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[SSUES PAMPHLET ONHIGHWAY LAWS State Department Prints Resume “ of Revised Statutes Hartford, Aug. 1 (—New high- way laws of Connecticut, as revised by the legislature of 1925, have been compiled in pamphlet form by the state highway department for gen- eral distribution throughout the state, The department proposes to send coples of the booklet to officlals of every town in the state, as well as to divisional offices of the depart- ment, as there are a number of new statutes affecting relations of towns to the state In the matter of state ald roads, financial arangements for construction of roads and bridges, and the matter of {llegal advertising signs along highway rights of way. Codification of all the state sta- tutes concerning highways by the recent sesslon of the legislature re- sulted in the repeal of several s tions which were revised and re- classified, These are listed in the booklet. A feature of the revised laws is the provision authorizing the high- way commissioner to re-establish the boundaries of any sfate ald or trunk line system when it is found that the original boundary lines have become lost or are uncertain. Tn several cases it has been found that the state’s rights of way on certain highways had become uncertain since the road was originally mapped ont, and the new enactment is de- sizned to give the state power to rectify errors of this nature by con- demnation. Hereafter the boundary tines will be, marked by a wniform and distinctive type of marker. QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an question of fact or answer information 13 , enclosing two cents in stam for reply, Medical, tended research be undertaken. other questions will receive a sonal reply. Unsigned requests not be answered. All confidential.—Editor. Q. What is the nationality Harry Houdini, and is that his rc name? A. Harry wasg horn at and is an Q. ats' ca Houdini (horn Appleton, Wi American citizen. Is it proj to s that soup or “dri sonp. Ono drinks soup. What causcs paint to It fs usually green luniber, moi face, impure oil, linseed oil contai ing excessive portions of fools, or paint being applied too stout. last cause is most frequently note Q. What are mn lnrgest zoole cal parks m the U, The National /onhv;:u al par Washington, In. (.; New York logical Gardens, Bronx Park, York city, and Lincoln Park Chicago. Q. present King of England? A orge Frederick Frnest Windsor. Q. What is scope? A presents an uninverted image of object. Q. What is the penalty Ing o mutilated 1 culation? A S provides that any mutilated United be fined not more than imprisoned not more than Q. What does the name mean? A. Ti is from the Latin, “cheerful." Q. When is time to trim maple tree? A. The forest they cannot he trimmed without permanent injury tree. Q. How sunflower seeds A. By first threshing from the head. They |crushed or ground and subjected pressure, usually hydraulic, a screw press may be used. may be done either liot or cold, Jat{er process vielding a better qua ity oil, but smaller quantity Q. Are fhere any Japanese traceable Ne READ THE HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR RESULTS a terrestrial POLI'S PALACE HARTFORD for pla coin in ONE WEEK STARTING TONIGHT Mat. Tues,, Wed., Thurs, and Sat. THE POLI PLAYERS The person passing States coin s $2,000, Hila the the hest roots of a st Stock Company in America service savs Featuring JEAN OLIVER and EDMUND ABBEY e “THE OLD SOAK” A Comedy in Three Acts Bg DON MARQUIS to the are P fdmund Abbey in the Tifle Role of Piay Gives n Vivid Characterizo- ! as in “Lightnin.” Reserve your Seats Early s Freryone Wants to See the Gran1 Old Man at His Best. CAPITOL | \UNDAY NIGHT — MON. — TUES. — WED. rom the Life of America’s Greatest Man Comes AMERICA’S GREATEST PHOTOPLAY His Life From the log Cabin to the White -House! With All the Drama. Romance, Humor and Adventure of That eat Life It Springs to the Screen as One of the Finest Enter- tainments You Have Ever Seen! George Billings as Lincoln. He Does Not eem to Be Acting— HE IS Linceln! undn\ Onl\—l.el"lv H‘nn in "Rleod “of the Border” " KEITH VAUDEVILLE Billie Baker & Co. in ‘“Variety” IVL\ AN \\H DORIS FRANK RIC ll ARDSON Dispensers of Cheer” “The Joy Boy of Sor I"R}Il A & CO. m “Loop the Imp CO]\TI\UOL‘S T RICKARD & GRAY n “Hush Money™ SHOWS DAILY to any by writing to The Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 2 New York