evening in G. A. R. hall, | Arthur Bottomley, Irank Keeney, | | William Squire and William Eliiott | sangs and James Mason's grapho- | phone did good service. | The Y. M. T. A & B. society will present Edwin Thorn's famous suc- cess, “The Black Flag” at the Russ. | win Lyceum this eveninp. | are being sold for 25, 35, 50 and cent, The Boardman high school of New | Haven has organized a bicycle | team and the local high school boys | are agitating for a similar outfit to | | challenge the down-staters. | | The high school baseball team lost | its first game Saturday in Bristol by a 13-12 score in a ten-inning battle, The contest was very ragged at times. ’(?anadiaq Farm Land | Worth $37 an Acre! | Oftawa, April 15.—~Occupied farm | land in Canada showed no fluctu- | ation in 1924, remaining at an aver- age value of $37 an acre, according | to the report of the - Dominion | 3ureau of Statistics, The figures in- cluded improved and unimproved land as well as houses, barns and | other farm bulldings. { Tritish Columbia registered the | highest average value pt farm lands among the provinces, with $96 an acre. - Others ranged from $53 an acre dotn to $24. for ats | Job as Naval Umpire Aboaed U. S. §. Reattle, en route | to Hawaii, April 15.—The Seattle | ! lost identity as flagship of the | United States fleet to become the official umpire shi for the sched- uled army and navy joint maneuv- ers when she welghed anchor yes- terday afternoon and put out to sea | with Hawaii as her destination. | The Seattle is carrying Admiral Rob- ert E. Coonfz, commander in chief of the United States fleet; Major | General John L. Hines, chief of | staff, and other officers. The Scattle is proceeding at Knots 3 Ogservafions On The Weather Yorecast for Southern New Eng- land: Showers this evening fol-| lowed by generally fair and cooler tonight and Thursday. Fresh to strong west and northwest winds diminishing by Thursday. for Eastern New York ly fair fonight and Thurs- day; cooler tonight and in extreme south portion Thursday; fresh, pos- sibly strong northwest™ winds, ~di- | tonight. | he disturbance over Michigan ssing out the St. wrence valley, has ocaused | local showers during the hours from North Dakota eastward to Maine and as far south Tennessec Several places reported thunder showers. It is followed by an arca of high pressure which is producing pleasant weather with ower temperatures in ‘the western Conditions: and cf tricts. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with cool nights, but| | quite warm during the day, ntral d lm«rvh-o." inaugurated at NEW POSTAL RATES NOW EFFECTIV Specal Servios Assures Speelie| Handling of Parcels A new scivice which is expected to be of considerable advantage to merchants particularly others who use the parcel post to any extent is a “special handling midnight last night when the changed postal rates went into effect, This service enables a person sending a parcel post package, by adding an additional special service stamp at a cost of 25 cents, to have his package handled the same as first class mail. The addition of a special delivery stamp as well as a special handling service stamp will give the package the same service as though it were sent by private messenger, according to Postmaster H. E. Erwin. According to Mr. Erwin it will enable a businessman to telephone New York before the close of business this evening for a package and to recelve it in the first delivery tomorrow morning. Another important change is that requiring a two cent stamp on post- cards or what it known as private mailing cards, which are * distinct from the government postal cards. This 1s & direct increase of from one to two cents on these cards. This is the only change in rates on first class postoge. In the second class, which applies only to newspapers and magazines, the rate will be two cents for each two ounces or fraction thereof up to eight ounces. Above eight ounces packages will take the parcel ponll rate, In the third class, which includes printed matter and merchandise up *|to eight ounces, the rate will be one and a half cents for each two ounces or fraction. There is one exception to this rate, books, seeds, cuttings, bulbs, plants, roots, etc, will be handled at the present rate which s one cent for each two ounces or fraction thereof, up to eight ounces. The fourth class rate, which real ly is the parcel post rate, all print- ed matter and merchandise above . eight ounces will be handled at the present zone rate, but there is an added service charge of two cents per package, regardless of destina- tion. Insurance fets show a slight in- crease. Ior packages in value not more than $5 there is a charge of five cents. which is an increase of two cents. Jor packages valued at not more than $25 there is a charge of eight cents which is an increase of three cents. Packages of $25 to $50 will be insured for 10 cents, and from $50 to $100 for 25 cents, there being no change in the latter. There whl be an extra charge of three cents where a Teturn receipt is re- | service | This is new quested. charge. Registry fees will be as follows: First class mail, valucof $50, fee 15 cents, an increase of five cerits, Values up to $100, fee of 20 cents, which is no change. In third class matter, value up to the fee is 15 cents, an increase of flve cents. Return receipts are a - [three cents additional. These rates do not apply on for-!| cign mail, where the rite remains | unchanged, except the return receipt | will be five cents instead of three. Fees for C. O. D. packages also show a slight increase. Ior pack- ages valued at $10, the fee will be 12 cents; an increase of two cents, for packages from $10 to $50 the (. 