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New Britain Herald HERALD. PUBLISHING COMPANY - fumied Dally (Sunday Escepted) At Herald Bidg., 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES .00 & Year. $2.00 Three Months. 76, & Month. Eatered at the Post Office st New Brit- n es Second Clase Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office . 925 Editorlal Rooms .... 926 The enly profitable advertising medium in-the City. Circulation books and press roam always open to advertisers Member the Associated Fress The Associated Prese i exciusively en- titled to the use for all news credited to it or not otherwise | credited 'n this paper and also local| news published therein. Member Audit Bareau of Circulation The A. B. C. s & national organizatior which furnishes newspapers and adver tisers with a strictly honest analvels of circuiation, Our circulation satistics are | based upon this audit. Thls insures pro- tection agsinst fraud in Dewspaper di tribution figures to both national snd local advertisers. | s on sale dally n &s Newsstand, Tim Square; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central, 41nd Btreet. e ———— e ] The Herald York st Hot It appears that Prince Carol has also claimed a foul. | The “wish you were here’ post cards are arriving—but not by air- mail. Further reduction of income taxes is probable; which should be hot news for Ford owners. The governor's conference at! | Mackinac island at least ought to be a successful outing. The office hours in city hall are our idea of nothing to worry about. Send in your checks by mail. The scheme to put “Congress on | the air” skould at least be as popu- Jar as the Congressional Record. i ‘Synthetic gasoline and symh»n.“ rubber are announced future possi- | bilities, What about synthetic auto- | biles? ‘ One thing that militates against the future popularity of airplaining | is that the things can't be parked up side’ road. a| | Beautifying parks has reached lifgh" point "of excellengg. Beautifi- | cation_of vacant city lots, however, is where it was 40 years ago. A good idea for pedestri downtown section on Saturday eve- | nings is to bring cots along with | them, thus enabling them to take a nap while “'ail‘g for the signal to | ns in the | ‘Cross. Gasoline interests fear further price retrenchments the fall. Crude oil in storage excceeds 430,- 400,000 barrels. However, no receiv- ership for the Standard Oil is yet | feared. in | One reformer has sald President Coolidge could make the country dry in 30 days if he wanted to. But then, he would have to take sides, which is contrary to the modern political technic. No Associated attempted to | Belated sport note: Press sports writer zive an opinion Dempsey to whether . To quote fouled )01 pel to financiers of Nuft Sed." | B. C, — [ | aining a vast store of | the hull collision the other day and the promptly the Thus proving conclusively A ship con dynamite in figured in crew | vessel that abandoned | the | dynamite didn't go off. Action of the State Corporation Commission of Oklahoma in send an ultimatum to the oil operators in | fleld something Tt Seminole down on | i the to cut production new in | regulating corporations. proves | once more proof is needed, t missions exist again, if any t mainly regularity com- | to help the coneerns regulated MONROE EXTENSION HAPPILY ASSURED city ratulate that The itself o s nevd to cor r mnoun, Monroc Ellis sion of street, from nwood to trect, will b 1 out. The that carri alcity it inad nt sable to provide prop to y this 1 made vith the plan Lorougi Ies was 1 of splendid potentialitie taken to me the city balke the an that t of purchasing inding expen y property st in the Now we are told that there never really was idea of the project on but a little delay the property owners that they could not get all they demanded The city sither way any account of expense, might convince hand properties needed could ha secured through J ~ond on proceedings. But this is a rather nasty mcthod and doesn't had The been the whip | Herald evidently has live uncovered, | anniversary a| slipping. | claim to abandoning | | tions of dollars are expended make many friends. ties needed at the earlier figure of $21,000. The