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6 New Britain Herald EERALD PUBLISHING COMPANTY Teswed Dally (Sunday Rxcepted) At Herald Bidg, 61 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 95.00 & Year. $1.00 Three Moatha 76c. & Month. Entered at the Post Office at New Brit- ain a8 Becond Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONE Business Office Editorlal Roome | | CALLS At . 926 The only profitable advertis: in the City. Circulation books and press | room Always open to advertisers Member of the Asmocisted Press The Assoclated Prems is exclusively en- | [ to the use for re-publication of | all news credited to it or mot otherwise | credited 'n this paper and also locai| aews published therein. ] Member Aadit Baress of Circulati The A. B. C. s & patlonal organizat which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with & strictly honest analvsle ci circulation. Our circulation statiatice arc based upon this audit. This insures pro tection against traud in newspaper d's tribution figures to both npational and Tocal advertisera. The Herald is on sa) stands, Entrance | Grand Central, 42nd Street. Welcome news this, coming all the way from Shanghai. Sen. Bingham saved the life of Mme. Borodin, wifc of the Russian Soviet adviser to the government at Hankow. She was arrested by the Chinesc and was later released, because, as we take it, the Senator from Con- necticut scaled oratorical heights in her defense when her captor, Chang Tso-Lin, said he was going to kill ber. through an did execute Bingham told Chang, interpreter that if he her he would be put down as “beast and a barbarlan” by West- erners. So Chang let her a Thrilling w: It must have been Senator Bingham who 1t incident for the bencfit correspondents some had happened. i | ‘ sa to led the | of the it | time after Now we know what he China for. Congressional Record copy. We sympathize with the tablold newspapers in the lack of sensation | in the Chaplin divorce case and we feel slightly sorry for ourselves as well. Here we were all set for a lot of | inside stuff on Hollywood night life, with both Charlie and Tita telling | about it and the tabloids picturing it | with photos, composite and other- wise. And then all that happens is aw- | ful tame. Lita goes on the stand and | tells about how cruel Charlie was, Charlie says nothing and the jlll](f“ gives her around three quarters of a | million of Charlie's. l‘ The public will get so apathetic | after a while that thefe won't be cent’s worth of publicity in & movic divorce | wed- | That youngster who traveled more There isn’'t now ding. in a movie than half a mile through a scwer in N York after through hole tell about himself in ment than Professor Ashley who got | Jack c having fallen to a man and lived it must havethou an even worse predics himself trapped in Nick and escaped We about elther ouldn’t care wticularly Laving the experience of e two. There feeling' must be for one a horri one who has penetrate deep into a large cavern and sees the ground covering behind him. And another v knows his exit close up about the for he large nic being whirled ot rough a iron pipe. Both of them must hu lieved when day they saw again. Tha doesn’t blush s fact a modern 1ention of the “petticoat” docsn’t become mean more broadmind merely may not know ancient limb warmers look furors FOUt 0 CITY The Wat recently by the tax comr City had Britain that the based the estimates npon T less po tion was explained by state board of educatior 1 basis of school population is announ allayed Water ing concluded that the hoostey it b educational ment fronted iry somewhat the spirit ir sued Relative to the Assessment and Col- lection of Taxes—Waterbury is re- | garded all through it as having less ' ming, at leat the record of accidents population than New Britain, so that we are given as being the fourth city. The population of both cities, probably also by the board of edu- of accuracy New Brit- | cation—but regardless or defective guesswork, |ain perches in fourth place in this ! some Iried it | New boys v department simply had made a mis- | take, The tax commissioner thus neatly passed the butk; but in the last re- port of the staté tax collections is- office—Information ¢ from his credit of course, is ‘“estimated”— important volume. The estimated population of New 1926) is that of Waterbury Britain (as of September 1, given as 74,790; 73,534, The grand list Britain is given as below that Waterbury. (Page 118). We are not wildly excited of New all this, considering the counting of state high But it is cars. noses as rather vulgar. worth while to