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New Britain eral HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY direct to Poughkeepsie, where con- nections were made with other lines, But this has no longer been possible for years, One can still take senger train from bury to Poughkeepsie, but the pas- senger traffic fs down to near zero. lTowued Dally (Sunday Bxcepted) a Dan- At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 0000 & Year, $2.00 Three Months. 6c. & Month, The automobile has been blamed for this development in the case of 1 | routes are open to the public Io convenient for traflic, and more Wotered at the Post Office at New Britain as Becond Clase Mal) Matter, NEW BRITAI DAILY HERALD, W lose his voice or his disposition, In fact the only party who & in a position not to much 18 the colonel. FactsandFancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN lose | One of the encouraging signs of the times is the decline of oratory The greatest alds In dealing with traffic cops are coolnces, tact and | femininity, STOLEN AUTOMOBILES AND CROOKS to bo sald that money | of all evil. It now be said with some degres of probability that automobiles lle at Tt e at used bo the root may A man's opinions depend larg ng distance traveling. e New Haven railroad, willing | TELEPHONE CALLS | Business OfMice . Editor'al Reoms to give up running passenger trains | to Poughkecpsle, apparently in- | lize the motor coach in- | ving fr advertising Cireulation boo y» open to advertiers The only profitad In the Oity. Dress room the tracks over | This op- com ight trains. Member of the A ted I rather new de The Associated exclusively en- titled to th use for re-publication of a1 news credhisd to 1 or ot otherwise credited n this paper and also local Bews published heveln. Member Audit Burean of Clrculation. The A. B. C. 1s & national organ'zation | panv's action In asking p,,mm\nn\ which fumienes newspajers and adver tioers with 4 strictly honest anaiyela of [ 10 O eirculation, Our circulation tatistics + based upon thie audit, Thie protection against fraud in new @iatribution figu.es to both oatlonal and | local aavertisera. ilrond, as the ng s to glve passenger trans- | being The com- | motor | port to towns already served by its own track a motor coach line be- | [ tween Poughkeepsie and vu.mur;u‘i paper [ indicates its motives, although this| being an Interatate line no particu- 1t The company Is also sald | lar permission to run seems In_ New Timed Entrance The Herald 1o oo wale dally ne ry Tork st Hotaling's New Btand, Bquare: Bchultz's News Btand. Grand Cenfral 42nd str fo be eager to start a motor coach ‘vnm between Danbury and Water. It blocked independ- — | bury, has ents who In the paralleling its own rails THE HOUSE DIVIDED AGAINST ITSELF | The Democratic party New | York city today is faced the | possibility of contributing election of & Republican mayor fext November by being against {tsslf. Willlam R. the journalistic luminary who has keld Mayor Hylan in his orbit, an- however, Bounced today through his evening stimulated by the efforts Sewspaper that a third party would | of independents to honeycomb that ®e placed in the field, The nomina- | gection of the terrain. A bus line ton of Benator James J. Walker by ; already extends frqm Brewster to Fammany probably wiil avail little | poughk and if the I, the -Democratic vots is to be di- | wers to operate busses from wded.between Walker and the Hy- Jen independent ticket. The ' Hylan-Hearst Bcket would be a logical outcome | has conflicted o such.a bitter family row as that | railroad business beteyecn the two perpstrated in the metropolis dur- | citiea. ing the primary. It would he a re-| véngs move without possibility of | cities in that section and the bat- success for Hylan; but the Hearst|tle the m‘ and Hylan camps, falling to attain | pesky enemics is quite spirited. the nomination, evidently are will-| When portation {ag te ruin anything they cannot | ger eontrol. The at the primary was likewlse a splen- | timo did Smith | with over Hylan. The governor retains|coach his prestige as the scintillant star of ‘ seems to have been stimulated; | the Democratic firmament, a prestige the t use automobiles in pref- movement of ruination and revenge by Hearst-Hylan successfully past have endeay- of ored rt a coach line Waterbury Hartford to the | Perhaps some day in the near fu- | it may want Alvided [ bus Tine ftself, actitn to run to s motor with between and ture to start such a Hflf\rs’.