entire cost of the ex- tension wiil not go to much higher figures as the city will save many feet in the construction of mains by | constructing along a straight line rather than along an extensive loop. The extension will provide a crogstown highway from Corbin ave- nue to Stanley street, one devold of grade crossings. Work should now proceed rapidly. THE considered DIAL SYSTEM probable that time the dial be insti- It is within a reasonable system of telephoning will tuted in all the leading Connecteut. The object of the tele- is to save cities of phone company, of course, money—which is another earning money. So aware, the public has not as yet been way of far as we are |invited to share any of the money thus saved or earned. The dial system has Hartford, is supplanting the manual switchboard connection system in New Londen, is bruited for Meriden; {and in all likelihood will reach New Haven, Bridgeport, New Britain and other of the Nutmeg metropoli in due time. The editor “invaded” of the Manchester in a dial city. Here is what he thinks of it: But let nobody who has not lived In a dial-telephoned city get the idea into his head that this device is all gravy for the subscriber. When one is te be hooked up with another sub- scriber's station somebody has to do the work of hooking up. Now the hello girls do it. By the lial system it is the subscriber who does it. You not only pay your fare but you work your ssage into the bargain. It is not quite the same as dropping a token in a trolley car grab- box and then having to run the Toonerville yourself, but is a fraction of the same thing. ICRET HEARINGS The hearings in the Sacco-Vanzetti case having reached their end, there is considerable complaint of their secrecy. The commission and the governor could have opened them to reportorial scrutiny and thus created what practically would have been a new public trial. But they elected to do their stuft in private, and the assumption, at least, has been that they made a thorough job. If the Gecision Is against the de- | fendants, however, eriticism will be intensifed as a result of the secret hearings. Nobody will know just how far the hearings went, what.was what new evidence was weighed—except £o far as the official port will disclose. It would have been better, in mecting the public scrutiny of this | business, for the hearings to have been public. Massachusetts scems to labor under the delusion it has a world monopoly in dignity. It has | more dignity than 1s good for it. 40 YEARS AN EDITOR The dean of financial newspaper | writers today is celebrating the 40th of his activity. And he is a New Englander—Clarence W. | Barron of Boston. Editor Barron is 72 years of age, and still a prodigious worker, travel- er and writer. He is a heavywelght in build, skill and accomplishments His influence in the world of finance has been greater than almost that of any other man, the so-called kinj of finance not excepted. Through his ownership of financial journals extending from Boston to Philadel- phia he has preached financial gos- high and low | standing; it is of kind that compels them to listen, and Barron at 72 gives no evidence of A supreme court jurist, and many another is re- tired at 70. The older he judicial mind, arron never thinks of retiring. gets the mo 1e does. By the time he is 100 he will be the acknowled He superman. already lay title, can considerable the FEDERAL AID FLOOD SUP Dispatches from FOR ERERS id City there has been a change Pre nt Coolidg, advisability in at- itude by regard- ing the | federal aid to rehabilitating the ers of the Missi suf | To & rer i s the valley edit that ry Hoover the Py adamant of convincing than lesirable, In addition formation is esident more an attitude is ) that the Senator nport sion of vill be call- aster. Whe Congr: ed to deal with the L visit o 1de fe Pro Seni- tor Smoot 1 what similar atement a few months ago a rath- as forth is to be pointed statement White re w cor from the spoles it t s Pre ‘ it himself, and not rely upon n that a special sion the sident will announce sena- tor to mak Now public the information the senator repeats his sta | ment; and this time it is not denie There to h may not be as many ways ress the