New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 7, 1928, Page 6

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6 New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY i Issued Dally (Sunday Eszcepted) At Hersld Bidg. €7 Church treet JUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 a Year. $2.00 Three Months 8. & Month. Eutered at the Post Office at Brit- ain es Second Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Business Ofce 925 £ditarial Room: . 928 (e only profitable advertising medium Circulation books and press ways open to advertisera. Member of the Associated Press the Assoclated Press 1s exclusively en itled to the use for re-publication of 21l pews credited to it or Dot otherwise redited n this paper and also local 1aws published thereln. Member "Audit Buresu of Circalation e A B. C fo & national organization vhich furnishes rewspapers acd adver sers with a strictly honeet analysle of ation. Our circulation etatistics are ased upon this audit. This tneures pro- action agalnst fraud tu newspaper d bution figures onal and scal advertisers cans appear to be safe in “hina, and in the minds of some of that hinese terested in it goes, is tantamount to saying th: war is over s¢ far as being When one 10 repair holes in the strect with this ar and stone dressing one naturally vonders why they are not 1ore fre- quently treated that way. WHEN THE SIRI BLOWS It scems that Chief Noble of the live departmient had his little experi- nce with West Main st bile drivers yesterday. The chief lias nheen in a bit of bad humor ever since, He is wondering what the world, or the fire department, is coming to if autoists do not know enough to drive {0 the side of the road or if cars arc there parked to stop in their tracks vhen they hear the sirens blow on fire department apparatus. We agree with the chief. His ex- perience of being forced t0 100p the cxtremely responsible job, one which | ness fallures since 1923, It s not the | loop around moving automobiles, with great danger to himself and to others, should be enough to call at- tention to all autoists to. step on the brakes when the fighting cquip- ment is heard appro firc « One of the customs that ome firmly entrenched among the proponents of spotless is to \ave an annual k. In New Britain this event takes place this weck, and let no citizer iie hasn't time to be U Giving the premises bath 18 not exacting too much from the individual surplus of cnergy has b town clean-up we claim an annual premises usually need it, and the of the iverage citizen Let the be boss during this notable opera- ion. 8h o time ne« wonian house e is the boss anyway, but at is she more of a boss than watchword ccumnlated mess of a Wiy tould not b the lear prog nore continuous is a juestion that protrud il miuch of a ge of cnerg itself they as the among the eriti but then are as o wreck- “inds its way to he dumps, F onvent after all, it is ove nt to have it all over ith in ene week and then forget No time for loating dnrir P week. Alwaye sometl 10 do. 0 1o keep Tinus spri ind op out of t < th of are no kids to oot T merely needs looking over—and even | that requires time. | Or he can merely “get over that | cold” and come to when all the work | is finis That, indeed, is the cst way, and guite popular. | ARING THE INNOCENT How 1s it that human nature con- stantly this hangn For instance, Herald staff intended d that fails to change in 2 world? when a member of told the to have a “bad afternoon the ad- got was of a sort calculated the cently boys he tooth” pu vice b to throw him into hysteri It was operation, hia espe with a Three or four offered testi- that teeth pulling remains the n - tortures, will be a terrible told, ially such tooth. mony most horrible of humar despite the the ileged advances made in art, or science, or whatever it is. The poor boy—or fish—was told not to expect anything less than a 1t a he would take days to get over it, aud at the after th s and swollen jaw would Le worse than the 15 distinetly b that primary operation it Now why were there not words o 4 condolence instead of 1lated to increase the mental to ture, we suppose. tooth ly and without trouble). was yanked “FREIGAT CAR TRUC A species of freight car trundled its way into Church street the other duy. Of course, it wasn't a freight car despite the ressmblance as to . but was only a truck. It hailed from another state, where the authorlties apparently did not care 14 ¢ they grew, or where the roads were a mile wide. This freight car truck had to move along with care. It was considerably wider than the usual run of trucks, ind the driver had to be certain | there was enough room ahead before he could push forward. The appear- | ance of the huge affair created con- siderable interest, and there were | who wondered s one how alizes how easy it is | some onlookers et aUtomo- | wyiather it wasn't against the law for | Would deserve what they would get. When a party possessing a real vote- getter is afraid to nominate him for | | | a freight car to wiggle along city streets. Trucks such as these are a serious menace along the highways. They cannot help heing a species of road hog. On the average road it is dif- | ficult for uautoists to