New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 19, 1926, Page 6

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1926. New Britain Herald ™ HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY )t course, there is no fast AW how anyone drive; Hurley's must Superintendent scheme (Sunday Excepted) 61 Church Street. Tssued Daily having a tr AT Herald Bidg., ffic policeman warn slow troublemakers, and Mr. Humphreys Wonders iem for disobeying an off ¢ persi a fashion. 1t howe SUBSCRIPTION RATES 35,00 a Year. $2.00 Thres Mont ¢ t to work a An Inquiry About the [ Hairpins. o & Month. s e will be an ineffective method, ver, unless torcycle police- d Entered at the Post Office at New Britaln ot atd aw he as Second Class Mall Matter. man | | The Washingto: a inted e i Bivoe | Washington Star printed an entertaining article the warning other in which Ernest N. Humphrey day TELEPHONE CALLS divy Business Office 925 Editorial Room 926 Britain manufacturer, was quoted be- of that most cidents occur %5 Wond what eventually The only profitable advertising medium ot road: A o the City. Circulation booke and press room always open to advertisers. manufactured Bri drivers New tain manufa slower cars|Vas auoted as saying his Member of the Associated Press. 8 ars The Associatel Press is ex: ively en titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwiee Gredited in this paper apd alwo local news published therein. ade about 50,000 cigaret ly as a sideline for other This cases a r, does not Eeino Arms is a comparatively 1 ding will be lawful or speders will be just |SMall number, but there are 150 other firms making cigaret cases, arrested as before, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. The A. B. C. s a natlonal organization which furnishes newspapers snd adver- tisers with & strictly honeet analysle of cireulation. Our circulation etatistice are based upon this audit. This insures | protection against fraud newepaper | fa distribution figures to b tional l:.mi as dangerous as the | SOMe averaging as high as 500,000 a year. not one too St estimat- n nor too slow, that is desired. g down to expert more or less — there mus local advertisers. OF THOMS STRENGTH IN THE STAT William E. is deserving of the nomina- the be as cases made there many cigaret in this country every year as In New Times Entrance The Herald fs on sale daily York at Hotaling's Newsstand Square; Schultz's Newsstande, Grand Central, 42nd Street. —_— ticket THE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT (a) He MAKES AN ANNOUNCEMENT | o0 pertor The State Highway Department, [ He through its official organ of course, P, has announce that it will shortly undertake to repair several highways leading out of | New Britain, notably the Beech Swamp road between this city and Berlin, a notorious washboard roadway that has been in a mentable condition indeed for longer period of years than we care to reckon. Just what was the | reason for this move is hard to de- termine. We have learned, long ago, that pleas of New Britain peo- | ple fall upon deaf ears in political | circles in Hartford, whatever jus-|gaj ajong | possesses one already. He takes his | tice there may be behind their ar- | gugge Thoms has come out as 2 gft, u&Lns it for i “mlf ;.r;d‘ | £ aath _|then ppts it among the relics in favoring modifications of the dry | i " iosion. After a whilo he law. He is one of the few candi- | goes back to one of his old loves, dates for any office who has ideas |and starts carrying a case again, but whatever w it is figured there are some six or seven cig- arette cases in every man's life that have gone to waste. What be- comes of them? No one knows. “Manufacturers of cigarette cases are doing the greatest business of their career; for the simple reason that since women took up smoking there is a greater demand for cig- arette ‘Women, like men, Thoms of Wa- are automobiles all go trying in Mr. discover, use. Where they to Humphreys is for governor on Demo- | vainly to and we for several the the cratic reasons. |would gladly be of assistance if we is best Democratic | could state. A L2 g | Many of the American-made b has not feared to state oy 288 red to state | igaret cases go into export especially to South America, where trade, his without straddling, par- t jcularly he wet a v ques- | woan Bt 0 ticularly on the wet and dry ques- | tney are said to be especially popu- Hon- lar on account of their marked (c) He was willing to step aside | i, poriority over the native product two the to years ago to permit could come Charles G. Newtown as the gubernatorial and now ought to have party the Morris | of leather, straw, or silk. see what of nomination of Yet, when said about where they possibly go, it remains to desti- the cigaret cases. The Star gave the follow- | may or all s la- | of 2 | nominee, his own chance at the