Mississippi as there ire arm but of methods there g Which agreement must be had before mil- The River Commis- engineers are several regard present Mississippt indi- | !tific & method for the mind of Con- | gress and local politiclans along the | | | of extending | flood | matches there, |sion is composed of such enginecrs, Now the city will get the proper- | and federal aid has been given 0 levee construction upon a basis of | two dollars of federal money for each dollar of local funds provided. Although the work has progressed for many years and many millions of dollars have been spent on hold- ing the Mississippi, the success of the descending down the river has been plan when eleven Niagar: nil. The trouble, man began trying to improve nature in the Mississippi valley. F. H. Newell, former chicf of the U. 8. Reclamation Service, in a re- cent issue of the Review of Reviews: in fact, started when upon S ‘Nature provided a nice ad- justment of ordinary floods and of channel sizes and h t low-lying basins in which ex- traordinary floods have heen accustomyed to spread harn during the thousands of years of the continuing process of building up of the long busins and bayous. Man, however, b coveted the use of these basins, which nature provided as a r lief or safety valve for the ex- treme floods. Recognizing this eondition many enginee now contend that instead of try- ing to build these hundreds of miles of levees high enough to be safe from overtopping. there should be constructed at suit- able intervals long spillways at flood heights so that when the flood begins to threaten the levees the excess water creeping up over these spillways m; flow back into the basins pro- vided by nature. This means oc- cupation of these basins for farms and towns should be dis- couraged or reduced to the minimum and the land devoted largely to the production of trees.” s le i t i i We fear this is entirely too scien- | Mississippt. AUTOS AS BATH HOU We thought the question had been settled last year, but the amalgamat- ! ed association of Connecticut bath house owners have again brought the matter to the fore. They are! opposed to the use of automobiles as improvised bath Jouses. | It is immoral, they say; permits those who find themselves in the vicinity to be “peeping Toms.” It is | a most “iniquitous ystem,” the bath | in house owners say. : The bath house owners, however, are not much perturbed about the moralities of the practice. What they | . worry about s that every time some- body changes from strect garments to bathing costume, or vice versa, n an automobile it means less money for the bathing houss proprietors. The family car can be properly draped and made into a perfectly private disrobing chamber for mem- bers of the family, The beach man- t t agers can furnish no better facilitles, | except that they can add a charge for the “service.” The beach managers are no more | justifiéd In demanding law on the subject than the hotel proprietors | are justified In demanding laws to from cooking their own meals in a camp, or from sleeping in a fleld or a haymow if t prevent week-enders they desire to do so. 25 Years Ago Today Among the men drawn for jury duty by the commissioners, (o} Sumner of Hartford=and A. J. Slop- er of this city, are M. D. Stockwell, H. L. Mills, O. F. Curtis, Andrew Turnbull, and L. A. Vibbert The Connecticut Co. has ruled that dogs may not ride on its cars unless permits are obtalned at the office and their fare paid. To illustrate the peculiar form form in which the coal market is, | F. H. Johnston of the City Coal and Wood Co. sold one hundred tons 1o a New York firm yesterday. This is the first time a New Britain| concern has sold coal to New York. Mr. Johnston says he got 50 cents more a ton than if he had sold locally. Fitzsimmons was again defeated hy Jeffries at San Francisco last night, being knocked out in the cighth round. A great deal of talk is being heard about it being a fa fight, and the mayor of San cisco has hanned any further boxing The stone cutter employed in re- building St. Mary's church went on strike this morning because no help had n provided for them and they had to shift the big stones themselves, After they had loafed {half an hour the contractor came |to terms and work s resumed. ‘The John Royle (‘o. has just finish- [ed a contract at the State Normal ! School building in New Haven. The building has been refinished and re- | decorated mil H arl Baumbach, the Hagist's cfforts to locate musician, whose and family five children | 1 here after hi 4 left town, | n crowned with success, and | mily will join Baumba m“ V'~l"HL{?