New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 6, 1928, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 N HOSPITAL Resident of City for 36 Yours| Had Wide Acquaintance Mrs. Rose (Noe) Volz, wife of Arthur G. Voiz, a resident of this city for 86 years until four years ago when she moved to Lower Lane, Berlin, died Saturday evening at 11:35 o'clock at St. Francis’ hos- pital, Hartford, where she had been confined for months' {llness. Death came just a rew days before her §3th birthday anniversary which she would have observed next Thursday. Mrs. Volz was born in Gerniany, I"ebrua , 1873. She came to this city when she was about 15 years Vor many years her home 94 Bassett street. On Octo- she and Mr. Volz observed heir 37th wedding anniversa When she lived in New Britain, Mrs. Volz was a member of i’eter’s church but was not active in fraternal organizations. rviving her are her husband; daughters, Mrs. ' (in, Mrs. Daniel Cosgrave of this ity and Mrs. Earl Case of Collins- ville: three sous, Albert Volz, vrominent florist, Arthur Volz nd Frank J. Volz, all of New Brit- in: three grandehildren, two sis- tors, Mrs. Emil Kraus of New Brit- and Mrs. Anna Heisler of Ger- 1d three brothers, Carl Noe. rtin Noe and Joseph Noe, all of s city The funeral will be onie i Berlin tomorrow morning t 0 o'clock and at St Peter's Vot 9 o'clock. Burial will in ) St Mory's cemetery. NORTON EXPLAINS EARTHS REVOLVING Case of Axial Motion Due to Resisting Medinm held at her (By David B. Norton) [l ure many phenomena in as- jonomy that cannot be explained nothe light of present knowledg ticiuse there are no demonstrated 5 to uxe 1 premises upon which to base ones’ reasoning. Newton, in order to m his miraculously caused rectilinear motions persis- tent assumed empty celestial spac or, celestial spaces filled with a me- dium so non-resisting that a body like the earth could rush through them for an infinite length of time, at a velogity of 18 miles per second, without having the velocity percep- tibly diminished. This is absurd, be- | cause na such celestial medium ex- ists, nor is there any good reason for assuming such a medium to ex ist. This is another of those assump tion of Newton's that were not true, and that now remuain as stumbling- ilock in the way of scientific pro- Newton's prestige is such because Le discovered the force of gravita- tion. and mathematically demon- trated the truth of his conception, hat astroiomers seem to think that ven his assumpticns must be true Iso Whethpr tacy agree with known facte or not. In order to explain axial revelu- ‘ion among the heavenly bodies it necossary to assume the existenca a resisting eclostinl medinm; a intil the existence of such a medi- um is realized and admitted the of those motions will always ain 2 mystery, There are g0 any pheonema that cannot be ex- Mained except in accordance witn is hvpothesis; but that can be « explained by using it as a Yreniise to reason from that to the vriter it seems that this alone wounts 1o a Jemoustration of its truth. Ths evidence of a resisting ol stiu) Tuedium is written so large in the heavens that none can fait soc it excspt those who do nox wnt to. ¥ tlore 1s no colestinl dium how can the nucleus of a comit he brokcn in its fall toward the sun? If there is no sting c=- ! medum what conld possibly the pieces of said comet to ? 1 rofer to Biclia’s comet but face is. generally spe: o waste themselves ¥ in the eelestial spaces by king up 2nd burning up: but is 1@ possibl ¥ to rationat- v explain this +xeept by very high velocitics and a resisting eclestial medinm. You see the resisting celes- tial medinn rovolves in the same di- rection that the planets revolve, 1 abont as “ast, so that they ar Lot resisted; bt the comets fall dr- veetly toward the sun. or almost so, md 5o moet with very high tance. Souwe o have retrograde motion mation in 4 con- 1rar: tion 0 the orbital motio of the ts and the resisting e stial 1. These vith' t test resistancr fium and omitimes their arc one hun ired o+ ton hundred