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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY ke W | the days of *40. It news story a mining camp In Tasued Dally (Sunday Exceptod) At Herald Bldg, 67 Church Strect BUBECRIPTION 00 & Year, $2.00 Three Months. A Month, Is nalvely statéd that payrolls re they were dellvered the yesterday was not so guarded, Tt is that hold wore rlght on hand when the police IATES bridge, but somehow unt the up men Entered at the Post Office at Now Rritain a8 Second Clasa Mall Matte {ma 1o the slip One cannot help thinking that A R 10 cunnot help thinking (1 h Offie 1 Rooma to Cambridge s far from perfect. The The only profitable advertis 0 the City, Clreulation press room wiwaya open think it selvea to guard funds very carcfully incumbent upon theme | while they are being transferred Member of the Associnted The Assovinted Pross fs ex titled to tho for vo-p all newn creditad to it or n credited fn this y news publishod here ress. | Buch funds probably are “Insure ure | agalnst rohbory; such Insur- of sengers but | ance dovan’t do a bit { the unfortunate It 1 [ eing . e time that Camb Member Aundit Borenu of Ci The A, R, ( 8 A natie which furnishes ne clreulation. Our el | #ro based upon this nu insire ‘ 4 sl a sort of Ch wspa England I a FINAL CAPTURE OF A BANDIT public in New with gatisfaction the protection against fran Alstribution figures to e local advertisers Il Fngland has reason to view of | capture The THerald ! Tark at Hotaling Rquare; Schultz's Grand Central N News John 1% Troy, the al- automobile Lleged | been bandit who has terrorlzing the vieinity of Had | desperado gone uncaught his ADJUSTMTNT BOARD WAS | Worcester for weeks. 1his GOOD BLGINNING The Board has come into being with the zon- the of Adjustment which | called “exploits” would have had a tendency other weak As every- to appeal the condition are to commonwealth. now it is tor that the inevitably will ing law i& now organized with minds in exception of the employment of a it elerk, Eelection of Willlam E. Attwoed as chafrman was in the nature of a formality, no one else had been considered in view et his previous sterling activity in the cause of a zoned city. There already being two appeals before the board, with others prob- ably likely before the building boom quiets down for the winter, there s every likelihood that the Board of Adjustment will be one of the most keard-from boards in the city. The board starts its active career with eitizens confident in its effec- tive administration of cases that will be brought before it. one to note wages banditry lead o evil end A BLACK sPOT ON PAROLE SYSTEM Fred “lifer” who was shot to death The “carecer” of Brown, the yesterday while aftempting to es- cape from the Nebraska peniten tlary forms a sad commentary upon the parole and pardon system. This weak-minded person first came {o the aftention of the law at the age of 16, when he was con- vieted upon a charge of murdering an elderly couple. He was given an but doned after serving seven years. of being promptly committed and served several burglary and theft sentenced {o ten years but als sympathized indeterminate term, was par- AVIATION MEET AND POOR PROFITS Putting on an aviation meet s one way to gain experience in the psychology of humanity. It is therefore not surprising that the alrplane show glven in New Britain a few days ago yielded small finan- clal An airplane can be seen quite a distance, and there are thongands of thrifty citizens who such circumstances are un- he crimes, Instead reformed, new sentence for In 1920 he for gr individu- he was nd soft-hearted him larceny, with and returns. was paroled. Finally he kidnapped two women, keeping them chained in a hut for two days, Wi and a would-be rescuer der he was der the impression that what can also chained up. After of cost need not be was sen- be s free caught for this crime he tenced to life imprisonment, Before be tried paid for. e could roled Ne shot to death by a guard. In the case of an aviation meet | or pardoned il wpprirs necessary to have the af- [ AF&in, to escape and was frir underwritten by citizens inter- eted in the progress of the sclence. | = COST OF CATCHING RATS AND FLEAS in YOUNG LAFOLX VICTORY “Young Bob Lalollette,” son of the late senator is genially referred to, won the Wisconsin sen- atorship in quite an, easy manner yesterday, as the result of which he will go to the Senate and take up the ‘relns of insurgency where his father dropped them. Of course, Robert M. Jr., was elected primarily he was the son of an flinstrious political figure in the