{ The of the railroad in| wishing motor coaches to | Ponghkeepsie, evidently 24 heen sie railroad Dan- bury to Poughkeepsie it would con- fiict with the Independent, lne; for Independent | that matter, the independent line | already with the Other independents are en- | deavoring to operate between other | and between railroad passenger trans that }n]m:mwr upon t ctory of Walker over Hylan | gervice ¢ ice in section depended he rallroad the at a minimum, as the demonstrates, of nger table amply motor | victory of Governor Al the development however, travel many residents in towns who can scarcely he affected by the | ordinaril willing | of a phe- It motor | to the railroad seem the time, erence #ponsored the to use motor coaches part | | combine, This scems to b b a fact eated | the Whatever eventually happens. [ nomenon not to overlooked New York is likely to obtain an efi- | soems 10 he that {he cient mayor, as both Walker and | ha X the coache ¢ c business. worthy AIRCRAFT INQUIRY AND MITCHELL erman are of a caliber citizens, The may be it cannot confidence of THE {earst-Hylan outfit able to| revenge dtself, but in 80| oy appintment of an doing prevent a befter man than | \cgigating hoard by the President | Hylan from becoming mayor. | will lead to the usual hubbub that cliaracterizes such things, and then | | | report. Whether any permanent CURTAILING RADIO | ;um will come of the investigation, BROADCASTING Restriction of radio broadea the | but | & | however depend upon as. Becretary Hoover *“reluctantly” | iy itahle report of the how how it admits, 18 necessary multiplicity tiona; the alr the large numbher In view u of Dbroadcasting ata- ports of the | cannot accommodate a the dust of | ng projected in the | There are too ma 1 J¢ the public; of action vertising interior enterta will miss them to go out Hoover indicates, thi stations whick n none. ment it busine they in a plenitude of of 5 eurtall the a atations in or on public is con peed not fu This 18 a and the air is free fie regulated fic. Every casting st then 100 projected. T s to functior conse erie pointed Con- | " own | com- in can dn amateurs f count and s the President irrassed. The 1 out of the Presi 1ispos: POUGHKELPSIT ROUTI THI BRIDGY with conscquences. amo! leaves It without turn office amount- and | Ing” cason.” tracks bran is anxic that ons ne alth passenger and earn a carriers The Poug tormer | ne tar. | sn't been su ) passenger mémory many when trains went through this city and meanwhile he probably won't of New Britainites| The fnieh is still a long way oft! | he offered [call In a $3,000 car ana were no | thing they learn to do | The figure, | operate Lot other | may not be accustomed {trom the root of all evil. The N man who was awakened by robbers at 3 a. m. the other day and en- rtained w York |on which set of statistics he sces The shrewdness ot impressive when in lawyers you count o 0 f | people inter- | ested In the $1.75 In small change | them, in br % In pantry, nor near-wine proffered, The rob bers were looking for “'big money and “real llquor.” They made thelr te them for half an hour, reports that they were not - ~ Futliity devilish A man of forty tryi while his wife is nor the LA and RAALE) the in normal Ameriean 1s another school town b pikers. Thelr host, after the party was over, came to the conclusion that the price of gasoline and the need for plenty of it, w motive behind the visit, The first thing a crook thinks necessary nowadays when contem- plating the future 13 an automobile the first thing a burglar, econd-story worker, or the main A 1ot of otherwise pleasant peo- never seem to buy any matches. ple | All that fs needed for a good cr Almost \1s an adle hour and a martyr com hold-np man thinks of is an automobile. Nine- desperado generally