million mil-~ o whale of star-drift can ha now of grat- “isting ~ pur of 1846 and 1§ that it (e of comots L fer 8- comets meet gr the resisting eclestial me ©ils ed by what we ional providing we jostu- also the astion of 4 resisting ce- 1 mediun Ub to about “winty-five or thir thousand years the carth ha ro moon, but ed about - thr “un the same as Venus and Mercuty s;—that is by ays turning the ame sde to tho sun the same as ie imoon alwayvs turns the sane side foward th Up to this time the sun only upon that side th turned t Tt of the o o of the it. The was turne? s hiel 1y from the si vered by great shie t of ice nearly one mils thiek. The period me duri which thic toof iee cover arly half the carth is called th . This period covered cngth of time, prov- billion v period 1 *hiol ) to 1 ory * was then that our co re laid down arm. ev pol. I-measiir but it doee not fol- + |4 body like the earth could captur from | low from this that the earth re- i volved upon its axis at that time, Tthat it was necessary for it to do #0 in order that it might be lighted and warmed on all sides. | Befors the giaclal period began | the solar system was young, and it | was not nearly as great then as it | {18 now. Size, and bigh orbital velo- | city are signs of age in solar sys: tems. When solar systems are great |and contain orbital velocities of one | { hundred or more miles per second, their ages are measured by periods | | of time too great to be named. Before the glacial period begar, d when the solar system was | young and the earth was still young- jer, the sun revolved about another | great sun 8o that the planets of the | | solar system received light and | revolved upon their axies oftener | | than they made an orbital revolution | about the sun or not. This story in | itself is a long story and space will {vot permit going into details at the | present. time. | The moon was the nuclcus of & | rather lurge comet that came near cnough to the earth so that the | |icutual gravitational force was | ! strong enough to hold them together | | It is well known to astronomers that und held 2 body like the moon, that might come near it, if the velocity | and distance happened to be right. | When the moon was first cap- tured by the carth it revolved much nearer the velocity was much greater than When these satellites are first lose a great deal of their velocity by Imparting their en- to the system to cause it to re- as I am about to explain; but ceelerated orbital veloeities, as the acceleration of the moon hows. n the moon was first captur- the earth its revolution about rth caused the resisting celes- medium near the earth revolve, and this re- volving medium acting upon the upper atmosphere of the carth caused the whole earth to re. volve, very slowly at first, but very rapidly befers many vears had pass- | od. No heavenly body revolves upon its axis oftener than it revolves atout a primary unlesa it has ono or more satellites revolving about it, | cavse it is the revolution of the | satellita, or satellites, about the body that cansed the acrial revolution.. Unless a hody is revolving very rapidly, the newly captured satellit always makes an orbital revolution in less tinie than the primary makes an axial revolution. s revolves upon its exis once in about “\(‘Ill}~‘ four hours; but the small inner sat- cllite makes more than three orbital ravolutions in this time. It is plain hat as time is measured in thes: things, this 18 a new eatellite. The inner ring of Saurn makes an orbital revolutipn in less time than Saturn makes an axial revolution; thorefore this ring is a recent acqui- sition. Mars has two moons while the carth has only one. The moons of | Mars are only six or seven miles in ! diameter, while our own moon has a diameter of more than two thou- | sand miles. This is why the eq torfal surface velocity of the earth, | ! resulting from axial rotatioh, is 0| much greater than that of Mars, Jupiter and Saturn arc hetween seventy-three and eighty-cight thou- | fand miles in diameter; and yet