stress the fact tha ! New Britain seems to be regarded a fourth city in one officlal state the ! document. NELS NELSON SPEAKS Nels Neison, one of Ncw Brital neer and a member o pic airmen, newly appointed e need of a ficld for the city, ha scen fit to take umbrage to a state ment recently made «ditorial and has so stated in a com- municated to this office. The ton and temper of his “communicated” is of the character that eveyy news. paper editor really ates re ceiving, We timeliness of the letter in this appreci are, because of th subject, using hi: and maki Here cclumn comments of our own. the letter. Tn one of your recent edi- torials a statement was made that New Britain would soon have an aviation field if some of its citizens owned plancs and knew how to fly. In regards to citlzens owning es will say that there were several air- planes owned here just a few years ago but as there was no fleld here all these machines had to he kept at the I tford field. Hartford had a field long hefore one of its citizens owned a single plane and the only planes on the field belonged in New Britain, in fact it was these New Britain owned planes that started the Hartford field and look what it is today. Some of these same men who owned planes here are waiting for a field so as soon as there is a field it will have plenty of ma- chines. The following is a list of the men who owned anes here and used the Hartford fleld. Dixon, John Thompson, Wessolock, Mr. Wright, tles Davy, Nels J. rwilliger. NELS J Probably the in our use of the wor some” editorial vised, it should probably “more.” We have bee are thoroughly familia with New Britain's aviation histor: »and as thoroughly proud of it as Mr Nelson rightly From the a reader that was seve is. nteen years o more ago,—thi intense interest in fhe city has taken a efforts of ma to conquer the air in a machine tha was heavier the milton came than elemen Charlje 1 to town i a contraption made of canvas, bam line i piano wire and finally off the ground much to th delight of a crowd assembled on Walnut Hill T Britain about park at and very f ved up to that had been sec anywhere had New York, 1f we time. Glen Curtis flown from Albany correct] York t he remembe New and Hamilton Philadelphia. known m Charlie, wa to his home tows folks, ceived $10,000 for that flight. A yea or so later Hamilton returned to th city with another plane er with still another type, liem being crude men nt day standards, the time. By number of loc; an active in flyin on quickly hecom ing proficient in the and piloting t His data on th Hartford ficld corre of the is stionably Wi tatement that th agree with the writer would quickly be follo of it. Undoubted! five years there considerable wddition ma h the spot in 1 a purpose befor of | about 's | drowned near New Ha committee on in a Herald | of Hamilton,— or- sight of a plane, to both of ured hy pres- but the latest at | art of building establishment of purely ANOTHER WEEK-END CONNECTICUT Humanity seems to get an enor- a chance | mous thrill out of taking particularly when it is out on a va- atlon. Having a good time seems |to consists of running needless risks boats or in swim- | in automobile, during the past week-end leads to that conclusion. Why it is that peo- | ple cannot be reasonable in their search for amusement is inexpli- cable. But it seems they cannot. The | man who rocked the boat and the | man who raced the car on a crowd- | ed highway is still with us. He gets | |our sympathy when he gets in | trouble, but usually he has sought | the trouble himself, possibly for the excitement of getting in a tight place and getting out, if he does get out. Connecticut is not so small, it has miles of water line, salt and | 1t has also many miles of vs, usually teeming with Accidents are bound to hap- pen. But it seems, in perusing the weekly list that the majority of them are due to carelessness on the in or on the water | many fresh, v.url of someone, or in automobiles. { Two men in a party of six were ven. In read- t that it was extremely that more of the party . The inference is that the sion s were not _ | dr boats had little e dling them and probably could not swim, all the earmarks of careless or reck- ss handling of cars. Despite being ccd with these items every week o n the state press the recklessness the accident list ounts up. One reckless person in ngers the lives ontinues and an automobile ends of others, the water endangers only his own The latter person is much more de- sirable to have around, but there 1o reason for his existence at that. It is time that a halt was called to thrill seeking. / DAD age from