pass them. Wherever such trucks happen to be the stage is set for trouble. The driver of such a truck has an approximates in part the responsi- bility of a locomotive enginecer with- out the latter's advantage of having ac red right of way all to himself. The railroad also has the advantage of protecting laws; he is ot at the throttle re than a stipulated number of | to guard against The railroad engineer must be a man of exemplary habits, cven when off duty; he must keep “If in the best of physical condi- tion, and be moderate in all things. No railroad would employ him under 1y other conditions engineer allowed to be ours, so as drowsiness. hims But no such laws circumscribe the onduct of a truck driver. The truck driver sometimes does many hours without slecp; some of them mak long hauls, and many a truck driver has all but fallen asleep at the wheel. His conduct when off duty is not ircumscribed by law, and he need to clean yot keep himself fit unles his em- | Which are not able to hold their own ]‘-m enants? ployer is particular about such things—and probably are | particular and others are not. | A truck driver should be as Care- ully groomied for his job as a loco- | motive engineer. The day whem it was believed anybody could be a | locomotive engineer is past; the day | some will also pass when anybody can be a truck driver. THE MERCHANT FLE Getting ' BILL an American merchant marine is a the comparatively easy | nation wishes to | cnough subsidies for that process Jispens: purpose to . do we want | n merchant . The question develop an Am flect in that manne A straight out-and-out subsidy. other subsidy 10 run under hing; under othe furent appe t remains quite the same, bill, passed the ven further in the di- merchant White bill Tt in- rmment L0osing no name, is one a amouflaged names may ice but by idizing a Jon. the gov long de- vily upon the gov- “hips, and other is perfectly sat opic think so. Even or ship the knows whether com- satistuctory if prople it who ' Congress seems 10 EXPLECTING TOO MUCH who had New York World to olunin of chit-chat, for ol Broun, been v the aily time during ontside looking in ond his o y 1he iz tands. During the gt th ease he let fla | ers. There | country { he NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 7, 1928 as to where he stood, and aftér the |week in Stamford. boss had told him ag much and| No settlement of the carpenters’ St - her sub- | St¥ike has been made yet. The mas- counselled choosing some other sub- | ¢ 1 Ho L T (TG ed that they jects, he let fly again on the Sacco |intend to Lring in outsiders in en e topic and got the gate. Later he | fort to break the strike. O, F. Cur- came back. Now he writes an article | U has petitioned for reinstatement : 3 : master builders' association. Tox Tho Nation'in which hs tells sl |5, L. master Bhiidors seciaty 2 He organized it and was elected about the World. Which caused | president, but repudiated his elec- Ralph Pulitzer to insert a few para- tion for political reasons. graps where the Eroun column used | Louis 8. Reynal, secretary of the to be telling the world that Broun American Paper Goods Co., in Ken- | | sington, was given a shock this was no longer there. ! morning when he was notified over It must be expecting much of |the telephone that his two-year-old hufman nature for Broun to think his | ¢hild, Claude, was missing from | home and that the mother was di employers would stand by and see ;;ic0q with fear. When Reynal ar- thems lambasted in another | rived home he found Chief Rawlings by one of their star writ- | already there and an organized s < | search under way. The decp pond may be & few rare em- | jioning the Reynal home led to the world of that type, | orave fears, but finally the boy was Pulitzer {50t among | picked up near the corner of Wash- ington and Broad streets, where he had wandered when his nurse was I not looking. Young Claude didn't THE CONQUEROR |seem to appreciate what the excite- leaders and pseudo- | ment was over. : 4 - ve o | At the 13th annual session of the \raders in the Democratic party, WUt { v, o prymbers® association in New by almost common consent there 18y onqon vesterday P. J. Tormay of | this city was elected first vice-presi- | dent. | Led by Tirst Selectman Prior, a large delegation of Plainville resi- Our Aviation Hint! note it's lack of fuel eroplanes to carth, take a lesson from it, Folks, ill up our tanks with mirth, Then we can keep our cheeroplanes, our spirits always high, And maybe make a record, too, through the world we fly! elves brings publication ployers in but Ralph them. as SMITH E Blackmail! Chere Hutchins, Sr.; “You want another $1007 You spendthrift! You're no son of mine!” Hutchins, Jr.: “Then $200, dad, or Tl let the 1 know about it!" are sip me papers only one leader who can be reason- ubly regarded as a Democratic hope. In 1624 the party had more leaders | than common sensc, and the result | jonts appeared hefore the legisla- as the shelving of the party's |tive committee today and spoke strongest candidate in favor of a | strongly for the climination of grade Sl | crossings. Selectman Prior said the dark horse. The experience has 1eft |y %0519 not be heard and that 4 lasting impression. The Democratic | conditions about the railroad were party this election is not inclined to joutrageous. M. O. Ryder, assistant 50 through the same role. Tt realizes Fpostmaster and member of the it has a fighting chance only if us‘f;':"f"hhot“!"