stealing punishment the him, isn't neces Just murderer shock convict tenths of the crooks who prey upon will kill soclety ride around in stolen a mobiles. Without an the modern erook 1s not in the run- | ning, or fthe getaway. The ,first| 1to- A shine shop village I again Is a will next ace be at the Saturday, re the automobile | dahbi Nothing lres love nake a girl give up a good that nothing. than could | for ob not how to operate a revolver, but how to operats an automobile, The | pays You Fasy stroet carded along the can re hy the 14 1o the soft enaps d latter at least is equally as impor- "0gNize re tant as the first, | The, that are parked in all 6f our cities offer the first opportunity, way, enormons numher of cars 7 A henpecked | treuble, but 1 | much he'd man may tell afraid to temptation, the first for crooked-minded individuals to follow their bhent. | the Vit Among aids to numerous is a pug last thing a crook ever thinks nose of doing is to buy an automobile; it A Missouri umpire Is in winter, and perhaps enjoys being hated. a le janitor | really isn't necessary, such morons 50 long as there thou- v are sands of them ready to be picked on ever You y main strect. Merely a never again will onee him | his wife general knowledge as to how to yon in style show the crook Is nim- | s s | poor. Nec | more, but you can buy a car for lees i one, and cauipped ake a fool of quipped fo mak fool ¢ . e nsoiliont (o self or the public the it now cogt The utilization of automobiles by intensified | difficultics. facing- the police in| crooka has greatly the | Ther will be change in keeping tab upon the underworld | ovening costumes this season. but It nothing v some has greatly intensified unusual catching them. The worst foes of crooks with stolen au- small police, but | g o A getaway brigands is coming off. this in makes the job | Correct sentence: ] my stocking."” one scem s0 Hilie hole 3 b vidnal." (Protected said tomobiles are indi- | of at 45 miles and up an hour is more the “job or not the the rules roa hy A Inc.) ated Lditors, | than original | ckivg the turns dangerous 25 Ye}zrs Ag:owi'oa’ay . At burglarizing. the trucks and safe- What with in road, automobiles, even n route, a wild dash for which | ced that it had rations for 5,000 | such |nounced that it had rations for 5,000 | !yisitors to this city on monument | dedication d | ard Sheridan had a finger in- | ured at P. & I, Corbin's ‘yesterday. Inability to secure carriages forc- | #d the postponement of two funerals which were to have been held today Albert Anderson was tendered |farewell hy the dish Chess club a |last evening. At a special mecting of the Hook & Ladder Co., last night, George Young, John Young, George Recor, costs money o and George Dyson were appointed a repairs to stolen |committec to draw up resolutions on o otting |1he death of a member, while Wil for geting |, ™ borter, Theodore Wilson, George Tecor and Geo Dyson but [were appointed pall-bearers automobile | William Ma of {has been engaged fo play with the Unionville band in the big parad here | There a good attendance at the dar n by 0d | 4 | Will lodge, Shepherds of Bethlehem, | in Holmes & Hoffman's hall last eve William Bennett saug a 1 " [ u inging exhibition, Thomas Hickey did a song and the Messrs. | [McEnroe, Seeley n formed 1andolin trio wee Som- M prompted Lynch & busses met eafety with an automobila noon foday the committce an- to and which may at mo- is no usage any ment play out. ideally safe performance. The number of aufo- | mobiles abandoned by ‘“fleeing” crooks after being ditched or | slopped by telegraph poles br in- nocent road hogs — is proof of the difficulties job. facing crooks after like buy Pandits like joyriding it to go biher folks; gasoline and m machines. The necessity the money to indulge in this inno- cent amusement s paramount; it is the temptation to Vester Plainville fundamentally is first without that forms the for the steal the stolen auto- | would have no | ) e gl mobile erook chance < 1t all 80 that stea the fixe im- i been get machine to automohiles could possible worst blow ever st solo, Teter gist Ve club- at crooks would