Jupiter makes an axial revolution in little less than ten hours, while Saturn requires a little more thar fwo hours for one revolution. This is because these planets have cap- tured cight or ten rather lar; sat- cllites, now. captured the volv ifter this they are slowly in their seenlar DRIVER ARRESTED ON NANSLAUGHTER COUNT (Continued From First Page) was walking west on Broad sfreet on the south side, near the Bartleti school, said he saw Stanulonis cross- ing the street when the left side of the automobile struck him. _A boy| shouted to the driver to stop hut the car continued west on Broad street. Sorgeants Fecney and El- linger have charge of the case Stanulonis suffered a fractur of ihe skull and other injuries. The thiory is that he did not see the car as he walked across the strect, and as the side of the car knocked ! him down. the driver did not feel the impaet as he would have felt i ‘ had the front part of the car struck | the pedestrian Stanulonis was widely known in the northwestern seetion of the eity. | wving been in the employ of J. P | Sullivan as o teamster in the coal| Lusiness aty-two years. Hel had lived in ¢ Britain 24 ve He is survived by his wife, Mrs Caroline Stanulonis; four daughters, Mre. Betty Robertson, Misses Anas- tasia. - Veronie Florenee for ¢ nesday morning. parish come Gold Foothalls Given Wesleyan Team To‘dnay ( e Middletown, % - Gold foothalls,, especially desigred .nd gifts of the Wesleyan Unjver- sity club of Now' York, werc present- 4 to members of Wesleyan's 10 ttle Three™ football ehampionship toam at the oprning of chapel exer- cige of the seeond semestor today Davidson, ‘13, of Now president of the eluh ntation. Twenty-three of | venirs were distribut- | William W. Wood | “sistant couch, The team manag r. and 19 letter m George G York city, made pr the prized so ed, Heald Coach and Da vi MAY EAD STRIKE Hendayy, France, Fo [ vices 1 fronticr | speedy terminat 1 week. i | strike in B loft their jobe in incom tax ir understood nearing the end of their meages men on #trike is stated be in ereasing, howe ustria 1ifa in the capital & riously affected 0 cagth than now and its | , become Tellows of the I DARING WOMENIN THRILLING HUNTS Several Unite for Further Ex- Citing Exploits New York, Feb. ¢ UP—Woman's | lace is in the jungles, believe xom«] American women who have ! nded together for the purpose of gaining recognition of their abiity | in exploration. A The National Society of Woman | weeks of her three | warmth on all sides whether they | Geographers is celcbrating its sec- ond anniversary and points to its| two years of exiatence as proof that @ woman can be charming, wear pretty clothes, and still do a man- d piece of work in primitive, un- civilized waster of territory.. The society is composed of na- tionally and internationally recog- nized women geographers and those | who have done distinguished work | in the allied sciences. cthnology, archacology. botany, natural history, sociology, folk-lore and arts and rafts, | Active membership in the society is dependent upon the contribu- ions the woman makes to science. sociate membership s granted to women who sponsor such trips, who | take them as I women, or who a interested in active geographical in- vestigations. The overgrown thicknesses of South American jungles, caste- proof communities of central India, the interior of Africa and the an- cient seats of civil tion in China have all been penetrated and their secrets converted to scientific chan- nels by these women Harriet Chalmers Adams, presi- dent of the socicty authority on Latin-America and Spain, tells of the gencsis of the organization. “The men. you know, have had ' their hide-bound. exclusive little ex- plorers’ and adventurers’ clubs for | vears and years.” sho said. “But| they have always been so afrald | that some mere woman might pene- | trate their sanctums of discussion | | that. they don’t even permit women in their clubhouses, much less allow | them 1o attend any meetings, for discussions that might be mutually helpful. “We