Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
12 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1926. THEY WERE DOING ITLONG, LONG AGD - Big Fish Were Eating Little Fish Just Like Today NEW IM,TO‘J N[WS ¥ Public Utilities Financing Now s 1 L ~4- 1 oY | In First Place |} f In 1919 new capital issues ; by American companies (te- | taled $2.303.000.000. H scelianeous third {1 .o o | utilities fourth, railroads and land ] n 1925—as also in 1924, { 3, 1922 and 1921 —public ilities ranked first with 496,000,000 out of a total i | $4,099,000,000 in new [ 1 { 1] a good reason for 1 preference in re- i > | RPUT 2’74“521 & CO lies' A LOGKE 1§ CALLED A SUPER SPRINTER Nebraska University Star's Per- Jormances Sensation of World TRIAL DATES ASSIGNED Luticura} -+ Loveliness | A Clear g ™ Healthy Skinj ! Ipiared by Everyda> ' ura Sosp . Quality Creates Demand "SALADA" TEA Is Demanded By Housewives Movies Without Titles Is Aim of Director ON SALE TODAY 10+ THREE WORDS endless circlings of the years Callista Bayne,” everything — one of us. Complete n the Black '1 LOVE YOU~ three words which burn with youth, with hope, with all things clean and fine. Three words which ring ~ver youthful throughout our lives. Three words which—alone of all words of which man is master—hold that sovereign magic to mock the slow ebbings of the days, the turnings of the seasons, the And so it was that at the words, “ pride, hunger, vanity, and fear — was forootten in the sheltering harbor of a splendid love. BRAMBLE BUSH, by Stacey Hutchings. is a glorious stary of love and youth that calls to the fay Journal, NOW ON SALE, ten cents I'm 1n love with you. cternal youth that hies in every Water By Hugh MacNair Kahler Even the midday sun, filtering through interwoven branch and creeper, threw but a fitful light on the tangled maze of waterways which made Black Water a name of terr —astrange, .mldrace.. kct even the stran g capabl g Hoew %awé{ Tonight tens of thousands will faugh and thrll at the antics of a tall, solemn, young man with great horn-rimmed spectacles. Yet how much keener would be their m- terest if they but knew the tremendous amount of brains and thought that goes into the making of one of these comedies. est of that whirl of strange events in which Mark Dutton found himself plunged,once he had looked into the cool, gray eyes of Marian Farre, Brack WaTER, one of the strongest stories of the year, begins in the May Journal, Now On SaLr, ten cents. | Makes Here, in this fascinating articl, Harold Lloyd tells you the whole story. Starting with the years before he arrived at stardom, he outr lines everything—and even reveals some ine teresting details of the making of his latest pictare. Complete in the May Journal, Now On Sarg, ten cents Other Features in the May Journal Four splendid short stories, tour novels ind a one-act play sweil the list of fiction toa total of eleven. And all by such favorite authors as Booth Tarkington, Zane Grey, Albert Payson Terhune, Sophie Kerr, and Elste Singmaster Maude Adams continues her own wonder ful story of her life and art. The Princess (Cantacuzéne writes on Russia and its refugees. S. Josephine Baker, M.D., pleads for a proper bome for every child. Corra Harris and THE MAY Alice Ames Winter share with you their treasured experience with life. And Giulio Gatti-Casazza tells of his thirty years in opera. Fourteen fashion features picture your summer wardrobe. A round dozen of articles— and two over for good measure—help you with your housekeeping, your needlework, and your home-making. Five art features and half a dozen poems minister to your love of the beautiful;and, for the children—and all who love them— there are Rose O'Neill's adorable Kewpies, L ADI HOME JOURNAL $1 o yoar through any newsdealer or authorized agent, or by mail divect to THE LaDIES® HoMe JOURNAL Philadalphia, Penssylvasia