have 5 The money L dance ieved. that could SR to buy a Ke enough an I would be next nney nd th are negligible. It [ impossible under modern conditions mu to buv a effort foot Chapman suflicient money fArst in t law-breaking ford ve 1nin i championship, H down Arthur Ba FE. H. Hart won ov saved teh lown: and For by winning. apponents will rar i Maple the state 1 quircd getting away on nooi fellows as Gerald By tor ase lost, won. 1 mup; Middletorn ¥ ard Prior i uy e play but they are the ex ; the 5 a secluded drank so a8tical story h' H went to a s spot nd there much Irink that he died from the match trong effects fell of its own weight. From | first the probability was that R ey (et Observation | On The Weather manner. He is a candidate for but ave to keep their eyes peeled meantime the police the noose will is miscreant. Anderson won't n Vorecas Sout! England ursday partly | in tem- 1d southeast, winds, New ship In such an : not muc i fresh e to northwe! for 1 atu shifting cast ects lo the city spend- | fire | Yor and to- er in central and Thursday fair; mod- and northwest winds. stern Insure adequate all soctions | €rnoon N The | orth o fire | throughout community. $55,3 Ividere growing tions §2 for a | re is high this| Maritime Prov- 1 of low pressure ersey coast north- Ont This dis- light to mid- | England | test 2.26 inches sure is high region south- area of low magnitude res of xpend e we | morning and 1s from the ——— | Lake Connecticut Couple Are | |"uiion of e i Given Divorce Abroad | “avantic . 16 Divorce de- s la American of public mL.x.E at Raleigh, N 1 on grounds of de ;hf‘m upper e | ward to Flor Paterson Jessup of Carrington Jessup preads T mar- Aistricts. Tem April 9, 1018 nged materi Gwendolyn Gallienne Polah | Mississippi river. Joseph Andrew Polah, whom she marritd in New York, Decem. ber iq 20l mects Conditi yproval bhee ts man- } to ario, ssure 1 or 0 Amou rain la but Asiferat entire from | pressure of | ove Conn sy were tain have York ally the Whales are hunted with dynamite ' ia South Alaska. DNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1 | When | subject | the Spanish | heen 25. 9 Z, [PROHIBITION FAILS - AS AID TO MORALS {Not Blamed for Disrespect for Maxson Cheer, Cheer, the Gang's All Here riding in a motor car bumps with far la worse, I wouldn't feel it in a hearse, Law by Church Council That Washington, Sept. 16 (B—An wistive discussion of the effect vohibition on crime, |scttiement nelgkborhoods, drug ad- ldiction, the morals of the young. and respect for law In gencral w !made public last night by the scarch and Education Department of the VFefleral Counell of C‘hurches as 4 third scetion of its special report the social conscquerces of pro- | hibition laws, While pointing out, that a lack of complete data makes definite con- clusions impossible, the report made these assertions: The tendency of young people of [the present day to depart from con- | ventional rule |be 1aid entirely at the door of pro- hibition but “the fact that prohibi ex- of along and ! Just h. and sav., "It might be Her attended a sur- t! What was Amazed So you nig Ten party lust surpri Billin o'clock, home at i was ten on my wife,"” Loomis. | | For Those Less Fortunate | By Carroll Neuhoft i T must admit that 18 Whenever 1 go on street My fe townsmen me sweet. low come and greoet “ome smiter all he the | bought | tunny verse that 1 hhd | wronght; i By many folks T now am thought To be a coming writer, Ma And 2 in heightening their ves food for earnest though.” me statistics in violations of law, chief of the misdemeanor class, hut it {is “gratuitous” to hlame prohibition {and "all that ean be asserted is that prohibition on has thus far not pre ented in increase in such offenses.” Family Life Improves Avallable information indicates hat in settlement ‘neighborhoods cause Some ok v and there to groups of ladies publicity’s hot glare my station asked ere e ed under prohibition but nevertheless fs widely “the bootlegger is get- has improv that the law ated and ing rieh."” | Assertions that prohibition ttended to increase the use of drugs jack definite proof and would appear 10 he untrue. “The