doing some- MISS DORAN AND HIR “It | won't stop them my children are of done * is reputed to thing T would have myself n I was their age,’ [ teceived from her dad when she told him that it was her desire to be the first woman to fly the The school teacher was but the answer Miss Mildred Doran across acific years of age, and judging from her photographs, was possessed of attractive face and figure. She unquestionably had personality and the desire for extraordinary ad- cnture. Tt is not to be suspected, cither, | too high despite an expression at- effect that one dies but once and might as well Iy. Although there Is still hope that she be found, on the face of the tributed to her to the a do so glorio: was ill-ad n 4 that somewhere | ¥ may Pacific, or on one of the isl: group, she be struggling to pro- !long life until rescue comes about, that hope grows slimmer every day 2 o | and many have given her up | Tost. in n t o | 1aay, " [tremely doubtful if any of them are for the young There are six others same predicament as the all of them men and it ix ex- n| | found, even the twa | scarching for who disappes st while their Ividently Mr. one of the eleme Doran’s permission its which took or less in the fate of his Probably she would have part mors 1 danght, n | attempted the flight lacking it. | | n men do those things these days. She have stayed on the ground v o | however, we do not know how mu she was willing to he governed by 16 | the ac But the he d of achieveme and er got ires of her parent, dad could hark re- back to S nt often filled his brain e opportunity and still lat- awake asleep. the prohably i to Lis ambitions soon tied down to a life which ms nt a truegle to obtain food and mselt Sheller al for b and family with no time Rec! ¢ he reali interest “highfaluting” sehemes - | he counld do so, heecau how disappointed he was, he hesi ited to interfore with the daughter . ambition of his And it seems as if qnite rightly. his win honors sccond only of Lindbergh, probable af- of vl the realization nture. Against of the i possibility ems has come there i to say s well 1- BRIDGEPORT dgeport caved cco- he For several years bad, but in, ter war it was in a ent s not or 1ere were siness blocks wy city in pulation considered port is nof only on its momically, but is advance in boilding permits is year The to hoe over last year, k city has had 2 hard row P and the hat it fair-minded will re- again is on its feet. men who risked thelr lives in small | knowledge of han- | everal automobile accidents have that she valued her life not ds of the Hawaiian | Wo- | of his youth, when dreams | il ! finding himsclf | use | She took her | ’ Facts andFanctes You never saw an inferiority complex on the same premises with a clear conscience, It isn't prohibition that makes the wet unhappy, but this darned { modern liquor. Ah, well; almost any {income | would seem enough if nobody else had more. * It is estimated that 87 per cent of those who vote a straight ticket | still sleep in their underclothes. If America has the most crime, she probably has also the larg: number of people truly decent. You can tell an American in any group of tourists abroad. He's the ' one who has 3§ picture post cards in his pocket. | ! There's always something. Amer- icans who go abroad to liquor up mis nuts. ing the account we got the impres- | Tucky | A hick town is a place where sound doctrine includes taking the preacher a cake or ham now and then, » Make him get you mond, dear. The larger it fs, more suggests $10 a month. the it cation because it gives somebody ¢ the job of looking after the lkids. You don't sign an abdication in \ free conntry; vou just sign a few fool bills and let Nature take its cours a reckless person about | Pcople are a queer lot, and there re hostes silver plate at camera men—and let them keep it The times are comforting to a no- hody. He can visit the heach and observe how funny great men look in bathing suits. i I A how tle has good points, hut four-in-hand hetter when you have waffles and i syrup. | | ANl Queen Marie has now is $30.- a year and the hope of con Ling to America again. Cruiser reduction may the birth control people (ing the supply of cannon fodder. 