people there evidently regarded him aa a chip from the old block, one who would represent them pretty ! much in the manner of his dad. | ¥°W Some journals think young La Follette will be “isolated” the STTE'S How great the | city was disclosed in the report of |an tuvestigator who declared it York 372 to the wit, politics works in a as costs the city of New | catch each rat taken by civie rat-catching authorities, to the Board of Health. And that it | for each flea Killed. Trank D mayoralty candidate, sponsored the | statisties through Investigation 4, and added the “bon mot” that Tammany got money from fhe city the bhoard $77 costs LaFollette, | nk Waterman, Republican becausc his state; the to fight fake epidem it Mr. Waterman voters that, if elected, he cost of catching the Now the $66 fle teful would reduce rats to about each, and in to about New Yor of killing gra him mayor. Benate, and that his influence there will be nil. This, to be seen. Events that the insurgents can wicld much insurgents than third and | 1t i» eignificant in this respect t however remains have proven EDITORIAL WRITER AND MINING STOCRS I. Cobb more influence as as members of a par s the New for the new Senator Lalolletts will go Siiiorta] the opr although in practice he will of this party Insurgency aeem to ha\e to Senate as a Dblican™ the of the in friend and edito perso dent Jie innumcrable statesmen, men < and prominent ing its head in at leas Sy September, states admin an S hestale, have a hard t out widow an est power was writ CAMBRIDGIES RECORD OF MOBBLURIES 30 YEAKRS AGO AND A YEARS HENCE ndred vear Bank m day's seizur Intest in that pecond traneter trial torced modus operandi in all crimes to. mive me o iviglon. One can eee plenty of them per- in every growing town. of | to an | banks up that way do not secm to|smiles | | | | parventiy | ing | &hould | heen | pockets soull L reduced petrated there has heen about the| More interesting aro pletures and same, Cambridge again figured in a | deseriptions of the strect 50 and 40 years ago, when the tral Grand Cen« Terminal reared its grand palice | plle of brick upon the present site {had made an arrangement to guard |of the great terminal, when the In | ratlrond | one | the tracks bore down toward statfon in the bed of the The that d as “too far uptown." streets, atation at time was re Such changes are taking place in the downtown sections of neavly all growing citles, I'ifty years from system of transferring funds in [ now pictures of the downtown sec- tlon of New Britaln will create by beholders, | ictures of the rallroad station the biggest laugh of all sophisticated will | MAYOR HYLAN SIT TIGHT Iylan of New York ap Is through, Tnstead of tak- | the TO Mayor advantage of opportunity given him the Hearst 1o by newspa pors run as an independent backed by the power of the Hearst the it press, cluded mayor has would only rightly con- lead other defeat and the victory of the The the to an- Republican candidate. that crats may at some future to gentleman mayor evidently thinks Demo- day be of it, e he some and ke treated use him acts a now he may be like one later. As for the Hearst pross, eafisfac tlon 1s widespread that their power has been clipped. PULLMAN COMPANY ITS SURCAARGE Rasking AND delightful in allowed in returns the that of from surcharge Pullman fares is under the decisions the TInterstate Com- merce Commission, the had company Pullman company wonderful The dividends has a had cenfury year, declared for with- but prosperity Why the e half a ont the year of its gr hoen 192 Pullman fail, est in company fat accommo- allowed to inflict a surcharge on Pullmau ken The oper- dations i3 entirely beyond the of those who have to pay it Pullman comp this ated 8,510 ny year cars, and every passen- ger patronizing them lad to pay a surcharge in addition to the regu- lar Pullman rates. Attempts have heen mado by various to eliminate but cfforts have organizations or reduce the surcharges, to such At gress an attempt was made to have the present fime unavailing, the last Con- {he surcharge ed by atlach- ing an amendment to an approp bill, the was HHou International Travel- rep tion which Senate hut the passed lost the gse. Later the Commercial in attempt by of the 1. C. C, some Federation hefore also failed, the ouzh members of of the possibile. commission were might e Pullman view a duction The up considerable additional business company drumined this year by making low rales to organizations and in connection turning what bad in its history. with vacation fravel, threatened to be a year into | the hest i And this big