Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW PASSPORT 1S SHALLER IN i Also Will Be Printed for Easier Reading Washington, April 1 (#—The state department has declded to stop issu- ing the old style engraved passports and within the next month or so will publish o neatly printed substitute of | vest pocket dimensions, Underlying the change of style are two chicf factors, safety and econo- my. Departmental officers expect the new form to give the government ahsolute protection from counterfeit products, a source of constant wor- ry. Then too, they say, the govern- ment wiil save much of the expense that went with the production of the engraved parchment, and by using less expensive paper. o further step in the direction of cconomy, the new passport will bhe embossed and sealed in colors by muchinery rather than by hand. To fnsure safety from counterfeft- | ed passports, the department plans to change the form from time to tlme, to publish them on a specially prepared paper and 1o use a distinc- tive type, the first being printed with Tiffany type closely resembling en- graving. it been discovercd wl ident that killed A 1ith at Bryan, Ohio t was his flying record Pilot Swith is said to have ng at sixteen in a planc himself. 1n his first flight, the plane crashed, wiping out the work of six months, Fle also f¢ said n the originator of sky- writing and the first American avia tor to “loop the loop™ in an airplane, During the San Francisco exposition and he nd other o w awarded or flying at varions times. Hmith joined the Afr Mail seryice in 19 nd for a 2 flew in the day on July 21 fying at night between Ne and Cleveland, 'The post offi partment has been tryiag (o discover o1 time 1 Japan the nse of the crash. Apparently | The Joyous Easter Season The refreshing and delightful new Spring models are now shown in their completeness. Ihere is nothing left for imagination—never have we heen <0 proud of them as this season. We can only say—-cone in and share our enthusiasm now. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1926, there was no mechanical defect fn |cstute left by Theodore Itooseyvelt? ‘n It was estimated at flylng above the Q. Are watermelons and squash |clouds. The opinion is that he was hoth clussed as fiuih? | descending to pick up the gulde A. The watermelon fs classed as :llgh(! of the Alr Mall course and fruit; squash as a vegetable, came too near the trees, Hlis plan Q. Can you give me directions for er ‘.-Iruvk the tops of some trees thut planting a shoot of the rubber plant? | | projected above the others, breakiny ~ A. A rubber plant shoot must be | jand did not live to tell of the dls. plant. Tie spognum moss on the | aster, greate a allow it to stand for ut least three | AR \d, who | months, The twig can t be cut won the 00 metre and 5,000 meter laway and replanted, The time for runs in one day and the 10,000 met- | replanting does not matter, ler run two days later, Q. Has Poland an ambassalor to Q. What {8 the most famous ! the United § ? What is his ad- mountain in mythology? Iross? When were diplomatic ‘-1|-‘| The best known Is Mount |tions between the United States and home of gods and god- | Poland established? ireck mythology, It is in Poland has no ambassador to Thessaly and ts top was supposed |the United States. The head of the |to touch the heavens. Here Jupiter | diplomatie mission of Poland to this \vuled over the other dictie | country is an envoy extraordinary Q. Why is Colorado called the'and minister plenipotentiary | Centennial state? land established diplomatic A. Because it was permitted to|with this country May 16, the Union in 1876, the centennfal an- | when the first Polish niversary of the Union. Prince Lubomirski, presented Q. What was the vote polled fn |credentials to President Wilson, The 1024 by Willlam Z. Foster, presiden- | present minister of Poland is Jan tlal candldate for the Worker's anowskl. His add 1s 2640 | | Sixteenth Street, N. W., Washington, 26,386, D. C. Why did the United States| Q. When were the first postage rines to Halti? Ts Haitl a stamps issucd in the United States? | possession of the United States? A, The first we ued by indi- | A. Haitl'is a republic. Formerly | vidual postmasters at their own ex- | it was a French colony but pro- | pense in 1845. clatmea its independence January 1 Q 1804, and now it is governed under | tion of honey by a hive of bees fn a constitution ratified on June six months? | 1918. In November, 1915, a ho A. Trom 50 to 100 pounds, de- | claiming to he the Haitian congress | pending on raphical ratified o treaty with the United | Northwester oisa States that established ual | honey protectorate over Haiti. Th aty Q. ' joes the nam provides for a number of American | Oddle” 1 what does \dvisors to the Haitian government, | mean? ippointed by the president of on the recommendation of the presi- lent of the United 1es, i Q. What was the value of the| What is the average produc- location, very good 1 from the Sean- | god of war. It} ». warlike, E Youmight as well have the best § W.5.QUINBY COMPANY: BOSTON:NEW YORK- CHI Satisfaction is always twofold when a pair of Dorothy Dodd shoes is sold You—with the pleasing appearance and value you have se- cured and