000 fafl There’s no excuse for illiteracy. Tn remote sections where there {no schools there are billboards i read. i are | to v for Tod: Cats Ey R. Austin (Dodd-Mead & Co.) | Holmes stuff done to perfecticn. Correct this sentence: a taxi,” sald the sweetie; A little | two-mile walk will do us good.” Review by Bo Freeman | 25 Years Ago Today of smallpox has I and Chict house Another ca: sred on Grove strect s placed the the son, this evening t caucus of il be held when the prohibitionists gather the home of F. G. Platt on Grove Hill to nominate deleg: A prom inent member of the party said to- jday that Mr. Platt will be offered | the post of governor. He has been prominent in the party councils for | When the republicans mect irsday night an attempt will be| wide by enemies of Alderman Cur Itis to keep him off the list of dele- tes, although he is very ambitious 1 will make a strong political, vea | for teon | William J. Noble of Sexton street has notified Selectman Huriburt that he had 41 chickens killed by a dog | vesterday morning. E. . Laubin will resume teaching mber 1. His studio will be in block. and Mrs, ne to New My have outin Mrs. r have | 1 William Marsland York for a week's h- Paul Vogelgesang and dau returned from a two we Indian Neck Maple Hill golf team 1 by Waterbury Saturday P. Hart made four others lost, 1 Hart by 4, W. H. Pease by 10. ven orih & the Stanley noon G 1l the M. S and . PPurcell A W. Judd baseball team Works Satur- and tied for the Ir listrial lea throt 1 fay in the pitche 1 ue Vickery ghout. Williams, summer school completed the s to his home in New on I h rned in I May (.nes to Plane Co. At Garden City, L. L In (. May 4 Highland chanic tth L, w position corporation mas F. Butler, ny's mechanics, this city during of morn- with the With one who wi the past whipping ended as an author of a healthful 1850, He blood and by stir of the | made the skin tingle thelr chewing gum and pea- . a small dia- | American ism: Hurrahing for edu- | s who wonld throw the | protects your shirt | | T take-a | Sherlock | Don't call | in| at| was points Colley lates oni- who has been =0n- ind ainville, of he of children | Send all communications (0 Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. | FHow About 'Em On Your Street | Folks? The tennis star in choosing both his racket and his ball Considers brand and make and ’ what they weigh, ]Bu! the kids on our street don’t i !'fllr‘c how their racket sounds at all, And the ball they need's out, we'll say! a bawling Natural Query Hampton: “Irene, 1 am go- have company this evening.” | Cook: “Yes, mum.” | Hampton: “So please lay | covers for six.” | New Cook: “Shure, an’ are they going to shlape on the table?”" Mrs. 'ing to New Mrs. THE HATE SQUAD IN ACTION! A Took for a Tooth! As far as old Mrs. McNair is con- cerned I hope all her gardens have weeds in ’em, The nasty old misanthrope always | makes pies Out of cherries that still their seeds in 'em! —Abram Dieneman P We Know Him! An hour with that Manuel Clarke, And I am simply groggy; ! 11e speaks of everything that's neat | As being “very doggy!" —Lillian H. Foraker P i i | | have | Justifiable Homicide! Some 4 William Wilkens will just disappear And his bones will be found in a ditch! then yon civily spoke And the son-of-a-gun sald, which 2" i will know that T —Amy L. Lavelle What She Put Up Morley: “My wife put up berrles d peaches this Summer. What id yours put up?" Wendell: “The ; fights!™ usual number of | —R. R. Henderson BOOTBLACK Goes CAMPING TONY TH | q ‘ Mariouche, datsa ma wife, sheesa gone spend ma vacash inna da | | woods. She wants T should write-a | da Barnum for-a heesa heeg tent so | can go camp. I say howsa | vou gone-a keep tent up an sheesa | {say weed steaks. I say eef daresa | zone he any steaks we gone-a eata {dem home, Dat woman sheesa craze {to go camp an lay inna da grass. Onee she lay inna da grass an da snappy shots from her an when T showa da pitch to ma frands deys asay whatsa name dem mountains. 1 say datsa not moun- ns datsa ma wife. Sheesa gets dat way cause Rosa, « ma litla gal, sheese Camp fires an wearsa da nice-a suit, nice-a red bandan hankcheef anna da Tom Mix hat. “Datsa gal knowsa lots hout woods graft.”” saysa Mari- {ouche. “She knowsa da trees, da rocks and sheesa know avra snake by name.” Whatsa use calla da snake names an make-a heem mad. Den tal me dat Pietro, | datsa her beeg boy, heesa Roy Scout n knowsa all hout how to make-a da fire weet out matches an he know how to ljve-a like-a da Tndian. IT'say T naver see Eyetalian Indian. heesa talla me eetsa nice eefa o camp like-a da keeds. T aska her whatsa camp an cesa say we takesa da table-cloth n buildsa da house, den sleepa iight onna da wha vou call ep offa da’ unteel we get-a da rumteez. We eetsa plenta bugs inna {da food. Den shec v ectsa nice to live inna da beeg open spaces lan T talla her ma farder he getsa keeled inna da beeg open spaces. {He dizga da ditch and heesa atta da hottom when da men deysa filla {up da ditch again an nohody heesa {know ma farder