decided that the best thing | to do would be to organize our own club.” B | Among the women who are mem- | bers is Mary Hastings Bradley of Chicago, who has been a member of two expeditions to Africa. She was | on the first white expedition through | the unexplored cannibal country of | the Nameless mountains in the Bel- gian Congo, brought hack the first mountain gorillas to this country and made pictures of wild gorillas. Gertrude Emerson, associate od tor of “Asia.” is living in a primi-| tive tribe in India as the only white | person within 5 making a study of its ion, social, | economic and political. | Blair Niles, secretary of the so- clety, has just returned from a year in French Guiana, and is writ- ing a hook on that country. Corresponding . membership s granted to those women of other countries who are engaged in sim- ilar work. Among them are G malne Merlange, of France, an au- thority on the textiles of the Orient, who is in this country delivering serlos of lectures, and Ella R. Chris- tie, one of the first cight graphical society. TWINS, BOY AND GIRL, BORN. Twins, a boy and a girl, were born at New Britain General hospital to- day to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kounaris of 265 Cherry street, A son was born at New Britain General hospital yesterday to Mr.| and Mrs. Bertram Thompson of Sey- mour Park. Herbert V. Camp and his brother. Assistant Corporation Counsel M. H. Camp, of Russcli street, are in Cuba | and will return in a few wecks. | |Ler. 1919, THO PRONOTED BT -SCOUTING LAUDED LIGHT AND POWER 0. BY HERO AIRMAN — (Continued From First Page) Byd Wishes Boys of Local industrial engineers of Boston, where he was a power cngineor. . Hi Troops Good Luck joined the Connecticut Light and Tower Co., a8 power engineer in 1923 and was stationed at Wategbury. He| Merton Clark, merit badge scout comes to New Britain as assistant| o Troop 4. interviewed Lieut. Com- manager in charge ‘of industriall ander Richard E. Byrd, transat- power engineering. He is married {jonic and North Pole flyer, im- | mediately following his lecture at |the Strand theater, S8unday after- noon. | ‘When asked to give a message to the scouts and leaders of New Brit- them T am going to take a scout wish New Britain-Scouts all the best of luck. Scouting is the greatest movement in the country. I am an honorary member myself, and wish levery boy in the country would be- | come 'a 8cout.” | This message and a special write- up will appear in the February is- sue of the Council Duffle Bag. Three Scouts, Merton Clark, William Bak- |er, and Winthrop Warren are col- lecting the news for this issue of the Duffle Bag, and in so doing are ful- | filling part of the requirement for the Journalism Merit badge. Anniversary Sunday More than 200 Scouts and leaders helped fill the South church audi- torium to over-flowing last night at the special Scout Sunday observance L. V. CLARK of the 1§th anniversary week. Dr. George W, C. Hill gave a brief mes- and has a wife and two children, sage of welcome to the assembled Jdwin A. §. Sugberg is a native Scouts, and this was followed by th sw Britain and resides with his:showing of the moving picture wife and family at 41 Carlson street. Regular Scout”” All Scouts and He entered the employ of the Con-|Leaders re-committed themselves to necticut Light and Power Co. in the Scout Oath and Law, under the \\'uh\rhllri[ in m].'» s n:n(rr leatsrahilp & the Sseut seocative, reader. He left there in Septem-| Window Dispia, 1916, to enter Pratt Tnstitute ey Through the courtesy of Henry at Brookiyn, N. Y., where he studied | ponsacds the local Cownoll has electrical _engincering. In APl heen gurnished with a window for a 1918, he entered the army. He """dh!plny featuring the 18th birthday listed as a first sergeant in the 8ignal oo ¢he’ Bou Scouts of America, This !display shows two fine airplane models among other handicraft |articles. AIR JAUNT OF 300 MILES | HWKINS'SUNDAY 0UTING ford to Curtiss Ficld and Home Again A 200 miles atrplane trip to Cur- tis