‘ ¥ G [ we to k l ‘u A |t e 1 1 the farm 1o spots Platt comun wn 1y and for spot is it looked over isolation Fospi on the rm a hill. The N Fishing club | poned it sake until Angust 17, One finest clambakes ever known heen planned, but <o f nur of tickets sold is not nt Hon. . Corbin's automobile wrecked in Thompsonville yester and Willism Scott Wetmore, and Charles and more | were injured, The ring wheel broke and the automobile went into |« u- the likely I The end, avor cas where th Britain Hun 1d nber | is i | lay a ditch throwing out all the pants. The ear had heen purchase: only terday. an offic: sire | Madam. think is o said she humor change westerly winds, Forecast for Gene Attorney in I]um\nle next week. nlon will open Factsand Fancies The ¢ to f re f scl be Some uit, and som vorce. All song bir : viewpoint Example o sympathy for a fat man’s desire to % educe. Let & few of A bused. Another ng old is to when t he bill is §32 You daily- ority never bath hab If you must ng, always Let the effete Where they don’t have half-pint pockets. they h: Americanism: Yanking the car to { your own side of the road; the other fellow a fool driver. “See Americ slogan in its time, darned bill Half the world may not know how | the other half lives, enough to disapprove. Even a firearms in Texas, | gers get by 1 'y virtu a man who feels too sick to s ir feels rather well in vis swivel ¢ he bleache! Army and etired A man is f he likes to be on the winning side You can tell by his attitude toward he Yankees. Another of ollege chum en years. Life insuraMee agents don’t seem such a pes t if few widows {believe in insur Correct this reat my chil “wh orag Co B Observations On The Weather Washington, night and in te ally f: not much moderate to ir f west winds. Conditions ters in the lower this morning mewhat uns: ngland. An overspreads states and over the Ohio states to the | and eastern westward ove Pressure §s 1o lake region states to the peratures continu season in all Conditions enerally fair change in tem mperatur Atlanta Atlantic Boston Buffalo Chicago Cincinnati Denve Detr Duluth 5 i Na apolis tucket New Haven N lea New York W O | No Tokyo () n men nobility the organiz s of 1t a c ing s muy en There 1 Yo are they. ar ision of t lepartment nal puni; ally flagrant, titles, pery is household way complex. do your they can’t hear it. hoards are woman can't earlier, vigor to cuss the the effort to enthuse over an old ght, extends T and and ge or a kick is just a de-| otter than all right. servants just 1e have to get a di- ds are catbirds from of a darned cat. A sick man's f zero: f his buttons stay off, man enjoys feeling | to k say ju he garage 80, p from grow- what you man says saw a man with the bit who had an infer- lick the kids for ly- lying where | ast hoot if it will. | ave ten-gallon hats | calling st was a good | but now the) up. a F but it knows | rob with | but the gold dig- here as elsewhere. | i Dear M. le in sunshine. Many | t in I y men should bei while they have the ervice in print. or the under dog or life's dismal faflures you haven't seen in | you happen to know | whose husbands didn’t nce sentence: I alw dren the same ether I'm in ood humor."” 1927, Publishers yndicate, an Fair to- Not much Moderate . Ju Tuesday. mperature. Zastern New Yor tonight find Tue in temperatur resh west and south- disturbance cen- Lawrence valley and * conditions are cttled in northern New area of high prssure middle Atlantic southwestward valley and southern Mississippi valley thence north- r the plains states. latively low over the northern horder Pacific coast. em- moderate for the districts. favor for this vicinity weather and not much perature yeste A the owe day H 58| anl m Tove of the Jay girls has caus ion by the peers them- ommitter to discipline nobles whose indiscre- d in scandal 1,000 