and prosperous | company. reaches into the | of one surcharge not based on reason | which travelers with an oner- or justice, goes so far as to expeel the public that it mulcts to pay | “Or conrse | | | | | | the its colored the hit by the high surcharge to of porters. most of wages cmployes, The pullic, | | vate, has | ite | tips the p 5 causing unrest among the of Pullman who look after the | comfort travelers, | The public would much prefer | to hand the large to the por- ters than to the Pullman company, as the porters at least need it The New Haven railroad is run-| ning a special low-price excursion | from New York to Montreal and ! train | “Mon- return on the system's crack betw two cities, the trealer he rallroad’s ad in the New York press says that patrons | will have ‘religious, educational and historic main thing, however, compare Montreal sold in New sts. T wet York he to ith those liott returne wecks' vacation indig in found g0 to serowed a pair benefactor Fred a thr ilson is taken Carlson he wouldn't Conductor today Jo from was Mr How hut rk He 1 trom his and v Lritain Scheutzen V' king and park honor. rest target, vRe committee sis IFrank Eict Jahn, secretary, and wsurer, Fred Zim- shooting master &t in prize Ther its annual its 2l¢ g neral mu; The is in receipt lord provost 1. thanki fo rican v conquering the they bubonic plague A new 7 his eity pot ed light Plain- ng a permit. Hs s00n was enlightened on this matter, could avoid obta 35 hours in Montreal for | and | however, and his strange edifle ereeted for nothing, The Swedish republicans are much lucensed at the charges made by the German republicans, that they alded tign of Mr, Hurlburt, a They particularly are charges against August M. Johnson, who was a candldate for the board of rellef on the r publican ticket and is a member of the Swedish organization, The exccutive committee met last night and an inquiry into the matter will be made, Grapo fuice seems to be a popu- lar drink at present, but the ques- tlon avises: “Is it right to use it it 16" says someone, “it must be just as innocent afler being squeezed out of the grapes as he- fore." “But the same is then {rue of cider and mince pies, The aver- age woman woildn't feel any ecasier to & it at her table than the fermented kind,” was aroused at rve would she Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN No line Bex and endure halt feminine, ean half mascu- I"ar nk too many is people also seem the splce to variety matrimony of Apparently to control trigger government everything finger., now except tries the How! a shirt, st Jane it 1 or ¢ spemy apper a to call “girl, It is so difficult to tell just where oise leaves off and swell-head be- n gine Class room ing i section work there ould b a thirill. also, was a cheering Firmness man was heing stubborn A fine Heked quality in who as a hoy for are those garag your litthe man car, metal torgets (o in There and after is too enougl they are birth of much control born, not About the only poor can't afford as is an acquittal neeessity” vell as the the rich A hick town is a place trafic cop nods and pase by. where the smiles Tt he wusea always suspect that he would enjoy a good ory. perfume, yon stand as Muc# better, pens on a shopping tour, “Women men.” fatigue if well it hap- The moves shade man in the when he is a traveling village already in salesman the It =o't difficult to hecome a member of the infelligentsia. Jnst learn to register scorn. y magazines ughty people. ads them all. More mean same don't The naug! more 1 ecrowd r The race Iy it instead pendent. is progressing. Former- took of a nine to hecome inde- The qnatc is no effort without an ade- cause, It takes one nose on « grindstone to keep another in the air. sentenes n in said have no what 1s like." Associated Tnc.) W door,” idea move net 4 1 furniture by family tected Editors, Violated Liquor Law, Savio Pays $200 Fine pleaded guilty to a ting the liquor laws Newell Jennings in vesterday and was ven a suspended W Savio of viol superior fined $200 and ail s ound conrt cou e of io wa poli sen- the local the in ut M aring be- I o f e 2ith time nn was six from drink to Jail for appealed from on u c MceDermot tonee to tig o local police co me €on Observation On The Weather shi Forecast Prob- light and Thure possi glon crn New showers Sout vi slightly portic winds. for I W fresh, strong cast Probahly T'inursday New tonig umer T slrong e York and m showers late slightly fresh, possibly | winds. | pera An area of high pres- ntral over Ont Conditions of io is produc- ing pleasant weat with low tem- ures in t the