heesa steel inna da ditch. No camp for-a me. Datsa [ halava way spent ma vacash. f IT gone-a get seek T wanna get seek | home! Leesa sheesa sa, s Vs : e TEF (As it was hit into The IFactory) “liver “Merey n you Fun Shop Jolke Jeffr B | don't | caddy play golf. P no, Jeftrey! which end of the when you ‘hit the 5 Know hold eve . Urban R. € \kins (And as other Fun Shop con- tributors played with it)— Answercd the Deseription ew Mald: “There is a disrepu- table, dirty-looking man In old | clothes trying to get in the front { question of fact or information by | rotate at va door. Shall ma’am ?"" Mrs. Weston: “Just a minute, Marie, 'till I see whether it is a tramp or my husband coming home from his golf game!” —Mrs. C. R. Rothschild PP Behold! Eaton: “I hear they have quite a’'scandal at your Golf Club?"” Murray: “Yes. The holder of the men's championship was holding the holder of the women's plonship!” call the police, —Roslyn Ament (Copyright, 1927, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can gelt an answ r to any writing to the Question Editor, New Britaln 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, mor can extended research be undertaken. All other questions will recelve a perscnal reply. Un- signed requests cannot be answ:red. All letters are confidential.—Editor Q. South America agricultural | tries? A. Only a small portion of the surface of Brazil that is suitable for agriculture is under cultivation. The agricultural population is small | and the farms and plantations are | tilled in a very primitive manner. The most profitable and largest crops are coffee and sugar; tobacco and cotton coming next. Small farms do ot flourish, Venezuela's chief in- dustry is agriculture. Coffee is the most important crop. For domestic consumption cereals, beans, potatoe manioc, fruits and vegetables are produced but the demand for wheat exceeds the home supply. . Of what does an Are Brazil and Venezuela in coun- | electron Of a nucleus of positively | charged electricity, around which high speeds varying | numbers of negatively charged par- | ticles. Q. Does the number of an ele- | ment indicate its number of pro- tons and electrons—hydrogen 1 ura- | nium 92, etc.? A. The number of a chemical element is the number of planetary negative electrons circulating around the nucleus of the atom. Tt is also the net nughber of extra (surplus) positive electrons in the nucleus (1. e. it shows how many positive charges are in the nucleus and how many negative charges are circu- lating in the orbits of ~a neutral| atom). Q. What Is the world's for the standing broad jump? 11 feet 4 and 7-8 incl What kind of a language is a | record | A barbarous mixed speech. | without literary monuments; a rude language resulting from the mimm‘ of two or more discordant languages, | A especially ofa cultured language with a barbarous one; as of the Chinook jargon that jargon called Pidgin-English. Q. What kind of lauglage is the | pure Hebrew? Is it still spoken? | A. The language spoken by the Hebrews is one of the northern or Canaanitic division of the Scmit family of languages. It is the language of the books of the Old Testament and became extinct as a | vernacular tongue three or four| centuries before the Christian but it is even now used for speaking and writing hy educated Hebrews over the world and has an extens modern literature. Q. When were the lands in Okla- homa thrown open to scttlement by the government? cham- | | approximately as latitude 31%, congress to open negotiations with the Creek and Seminole Indians looking to the settlement of the vacant lands in Oklahoma by the white man. On April 22, 1889, the lands were thrown open to home seekers. Thousands of prospective settlers collected along the border of the new lands, and at 12 o'clock at a given signal the race began for farms and town lots. 4 Q. What was Pawnee Bill's real name? A. Major Gordon W, Lillie. Q. What was the resuit of the Firpo-Wills fight? A. Wills fought Firpo, Septem- ber 11, 1924, at Jersey City, N. J. It was a 12 round no-decision battle, but Wills earned the newspaper verdict. Q. Upon whom does the pardon- ing power for prisoners rest in the United States? A, For transgressors of federal laws it rests with the president of the United States. For infractions of other laws it rests with the gover- nor of the state, frequently assisted by a board of pardons. Q. What is pyrite? great value? A. It is sulphide of iron. Some varieties sell for about five dollars per ton. It has a slight value in the making of sulphuric acid. Q. Where was Alice Terry born and when? Who is her husband? A. She was born in