p Japan, under the direct su- Tmperial Household Xity of mor us- when exception- by the taking away of o ers eisha he 1 st | T takes ‘em out and burns 'em. | to the marin placed my garters.” of your dresser Holbrook. ere | her ried?” ana she says to me Seud all communications t0 Fun shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. How About It, Folks? We take so much on hearsay, THE ¥U HOP recommends Taking more on cheer-say, hailing foes or friends With a joke so merry, with a grin so gay It makes a flapper's beach-coat look colorless and gray! How It Was! Pierce: “They say Welton lost his Jeb. Was he caught napping?” “No, he was caught nip- The Fun Skop Janitor Speaks! By the Janitor Himself Oh Folks who fail to grade! For poems dull and*rank you Send to my boss 1 really do Sincerely, truly thank you! make the Perhaps you think that this is odd. The boss, he doesn't need 'em, And as for me, you bet your life 1 never, never, read 'em! The hess, he separates the mall, What's weak or lame, he spurns ‘em, And when the wicker's full brimmi-g I hope vour right arm never fails! Whate'er the hoss is wishin’, hope you write ten times much! Your work means my position!! 1 as | He Saw Stars—Not the World! Hartley: “How did you get trat black eye?” Carter i orey told me to tell it and 1 did!" —Selma G. Lobo | | movies but has appes limit the numbe Of the month! —V. V. Straughn The Reason Friend: “That short-stop of yo is a good man, but he has ne made a home run in his life, has he?” Manager of Basehall Team: You see, it's like t One day I year he made a double, and next day his wife presented with twins; this r he made triple, and his wife had and since then hi afraid to ev try to hit a single!” —Walter J. Goldsmith 1927, Reproduction (Copyright, Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get question of fact or information writing to the New Britain Herald, Bureau, 1322 New York aven Washington, D. C., enclosing t cents in stamps for reply. legal and marital advice tannot given, nor can extended be undertaken. will recelve a perscnal reply. signed requests cannot be answear All letters are confldential.—Edit Q. Is Lovise picture actress, the screen? A She is not ple Huff, the still playing moti ying for t d frequen married E. eer, and on the She Stillma childrer Q. How many terms can a Pre ident of the United States serve? A. The Ccnstitution does r of terms. No Pre ident has ever served more th two, 4 stage. an eng LIGHT OR DARK! I live in a rather old use, and some of the ren't exactly airtight. The room next to mine-is occu- | pied by a young man named ]Iol-’ Jrook, a handsome brunette. He rapped at my door the other evening and $yggested that I take | Jinner with him. “I can't go,” 1 &aid, rooming partitions “I've mis- | “You put them in the top drawer last night,” said | | Warblin THAT'S Whiffenpoofs! why I prefer blondes! ng G. Barlow Meoster Judell: | Rosa gotta da hair like-a da fine | ti. Her eyes looka like f]\' word puzz. When T wasa da litla fa! I gonna make love to |° Rosa, so we go-a to-a da picknickle | weed her farder, her' murder, her | whole lotsa sists an brud | We sitta vmder da wiffle-tree an | bills and cuckoos an makesa lotsa | wh you cell love, Den 1 a to | “Whena we gonna get mar- “I don | know, you gotta aska ma hushand.” | Pretty soon gueek a falla he come to me an sa mat’ you neck wid ma wife? I ain't neck, T gotsa ma cloth He v “Wh pecka da blonde I say much wife's hair, yesterday morning.’ He say “Alla right, aghetti you gonna more.” Den he makesa blonde hairs an I fecl inside. Galloping g Ana datsa make-a da wites 1 gonn hairs off ma coat atsa not you paghetti I eats detsa eat rome me eat mucha eefa rlict why when T gonna | love to other fallas| prefer brunuts! | Pony the Bootblack Yeruin orn SogLow. Usually Machin: “How I¢ you going 1iviy on your vacation?" n: “Well, Dboss expects me on the 10th, 1 expect to get on the 15th, so I'll probably sout the 20th!"” Jo! Lillenthal e to be Jor back back he back 1HIS GIRL LOTS OF R et WE GIVE Dear Editor P (heires And T Had gone about In my tlivier When I fivally asked, “T wonder who that nosey bore t's following us.” smiled. wat’s the chauffeur,” cald “You didn’t think to PLENTY ten