field, Long Island and back to Brainard field in Hartford within about three hours was the experi- ence Sunday of Charles W. Hawkins of Rackliffe Bros. Co. The plane was piloted by another New Britain man, Charles L. Wright of 178 Win- throp street. They had with them another passenger, F. E. Ogden who made the trip to Long Island where he lives, ~-Photo by Johneon & Peterson ,Of flving only once before and th: E. A, STIGBERG * {was for a sHort time over an airport. but this was the event of a lifetime. lcorps and aftor a bricf scasion inThe plane took ¢ at 11:30 o'clock signal_corps school at City col- yesterday morning and it made the lege, N. Y., went to a government 100 mile trip to Curtiss field in an camp in Alabama ag an Instructor of | hour, arriving there at about 12:30 radio operators. o'clock. 4 ;hrrv until he \\éi graduated |ll\“as the OI)I); Hopleamant {cafiixs ‘ol 5 entorad 1T S BIey BT the Ll . LBP SOD. the, oAy 10 Lonk il Mg Cor of Waterhury as|14and. they could see the Atlantic lectrical expert. In February, ‘;(;l;l:n when they were above Bridge- he returned to the Coumnecti- S cuf Light and Power Co., in the gen- BUcking a head wind they man- cral test department. May 1, 1926, |aged to make the return trip in one he was sent fo New Britain as o |hour and 20 minutes. Wright, who cadet engineer. The promotion to- |15 connected with the L. & H. Motor day makes him district engineer in €' of Hartford, has been making a this district. reputation for himself in airplane John P. Hannon, formerly assist- Ventures. He makes regular trips ant manager here, took over his new |10 Bpston, New York and duties as manager of the Branford |Points almost daily. district. tod | P Frankincense is an aromatic gun | for the Indian head stamped on buf- used, in making incense, falo nickels, * | New Britain Man Flies from Hart- Mr. Hawkins had the experlence | otker | |PRUNING COMMITTEE 10 | TAKE UP TASKS ToNiGHY) | Prediction is Made that Many Im- provements Will Be Cut—Rate May Be 37 Mills From First Page) lular force, and it is significant that | (Continued ! | The fate of numerous projected the detail on which he worked just public improvements will be sealed |tonight at the office-of Mayor Weld |when the pruning committee of the board of finance and taxation meets {to prepare a budget. It is predicted that the rate will be about 27 mills, jas against 25 1-2 mills for this year. |The increase in sachool expenses, !caused by the opening of new tschooll and the addition of many | classrooms in existing buildi ap- | proximates one mill. The placing of will account for another one-fifth | tee will report to the board Wednes- | day night, ‘Thieves Ransack Store | In Search for Money The A. & P. store at 131 Hart- | cornerstone of the present orphan- | ’ford avenue was entered last night ‘and ransacked, but nothing was taken, according to report to the po- {lice today by Manager Joseph Glynn. Bergeant J. C. Stadler, who was de- itailed by Detective Sergeant McCue to investigate, found that the door had been forced and merchandise strewn about the store, apparently | noints successors -to Officer Meehan | and Officer Johnson at the meeting | tomorrow night, the selection will be | |in a search for money. Wrappers were taken off bars to soap, ples were spolled and other similar dam- |age done. According to Mr. Glynn, | was $287 in the store, but it was not |located by the burglar. Sergeant | Stadler brought Michacl Ryan to police headquarters for questioning {but he denled all knowledge of the incident and was not held. there Hearing for Policeman To Be Held Tomorrow At the meeting of the board of police commissioners tomorrow eve- ning, a hearing will be held in the | case of Officer Stanley Dombrauskas {who has been off duty under sus- pension by Clief Hart on the charge |of drinking liquor while on duty. !The officer was met by Sergeant T. J. Feeney in an alleged intoxicated | condition a few weeks ago after he !was left on duty at a fire in the northwestern section of the city a | few hours