Vincennes, Indiana, in 1896. She is married to Rex Ingram, the director. Q. What is the value of a United States small one-cent piece dated 19222 A. Only one cent. Q. Is the waltz of French or German origdin? A. It was originally of French Origin but so modified in Germany as to really belong to that country. It became popular on the continent at the beginning of the 19th century and was introduced into England in 1812, Q. are Is it of any English, How many public day schools | there in New York city? A 662, Q. Is “Between you and me” or “Between you and I" correct? A “Between you and me” s correct. The objective form should be used Q. How long is a fathom? A. A fathom is a nautical meas- ure of length equal to six feet. Qbservations On The Weather Washington, Aug. 23 (A—The tropical disturbance which began cast of the Bahamas and north of Turks Island is recurring to the { northward and now is “of great in- tensity and attended by hurricane winds near its center,” the weather | burcau reported tod The center of the storm was given lon- gitude 73%. “It will cause danger- ous winds off the coast from Cape Hatteras to Nantucket”, the burcau warned. Storm warnings were displayed to- v on the Atlantic coast from Wil- mington, N. C., to Boston. ! Aug. t t t t s c ‘Washington, 23.—Forecast 2 BIG DAYS FRID! \Y & SATURDAY WHERE? We'll Tell You Thursday you are an experienced o aw's bulletin on THE ETI suggestions and helps that will be valu How to find out ahout train sched: as to wardrobe, traln courte of the dining car, suggestions ab and etignette at a hotel; sugg U covered fn this bulle CLIP COUPON Washington in ith five cents in loose, me: | NAME in for T and NUMBER the h\ A. Tn 1885 the president of United State authorized L Atlanta . . Atlantic City . Chicago Cincinnati Denver ..... Detroit .. Duluth Hatteras Kansas City . Los Angeles . Minneapolis . Nantucket New Haven New Orleans New York . Norfolk Northfield Pittsburgh ..... Portland, Me. .. St. Louis .... Washington Shredded Wheat Sues alle pany of N o Bureau, Washin, THE for Southern New England: Partly cloudy tonight and Wednesday; probably showers tonight; slightly cooler Wednesday. Moderate south to west winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Cloudy followed by showers tonight and Wednesday. Cooler Wednesday and in north portion tonight Vari- able winds tonight, shifting to fresh and possibly northwest on Wednes- day. Conditions: The disturbance that was central over the upper lake re- gion yesterday morning moved rapidly eastward during the past 24 hours and centers over Quebec with a long trough extending southwest- ward to Texas. It is producing light showers this morning in the Atlantic coast dis- tricts from the southern New Jersey coast northeastward to Massachu+ setts. Pressure is relatively low on the south Atlantic coast. It is high over the north Atlantic coast region, also over Tennessee. A strong area of high pressure from the Canadian northwest is advancing southward over the plains states, accompanied by somewhat lower temperatures that produced frost in eastern North Dakota and northern Minnesota last night. Temperatures yesterday: High . 86 72 78 80 82 84 8 78 68 82 88 86 78 88 70 .72 . 73 . 86 72 82 80 84 . T4 . 86 8 Low 70 " 64 66 62 58 54 64 42 4 70 62 60 48 62 66 76 66 0 60 66 60 68 70 Boston Buffalo .. Jacksonville The Kellogg Company ;‘ Haven, Aug. 23 (#) — Suit J g unfair competition and un- awful appropriation of its trade mark and good will was entered in he United States District court here oday by the Shredded Wheat com- iagara Falls, N. Y., against Kellogg company of Battle reek, Mich,, and “certain grocers.” he A London snuft manufacturer says hat 65 per cent of the snuff now 0ld is bought by women of all lasses. Eyes Examined Glasses OO Fitted Henry F. Reddell Optometrist 99 W. MAIN ST. PHONE 1185 Genuine I{ Old Company’s Lehigh The SHURBERG COAL CO. Phone 2250 55 Franklin Street ETIQUETTE r inexperienced traveler, our Wi QUETTE OF TRAVEL will contain sable to you when on a trip of any ules, fare. connections, baggage, ete.; sy, how to travel on a Pullman, eti- out children on trains; arriving, reg- estions for travel by boat or ship— . Jill out the coupon below and send for i OFF HERE — New Britain Herald, D. C. ETIQU! uncancelled, U. TTE_OF TRAVEL. and 8. postage stamps I am a reador of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. —_— e e e —— (Copyright, 1927, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) THE SUMMER. BRCHELOR, COMES TO THE JAST CLEAN PLATE AND REALIZES THAT THE NOUR. OF RECKONING AND QF DISH- WASHING 15 AT HAND GLUYRS WiLIArS