gencral impression that r t for law is deciining leads many 1 vi To liumor T'll give the sccret here To | fit the nation, Tow now, has upon your bit; 1 thinl pen something a i wit certain to make hit is eaky, very i I Kk brings is mere] lin¢ i it rest ) ar a helieve that its foes are dermining all eitizer while the latt as- sert very positivily that prohibition h e 1+ respect for all law. ‘nrtunately, neither contention is fully supporled by facts. The best 1uthorities in psychology and educa- ce that a person's attituc and government is not with rcference to a and - that hostility Jaw does not ca over into the whole ficld of the Jousibility. The attitude of peo- toward their government, al- hough it often gives eanse for econ- {s upon a broader basis than the popularity of a single Iax Fvary one takes som» laws mo |eerionsly than others, and naces All laws have .not th importance and some have a1 sanction than others. \son it would seem to he a ‘mis- to rest the appeal for obse | vanee of prohibition laws mercly up- lon the gencral duty to 'obey the W Rather, an attitude of intelli- gent sympathy fow the law itself nust built up if it is to be gon- rally tell h If for a word you should get stuck, dictionary! s destroy t Help orn er ¥ M my will this larze one eet YOung t caring larger ttion you | ing Haye toward law w determined ingle statu toward on ) shoes to suy ow even t nsed 1i Holdup men vour is gone money or cl our of Curses you hehave From orn, 1 in urch?" an interested relative when returned from the service, I did,” replicd Junior, the 1y k 8 s a child behave so.” —Irank J. Johnson. “Did kied Junior *'Course heard never 5 1o game of For this Traprock Muscum of Un- Natural History Walter E. T take The By Dr rock obzorved. Eficcts Tn Schools ports of school admin and of teachers who sive studies of moral pros e Feling Group rom the time have been wonien prized ptians, tration by share some have of their attribut their grac their love of comfort, and other qualltics which 1 will mass over. In the museum we approach the of cats with our usual sc entific thoroughness, taking ug the development of the feline-proto. plasm through its vegetable forms of cat-tails, -briers, catnip, cat Kins, and villows, its animal- |} isms such as the catamount and the fish and bird the catfish anc cathird are also such mechanical cat-o- ninetails and among many others The “loat, the creation of the ho officials ade ¢ iport to the theory that prohibition is in itscif a cause of moral bregk- down, it continued.” Tt may per- haps just as truly be said that it does not appear to he a great assct. | Certainly, the non-observance of the 4w by parents has a rather tragic frect on boys and girls “In the colleges. undeubtedly. ome slarming conditions have de- Iveloped. Fven in a conservative de- nominational colle a student has Leen known to carn his way through | by hootlcgging. The evi- however, seems to indicate a favorahle trend at the present time; 't leact this i3 the opinion of nearly A1l the college deans. consulted, and {it receives some measure of support from other sourc puasy lines, I'here phases the the cat-hout = the w was | school natives of Cata- Mediterranean provinee of used them in fishing from which is de- cat-gut. It is to Sea-puss company of Valencla that we owe our large crop of violinists. Without this cn- terprising whose slogan is “Get the would never | hav a Heifitzes, Zimballists, orehe cal by ay, enee. lonia, who sea-puss our modern Spain for the rived | ; Al tile s | e Recruiting Resumed By United States Navy The United States navy has re- <umed recruiting on a quota basis, Connecticut district being al- A4 to enlist ceven men every = k. New Britain and vicinity are amd al the death | | (01 two men each week as a pernnigell thels N! part of this quota. peregmunmificdiand | Enlistments in the navy for with the main gu¥. |, "coqry for mon of gond char- UL R S " who can furnish sati to obtain for the museum | At who Cn (IS BN ionirs pet cat, a Theban tor- |/ T “hiny nake apoilealion at ell, perfectly preserved. We | . pogt Office, Hartford. r at the irn that its name was Mamie, for | h® Post BFCS