lake A trough from " regic of low ¢ Min showery tled rn a xas sota is causi ather in th & mpera 1 southern ture is ahove o noun- er this vicinity ir weath rising 1 perature followed by cloudy unsettled weather Thursday, slowly Al control | them | as you | who | hoy twenty-one years | | state farm imposed In t it in of | LSDAY, SEPTEMBER 80, 1925, Let's Put Up a Winter's Supply, rolks! How about a cellar shelf with jars of fun and ch Of humor and of Jokes, laughter and of try months and drear, To serve up dally as we need ‘e, folks? { Making Him Feel Himself, “My poor man, here's a | sandwieh and a cup of cofice for Framp: “Would you mind playin® the plano for me while® cat? T get s0 homesick for the cx Cl [ THE HARDWAR (Ry Gene, The Villag | The Hardwure Mere | Kind | Of job I think is vight; No wonder he has peace of mind I'rom morn (i1l late at night. [ No matter if you're rieh or poor Sometime you must come through his door » look his stock of fre Messmer. MERCHANT, Rlacksmith.) ant has the T m cracks o'er, plows and dynamite, Irom him the the gaint Can time obtatn A Kinds of varnish, put And eke the humble glain, Which, if applied as he di Will cover up all spots and specks | And sell the property for checks | That pleasing gain, sinner or any . paint s, show a The knocker can keep well supplicd With hamimners from his hoard, | While women, when their men have died Can get a na And if you L He'll 1 To Whic hing board. shonld get pot in Juil sell you saws that will not f ut and save yon friends couid not afford! all bars, Al Hard Luck “But, doctor, 1 cough and I must g |1t righ away. It interferes with | business, Dr. Barnes: “Who are you trying to kid? Coughing can't interfere with your work. Patient: burglar.” | I ent have a vy A4 i of my “But it does. I'm a —Barhara LTIQUETTL, A 1 the hand-—isn't table manners. in good Contradictory. was standing by watchi asked, he win- it rain. “does God Johnny low one Sunday, “Mamma,” he Ke it rain?" son,’ replied his mother. countered Johnny, “this is oot e iy “Well | the fi Sunday | Helen T, Smith. ma MEOWS FROM THI Such heavenly Iall weather lave been having! 1 have been wotoring with my friend Bert who was at Bryn Mawr last ye she is mad ubout cars und v o have had gorgeous trips. It is a little oo exciting sometines s she doesn’t pay any uttention to | Bpex d 1 or traffi¢ regulations, hut she is pretty that she always lout of trouble somelow. Last week we went flying through of Hanover and cop shot by us and told 1 |pull over. Tie was awfully mad. had his summons pad in his h and as h up to us he sald: 11 guess TN have to you a and Bertha said “Yon sweet In New York they malie me That was too much for {him and he told us to get along. A few days ago we found a card [ticd {0 the steering wheel saying that |we had parked on the wrong side of |the street and were to repor (o [the police station right away. Ber- |tha took the card oft and tied it on a car in front of ours. “The pol i will think he le mistulke the number,” she said, and surc 1 1rd nothing from it t week she actually ran over & man and knocked him down and Ithen got out of it by saying that he | had slowed up without holding out | his hand! Can you beat it? And she is such an artless little thing! Meow, meow . . . When she got her [new car she traded in the old ont ‘AHI the dear child said thit eveniy {*The nice thing hout it is, Carrie, that 1 haven't paid for the old one {vet, but the dlerk dign't know that.” 1‘\'\\\‘ little innocenf® that she Meow . meow CAMPUS CAT we [the town {hin lbny them. n m a in cnough, we h e | Yours, | CARRIE We'll Have To Call the Attention of To This acei- | the Health Commissione | Rert: “I hear you waus in an “I sure was." : “Did you receive first-aid?’ “I did not. The doctor tre «d five others before he treated me V. L. Tyrrell. KEASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE ed by Gertrude) N (Conduct or Bi kindly use the ‘situate’ in a sertence?” e Birg on my sister asked the doctor Why it was she got no thinner. veplied, with sly expression, What for dinner?" " will you sitnate fine, old-fashioned You will please use Ans re's @ Ameli a sentence, { Do Anson Jiggs Od-time corned beef feed 1 nd cabbage to beat. f you've Ame pavdays “IX in oughta 2] SISLER DENIES BAD EYES §t. Louis, Sept a st. I after esstul e R tern trip with ns, Manager report that he were giving America sell three for two centa. Dreserves (o tide us over all the win- | 30 (M—Back home | SEASO MARTINELLI WORLD'S FOREMOST TENOR October 25 20 N 19 NEW BRITAINMUSICAL CLUB Presents 25- MAIER and PATTISON {i PIANISTS—RETURN ENGAGEMENT | You cun get an answer to any questlon of fact or information by | writing to the Question liditor, New ! Britaln Herald, Washington Bureau, [ New York avenue, Washinglon, | D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps | for reply. Medlca), legal and marital advice cannot be glven, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. Al other questions will recelve a per- gonal reply. Unsigned requests cane not be answered. Al letters are confidentlal.