We—with the knowledge we couldn’t have sold vou a better shoe at the price. ! A, The dried julco or gum of thy his plane. ke was about three miles | A, about | bullet or bulley tree, used for iue R[]”N[] WI]Rll] [ 1o|'t his course near Rryan, Ohio, and ' 500,000 at the time of bis deuth, | sulating wires, was evidently What are some of the prod- ucts of the Arcti ccountrics? Olls of seals, walrus, whales; | skins of reindeer, bear, fox; feath- | and eggs of the elder duck; fish and minerals. There is about one chance in twig or put the twig through a pot 20,000,000 years of a comet striking | Q. Who is considered the world's | of soll, s0 that a part is covered, and | the earth, according to Science Serv- | a wing. Smith was badly burne! cooted while still attached to the | comet colliding with the earth? ; | ! Aplessant effective syrup. er on the “Chicago, ad soremalios e PISO'S . Had fuars ,d C:\GII Throat Salve. 35¢ feago™ it months. Licutenant Arnold 1 a big loose lenf conditions—by cand | {huts of Alaskan fis aance o« Plactd With Other Relics atifi"il."curers or' Smithsonian Tnstitution ~ oc Aravian seserte s cates, in the cockp! glon, April 1 — Tho|cago” while In fiigl log book of @ great alventure can I an sopjochiy ? v simple, hu now for the first fime be seen hy it revenls wit) the public at the Smithsonian insti- ness the strain and tutlon. This s t 1l Kept by (trip—dangers which it Leslle P, 1d, ol ng flew inee ¢ of the tw \ v 1) A o first complete | Of flight nort) it of the o by alr writes: “Rounding ( Yas been on exhi the Kiek of the trip, bitlon «t the Smitt in the quarters of commanding offf- |get ahead. crs of Indlan barracks, on the edges |t ¢ the uncertain handwriting {ndi- sonlan for several (from the ocean came in in great 13 |swells — conservatively estimated, [of course — the endiess receptions lkept Nis diary (rom our altitude of 800 feet, as be- [and dinners, where the filers occas- book, mak-|ing forty feet high, Great sport to |lonally go to sleep from fatigue; ac- a line, for |watch them break It was writ- 'shore; greater yet to r all sorts of [forced landing." |of the landing on the le If in the| The diary reveals also the intense |Indo-China. hermen, in the pressure under which the flight la- |drink the local water imagine a (lands; lighter tales suc! The men against the [counts of strange customa in distant h as the one river Hue In teared to because of world's capitals, Lored for flve months—pressure to |fever and the only wine to be had ree” “Up at §:30"—these are the (I'rench priests. This “Up at one, “Up at |was the holy wine belonging to some the priests and sometimes, most frequent entries for each day, |could not sel) and the Americans t 10tors or making repairs, mes in the ot some- | buying not the wine Indo-China |glass for the church, llowed by short accounts of long |were In danger of going thirsty un- it of the “Chl- Lours of forced labor, changing |til Arnold had the brilllant idea of but stained This was the rried st and where the tools grew so hot from |knot cut .and all consclences ap- tramat an it was impossible to handle | peased. them, sometimes In a storm on the | Alaskan coast where the men worke- mgers of the 1 ever chang merican plancs from Seattle he ¥s which more than once were |c pent withont breakfast or woe Cantion was which sometimes continued through |senian .announces also Here the waves |without break for 42 hours. The diary has been loaned to the mithsonlan by Lieutenant ssantly at the led all day drenched to the eskin; indefinitely. Mr, Paul Arnold Garber, o rge of aeronautic exhibits at the lunch, fnational museum under the Smith- the transfer \from the war department of 66 There are other phases of the trip, photographs taken during the fiight. e e ————— b P Sxenes nly as France makes her linest soaps cou Skuwrrue, luxury-loving France! France that sends us so many superior things for the toilet. It was France that discovered and developed the method by which Lux Toilet Form is made! That smooth, glossy surface of Lux Toilet Form—the minute you see it you know Lux Toilet Form is a true “savon de toilette.” It is made just as France makes her finest toilet soap! Made quite diffcrently from the white soaps you are used to. Satin-smooth, fine-textured, firm, Lux Toilet Form lasts and lasts just as imported soap does. And such deli- cate, fresh fragrance— not too much — you The French method also means ample lather no matter how hard the Id this soap be made know it is from a European perfume expert. And that generous lather you have liked so in imported scaps—even where water is hard— Lux Toilet Form gives it to you! How often you've been tempted, in spite of their extreme prices, to buy French soap just for that same lusurious feeling Lux Toilet Form gives you— intangible, but very real! You do feel better groomed after Lux Toilet Form! In its inviting lavender and white wrapper, sprigged and flowered like an old-time sampler, Lux Toilet Form is at your druggist's, your department store and your grocer's. Ten cent stores have t, too. Lever Bros. Co., Cam- bridge, Massachusetts, Caressing magic lather let the water be ever 30 hard—what jcy AR BRANY Precious baby loves his gentle soap, just ke mother's