SECTHE 7 Chapel the Iar still bears a gold plate ‘li"'.»fl N HavEn wpon which, in hieroglyphics, i the | STECh NEW BREER L gesirous Ny from Mare " hlist men trained:in some line, A"\H";m:ijh‘ lli1n 15T ohirkraoat Pyals | Such NaEgmAghlnipin, boll f\""“‘“m | blaeksmiths and coppersimiths. vossession wo do not specials | i iing have a chance 1o, travel : el and see the world. anen ot The much talked of navy picture, AR Y 18| wings of The Fleet,” is now being Childrenin (day el the { MUBGUN | hown i tn iNaw/ i Hayen and. il when kittens arc given Awey 10 the | shorlly coms to tiix city. le ones, if accompanied by par- pert Found company, Gut,” we our Ysuyes, and forry-boat the lowr | wee stians considercd the cat a animal of a in the buried ks red prominent place along are That this acte | uable ave a full 50 line of all s, Thurs it ent or gua . German Art E: I Dead in Calif. Residence Hollywood, Cal, Sept, 16 o, — Baron . R. Vongersdorff, art €3 pert and former German army offi- cer, was found dead in a bath room 1t the home of Martin Weinschenck art collector, yesterday. ‘A physi- cian called to the house said death | was caused by a rupture of the main blood vessel leading to the heart. Although accepting the doctor's explanation as probably correct, the |coron office ordered a post mor- [tem examination to remove all ldoubt in the matter. The Weinschenck home was loot- ed last February of paintings and art ohjects valued at close to half a million dollars. Baron Von Gersorff was among those questioned in con- nection with the case, but police and private investigators said he was unable to throw any light on the dis. appearance of the art callection. Service tron: “Wait vl T f threc 1 dered two." Waiter: “That's a spare for in f trouble I 3RS p case o Leonard Remsen. Trmest, How Could You! 1 excited the Fun door "Twas half past ten at we a to sell.” T erie Tis witty, keen, and bright.” at Shop But the editor only answered: “I hear what you have said, And T'll say it is no joke at all call when I'm going to bed —Ernest Mann. Certainly a Record 1: “Did Campbell ever do any- ng startling Haas: “Yes. from an upper he herth once appeared fully dressed.” Raphael Latham. zagging down the street, when he | overheard in regard to himself, this remark: “See that disgusting- Iy 16ose character over there.” To which he replied: “Beg par- don. lady, your eyesight mus' be | failin’, can’t yuh shee I'm tight?" —H. B. Fields. (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction Forbidden) When the honeymoon is over, many a man who has asked for a s hand finds himself under her thumb. | All Wet The townesoak was, as usual, zig- conditions in | Re- | of behavior cannot ! |tion has made no mare decisive ef- | | moral tone indicate a rapid | there is less drinking and family life | nt supporters of prohibition 1o ater | {blems in the schools give little sup-| | You can get an answer to any yuestion of fact or Information by | writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, \Washington Bureau, New York avenue, Washington, 1. C., enclosink 1wo cents in stam ps "nr reply. Medical, legal and marital | #dvice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken, All |other questions will recefve a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor, 11322 o) ). s Newport, Tthode an fisland? A. It to the Island, ia an island mainland only Is the word as a surname? | A, Death, as a surname is na- tive in Cambridgeshire, England, but some of its posscesors prefer Lo write it D'Aeth and De Ath. Q. When dald the Charleston, €outh Carolina, rarthquake oceur. and how much damage did it do? | A It occurred on &ugust 31, 1856, Seven-cighths of the houses | were rendered unfit for habitation nd many persons were killed, and property valued at cight milllon dollars was destroy It wag the severest earthquake the of the United Stafes, Q. For what is logwood A, Largely manufacture of inks and as an tringent to control diarrhea, Q. What the duties of rder clerk brokerage house A His pertain to | handling of orders to buy or sell mar} securitics, stocks, | or bonds, This includes aceeptance 1of the order by