honor. (d) He is an able and highly re- up a a mystery the actual nation of as | Washington spected man and would put o ing explanation, ¥ not be correct: “The average man who has a cigarette case given him usually strong battle. (e) His would ler m, popularity the ticket personal d strength the to line, guments. There is not, in the state of Con- necticut, a highway as generally used as the Beech Swamp Road which is in as poor shape. It has |is willing to state them unequivo- been consistently ignored by the T C e & Ehett e is e highway department and complain- | A1 Smith of Connecticut. ants have been received with scant ‘ 1t courtesy, although this newspaper, | qounted as well as certain groups of New Britainites should be, it they with ecn public questions and issues and cally. nominated it un- mean he would he were would appeal to the voters on a modifi pla the votes of those who favor modi- a who even cation tform, and would ask for are not, influential the cases. ave done What Becomes of Them? Where All the Cigaret Cases Go That His Firm Makes, Which Leads To Fate of Razor Blades and generally have several cases apiece ey it to- back to pulling fags use one today, discard and eventually method of morrow the old the §O t iher Bu are worn to becomes 11 What And o at what blades irpins? And about the ordinary about f iRt oxietier hit pins one buys for five or ten pac So 2s men are men and whiskers are whiskers, razor-t But never lades never go out of style wh they finally land has satisfactorily explained. Sinclair Lewis had Babbitt plac them atop the the cabinet in his bath room; but even such a keen-sighted novelist as Sinclair could not tell the world where Mrs some Babbitt from could they went Babbitt there, Perhaps have thrown but Mrs on the subject wasn't interviewec There are all sorts of contrivances on the market for sharpening safety but razor blades, the average man sems to get along without resharp- ening his blades. He leaves them on the window-sill in the bathroom, de- posits them back of the bathtub, or when traveling, leaves them in his room for the chambermaid to dis- pose of. All of which, however, does not What blades men ans ately a carded in great nation? As for hairpins, the question is simplified. There are not as many used as formerly. Since the girls bob their hair and roll their own the hairpin market has taken an enorm- ous slump, and what becomes of the hairpins, therefore, may not be so important. When it is a matter of speculating what becomes of the ordinary pins used by all classes of the population it we give it up. organization, all possible to secure a remedy wracking surface of the road. Pos- | Connecticut company, 1ot the who did he fication and would solicit from the bone- | (.o In honest of not would thos be developed there. The chief reason is economic. The Filipinos them- clves would not be able to furnish words, be it. other sibly the about now that it is running auto bus the route, ha an attentive A ~Thik 10 | that town of course, of New- good candidate, to be a lies is not Charl is not £ Morris the necessary labor, and what there over been able g G is of it would be too high in price; for contrary to the general belief, Iilipino labor gain ear somewhere in Hartford. If so, we company our thanks for the facing of the highway, even if we have to criticize it for the lack of repairs to the tracks roadway in between them and the horrible state the trolley road bed 1s in. There are other possibilities of them being more or less poli- tical in nature. It is quite natural | ulterior motive in nor can owe the it ia s aan advantage seems to be an that a His there man is by no means as resur- candid in t te, cheap as labor on the continent of | un- | Asia, that the who for office to run n law man the if In order to develop the rubber in- dustry large numbers of peons from | Asia would have to be imported, | |and the Filipinos simply do not de- trolley and ticket he de: once ran on has a right again to do so. also ought that one year should not be sires Ther: t e a - o i © be an N0 tnat development. And after all - writt law the man who the rubber that can be grown in the steps asic Philippines were a reality — after a expected to do so the next year. period of 12 years — it would only the that we seek an | Britain the move to fix the road, it having | for so | delegates i amount {o around 10 per cent of the will " quantity consumed annually in the Democratic state convention been such a crying shame long a period and nothing having been done about it. If service was | the motif of the department, fce would have been extended years ago. But no one nights cheering the department for instructed, it is said, for Thoms, New b United States. Britain citizen, If nominated Judge Thoms will make a good in New Bri and Hartford county. He will make New Haven county will do quite a former serv- SALE OF A RAILROAD a run from Denver and Salt Moffatt line,” anction block 0,000 — A news that dispatch stated the Lake railroad, had been sold on the fine run in Denver pro! Fairfield a is going to sit up |, bly also the county. good well This in 3,750 deciding to fix the road, no matter whether the up awaiting the done to save which rough The paired and our resentment for the small sum of § to pay for ought to look to the convention. sitting | If department is mocratic not much a railroad, the cheers or not surely CHECKING UP ON BERLIN BUSSES Berlin department fc To the average person this may a favor condescending us from t by us y not mean much. But his interest may that the the United by wear tear 1 ave 15 checkers in seem | he whetted Moffatt on learning has been asioned th it thing ought Lk it on the Connecticut It com- line is regarded as road it is sadly mistaken. | oo {he thinks its I company railroad in the it tourists who happen greatest scenic have all that to We ses are ording to tir checkers appears to deny the running ac States, and a is taken all Denver with trip over years ago. know o the devastating figures | by nearly be in for the day or two required. it was not i = to sufficient will outwear our — forl mpany's allggation. | tim No irns, BUMO LS no logical reason railroad in the Alps has more busses cannot run according to ihe twists and tunnels At HURLEY'S SCHEME WORTH TRYING Roh well as the erstwhile | . one: BoPtioh" tie trolley cars. Perhaps the trolley Hurley ¢ The superintendent of stafe plan of ack in both 14 in orde cars, running on one had 1 to schedules at ne; and the roadbed goes to di i e t eld a better |, e 1 3 o i better |} ights before crossing the great P i s r to pass A & ¢ more tha i divide a height of more than miles r e the designated | 0 000 feet the week-end rush ho other switches, The busses, on the i meet with gener: Even more remarkable is the life of th hand, seem to be running wild, on e t ; : history of Moffatt, the banker, who undental iple that any old time will proposal s instrumental in building the line, Dri slow ers who "po h was to be a “short cut” from Connecticut company is wise the mountains to the The . 10 enika et _ Denver over 8 PAS el straighten out its Berlin bus It a will theadopt s western part of Colorado line \gle forthwith. If the present con- petition be Public Utilities was never completed, and for years d may tinct Slowly-driven cars s upor tarted tow th iy or the benefit of fourists. mission asking that some more | thi¢ great h be perfectly ndreds of cars behi m may | o Vst sivan fran- | It is along this line that the concern safe v or thosc | Mofratt tunnel is under construction chise. that are in them, but who are | by the state, which will avoid crawl- | PHILIPPINE JA Philippine legislature is at it Governor-General Wood, who of simply can't hold it in ing up into the clouds to get over |'the mountains. Tt will be the the encouraged to go out ahead are forced to assume risks The longest which no slowly-driven car has a tunnel in country, being bored 1zain through | tinent. mora! right to cause. is sitting on a volcano instead a the backbone of the ¢ 6w drivers, g w traffic to the side roads until they en to the whirr of | swivel chalr, on state roads, had best stick | f the The will of [ complete the line when the tunnel Passage o plebiscite | new owners, of course, gain ex- | resolution “on the question a state road is a the Philippine independence” over his |is finished, or even before. It will s that the islanders fields and denied perience; very | poor place on which to get ex- | veto indicate open up vast coal also in_their |a vast region beyond the mountains [ for settlement. In other words, they seem to take [some of the greatest railr perience they require. simply will not be Elderly men driving cars, who are | demands. really | Colorado is seeing inclined to be overly cautious ad con- are the reverse. “self-determination” quite seriously, | struction work in the country at this : | Trucks, which cannot travel fast | regardless of how much rubber may | time, and sale of the railrond was enough and large occupiers of space, | b | merely a step In rehabilitating the should not be allowed on the trunk | The fact is, the Filipinos do not | system that is destined to e better lnes at all during the congested | want the rubber growing industry to | days, e grown on the islands. i rails | travel nine miles to go forward only | its chief function was being operated DISAPPEARING LAKE For the a within the second time a large lake threatens to year in west disappear into sub- terranean levels, gists and inhabifants, Whether the in Oregon will scaring the neighboring ke of the Woods of the erstwhile lake in Kansas, which dis- way appeared almost entircly, remains to be seen. The natural question