carlier. $12,000 FORECLOSURE SUIT Becking foreclosure of a mortgage, deficiency judgment and possession of mortgaged premises if there is no foreclosure by sale, Samuel M. Le- vin of this city has brought suit |against William and Anna Suzaus. | attaching their | !kas and others, property to the amount of $12.000 'and garnisheeing several ‘bank and |business houses. The property in | question is located on_ Park street extension. Hungerford & Baxe {s- 1 sued the writ and Constable Fred { Winkle served the papers. The prop- | erty was priginally mortgaged to se- cure a note for $11,300. FENDER BENT IN COLLISION. An automobile driven by John 8t. | Denis of 204 Grove street struck a ,car owned by William T. Sloper and ! operated by Charles S. Morehead of West Main street, about 16:10 Satur- day night, bending the left rear fender of 8loper's car and the right front fender of the other car. Offi- icer David Doty reported no cause for police action, St. Denis said he !was turning west into East Main | street from Center street at the ap- proximate rate of 15 miles an hour when the collision occurred. Two | young women and a young man who iwere in the car corroborated the statement, | Special Notice There will be a bridge and whist ! party Tuesday afternoon, T. A. B. new hall, Several prizes have been Chief Two Guns White Calf posed i donated. Admission 25c. Public is| party lines and 25 centa for four, | invited. Playing starts at | —advt. 30 sharp. Merely Margy, An Awfully Sweet Girl DAD. U SHOULD BE G40 o HAVEN'T POLLY AND HER PALS 'm PLAY, MRS PERKINS? OH' | MEAN HAIR THAT S T00. SHORT TO DO UP AND TOO LONG TO_WEAR DOWN! before becoming a regular officer was the same as that to which he |was assigned just prior to his appli- jcation for retirement. In the “old idays,” however, the supernumerary policeman at the thegter was on du- ty in the evening only, whereas th present practice 1s to police the thea. ters afternoons and evenings. To Officer Johnson is given much [o! the credit for starting the Chil- | dren's Home, of which Rev, Dr. J. E. |ain, Commander Byrd sald, “Tell sprinkling taxes in general taxation Klingberg is founder and superin- tendent, tor it was “Charley” who ‘with me on the South Pole trip. I of one mill. The pruning commit-|called Dr. Klingberg's attention to | needy cases among children of a poor {family, and in providing shelter for ! them, the clergyman actually began ! his great work for homeleas chil- | dren. None among the large crowd in attendance at the laying of the | age building on Rackliffe Heights a few years ago was prouder and hap- pier than Officer Johnson, Officer Michael Meehan was trans- ferred to the Veterans' Reserve force | ficer to apply. In the event that the board of police commissioners ap- | made from Bupernumerary Officers | Cyrus Bchoonmaker, Willlam Sulli- | | van, Walter Wagner and John Riley, | Ofticer James Rappanotti, who has {been in the department long enough {to be eligible and is also within the | age limit, is disqualified at this time because of illness. Policemen on the veterana' reserve force draw half pay, which in Officer Johnson's case is §21 a week/while they remain on the force, with the| ! provision that they may be returncd | | to actfve duty at full pay if they be-| | come able to fill places on the regu- | lar force. ! APPOINTED PRISON DOCTOR. Hartford, Feb. 6 P—Dr. Alvin H. | |Cranz, avho has been assistant phy- | sician at the Mansfield state training, school and hospital, has been ap- pointed physician at the Connecti- cut state prison at Wethersfield, to | succeed Dr. P, B. Battey, who re. signed on December 31, it was an- {nounced at the prison today. It was| also announced that Burton J, Cas- | well has been appointed assistant to ' |the deputy warden. He has been a |guard at the prison for mearly five vears. | 270 EXECUTED ! | Shanghai, Feb. & (M—Dispatches’ |from Canton state 270 out of 600 ipersons arrested there as com- munists have been executed. The | roundup of reds was made by the government ot General