avenue, Washington, legal and marital dvice cannot be given, nor can ex- Al pe letters are of Weiss) consin, onc “hlis- ure in the sur- The Zoo- Zoo. What is the full name of the | Al- tolo- One having an eyepiece that the cir- ‘tion 165 of the penal code and venrs. meanis and gafe large that at any time the is the oil obtained from the althongh This the in the NEW U. §. navy now A. On June 30, 192 20 Japanese in the U, ( Heow should locating a good, boarding house New York city? A. Write either | Traveler's Ald {vity, or to the Y ington avenue, | advice, | Q. What carthquake in ercorded times was the greatest and caused the most damage A. The Japanese September 1, 1 Q. Can you name some English sportsmen? A. Sir Thomas Wimbho Lord Rothschild, Harry min Irish, Lord laren, R. Lyeett, Q. Are many persons lefthanded ? A. Four per cent of the children born in this country are lefthanded from hirth, Q. Did Indian children have toys? r A. Yes, the U. 8. National Mu n- um has dolls, horses and animaly as playthings. Q. What wa Quixote? A, Don Qui satire on chivalry, it live salirized are dead. Q. In traveling, the right to sit facing forward, one who has the lower berth or the one with the upper? son with the lower at facing forward, at is block coal? A name given to cértain non- there were 8. navy. a girl go ahout but eheap and safe if she is golng to to the secre soclety, New Yor W A, 610 Le New York city, for earthquake of noted Lipton, Lord Buckmaster, Lord Preston, Benj Derby, A. C. Mac- ps stuffed | s the purpose of Don al nte was written but its human after the days it s made which person has to n- to on acconnt of the > forms into which they bri Which the most ous spot on a railroad train? In the short concertin stween the danger w | bueaking, precipitati {anvone standing over it |lisions the most ge done at the point where one car tele- another, What is fhe origin timore? The n towr Indiana, Tike [ is k. | of the and in col- fs often scopes o of the name A “large in. ned Mimore, Raltimore is of Celtic cify of Baltimore for Cecilius (‘alvert, seftled Maryland me and ori- was who c- | provinee in 1635 (. How can I rid my garden of snails ¥ A one cold Q it with a solution of to a gallon of Sprinkle pound of alum water: What percen women live A. 1t has been estimated that out of every million people horn bont 63 men and 241 women re the a of 100 a all of men to hecome centenarians? ry one o ch 18 ) g6 Abraham Lincoln at (apitol Beginning Sunday Young Al and Ray both of them nnder today probably bhetter informed on the life of Lincoln and the history of Civil War days than any historian in “Their thorough knowl result of Two ckett, men, 1 ds n to | the country on the subject is the two years ing for the Lincoln," which luced. “Abraham vn at the C ning lay for According neh that “Abraham ently pro: s {0 he photoplay, they re Linealn® ipitol theater hegin- sun four days there anid Lin the W to the Rocketts, 5 0 matic “ling the story of that ario writer in the t France st it public prohlem of s M rial Tife Mation, wrion Not only admirably | but fhe Anne the to select the vas Lincoln® od for soveen ac first romanee with nid his courtship of married are (Eank st far more e majority of the seareh was nec hofore | med which Ahraham Lineoln' as done in 1he in Washi wling il roduc work ssiTy could he Cor sional 1. on, D, €. Tn ad hundreds of hooks documents, th visited Nlinois < hoyhood, and th the fe irtyred presi | | hrary dition to re oric ors f Lincolr inted ing friends of the fent. In this way Tetails of the il clear in their mind gantic task of filmir rted Keith eat and ( of the 108t minn Lineoln the pictur 3 bhefore ai o was st The vaudevi c headed in “*Va dance an van and D Tush wets pourr Othe “Dis Rickard | Trella Loop.” and he Joy Doy of s are 1. s Toy in Wm v Maney™ Lefty T of \ continuous who ¢ Irish Shipping Men to | Start Navigation School | = Dut e o Aug. 1 (A - ipowners, brok and s decided to es- The met since last in s in qua rs expectel A confer- re interested, T \ a school of navig itherto n closed addition to the tr to In men subjects uary of s¢ cessary v and em for certifi mates, school to provide instruction for fisherme) lesiring certificates as skippers and second 1 for boys de L carecr. LYCEUM SUN. — MON he new ands, siring to follow — TUES.—WID TWO BIG PICTURES BEAUTY and theBADMAN PETER B3, KYNI ALSO LOVE and GLORY With MADGE BELLAMY By | she which Indian children used | | know the | { coking hituminous coals of Ohio and | cube- coupling | to the |r.u'l\; | City means | Lord | | atternoon and | research spent in prepar- (! book BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 4 AT BTN o ] e THE STORY SO FAR: May Seymour, whose husband, Dr, John Seymour, killed himselt by cause of her love aair with Jim Ca- | rewe, returns to her homa town after | a ye absence, Heavily veiled so that no cne will recognize her, May conies late one fall night to the home of her lawyer, | Dick Gregory, and Gloria, his wife, tells Gloria, who is her close | friend, how the story of Dr. John's| suicide has followed her everywhere | and sporled her fricndships with | people she has met. And so she | has made up her mind to “sell out” | and go to Kurope, where no one will | lier or her story, she g . & wealthy wid- | who is in the real eatats busi- | to ask him to scll her house r her. Ulysses advises hor to keep live in it, and face the world bravely. But May tearfully insists that can't—that wants to be footloos 10 begs Dick Gregory (o sell her stocks and bonds for whatever they will All she wants, she ex- plains, is enough money o keep her afloat for a year while he hunts a husband. frankly admits | that she is goi to for money if possible A week later with $8,000 in cath May sets out a rest at Atlantic | hefore sailing for on | the frain has a shyfl irtation | with a handsome middle-azed man | across the aisle. And as she enters | her hotel at the seusido o8 him going the aq of her. NOW GO ON WITH 0es to sce | she sk bring. new he g marey for 1rope. she resort she | just up steps THE STORY The lobby of the hot with the rich sunl and filled with smartly- men and women At one of it an orchestra was playivg low and and ol was flooid- od it oof late dressod end something haunting. Suddenly it was—the been onthreak sweet May old 50 popular of the remember] “Dastiny” v in 1014 vatl war estiny . . . She looked straight into { mine And der what her thon tant fell The Man INSWer married and thar 1o in- | of Wbl has a ‘Mrs. Her- Waterbury' tucked away np in May seoldeq hersolt from the Traiy But ghe hoped that there standing at the “Nirs. ert Waterbury.” ing for his room 1 . . little her on the famuii hert Brookiin was no A throat stood e her shook ent I'rom When she was dressed she ek rom the it her v “Perhaps 1 Jlor on my doubt fully. inst it slepped and e n ug he open | long flection do need a Bhe of his watcheq name the Terbert Water chusetts,” name point she bur 1shed across cheeks,” I'hen had pt thought decided vorn no re the brilliant senguons mouth. she Brookli “What a May. Point by in his s hair, t ni thought him or months, ook on her paste And of her acainst the whiter . tonight, wert he log lothes ivor Cxpensive Kin, “And money:"* herself pigskin Kitbag 1 rtainly | added, choerfully walched him carricd, like to vanish he e she St into an elevator, Then turned fo t W room-clerk want a1 the And a bath she did n want to know sl nting that of om faces ocean he said She didn't vourse," 1he rate aw much it would zoing o invest future And 1ot one going fo save! of the 8,000, and it in herself was her all ind ant | writin half end year wisband 1 ek to type I, comfortably, a as she stood window il have organ mar sells it H Ulys themsclyes she had jyst scen in the | “Herbert Wate s00n a moment upon the handsome man bhy > aloud And it was with him m r dinner most black with suppresse ind of tement e went over th ili er. A band of g the famous “After ways of in ights Board 1 Or else a uld say n could langh at nothing dinner M said RACKLIFFE BROS., Inc. Park and Bigelow Sts. of AUGUST 1, 1925, EYM (i tup a lace sugh mind Y lown the Boardwalk. wer was a shadowy The dream man. picture pus And M ittle as 1y shive carried down to the ring A her swi There W the cor Wis a4 vase tali vaned nd rom its fr wt el forward moment 1 er | Then enl 1 | someont ki | Slowly, mwil it 5 he eyes of Herbert Waterbury. scarf from the hed the roof ran a inst th And hes 1re ound he the el ind dining-ro. om dinner e held cpar ips. e [olt ng at It igiht raised into Her pict his. 8he opened her lips to say “Thank you," but found she could make no sound, She felt dreadfully awkward . 4 o tongue-tled Men haq often looked at her. be- fore, had even spoken to her In the | stroet, But this man was different, Ha was 8o scrious, and so obviously a genticman of the world or at least a mas Certainly not the type | he what? For the life of her, May couldn't | finish the thought. Utterly baffled, | almost panicky, she turned away Lestra | AUICKlY und - walked back toward hotel, Breathlessly deep ve dt unless « « Well, unless he At hrok the waltz that is called that into moment AL BLL RS she sank Into one of et chairs in the lobby ck with closed eyes to the music. but I'm sick of jazz, aren't sked a soprano voice beside And May opened her eyes to blond, plump woman with blue eyes, sitting in the chair beside her, at isn't jazz they're playing. (e L ihms,"” May answered. She knew a thing or two about music— real music. “Well, T wish the orchestra would ke something for it. It sounds like nervous breakdown they're have {he woman said, peevishly, “Wlen there are so many pretty s like ‘The Indian Love Call' J don't see why they play such stuff as that, do you?" | ' May answered. She bent her head to listen to the musie t seemed to sweep around her in | the 8he | yngd lear and pretended 10 | jigroy hand that held it wyyy ilied | her. dropped picked up the card 1y it But the trembled ever i e to e walter consom st her cup of me bef 1 her di ingry found she Labyish but, su had no appetit meal she no After t s I a small cup vaised it eyes and looked bert Waterbury let her 1 moment She signed her checlk, tiy the | waiter generously, ! cor- tain air of the dining-room fe s eyes upon her Out of There oce poured hev AS 8 he lifted her at Her- to her lips s once more Delibera in his for & cyes walked out elin, of defiar doors tl was night was black. high wind, and the been so calm at sun- radiance from | looked up to see Herbert oardwalk May | Waterbury coming down the lobby. toam along the | His eyes were fixed upon her and reakers | he seemed to be coming straight toe her lace d | ward her. i With a curious calm May watched direction Am- | him come. that He paused heside her chair and she felt sure that he was going te speak to her. A mixed feeling of dull anger, in. dignation and excitement filleq her, then— ‘Hello,” she heard him say, and as she looked up she felt a hot flush swoeping up over her breast and neck, to the roots of her halr. Then, with intense relief, she saw that he was not addressing her, but was looking down at the little blond, babyish woman who sat heside her. lieard footsteps | *Hello. Herby,” the littls blond slow and measure her own. | woman answered, patting the arm: kened her y . and theof the empty chair on her ether tsteps behind her quickened, too. | side. “Sit down and listen to the gould he them every now and | music. Tt's terrible, but it's better voar of the surf. | than nothing . . ." ¢ | a an that ha | roared shts along She threw her mlders in searf arot sh walkedq slowly | of the limly loomed | along | bassador hotel, in the distance The Boardwalk serted, Later would he ont the was almost de- on the gay crowds , on their way to | wiliiantly I theaters and movivs that f But at this moment the seekers of Atlantie City pied with the s i dining and b | %o May haa the herself. the pleasure- were occu- | | ! of | i , - | 1siness lang sweep of the rself . hind her famous promer most 1o started out she as quic new | She turned suddenly to May. “What did you say they were playing, dearie?” she asked. “Brahms,” May sald with an ef- fort. “Something of Brahms.” (To Be Continued) stinet own wish . . . | man she had ! staurant i m moment beside | hin lace Two (cood Dramas Listed at Lyceum with Madge in the leading role, and the Bad the pen her vay down | “lLLove and Glory," Bellagy with iy § 3 and Man," a film of Peter B, snacted by Mabel Ballin, For- Stanley, Edna Mae Cooper, Janes Gordon and others is the Sun- day, Monday, Tuesdays and Wed- nesday movie attraction at the Ly- coum. The news features and select- o4 comedies also will be shown. For last three days of next week the productions booked include Mary Philbin in “The Gaiety Girl,”” a ro- { mantic tale of the stage, and Monte a8 A Blue and Trene Rich in “Defying much to say some- | Destiny,” a powerful drama of love !.md misunderstanding. The serial yes up to falso will be shown. tory from Kyne 1 rest Iden! A\ 1 out fo wped nost inandibly, | the s to take it into| 2 moment tl hert eyes, 4u Bodies LATEST end MOST BEAUTINA DESITS AND | MANY OTHEN srverivs | ¥ TURES | i WHEN 1926 BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT, BUICK WILL BUILD THEM has built a better Automobile W ee it today af the Buick showroom L CAPITCL BUICK CO. 193 ARCH ST. TEL. 2607