wire, mail, tele- | phone or from the client in person, the subsequent tranemission to the broker who exceutes the order and jthe rccording and filing of all orders, filled or unfilled. Q. Did the government United States ever pass an ! tance tax before the one being joined by bridges, “Death” ever used i in t used ? dye, in the are in a dutivs a able of the inheri- passcd " | during the World war? A, The inheritance tax was em- ployed by the federal government as a means of raising revenue dur- ing the Civil war. but the act was repealed gome time after the close {of the war. In 1016 an inher tax was again passcd. In Revenue of 1919 and ag: the Itevenue act of 1921, a fax was levied on estates or all persons, ex- cept those dying in the military | service of the United St (ing from one per cent on ests less than $50.000 to 25 per cent on estates of over $10,000,000. Q. What was the record trip of | the Teviathan as to the number of ra act The record was a return trip made from France when the vessel | carried 12,107 soldiers, | Q. What design was used on the one cent pieces coined in 19 How many were minted in that year? y All of the one-cent piecces coined in 1022 were of the Lin- coln design. In that year $71,600 were minted in onc-cent pieces. Q. What is the meaning of “Miz- pah?” It is word which translated means: “The Lord watch | between thee and me when we are absent from one another." Q. What can be done with soil | which has been foo heavily limed? A. Soil that has been too heav- ily limed should be treated with a a Hebrew ! stable manure, compost and loam. A top dressing of this composition placed on the ground to a thick- | fall should be turned under in the on the ground ground. Before putting dressing in the fall the Ishould he plowed or spaded up. | Q Why onc have to usc | less baking powder in high alti- tudes? does The reduction of the amount of baking powder in high altitndes is due to the rarity of the atmos- phere which exerts less resistance to the rising dough. Q. What was the middle name 1of General Grant? His full name was Ulysses Simpson Grant. Q. What is a “hormone?" A, _Tn pathology it s a subatance or tissue, and carried thence in the blood to another organ or tissue, which it stimulates to functional activity, Q. FKrom what Franklin come? 4 From rankelein” er. Q. How many Selomon have? A. King Solomon, according to the story, had 700 wives and 300 concubines (1 Kings 11:3). Q. Is it coldér in the antarctic regions than in the arctic? A. The temperatures of the Ant- does the name the Anglo Saxon meaning a frechold- wives did King Nrths, est day §0 back td t Greece, Why a bride wear oran ed with laurel? Why do they call th the Hyacinth get its name? months of the year? ington Bureal's latest bulletin, FLOW b T.want a._cpoy of the bulletin, FLO and enclose herewith five cents in stamps or coin for same STREET and No. or R. R. .. are ... history | composition made of equal parts of | ness of two or three inches in the | spring when the frost is out of the | secreted or formed in some organ | Jegends, and bellefs concerning flowers Love, beauty, succe Rome, Egypt and Babylonia. Do you know the flower symbol of the varlous nations; wish a copy fill out the coupon below and mail FLOWERS EDITOR, Washington Bureau, The New B 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. arctle are colder in summer | perhaps warmer in winter W4 those of the far north. The coMs. ‘lwn\n-ramru recorded was minus 67 degrees I'whrenheit. The fce pack 18 not so tormidable as It i |in the Arctic reglona. ‘ Q that | sun? ago th Ly the In Who was the first to discover the carth moved around the Until about curth four centuries was considered, even ined, 1o be the center of | the solar system and of the uni- verse, I1s rotation was understood in the fifteenth century, but the theory of the earth mosing around | the sun, that Is that the sun was | the center of the universe, is as- sociated with Copernicus, who used it at the beginning of the 16th | century to explain the movements | of the heavenly bodies, | Q What | pansion in into ice? | A. When water passes from the | llquid to the solid state it expands [to an amount of about 1-11 of its ;\nhum‘: that is. one volume of wa- ter forms 1.0908 volumes of ice. | Q How gold cleaned ? Common jewelry may be ef- | fectually cleaned by washing with soap and warm water, rinsing in cold water, dipping in spirlts of any kind, and drying in warm box- wood sawdust, Good jewelry only needs washing with soap and wa- ter and polishing with rouge and a chamois leather. THE OLD (By C. A Lright morning in Augus:, 1425, the writer's attention was at. tracted by a sign on the old academy by the village green at Norfoll., Conn,, that read, “Art Shelter, Ad- mission free." Having sone spare time and looking for environment, lie surely found it one hundred per cent, absolutely, ‘The tablet on the building captured his concentration of attention as it will when yon read it: Art Shelter from Heavenly - Spire calls each hour. Music in her Sylvan Glen charms us with her song. Literature ut the vine-clad Bo feasts of fact and story. Art is hére asking for her rightful Place on the Green, Seventy-fiv 's Faithful service, Ten rs and Despar Shelter? A, poor indeed am 1t Art and Beauty are come to heal my body and fill my Soul. My Voice long silent shall call softly a reefing to the Elms and tie listen- ing Robins in joyous note hail dawn of Art Shelter on the Gresy § They say you can't always belie, in signs but there are thoze you ca S true, Amcricy: oil and these were found Irance, Bermuda and ntings, pen paintings and v ood | engravir by Macawin ‘Tuitle of New York. All sales to be used in transforming this building from what it is to what it ought to be. The writer soon found himself ‘in his old schoolroom surrounded by lone of the best collections of art in the world and such a thrill he will |never forget. These paintings are |the result of years of travel and |study by the artist, Macawin Tuttla, | Thoy can be purchased and placed on the wall as a monument to the {memory of the purchaser. with their |nanie attached and are merely loan- led to the Art Shelter and can be |taken away at any time. This Art Shelter should thrive and groty and will prove it fo he one of the: best |attractions Norfollk ever possessed. 1t is planned to have'it open from {May 1 to Oct. 1 every vear-in the future, TLet's get behind the hand ‘\\nxon and push it up the hill | Such is the cultural study of our | Is water the amount when it of ex- ie frozen can jewelry Le ACADEMY Humphrey) One yours gresting'—*Religion er o country, Let us show our interest |and make it a valuable acquisition {10 the good old Conn. 'STATE INTERNAL REVENUE 36,991,448 FOR 19045 Accounts for town of Norfolk. Federal Income Tax £20.565,650 Collected in | Hartford in Year BY GEORGE H. MANNING siington Bureau ot N. B. Herald,) Waehington, D. €., Sept. 16— . S internal revenue receipts for [ the state of Connecticut collected {during the fiscal yéar which ended |last June 30, showed a slight. de- | crease as compared with the fiscal |year 1924, a preliminary atate- | ment of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, U, §. Treasury Depart- | ment, revealed today. Connecticut's decline which | amounted only to a fraction of one | per cent, however, compared: favor- ahly with the average for the antire | U.gted States, the country at Jarge receipts for amounting to | showing a decrease in the last fiscal year cight per cent. | Through the collector's office at | Hartford, a total of $36,051.44563 in internal revenue receipts was re- corded for the state from July 1, 1924, to June 30, 1925. Receipts for the corresponding period in 1023-1924 amounted to $37,006,- 532.52, Federal income tax receipts col- lected in Connecticut during the | past fiscal year amounted to $26,- 630.68. Of this amount $13, 760,553.10 were pald by corporation of the state, and $12,805,077.58 b individuals. —— — FLOWERS AND THEIR MEANT GS date back to the danger—the flower symbola nge blossoms? Why fs hem “Bachelors buttons”? victor erown- Where dia of the All this ‘and other Interesting information is contalned in our Wi ERS AND THEIR MEANINGS, If y, directed: CLIP COUPON HERE ain Herald, )WERS AND THEIR MEANINGS, loose, uncancelled U. 8 post