Li Chal- Sum, who ousted the communists !from the city six weeks ago after {they had executed a coup d'ctat. .In the coup d’etat and subsequent .exe- | cutions and fighting msome 5,000 | persons were slain, { :Telephone Mileage Rates i To Be Reduced in March' | Boston, Feb. § UM—A reduction in telephone mileage rates affecting all | | mileags aubscribers, effective March | .1, will be filed by the New England | ! Telephone and Telegraph Company, | the state department of public utill- ties announced today. The depart- 1 ment will waive the usual thirty-da: | notice requirement, permitting the | | reduction to become effective in this state at the time eet. The reduction will aggregate abour $75,000 a year. It applics to persons | living beyond the base rate houndary {line of the exchange in which their | !telephone is located. The present | | rates of 75 cents a month per quar- | | ter-mile for mileage subscribers on | one-party lines, 50 cents for two. [tive and six-party lines will be eut | to 70, 40 and 20 cents respectively. a few weeks ago, being the first of- IRelief from Gas Stomach Pains Dizziness The Doctors tell us that 30 per cent of all sickneas is due to stom- ache and bowel troubles. You ean't be well if your digestion is bad; you are to get sick unless you reliah your food, digest it properly, and keep your bowels regular. Tanlac has a wonderful recerd as relief from digestive troubles of every kind, even those of many years |standing. Mra, Emma Yockell, of | 41 Buckingham 8t., Hartford, Conn., |says: “Since taking Tanlac I can eat anything, have gained 9 Jlbs, and sleep well. No more diszsy spells or | headaches—I get up in the morning | feeling fine | It you suffer from gas, pains in | the stomach or bowels, dizziness, nausea, constipation or torpid liver; it you have no appetite, can't aleep and are nervous and all run down, |it's a sign you need Tanlac. Tt is good, pure medicine, made of roets, |herbs and = barks—nature's own |remedies. Get a - bottle from your | druggist today. Your money back if |it doesn’t help you. Tanlac S2 MILLION BOTILES USED HERALD CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING HEADLINGS ANNOUNCEMENTS 1—-BURIAL LOTS, MONUMENTS 3—~DEATII ‘NOTICES 3—T'1,ORISTS 4—FUNEXAL DIRECTORS $=1OBT AND FOUND $§—PERRONALS 7—8TORE ANNOUNCEMENTS AUTOMOTIVE 3—-AUTO AND TRUCK AUENCIES $—AUTS AND TRUCKS FOR SALE 10—~AUTOMOBILES FOR EXCHANGE 11~AUTO PARTS AND ACCESSORIES 13—AUTOMOBILFS WANTED 13—AUTOS~TAXI SERVICE 14=—GARAGES TO LET 15=MOTORCYCLES AND BICICLES 16—~MOTORCYCLES- BICYCLES WANTED 17=8ERVICE STATIONS—REPAIRING WUSINESS SERVICE 18—BARBERS HAIRL'S MABSEUSE 19~BUILOING AN 20—BUSINESS SERVICE RENDERED 21-~DENTISTS { 22~DRESSMAKING & MILLINERY 23=DYEING & CLEANING 4—INSURANCE~ALL KINDS {3=LAWYERS—PATENT ATTORNEYS £3=MOVL. STORING & CRATING $;=PAINTING, PAPER HANGING N—-PLUMBING HLATQ, METAL WORK 14—~BUBURBAN FOR RENT 78=VACATION PLACES FOR RENT 76=WAREHOUSES & STORAGE 17=WANTED—TO RENT 2y=I'RESSING AND TAILORING 30—-PRINT'G, JOBB'G, STATIONERY 31—-PROFESSIONAL 8LRVICES —REPAIRING & PIANO TUNING —~WANTED TO RENDER SERVICES EDUCATIONAL ~CORRESPONDENCE COURSE ~DANCING TEACHERS ~INSTRUMENTAL AND VOCAL '=1,0CAl. & PRIVATE INSTRUCTOR® WANTED—INSTRUCTORS —~EMPLOYMENT AGENCIES EMPLOYMENT 40—HELP—AGENTS WANTED $l—-HELP<MEN WANTED 43—HELP=WOMEN WANTED 43—HELP—MEN OR WOMEN 44=BITUATIONS \WANTED—MEN 45—8ITUATIONS WANTED—WOMEN FINANCIAL 48—BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 4I—INVESTMENTS, STOCKS, BONDS 48—-MONEY LOANED 18B—MORTGAGES #9—WANTED—10 BORROW LIVE STOCK §04~CATTLE AND LIVE S8TOCK 51—DOGS, CATS, PETS $3=EGGS, POULTRY SUPPLIES REES, VEILIC L8 ~LIVB STOCK MERCHANDISE S5—ARTICLES FOR SALE S4— W READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS ’ By John Held, Jr. BT 5L HARDLY OH,PAY/ MAKES A STAB AT (T, o MIND P[_Aé/ggl € T CAnl PLT o AT ONE OF THE ) BRIDGE TABLES, IF Yo DONT 1/ v, WITH y |?~ SIRANGE NOMATTER HOW GCOD FREATDS WE 1S AT THE BEGINNNG. ~ OF iE GAME, WERE Alva/s) RS BEFOR E WE

Other pages from this issue: