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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANS { Isswed Datiy (Sunday Fxcepted) i At Herald Bldg.. 61 Chuich Btrest. SUBSCRIPTIOR RATES s Year. $3.00 Three Montha. Thc. & Month. Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Buatness Office 926 Editorial Rooms .... 936 | Tmperial valley in southern Califor- | The only profitabie advertimng medium | n the City. Circulation books and press room aiways open to advertieers. | B the Associated Presa. The Associated Press ia exclueively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to It or not otherwise credited 'n this paper and also local gews published thereln. Member Member Audit Burean of Circalation. The A. B. C. 's a natlonal organization which furnishes newspapers and tisora with @ strictly honest anal. circulation. - Our circulation are based opon this audit. This protection againr: traud 1n newspaper distribution figu es to both nationa) and lucal advertisers. Jerald i on sale dally in_ New fork at _Hotaling's setand, Times Square; Bchultz's Newsatands, Entrance Grand Central, 42nd Street. The —_— —John Bull apparently has cnough warships, all dressed up with | no place to go, to warrant sending i one to Nica logg doesn’t. see in against the Monroe Doctrine it will gua. 1f Secretary Kel- this a threat | e evidence he is not as nervous as usual. filibuster is one of s in the time A Senate those things which fi with talk and “bust the schedule of action. —The ature this year is making about as much noise a towed away in a garage. —Some of the half-sized, dinky, local line trolley cars actually travel | fast enough to compete in speed with the expert hikers on the sidewalks Leg an automobile | —Government agents are reported to have been busy “gathering evi- ( dence” in Waterbury and now the estimable American of that city comes forward with the fear that the | “wettest city in Connecticut” is in for a dry spell. We doubt, however, if all the stills in Waterbury can be loca(w ¢d quite that eas WIDENING STANLEY ELIMINATE THE POL Widening of Stanley street wou be a simple project were it not for the fact the plan of the hoard of public works apparently hinges upon the idea that the telephone and electric companies t have room | for their poles along the street. | The proper way to the | street, a plan which probably will be | favored oy the property owners, is | o eliminate the grassed portion of | the street, between the curb and the sidewalk. This would not subtr land, between the sidewalk and the m widen bullding line from the property own- ers, and would satlsfy everybody. | works and the utility interests. | The board of works plan is to re- tain a grass section between the new curb and the sidewalk; it would tail moving the sidewalk toward the | Dbuilding line. The idea evidently is that this grass plot between the curb the sidewalks should remai that the utili room upon i ¢ companies can have which to plant their poles. | The their wires into a subwa city utility companles could put —whict course would cost the additional 1money—or put their poles g the rear of the building lot in many other scctions of the It perty owners hoard of public works. pre appos 1s is done city is a mistake to think the pro- wor the plan of the At ings they werc sent in numb and to a man plan of w ssments. of gidewalk and pres reduction prop the assessment privilege of h property ow blamed for secing n fits to themsel 1f would be inder the plan. a good th street, possit and ening the street v quit improvement vantage of eiiminate the wires, STATE'S RIGHTS IN ARIZONA The sovercign judging by the the in Congress, baloo of its pre: murmurings of its sur ry, wishes it could sece Union. The filibuster eng the Senate quita accurat of the citizens | considers the the mental complex ol a state whie flowing through the serried can mightiest Sot of its o except that th its river perty. & rcasonable, too o river does not confine its Wi to Arizona Be that as it may, Arizona is up ! good fortune, | Senator Cameron reasons. | this lana is | Wolfe | cluding that | other | cut | pective | candidates “provided Calvin Coolidge | decides not to b |a on its haunches, fighting the’ good | fight of state’s rights, with all the proponents silent about ctlier state's rights in the Senate conspicuously it. Construction of the Boulder | Canyon dam would benefit the en- | tire Southwost. Imits this, | but thinks Arizona should get the | What is the enormous power and irrigation pos- | in the it the other re to share in the That in effect is how Arizona a benefits, use of having sibilities state states nearby of the dam | flooding of | land, but The would make possible the construction 16,000,000 acres of desert situated mostly in the | nia. Arizona is not interested in ir- | 1t is land. not | sted in furnishing an uninter- rigating California intere rupted water supply for Los Ange- ; it is not interested in providing a huge power reservoir for its| neighbor, But itselt possibly could not, build th Arizona would not, | dam or | ood the land or provide the pow- This is to be done by the U. §. At this point the con- tention of Arizona grows we It port ¢ o er government. : : | refuses to ex- | 1t export is Maine which power, is Arizona | which ses to anything even when provided by a beneficient government. Both love their state's rights. THE HABITUAL CRIMINAL On the day when the New York Court of Appeals held the celebrated constitutional—to Wolfe il Superior cou: from Baume wit, vesterday—Jude in the idgeport Crimi York four to New from ) years in the penitentiary | the habitual | criminal act. | All four off the him a man whom he sentenced under Connecticut ses listed against | man we slonies | in t|ate proposed extension, formerly owned by Horace Booth, is now being sold as bullding lof The United Sixteen Whist club will meet Friday night with Mr, and Mrs, amual Knight. The storm was S0 severe none of the stockholders of the Plainville Creamery Co. were able to attend the annual meeting, and it is though: the old officers will have |to hold over for another year. Johnny Nichols, the irrepressible hackman, got into a collision with a | West Maln street car at Black Rock | last evening. He was stalled in a drift, but the motorman thought he | was going to pull out and kept his find fault with “British justiee jcar going The two vehicles came T T In O together with great force. Nichols | was pitched out into a-drift and his colored man Was | grriage injured, The fender of the car was broken. The cabman was wroth, economical to pay for the trip per- haps the committee has enough spare cash to foot the bill, If the government can find the money to send marines there on the wholesale plan it ought not to hold that back about shipping the foreign re- lations committee some first hand information. there to obtain CANADIAN JUs Mild-mannered folk TICE who believe regard- less of the ferocity of their misdeeds have had another opportunity to mollycoddling criminals Canada. ham, Ontario, a iced to be exccuted for attack- | ing and mistreating an $1-year-old | | Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN woman. It was a fiendish crime, the kind that produces mob action in the South. It took the jury 15 minutes to find the man guilty, and the en- tire trial lasted two only hours. had pleaded for Some - lovers' end matrimony and some in almony. Mussolini is one of few men who | have succeeded in making a pet of | chaos. | After the culprit auarrels in “lenfency” the judge had his say Among-other things he said the fol- lowing crime that the | that the death sentence may be imposed, or a life sentence, “So serious is the criminal code provides Was somebody lying about the discovery of a truth-telling serum? | Joy of the job is what the work- | man docsn't have to ask the bhoss for, or a term of years, and to which may be added, whip- Sinar here three fore. The judge continue What the act mean, if it | does not mean that it should enforced. I have never heard of a | more extrome case than the | guilty of. I| I fully appreci- of the sentence I that T will But my only | concern is a fearless and impartial dis were alternatives, Paradoxical persons are those who want something else after they got | all they want. does be on, you have heen cannot ima found ine one. the severity am about to pass, and be criticized for it. jilted maid no longer dies, She | how to handle the jury. The majority must sometimes submit to the minority for the sake harge of my duty as I see {t.” Then the judge selected one of the three alternatives given him by though not Judge | | all occurred in this te. was entirely justified in con- the fellow gave every evidence of being a habitual crimin- | itled tence in accordance with the Con- | al and was to a long sen- | necticut statute, | From “four to 30 years,” however, | may not mean that tl criminal will spend a larger term in | In truth, the | usual precedent, it will be quite like- | 1y that his actu | habitual the pen, tollowing I termy will be near- er the four years than the 30, Under the Baumes nace to society would have been | law such a| ¥ 1 that York inviting pastures it en care of for life. Small wonder | habitual eriminals in New are fleeing the state to more Observers say that may hecome necessary for the states, out of self-protection, | | to enact similar laws. In Connecti- | habitt minal law is held | fit substitute; but here we | » a fit comparison. There is 1er up as ha diff a a| rence between what this ridge- | port criminal drew in the way of a sentence and what he would have of New | York. 1 in his native state HUGHES ! Among the A CANDIDATE. estimahle gentlemen | receiving honorable mention as pros- | R blican presidential | candidate for a | third term” 1is Charles Evans| Hughes, The Hugt ed by New s boom has been start- York Republicans on the that he surely would v New York state, and would be it he carried enough Very it. | Al the | candidate, | supposition le to win other states. simple, isn't This provided Smith is not Democratic It is pointed out that Hughes is a | very different man than when he w ated by W re knowle has o s of the people, cte. Since the been one wing associate jus- tice of Supreme Court he has of the nation’s most pros- perous corporation attorneys, and if this makes him more conversant | With the needs of the people the Yo ow bsolutely Coolidge make a bid | crime avery ni robab BORAH SHOULD GO, perr myone wions cor to take is being blocke commit rothing ¢ Senator Borah and possi- v his committee should the trip anyhow. T it the e costs are not ex- | cessive, an government is t0o |ing the trains en route to Cana | the most severe | tion. | the law without regard to its na- British system ghin i least, the law. As usual under British jurisprudence, he selected the most of cuphony, as in the case of Pork and Beans. severe. He sentenced the man to A, Baseball is a business in the play- ! s *|ing field, a pastime in the grand- and may God have mercy on ¥our ! ¢tang and a sport in the bleachers, soul.” be hanged by the neck until dead, Happiness gets very licity. No space left after sorbid stories are told. le pub- all the American penologists who believe in reforming crooks, in finding thein merely mentally deranged and | not really responsible for their ac- tions, who think they are entitled to & good time while incarcerated, who believe in pardons, paroles and plenty of them, and who cannot see why society has the right to protect itself with the means at hand,.can Join in the “criticism™ of the stern old judge. But crooks are not fill- Americanism: Questioning printed history and accepting mouth-to- mouth tradition Before the operation he was a man of parts. After the operation | he was a man of spare parts. The optimist looks for showers of | | blessing and the pessimist anticl- | pates a reign of terror. { Tt is well to so live, if possible, in the expectation of having a nice | 1sy time there. The judges over the ational line, like their leagues in England, invariably hand them the heaviest sentence the law allows. If there is o punishment up with the fish stori col- | jection to capital , of course, the law to be censured, not the judge. is | 1| | penalty had been life imprisonment the judge would have meted it out without compunc- In fact, he took care to state that he was giving the limit under Times grow better. If you have a cold, nobody annoints your chest | with turpentine and goose grease. | When the traffic officer shouts, “Where you goin’?” the diplomatic reply is: “You tell me.” | ture. He didn't pass the law; he only | administered it, It is in this matter of administering the law that the “How T Made My First ought to make a good stor success mage In the old days everyboly the small town hotelkeeper ter would eventually marr; cling salesman. Billion™ | for a | “The fact that you are a colored | man has not influenced me in the said the judge. “Had you been a white man, 1 would pass the same sentence.” Knew | laugh- | a tray- | ! | The dictionary 1s a wonderful | book. There are cnough words in | it, properly uscd, to bring universal | hiad a|Peace, and more than enough it ere is no chance in the world for a suc- ul It the million s to spend on couldn't evade his sentence. Perhaps needless to add, t appeal. dol man tart another world war. Correct this sentence: my neighbor's possessions er than mine.” “I'm All the newspapers in Canada ap- LS parently highly approve of the se- | vere sentence. All the newspapers in Michigan, close at hand, hold up| ast. To Publishers ate Copyright, 192 Syndi their editorial hands ag which one Canadian replicd: Observation On The Weather Washington, Ieh. for Southern New England: Mostly | fair tonight and Friday; not much | .. | change in temperature; moderate to 8" | fresh southwest and south winds Porccast for Eastern New York: Mostly r tonight and Friday; not | » in tempcrature: mod- fresh southwest and west “If Michigan would deal with her criminal problems as vigorously and as fearlessly as they are handled in Ontario, the almost absolute dis gard for law and order which now 24.—orecast prevails across the river would soon he g of the may be mentioned “ir a th Tt past that Detroit has one of th crime records in the country, while @ river” in Onlario serjous | Much chan The | erate to is quite obvious, ross th Is low, reason for this| | win ! Conditions: ow over the lak Lawrence valley and relatively | Lizh over the plains states and the | northern Rocky Mountain region. owers occurredl in the south At- itie and east Gulf siates during past 24 hours in Pacific northw tricts. peratures continue mild in al tions of the country with ange during the past BY conditions w ‘hroughout the sont land coast eections this morning Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with freezing tem- | peratnre at night and thawing dur- ing the day. The temperatures yesterday were: High Low tlanti y 0 Boston 0 Cincinnat Chicago Denver ~ 1 region and the 25 VYears Ago Today | i It Rosen elipped and fell on the walk Main last night and sprained his right foot H. E. Hart Merwin, Charles Prasor ned York tell of vin P'lans haye 1 th s on strect Tem- po slight hou vort and from New ing story to | ¢ Mr. Mer- et They have a th Park hotel ot some ¢ o SYNAgOR i aven en of Tsrael ccount has surp party Bre been received in Plainville 1S hours, Seventeen young | people went from this city EFriday t and snowhou They waited one 1 half urs for the last trolle car and then went to Hoyt's hotel at Mountain View, The Whittlesey family has ived a letter from John K. Whit- | oo sey, who was in the Park hotel { ) huey fire, He was overcome by heat in|p,¢ his room on the fifth floor and was| .ok, when reseucd by | Kansas City { LLos Ang Miami of a ise which | 1 lastr ni were il i 42 ro- a 04 Jes Lucyan Bojnowski will peti- tion the council to authorize the ex- tension of the sewers through Broad street to Cleveland. This is because | New O of the new church fo he erected In | New York the spring. The land cpvered by the Norfolk ,.. | Ana he'd blush an uncommonly red | [ | Dut that one’s obitnary won't get mixed | a | secems to have a little more human to ]y ter is gone!" do. the | Send all communications to Fun Shop Lditor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. t's hie us to th ‘ut up our fun-lot, Folks, ‘s supply of jokes! Handy Swanson: “Anderson shaves the rest of his face—why does he wear that long goatee?” Olson: “Economy. He a shaving brush!” | | | uses it for | PLEASE GET MARRIEL (Re Why We Did) Judith Oh, Judy she was shy and coy i The first time that we met; | Her manner knocl me for aj loop— | It even thrills me yet! | ‘bout a show or dance?” I| 1 | The sccond time we met; | But Judy blushed and said, luh, Let's go somewhere and pet! —Walter W, Ramey . . Wilbur Wilbur was hardly the Loy for the girls; The diffident lad couldn't dance, | “How “Huh- kind of red Whenever you gave him a glance. had little sang froid and oir i s no wholly without grace or charm— listen! The boy ecrossed street with me once Without grabbing hold arm!! —Mrs. W. G He wa the of my Ricker Busy Stranger: s it that you men wre always working so hard every time I pass here?” Laborer: “IU's "cause justa like da foreman —\Irs. A, H. Hill ou gotta hat Believe It Or Not! I Anna Hannah Jukes-McNoll Brained her sister with a doll; Her mother said, *Oh, honey-bun! You should have used the saw-dust one hod Sarah Scara Fellowstiff Pushed the nurse-girl off the cliff; The fact that made her Vaother moan Was that the child walked home alone! b 5% the Truth Hurts Kingsley sat himself in the den- tist's chair so gingerly as if it were an eleetric chair! “Your ad says, ‘teeth extracted without pain.’ Is that the truth?” The dentist smiled the truth —THenrietta Murray with dental reservation Only Days before THE FUN SHOP BOOK comes out! (Copyright, 1927, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answ.r to any question of fact or Information by writing to the Question Editor, New DBritain Herald, Washington Bureau, 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 undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Un- signed requests cannot be answered./ All letters are confldential.—Editor. Q. How did the originate? A. It was derived from a con- spicuous victim of the practice, Captain Doycott, an Englishman who was land agent of Lord Erne in the district of Cannemara, Ire- land in 1881, He incurred the ill- will of the tenantry by his harsh word boycott Lven the tailor when he read the forthcoming FUN SHOP BOOK will have fits of laughter! | TH S I | (A Fun Shop Movie) | In Three Reels ! By Virginia W. Minton | — | Reel One (Office of J. D. Rockepont IL" nke Rockepont and Oscar Diesel | chatting). | Rockepont: “You've known me | for a long time, Diesel, and we've | done a great deal of business with cach other. I've got a little surpr ing confession to make to you I've got onc glass eye. I think ti match is perfect. Which one do| you think is artificial?” | Diesel: “It must be ey Rockepont: “How did you gues Die 1 the right | Because the right eye | Lindness in it than the other one.” Reel Two (Annual banquet of the Caledon- ) Society, Rockepont, the honor guest, sncezes and his artificial eye pops out. It rolls under the table. There is a seramble.) President: “Wull the mon who foond the artyfeechicl awptic please return it to the owner (There is no response. The presi- dent scratches his head.) President: “YVurry weel. One of ye has the eye. We'll turn oot the lichts for thirrty seconds, and the man wha has it will return it to n silver platter.” (The lights are i on.) Iockepont: * turned out, and b, vds! The plat- Reel (The same whose eye has not heen returned, is talking with the president.) Rockepont: 11 tell you what 1I'lIl I'll offer $5 reward for the re- turn of the ey President Three scene. Rockepont, na. Dinna ye ao it Rockepon dent y mon pi ¢ one ey here but own optic! Why not? “Would ye like to sce sent gang hame with Tor $5 there's not a would take out his | y THE WAY (T LOOKS TO THE BOY WHO 13 DOWN TO HIS | | LAST MARBLE ~=~ ARrperSon — A friend of mine, Gertrude Hill, is teaching an English class in high school w liappens to he &tud | ing “A Man Without A Country. The other day, after having a signed the lesson, Gertrude said, “If anyone does not have ‘A Man | Without A Country,’ pl I have two up in ase s my room deletto Grose THE LITTLE ANGELS! antiquit > me. | enforcement of the eviction law and to retaliate they induced the popu- Jation for miles around to refuse to have anything to do with him or his family. He was reduced to dire straits and finally was obliged to leave the country. Q. Who was the prohibition agi- tator who lost his eye in England? A. William E. (Pussyfoot) John- son was mobbed in London and his ve was injured on November 14, 1919. To prevent total blindnes one eye was removed November Q. How many American consule are in Canada? There are 22 American Con- 1lates and four consulates general in the Dominion of Canada? Ts it proper to eat olives in the fingers? A Yes Q. Tor have how long people { been using soap? The use of soap is of great A well equipped soap factory was found by the excavators of Pomp: Historical records of Ttaly and Spain show that soap was in use in those countries in the Sth century. Q. When was the Mediaeval Age? A. According to most historians, the Mediaeval Age covers the period from the fall of the Roman Empire in the West, A, D. 476, to the discovery of America by Colum- bus, A. D. 1492, Usually this period is divided into two parts: the Dark Ages A. D. 476 to the 11th century, and the Age of Revival, covering the period from the opening of the 11th century to the discovery of Amerfea by Columbue A, D. 1492, Q. What nationality is Lya De Putti, the motion picture actress? She was born in Budapest, Hungary, and had an Ttalian father and a Hungarian mother. Q. How does one tell the num- ber of words in a manuseript with- A, \WAKES UP Tk DAY MORNINGS TOR KEEPS (Obseryed by Norma Shearer) graciously. | "tariff act of 1913. out counting each word. A. The number of words to a line is determined by counting them for several average lines. The number of pages to an average page ie estimated in the same way. Mul- tiply the number of pages by the number of lines and the product by the number of words in a line and the result will be approximately the number of words in the manuscript. Q. Was Sir Franeis Bacon an illegitimate son of Queen Elizabeth by the Earl of Leicester? A, No. His father, Sir Nicholas Bacon, was Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, and his mother was the learned Ann Cooke, sister of Bur- leigh's wife. Q. Who received the contract to build the Coolidge dam and where is it located? A. The dam is to be constructed across the canyon of the Gilas river near San Carlos, Arizona. The con- fract hag been let to the Atkinson- Spicer company, 1315 Edward ‘Wildey building, Los Angeles, Cal. Q. Why is Ohio called the “Bucke; state? A. On account of the large num- ber of horse chestnuts, popularly called “buckeyes”, found there. Q. When did congress enact the federal income tax law? A. The first federal income tax law was passed in 1862 as a meas- ure to raise revenue for the Civil war. Tt was repealed in 1872, It was declared constitutional by the federal courts and in one year pro- duced over 24 per cent of the coun- revenue from internal sources. In 1894 an income tax was imposed by the Wilson Tarift Act but the supreme court declared it unconsti- tutional on the ground that it was a direct tax and must therefore be apportioned among the different states in accordance to their popula- tions. A tax of one per cent on the net income of corporations was made a part of the Payne-Aldrich Tariff Act of 1909. Agitation for a federal income tax law culmi- nated in the adoption of the 16th amendment to the constitutfon au- thorizing the imposition of the in- come tax which was included in the Q. What was the total attendanes at the Dempsey-Tunney prise fight last September? A. The total paid admissions were 118,736, In addition 38,732 were admitted on passes which made a total attendance of 144,468. Q. How many rallway nhafl tlerks are there in the United States postal service? A. Approximately 21,000. Q. How did the custom of Am'ili Fool's Day originate? ! A.. There is a tradition among| the Jews that the custom arose from | the fact that Noah sent out the dove from the Ark on the first of the month corresponding to our April, before the waters had abated. To perpetuate the memory ~of the great deliverance of Noah and his family, it was customary on this anniversary to punish persons who had forgotten the remarkable cir- cumstances connected with the date by sending them on eome foolish errand, simllar to that on which the Patriarch sent the luckless bird | from the windows of the Ark. POLICE HAVE CLUE South Bend, Feb. 24 A—The find- ing of a bundle of women’s clothes | in an automobile driven by “E. W.!| Rogers of Oregon” at Indlanapolls | has revived the police theory that | the headless and armless torso of a woman found in the St. Joseph riv- | er near here may be that of Mrs. | Alice Van Dusen. * description of Ernest Rogers, Shower partles for brides, to cover postage and handling costs: NAME . STREET AND NO. cITY / WONDERS If WASHINGTON USED T LIKE TO SLEEP LATE ON HOL- | WONDER® WOULD IT HELP IF HE GOT UP AND SHUT THE WINDCW SOME NOISE . THEY'RE TOO | CR WOULD IT JUST WAKE HIM UP QUIET. T'> UNNATURAL. (Copyright, 1927, by The Bell 8yndicate, Inc.) REMEMBERS M5 WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY AND THAT HE (AN SLEEP JUST S LATE RS- HE WANTS REALIZES THAT HANG [T ALL HE 15N GETTING TO SLEEP. SHARES UP PILLOWS WISHES TAMILY WOULD MAKE “stork” showers, showers for Invalld away" shower partles, housewarming shower: —unlque suggestions for shower partles of all kinds—are contained Wahington Bureau's newest bulletin, UNIQUE SHOWER PARTIES, wish & copy of this bulletin, fill in the coupon below and mall as directed: former employe of St. Mary's acad« emy, near which place the body was found and who disappeared with Mrs. Van Dusen last December was sent to Indianapolis police who re« ported they had “E. W. Rogers” un« der surveillance. Ernest Rogers wag a boarder at the Van Dusen home. Police have never been able ta locate the woman since she disap- peared. (g Your Grandmother’s Choice in Laxatives Imagine the goodness back of when you consider it has been used for 76 years by millionsofsufferersfrom chronic constipati “We, the Smiths, will always lEpnl highly of Dr. True's | lizir not only because it helped us but because we ' have seen it work out so well | with others.” B. L. Smith, Chelmstord St., Dorchester. 4 The True Family Laxative Family sire $1.20; other stzes $0c & 40c. UR COAL Is not artistic; but as a dispenser of real concentrated heat, it puts an “artist to shame, “Handsome {s as handsom. does,” and judging by actual rib-rock quality, our coal, after all, is pretty good looking. We sell it for its wonderiul heating effects and proven goodness, CITIZENS’ COAL Co. Tel. 2798, 24 Dwight Court. SHOWERS, SHOWERS, SHOWERS! olng howers In our 1t you wedding anntversary r———— CLIP COUPON OFF HERE = == == =— SHOWER PARTY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britaln Her 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C. T want a copy of the bulletin UNIQUR SHOWER PARTIES, and enclose herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled U, 8. postage stamps, or coin, I A STATE sesseasenee I am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. ] —— e ———— ————— - - GLUYAS WILLIAMS CONGRATULATES HIMSELT ON HAVING WARNED THE FAMILY TO KEEP QUICT THS MORNING E LIES FLAT ON BACK AND CON ~ CENTRATES 6RIMLY ON GETTING BACK TO SLEEP GIVES UP. GETS UP AT USUAL. TME . GWYAS 2 W