which the layman as gocs. But this is body can answer, is where the water something that no- Perhaps plenty of room in t earth for petroleum. he bowe water as w Perhaps, in view of the ] quantities of petroleum being taken a | from the ground, Old Mother Earth needs some water for balance. Observation On The Weather W ngton, for Southern 1 nd* Increas- ¥ st ing cloudiness tonig ain fresh northeast winds. I New York: | Cloudy, probably followed by rain and Frid in temperaty | Forecast for rn tonight change winds. | Conaition: | turbance is central over South Dakota listurbances central and North Carolina. They are | causing unsettled weather | from Kansas eastward to New York and from the « southward to 'I The greatest r the last 24 ho: at Key West, I perature is rising tral districts but | normal in the the Lake region Conditions favor partly cloudy w rising not fresh much cast A well def this with over ned morning secondary Indiana dis- | showery nadian border fall reported for 8.06 inches ter cen- he in th contin 1 N portion of W England this vicinity with slowly followed by temperature BANDTRY INCREASES from \ Cruz crease in Special report banditr: military bandits. ron i dispatches a inuca in that campalign cor | to clean up | Near Teocelo, bandits i tured two prominent | fonso Pasqual carried them them for ransom | each. | Tederal have citizens, Juan and of cap- Al- 3elandia, holding pesos off T troups s, one have routed {wo near Texpetec and the other near Soledad, killing two men of the latter group. CLAIMS CAME TOO LATE Mexico City, Aug. 19, (P—About claims of American citizens | against the Mexican government | for damages sustained during the revolutionaty movement before the Calles government came info power, reached the special claims commis- sion, too late to be honored. They | came through the United States | embassy in Washington. bandit bands, Among. the races in Europe.and America, the Jews have the lowest infantile mortality rate. ultim- | mystifying geolo- | 19.—Forecast | below | @ |over and sit up with you when I get | Landers, Frary, & Clark d all communications to Fun Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your lette will be forwarded to New York L e Y — hat ] J son Se Shop Vacation Urge, Folks! and the re will bury ourselves every jerk-water pl with two trains a day there, out our own to stay just hard-ea How It 1 want the prices Deal What to one?” Was to L s 1y a Auto do you want | she's about five | r, and blue ny. THE DEAD PAST BURY ITS DEAD itor Becomes a D.AR, Dictating a Refusal Souther Many thanks r most friendly letter; I h « read s any you might The B Dear Mrs, For yo I doubt A note Although better. have sor Your would be enragi 1 ust , in very truth, Your frankness was engaging! n confess i35 like some other And wished for social stat 1'd wed your girl wtilou Demur or hesitation: ch things don't appeal to me as this note's indited, full well you ladies will that I'm short-sighted were men on, delay, Tho kn Agree I know; ‘em, Forefathers are all right, | We all have had some of | But that's no reason why we s Perpetually love ‘em. The girl I wed must ME, alive and on some men fling. in the concentrate merry who On Not had their Now cemetery! She Didn't Want Necking on Beach “I was down on the beach and dunes.” he police ought to | | | the | | | Moore tching the Moor em.” Moore: Moore: W what?" tella Now it Can Be | A teacher in one of the New York schools asked her beginne they could bring some baby for a poor or four volunteere w boy. | With face glow father can get me A orks in laundry!" | . H. W. ‘Stor sand doin's.” McKinney. ‘ Among the things any manufacture as fast as them are statistics. | | You seldom man who is more righteous than he must be to keep the respect of his neighbors. i | Told public |class if clot mot Three s a m a wee t some. —M Van Alen. HOW TO ENJOY YOUR VACATION AT HOME By Charles H. Mcilvain ot stove all almost as red inding over day will leave the face sunburn. Wear a bathing suit in the bath- ub, and eat a sack of peanuts while athing. Throw a as } dozen tin cans on the floor and eat with the tablecloth spread on the living room rug. Wear knickers while doing the housework. | Stand out in the until thor- oughly soaked ep in the k yard your bed over an ant-hill Learn to play a ukulele rain ba making NG P = AN A RECOGNIZED NEED | Municipal benches in all blind al- {leys for the convenience of thugs | while they are waiting for custom- ers! | 1IN KDASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE (Conducted by Maxine) feacher: Now, Miss Soter, if vou'll stop trying to look like Cleo- | patra vampi Mark Anthony, you | may recite your history lesson, lubri- lacting your mental machinery with ‘castor oil." " Minnie Soter: “Queen Cleopatra, so they She wasn't very smart; She castor-oil crown awa Because she Jost her heart.” . T. Hawkes. KRAZY KiNDERGARTEN (Conducted by Dusty) Teetcher: “Does enybody in your fmily play the bagpipes, Killen?" Killen Time: “I don’t know, none of them never tried.” Teetcher: “Well, sippose you try ‘Donahue’ and ‘Casey.’ " | Killen Time | “Mr. Michael Terence Hourihan | shamus Pat McHugh | 7= insured in Casey marries, Tho as yet he Donohue.” | —Marion L. Bovard. | Could Return the Favor Mrs. ‘Maloney: “‘And- where -were you last night, eh? You came in at two o'clockll” Maloney: “I a sick friend, my dea Mrs. Malone; Well. he can come w itting up with through with you! —Robert Reichenbaum. right, 1 Reproduction Forbidden) (Copy Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN Conceited guests are need only sit and listen best. You 3 brief. Omit unnecesary poison liquor.” words. N bad road manners another dent won't Genesis My ¢ matter. American, of have mastered being prosperous though e are no new ideas in the The wife gets new | frocks at eacl one. { movies.” Rats! ideas about language! A man de- gets drunk and deliber- | spends and people call the Ax ent Funny liberately tely climax an acci 3y A village is a place where the cop t bawl you out because he ¢ want to borrow the rake, st Baldness usually indicates life. It doesn't to a fly. long Still, indicate wvork. sing only in the bath tub may | that lock won't Movie theaters are about as com- 1s possible now, except for our feet on | fortable tables to place | Alas! the people who say what they think very seldom think any- thing worth sayin | Only a few | rand manner, and they | cars for somchody else. a Americans have the are driving Making smaller cars won't benefit traffic much. The drivers will feel 1st as big. | man can he needs The hard part of the channel swim comes when the tide turns. In | the case of the social swim, it comes when tradesmen demand cash. icks! Sweecthearts old days; and it t them drunk, Fiddles were Kissed in the 3 wasn't necessary 1o g either Correct this sentence: “I enjoy our old car just as much,” said he, “even though all the neighbors have new ones."” (Protected s by Publishers’ ndicate). 25 Years Ago Today W. A. Kinne, the bicycle maker, met with a mishap while riding a motor bicycle yesterday. The ma |chine broke down and Mr. Kinne was thrown to the ground with con- |siderable force. The machine, which weighs about 200 pounds, fell on top of him. He sustained a number of cuts and was badly bruised. Irving rter has given place with J. W. Beard. Charles Diggle and Jerry Lewis | go to Congamond Lales tonight for several days' fishing. When the factory up his league man- | |sell & Erwin's said agers met Woodhouse d that ht, W last of the his team n Manager Stanley Works s game with Saturday would have to be postponed as sev- eral of his players were .out of town. The Landers mgnager refused. The Stanley Works then refused to play, and ~Manager White of Rus- “Very well, let'’s disband the league.” It was done. The former city collector ar- rested by Chief Rawlings this morn- ing and charged with fraudulently appropirating $16,500 of tax money for his own use. He could not be located this forenoon, but about 1 o'clock the chief saw him standing on West Main street. He followed him when he it into his office and found the door locked. Believ- ing he Wwould try ape, he went around to t the building and saw him on roof of t! building adjoining spring bed shop. The chief told him not to e cape if he valued his life. The man climbed back through the window but refused fo open the door. Chief Rawlings had to smash this in and then arrested the former collector under bond of $15,000, The members of St. Peter's choir paid a visit to their former pastor. Rev. N. F. X. neider of Meriden, vesterday. vatior Q tban independence en was the Tuseani how many lives were what troops were aboard vessel at the time 2 A. She was torpedoed in the evening, February 8, 1918; 101 lives were lost, including 73 soldiers apd 25 of the ¢ On board were Company E, 6th Battalion, 20th En- gineers, the 100th Aero Squadron, the 155th Aero Squadron, an En- tor- sa pedoe lost, and ths w. was to e o th the side title v c 1911 gineers Reserve Corps and the 107th pply Company. Q. When did King Edward VII. of England die and when \\’{ George V. crowned A. Edward VIL died unexpect- edly from heart failure incident to a bronchial attack, May 16, 1910 George V. immediately succeed the throne and his wife took Queen Mary They rowned June in minster Abbey Q. Where does a third-cl man in A On his right Who w the cigns pf England A. Henry VIL, Henry VIIL, Ed- ward VI, Mary and Elizabeth. Q. What did the United States pay for the Virgin Islands? Twenty-five million dollars Who publishes the Birth Review and ‘what the price? ed by Margaret San- ger and is published at 104 Fifth Avenue, New York City. The year v subscription rate is $2.00. Q. -In