miles is | dog ment is | Q. Was R cd on Jun ) No. is still in > outcome of an app 1ce of death o publishes the Cong n jail awa | sional Record A. It is published daily duri the ssion: of Congress United States Government fice and contains the proce ate and House of Anyone n subscribe it from the endent of Doc ments, Government Washington, D. ( Q. How 1any days did It e in 1868? Twenty-nine What Printi h days. Tt leap ye Q names of gon fHnaet are the Y s published United A Americ Fourth A World, 19 , Tllinois How can ned from Moisten the water, and dip a cle reh and rub the into the stain. This cont of paste on the garment. v for about 30 minutes, the move with a stiff brush. This id not only to remove also the odor. Q. Who played the I role in the photoplay, Venice” and what is Nis A. Antonio Moreno. Micheltorena St. iforn ue, New York City West Lake Street, « cles A, garments stains with cle wn cloth in cor cornst makes th Let a res t in but rding m address His add Los Ang fo 1925 of accidents number killed was 30,4 of whom §0 per cent we in t United States. Anto fatalities in t United States in 1025 totaled as estimated by the Nation Ity and Suret cro: the automobile them were gra ers. Gra in countedfor sons. Q. “No. the him triplef an answ r to any Question Editor, Washington Medical, | research | All other questions Un- for thr not | Snyder electrocut- al from ding Repre Printing Office, bruary was 8 howe - : number of world | and | tleship and rplane earrier which has been suggested since th days. of the airplane bombing of the old warships off the Virginia coast during the past five or Bix years. Even if such a type of craft |could be built under the naval limi- |tation treaty, some experts can find no advantage in such a ship over the separate fighting craft and the carrier of the present, They say {that the effectiveness of the battle- |ship would be materially decreased |it guns were sacrificed for airplane ling deck. hiese same experts declare the | battieship must be able to stand up 1l receive as well as give the tars to the earth A. Proxima Centauri and Alpha Centauri. Q. What i5 the meaning of the name Beverley? A, “Boaver meadow. Q. When was the first head tax imposed on immigrants entering the United States? A. In 1882 the imposition of a head tax of fifty cents was ordered by Congress and the amount has been increased gradually until it is ow eight dollars. Q. What is a “Jews Harp”? A musicaNinstrument consist- ing of a flexible metal tongue set | in a small stiff iron frame of pe- | culiar shape, which is held against hardest knocks. A fiying deck is by player's mouth and pressed |its nature unprotécted and | against his teeth. The metal tongue |theref tremely vulnerable to is bent outward at an angle :o as lattack. These two characteristics | 10 be struck with the hand. Tones |cannot therefors be consistently |are produced by altering the shape \vmho]h d in a single ship, they be- and of the mouth c: ship of the future, to reinfo the various h: questionably will ics of the natural tone of incorporated in its design ef- tongue, which is low in pitch. s for launching a limit- Q. What species of whale |ed number of aircraft of the am- lar; ? | phibian type, but there will be no provision for them to land back on board in battle. There is a school of thought in [the American navy for the most |powerful battleships, within the ton- [nage limitation of the Washington | treaty, equipPed with a few ‘plancs for fire control scouting worlt | but depending for its main air pro- |tection upon planes carried by ships especially designed or con- verted for that purpose. There is conflict of thought as to whether the bombing airplane will |make necessary greater speed for |the future capital as a means |of defense aside from friendly air- planes and anti-aircraft guns or |will force a sacrificing of present speed for greater armor protection T |both on deck and hull. Protection against’ bombs ex- alongside of a. battleship, h caused the sinking of the old e battleship Osfrieland off Virginia capes six years ago, m« through an. increased num- water-tight compartments naval authorities be- WARSHPS ANDAIR ‘\gamm the lolpm]n attack and the | under-water explosion of the