—Iditor, Q. the total | men United ary at West Point are appointed from the en- | listed personnel of the army and| the equator and Australia, t per cent of the officers now climate is mild and equable r: in the armmy were gradvates of ing fro £0 to 90 degrees but West I'oint 2 the rain™fl s extremely heavy. 1t A There are 1ad cadets uow is under I'rench rule. and French West Point who were appointed is the official language, —although from the enlisted men of the regu- {he Jers apeal mostly English, lar army and the Natfonal Guard.!and the natives speak their own The total enrollment at the mili- Polynesian lar tary academy is 1,100; therefore| . Are the number of i the enrollment of the enfisted through automobile accidents amounts to 14 per ecnt of the total creasing or decreasing? stndent body On June 380, 1025, A Fhe number of deaths by there were 11880 officers in the aute accidents in 58 of the prinel- { Unlted Sfates @ of this num-; pal citiea of the United States for Ler 3,262 wer Toint gradu-| 1924 waa I'rom January 1 !t May 1925, for fifty-two of 1he irading cities with a population twenty-five the num- of deaths was 1 as ted with 1,564 such deaths dur- 1) of year. What Pulitzer n ainee 1918 Poole: Ambersons” 1920: No What number of the per cent of in States mil academy ——— The ng- at W uge. deaths in- a men iy West Q. When trone: made a common article af ¢ | for men? A. ‘Trousers garment, not in o RerEons, of millions, 1 ber nt t st confined ing trouger is ot -elotit just as 0 adaptation of the | the nerally speaking. | fe st adopted by peo N arctic climates, and e were the undversal form dress for males and fomales just as skirts Lecame the costinie of MeN ¢ Tnnocenes and women in the tropics. In the jass. “Aliee middle s it beeame an almost | Tarkington: 192 universal custom for men to weal hy willa Cather; the trousers and women the skirts. | py gdna Ferber In' one ays he calls! . What is the the Transalpine people the “panted (jon of the worll” people’ because of their garments, A O fifteon which seemed queer to the Romans ' ne ilians togas and whose soldiers wore short skirt i Q. TIs an author properly re- Heiress fo Lose Her ferred to as an “artist?” | License for 15 Da | . An author may be properly | 4 2 Lealled an artist, using the word to | The local police o expecting mean one who does work sceord- |daily to receive notice from ing to the constructive i of the eommissioner of es of the suspension of art, 4 L . (. How leng has it heen sinee | Operator's license of Miss Eleanor C. (he manufacture of pewter houss. | T:ewis, local heiress convicted in the ) ' | ce o \turday or held cooking ufensils was discontin- | Hartford police court Saturday on ued? charges of violating the moior ve- | A hicle<laws and the Hartford t [ e i ordinances, The suspension of | @ Jias the Star Spangled Ban. | levis' license “”,‘r, BN iy ner even heen afficllly’ mada. iife||[€ON SSIONSES OfLCe 28 8001 [itolstand Swlille {piistheing: blayed i e SEAT DM EOI IR TECHS: 4 ) { motor vehicle department. A The United States has not by [M3or vohicle a2 Sl law. officialimni fonallan eyl lis (IS IBEOIEREE RN CI DI Er o] i {the one that calls for 2 | According to the war department,’ g - ¢ [the Star Spangled - Ranner haa Peneion, and her conviction on this e SIS Bl 9 eharge will cause her to lose her | never heen officlally adopted as the | COATES S €SIS0 ROC T Je5E O anthe ) nited | e Y Ve [pattonal awhem of the Unrer | G o epartment nmoinesd ich. and ovders require it tthat there are featu in the played when the flag is lowered are the Th metamorphesed breec the skirt is an loin cloth. € trousers were fi e in very corresponding period received fleld of have in the hooks awards 10157 “Ris 1919 amily” by The Magni Iiooth arkington 1921: '“The Age by Edith. Wharton; Adams” by Booth “One of Ours” 1924: “So Dig"” of Cicrro's Jewish popila- and one half m whose ¢ ware the motor of the Their manifacture was dis- ued ahout the year 1840, as a in any only, no LATE MUSICAL WORLD the ' January 14 DUSOLINA GIANNIN OPRANO T SENSATION IN March 14 This Constitutes the I'inest Offering of Music Ever Presented in New Britain JOIN THE MUSICAL CLUB | | | | con- | | | TSRS ¢ ] | AR |tere s Jonathan Foulke, wha ‘was lan old man when Horace Greelpy told the young men to go west, lthe advanced wge of 108.he fally has Tineded Greeley's adviee and has Taws An- lived in Towa nearly 100 ated to Los rom Lewis that call a leration or any dive frer the stahdaid’ ‘poii spending the right to eperat spe e for For Part of $3,000 Reward Judg: Newell Jennings gate a hearin vesterday afternvon - to Chairman David L. Dunp. of tie Joird of police commissioners on an application for a share in the ward of 83,000 offered for the cap- ture of Giovanni Voltari, murdrrer of Joseph D'A 0. MOW serving a life sentence at Wethersfield, “The, application by Chairman Dunn was f of the ‘police’ peficion fund, and was bascd on the part playel in the murderer’s arreet by Sergeant Patriek J. 0" Mar Judge Jennings rescrved decision as he did in the cases of the hree Canadians who applied for the roward at the hearing September 19, 1o at “Retreat,” but there is no act of congress fo thiz effect. Official orders preseribe that army and | navy units stand at attention, while the anthem is being played. It is omary for cilizens to stand when it is being played as a whole selection, but not as a part of a medley. Q. What kind of coins are used in Cuba tor money? A. In Cuba, the monetary unit is the gold peso, cquivalent to the | American gold dollar. Gold pleces l'or 20, 10, 5, 4, 2 and one peso are | coined; silver picces of 1 peso. 40 centimos (cents), 20 centimos and 10 eentimos; and nickel pieces of and 1 centimos, Q. How many national flags are there in the world? A. Bucluding island possessions, ! colonics and dependencies, ete., there are 63 national flags of the varions independent countries of the world. Q. Ts the service examination tion inspector A. The last » any scheduled civil for immigra- examination for im- migration inspector was held on November 19 1924, About 800 are | still on the register eligible for ap- pointme The register is active, but not exceedingly so. Eligibility is usually for one year. No ex- amination for this position is now pending QN Cin mention some of chicvements of Luther Bur- 1k along agricultural and hortl- enltural lines? A. Improved wheat; reduced the size of the pit of the plum; pro- duced a flaxseed that furnishes a pure white oil. and Increased the content 20 per cent: Increased the size of mulberry leaves three time to furnish food for silk worms and brovght the trees to d velopment in {wo years instead of seven or cight: made sunflowers | grow close to the ground and in- creased their seed content by pro- | ducing blossoms nearly two feet in diameter; produced from American you il The climax of the presidential * MITCHELL ON' THE STAND (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) commission’s investigation into America’s aircraft situation came when Col. William A. Mitchell, former assistant chief of the army air service and bitter critic |of the present regime, took the witness stand at Washington. This picture was taken when he was on the stand testifying. peas the small “petit pois” that formerly found only in Franc developed a black walnut that ma- tures in teu to twenty years; made chives hear a sweet scented flower; created the blue petunia; produced | artichokes 14 inches in diameter; produced an everhlooming sweet- pea, a perennlal poppy, a sweet- scented verhena, a primrose five inches in diameter and the Shasta dal n Turenu's lntes what the ancie ‘L'f stones; geme of tha hest known gei and synthetic stones all there. in PRECIOUS STONES EDITOR, W 1s the officer personnel of Veterans Bureau hospital at| Tuskegee, Alabama, all negro? A. The entire personnel, includ- ing physicians, nurees and other attendants are all negroes. Only | negroes ara treated st the hespital Q.. Where is “Tahiti?” | A." This is one of the islands. in what is known as the| Windward group, that roughly ! measured, lles midway - between Q. the 1 want & copy of the bu closs herewith five cents In o coln for mm n NAME BTREET and No, Society | CITT I am a reader of The Herald, : what precions stones mean s mentloned sh 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. ¢ MS AND PRECIOUS STONES and en- e, un cancelled, e WHAT IS YOUR BIRTHSTONE legends and bellefs connected with Gems ave heard and things you haven't—all are MS AND PRECIOUS STONES about the curative value of colora of artificial thought in the Bible; imitation, Flll cut the coupon below and mail as directed: CLIP COUPON HERE ington Bureau, New Britatn Herald U. 8. postage etamps er At