what movies has. Donald Keith played opposite Clara Bow? A. He played the part. of her lover, Kenneth, in the motion pic- ture called “Dancing Mothers.” . He also played opposite her in “The r Age” and “My Lady of W ve. Tudor sover- B A Q Control subsecription A. Itise is hims." What are “The Seven Seas"? The North and South Atlantic. the North and South Pacific,, the Indian, the Arctic and the Antarctic oceans QULSTIONS ANSWERED Q. You can gel an answer (o an) question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washingtor llureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research Le undertakén. All other gquestions will receive a personal reply. Un- signed requests. cannot be answered All letters are confidential—Editor. Who was John Doe? A. It is a fictitious name fre quently used to indicate a person for the purpose of argument or il- lustration, or in the course of en- forcing a fiction in law. Q. What is meant by tion of natural resource A, Coneervation has defined as “utilization mum cfficiency and minimum waste.” Gifford Pinchot has out- lined movement for conserva tion anding for development for use of exhaustible resources, for prevention of waste, for control against natural calamities, for per- petuation and renewal, for pro- gressive and _cumulative conquest of nature. The government directs conservation of resources through various agencies such as the Forest rvice, the Inland Waterways Com- mission, the Bureau of Mines, etc. Q. Do the ears of thorobred police puppies stand erect naturally? A. They should be erect at the o of six months. Q. How much did Jack Dempsey receive for his fights with Carpentier and Firpo? A. He received 00,060 for his fight tier and $500,000 for Firpo. Q. What is the value of a United States large copper cent dated 1815 A. 2 to 25 cents. Q. What are the duties of an o1 dinary seaman aboard sliip? A. On a modern steamship, swabs, scrapes and cleans de scrapes cables,"coils and handls ropes, mans small boats and per- forms other work as the ship's offi- direct. been briefly with maxi- the as st Q. What is the full name of the King of Norway? A. His title is Haakon VII. His name is Christian Frederic Charles George Valdemar Axxel. Q. Is whale oil still illuminating purposes A. Whales are etill hunted their oil but not so much as for- merley. Before the discovery of petroleum, illuminating oil was de- rived almost entirely from whales, but kerosene has now largely sup- planted animal oil. Whales are still_importa source of am- bergris, spermaceti, whalebone, glue, ete. Q es bear They bear ir imes once in two or sometimes oftener. The nuts ripen the fall of the year Q. 1In what way is Cuba a tectorate of the United States? A. The Platt amendment was made a condition precedent to the cstablishment of the Cuban repub- lic and expressly provides: “That the Cuban government consents that the United States may exercise the right to intervenc for the preser- | used for for approxima with Carpen that with How do Pinion pine often do 3 ularly, eome- hree years, pro- Te CARE OF TOOD HOME The housewife who is “on her job” knows not only that she must give her family good food, in proper proportions, well-cooked and attractively served, but that she can do none of these things unless she knows and practices the science of protecting all kinds of food stuffs from damage, spollage, and consequent danger to the health of her family and herself, by protecting it prope There are ways—mostly simple ways—of taking care of all kinde of foodstuffs, including the most perishable and - easily spolled. Our Washington Bureau has prepared a valuable and attrative bulletin tell- ing her the “Ins and outs” of all the tricks of food care and preservation, Fill out the coupon below and mail as directed: CLIP COUPON HERE FOODS EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. T want a copy of the bulletin, CARE OF FOOD IN THE HOME, and en- close herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. postage stamps or | cointor same: ez an e s b hisstbn va ses SoN HIALH I I am a reader of the HERALD, 1 (o ADDRESS cITY SNAPSHOTS OF A MAN AND HIS SEAT-CHECK - GIDYA \WILLIATES, PUTS IT IN HAT HANDS TICKETS TO CONDUCTOR, RECEIYES PINK CHECK AND JAYS [T ON WINDOW SILL FINDS CHECK ON FLOCR AND - By GLUYAS WILLIAMS e | READS NEWSPAPER HAPPENS TO GLANCE UP AND SEES CHECK 1S €ONE . MUST HAVE BRUSHED IT OFF WITH NEWSPAPER_ DECIDES TO PUT IT WHERE HE (AN FORGET ABOUT IT' AND GOES ON READING, TEELING NOW AND THEN TO MAKE SURE CHECK 15 STILL IN HAT H RETURNS FROM DINER AND HAS UNEASY FEELING HE MAY HAVE PULLED IT OUT OF POCKET WHEN E-TOOK HS WALLET OUT T PAY SEARCHES CONTENTS OF POK- SI6HS WITH RELIET AS CON~| ET THREE TIMES BEFORE FIND- DUCTOR COMES ROUND TO ING IT IN FOLD OF TIMETABLE, PICK UP CHECKS . e (Copuiig f, { ( ¥

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