tor- pedo and the bomb are compara- ble. It will be hefore the ship is des this type urs ver lea’ or beaver last a 1 en e € the | have | ficient m is lurgest whales are the | Blue Whales (Baloenoptera muscu- lus) whi attain a length of 100 feet or more, and weigh approxi- mately 70 tons. Q. Is Antenion Moreno, actor, marricd? A. His wife is Daisy Canfield Danziger, a socicty leader and phil- anthropist. Q. What are the meanings of the names Evelyn, Claire and | Alberta | Nellie, fruitful; . hazel Claire, illustrious; and Alberta, | nobly bright. bel Q. On what day of the week did November 1, 1899 fall? A, Wadnesday Q. Who played the par lowdean in the photoplay * Bachelors”? A Iuh Hyams. | | a the film by | ue, wo f ed. or. on G the \\1]1 | ber hno\\ (1'( he | tly A, ce s- unl Naval Experts See Them as/ Inter-Dependent Washifgton, July 25 (A — While | the of the world have been | Ifixed on America’s trans-oceanic { aval construction experts been quiet lying the tuation with a view determin- ing the eifect of the spectacular | advance of aviation on the future | battleship. | READ AEF i Musty Cellars Made Clean- | ot Smelling unwholesome rapidly more than three .years next American battle- cd, as no more craft can be built by the United States, Gri Britain and Japan until 1931, Meantime, Ameri- cal experts are giving the question of defense azainst airplanes careful udy and will embody their con- lusions in the next ship. it- eyes ng | LD CLASSIFIED ADS to ’ u- ough, the one change e appears a degree | of opinion_in na sult from considering adjunct of the b unanimity les will laircratt as an ry as an enemy o |this, it meant that the “ leility will be used for spot recting the fire of the bi Al men this use ne in battle time will make for t possible elevation and uns as accurate " Ihe had at a much greater distance " |than probably even was dreamed ut; fore the plane came into use for fire control. Discussion on which a large n\m\»: of Ameri al men seem to | ree is the combination is co me | he | Dank conditions. odors mean Germs multiply corners and damp- Disinfect -such places by prinkling with a Sylpho-Nathol so- i to gallon of warm water. It will check organic 1y and make your cellar clean fresh-smelling—as healthful as Got Sy . |range of s | | the de and any room in the house. Nathol at all dealers. ar | | n- {ber 11 in it YOUR BRAIN POWER n any company depends upon your dgo you, size you up, by the intelll- HOW Your ability to talk Intclligently fund of general Information. People gence you display on topics of gener al interest. Do you want to find out Where you rate in the scale of general Intelligence? Our Washington Bu« to record of every g uestion asked by every reader of ti t people wa nt to know. And it has compiled & in an abso rbingly Interesting bulletin called CAN YOU ANS The answers a re (n a separate scction of the bulletin. self, your friends, to hav o o thrillingly interesting game at & party ne gathering, these tests will glve you what you want. Fill out the coupon below and send for it. CLIP COUPON OFF HERE = == == == 'S EDITOR, Wa shington Bureau, New Britain Herald e. Washington, D. C. t a copy of the bulletin CAN YOU ANSWER? and enclose herewith fiva cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8, postage stamps or coln to cover he ale of pape series of Ten s —-——— 00 he | he STREET AND NO. sereressane chn STATE T am s reador of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD, — — - — — e — — — o — = ——— E5 OF LIGHT AND RUMBLI NOISES ARE I'da WALK home, did vou?" 1 felt Hke The thirtieth GET ANY TUN OUT OF WONDERS WHAT THESE FLASH- HELLO THFRE'S MOTHER AND DADDY OUTSIDE Hi5 DOCR WOND * ERING IS HE FRIGHTENED. THERE T BE FRIGHTENED AT WHY .DONT THEY CLAP AND LAUGH WITH RIM, AT ALL THE NOISE. THEY DONT SEEM TO HOW PRETTY THOSE FLASHES OF LGHT ARE HE CAN SEE EV- ERYTHING IN THE NURSERY S LOTS OF FUN - MAYBE IT'S A THUNDER: STORM, HE HEARD DADDY TRLKING ABOUT ONE NG WHOOPEE " THAT WAS A BANG! MADE THE HOUSE SHAKE LIKE WHAT'S DRDDY WHEN HE'S MAD HERE'S MOTHER AND DAD RUSHING IN SHUTTING WIN= Dows SRY THEY'RE GETTING ON HIS NERVES THEY ACT 50 JUMPY AND GUEER WELL F TREY'RE GOING TU BE SCARED HE MIGHT AS " WELL BE, T00. SWYAS WILLIAFS| '