0. D, fee is 15 cents, an Increase of fiva cents, while packages valued at from $50 to $100 have the same C. 0. D. fee of 25 cents attached. Money orders up to $2.50 will cost the purchaser five cents now instead of three. p to $5 they will be sev- en cents instead of five. Inasmuch as the postal depart- ment at Washington is being swamp- ed with ord for new stamps, fast- er than they can be supplied, there will be some time requircd getting adjusted o the new rates. A num- ber of new stamps have heen print- ed. brown color and bears a picture of Nathan Hale. There will be a new as well as | Up to $10 | they will be 10 cents instead of eight | A Half cent stamp is of dark | (By Charles P. Stewart) Washington, April 15—Washing- on's new traffic director, M. O. Bldridge, alms to make the capital a model for the whole country in the matter of automobile regulation. His theory is that drunken driv- ers, fleeing bootleggers and miscel- laneous morons are responsible for most accidents. It's in whizzing around corners that they generally |got In their work, he says. Also he thinks there has been too strong a tendency on the duthorities’ part to subordinate pedestrians’ safety to motorists' convenlence. Eldridge s going to fix all this. And no more spooning at the wheel of a car, he adds. “Nobody,” he inslsts, ‘“can drive judiciously with his arm around a girl's waist.” | fic regulations, no matter how good, are no good at all unless rigidly enforced, and right there, He ob- fall down,” He won't. The justice department gets very few appeals to be sent to the At- lanta penitentlary for 25 years. Chapman wants, and in his case it's easy to understand why. He in- sists that the federal government only loaned him to Connecticut to try him for murder, and he thinks a horrowed article should be re- turped In as good condition as it was borrowed in. Besides, it he's | nanged, how can he serve out his |long Atlanta sentence for robbing | the mails The justice department made up its mind. The fact is, the attorney general isn't as much interested in Chap- man's technicality as Chapman fs. iThn government has more prisoners than it wants now. At this very | time Luther C. White, new superin- |tendent of federal prisons, is at hasn't cnse for paroling all the convicts he can. Leavenworth has more than Finally, Eldridge concludes, traf- | 'twice as many inmates bullt to hold. Atlanta isn't Guite that bad, but bad enough. So much accommodation wasn't needed in the old days. FProhibition law vio- latiops hadn't been invented ;then. Smallpox is more prevalent fthan the government pubtic health Q&rv- fee llkes. Not only are there 100 many cases but they are increas- ingly malignant. The idea \g that people develop) considerable power of ‘resisting a| disease they have had ameng them for weveral gemerations, and elther) don't eatch ‘it or have it lightly if] they do. Thus the disease finall runs itself out. Only it isn't dead,) just dormant. Reawakened, f usually finds a generation whicl has lost the old immunity, beging again as a much worse ease than it left off, dis. serves, is where a majority of cities | 4 That, however, is Just what Gerald | | Leavenworth, trying to find -an ex- 1 Just so with smalipox. It parti ran itself out and was partl stamped out by vaccination. Now that It appears to be reasserting |itself, it may prove to be deadlie: [than ever, though fortunataly n\nde | better control. 3 Keep vaccimated, is the publig | health service's advice, The state department is hearin from many American residents - of Irance who are scared at the pros |pect of a capital levy. Some of them have large Ifrench propert holdings, especlally the branches o various big American companies. A capital levy, if made, whl hi them all. They can't get thei wealth out of the country, either| Present French laws forbid. T government proposes to ftake large chunk—10 per cent, and | | will be moro than that if the frang slumps, as probably it will. It France were a little like one of the Central Americu republics, the state departmen| might see its way clear to opposini this confiscation. Bging France, f ish't likely to do so. countr 11 cents stamp of a lighter brown and bearing the picture of Warren | G. Harding. Parcel post packages not less than {10 pounds in weight and more than two, sent special delivery, will re- quire a 15 cent special delivery stamp, which is the same as the present 10 cent stamp but of orange color and containing the numeral 15 instead of 10. Packages weighing more than 10 pounds, sent special delivery will cost 20 cents extra. |been designed, two 10 cent stamps | being required in this case. One more new stamp is the 25 cent special service stamp, which is dark green in color, of the same size and shape as the special delivery stamp, with the number 25 in circle in the center and the words “Special Handling” printed thereon. BLUE TRIANGLE CLUB N gin Wednesday and Friday evenings. A class of industrial girls is being formed for Friday evening. 7Those a | Saturday night. { The regular swimming classes be- who wish to join should inform Ls| |telle Thomas at the club rooms The club room will be open Wed| nesday evening for callers, . A First Ald demonstration will by |given Thursday evening at 9 at th {club by Miss Grace Stowell. Hele Grybach and Helen Novak are th committee in ch The lam shade making class and“the ukulel class will begin 7:30° the sam| evening. . at No 20 special delivéry stamp has | To Observe Anniversa " Atwater of 2| srve the 26t wedding o] M Atwater wa | formerly Miss Rose Fusari, daught of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Fusari, of th | city. Mr. and Mrs. J. Trinity street will ob |anniversary of their Japanese hyacinths have becom| 80 thick in some of the bay: | Phltippine Istands that navigatiof | 1s being menaced, i Marble Editor of the Herald tournament rules. My name ig ontztar e et Il My address is ... (Every boy and girl in bring it to the_ Herald). Bsiny City Sights—window Displays. GLUYAS J WILLIAMY MARBLE CONTEST ENTRY BLANK I wish to enter the Herald-Junior Achievement Mar- ble Tournament and I hereby agree to abide by all the ... (print) e S S (pLin ) [am ...... yearsold. Tamapupilat.......... school New Britain and immediate | suburbs who will not be 15 years old before July 1, 1925, is eligible to enter the tournament. enter, but you must fill out an entry blank and mail or Tt costs nothing to CLUYAS WILLIAMS © McClure Newspaper Symflult L SPRING TASHIONS, MEN'S FASHIONS, 4ARDWARE STORES, JEWELERS, AND A SHOP WITH A PASTEBOARD AUTO - MOBILE MOVING BACK AND FORTH ACROSS A PASTEBOARD LANDSCAPE