‘l'hff’;: :" the:dangers to strongest foot is put forward, and | this fecling percolates from the top | to the bottom. The beliet is general | that Governor Smith is the strongest | candidate, and there now is little | likellhood that anyone else will be | the nominee. Senator Reed of Mis- | Narrow mind: fSo called because but | #0 idea. once in, hasn’t room to turn jaround or change. MISPLACED! By Marguerite R, Avram A bus conductor T have met Is ever full of vain regret. He punches tickets very well And sounds a husky little bell. ie really is extremely nice; 1 don't suppose he has a vice. Facts and Fancies|, "™ . .. BY ROBERT QUILLEN | An uucongenial career, | He's never rude or rough or snappy, And yet, somehow, he looks un- happy. In early youth, I understand, He wanted to conduct a band. souri continues his futile effort, wherever the people have spoken outside of his native state the choice | Of course exercise will keep the has been to favor pinning the falth [tecth healthy. You never heard of of the party in Smith, The feeling is |21 unhealthy tongue. that there is a chanee of putting up| a real political battle with him as the standard bearer; i? he should ! again be pushed aside the stock of | the party will vie with a plugecd | nickel in market value. What kind of a party would the Democrats portray if they deliberate- ly ditched the personality and popu- larity of their strongest man? They Instead of which—"'tis ever thus He now conducts a motor bus! Count "Em Yourself! | Martha: “Mary, what's the mat- ter? You look puzzled.” Mary (holding up faulty lamp- shade): T can't figure it out. This | is the first one I made, and the boss calls it a ‘second.’” Moving isn't a pleasure, even now, but you can do it without getting carpet tacks in your knees. Perhaps the reason a new popular |song pleases people is because they {recognize the old tune. ~—H. Conrath Some of these they pacitists wouldn't are shoot 50 a It's easy to tell a dark horse. He's [the one that hasn't yet been white- — washed. ORDER YOUR NEXT SUNDAY! PAPER NOW (Urges E. H. Bradford,. Circulation JManager) To insure delivery of nmext Sun- day's iasue, readers are strongly ad- vised to place a special order with their news-dealer now. We have secured at great expense | the sole right to all articles by Supt. | Waiter E. Traprock, whose retire- ment after 25 years' brilliant service | at the Police Headquarters has just been announced. Although his name has chiefly been associated with the suppression of street betting and the illicit traffic in chocolate after hours, he has made a profound Americanism: Viewing with alarm | m";‘," oL ":'""’,Mf “"d‘n:lnrd”el'f'b 5 - 2 : sm; Vie | The fruit of thes studies will be Aaid, ot masy produblien. Which alse | eshuse pesple by @8 mUCh ®n|gung in ihe startling asrles en- means that the firms which are not | credit; voting for another bond is- | tyi1eq a part of the machinery of mass Sue New Light on Old Crimes production have the first of which will appear on hard time to survive. Sunday nexi In this enthralling article Supt. Traprock will glve an amazing reply to the familiar query, “Who Killed Cock Robin?" The motive for the dreadtul deed will be found after re- search in the grim records of sexual pathology, a subject with which Mr. Traprock will not hesitate to deal at length. Terrible and even nauseating de- ails of the slaying of poor Robin are now available, and we shall not shrink from our plain duty, which is to give them full publicity. An organ which forms the staple reading on Sundaya in all this city's and suburbs’ homes shall never fail to put the true facts of life before the men and women, aye, and the growing children, of this great com- munity. I¢ you cuss a man behind his back, and not to his face, that may be either discretion or professional ) ethics, various factional reasons it no longer is a party, but a vehicle for the waste of time. Nature keeps a halance. hands get softer the harder. As the heart gets | With the new air service, mail One rarely hears of a big concern {matter can travel from any manu- hitting the rocks nowadays. Statistics | fActurer to the farthest waste basket show, however, an Increase of bus- | " fOUF davs. BUSINESS SINCE 1923 There's a bright side. The ey large but the small ones | cal, hard-boiled flapper never will which figure in these totals. | be anybody’s mother-in-law, This is an age, it has often been | concerns, an increasingly | | Doubtless Hoover will carry out, |the Coolidge policles. He's already The giant industries are prosper- | keeping silent about a lot of things. ing; there can be no doubt of ftafter | | Fable: Once there wr specia Flancing at their reports and tho | eV Sk i :1};.;1;:\ Qitie r;n'l trend of their securities in the |cigents to advertise his familiarity stock market. with great men. The giant corpations,however, total | only one-ninth of 1 per cent of the | corporations. These are the corporations which have a net in- | come of $5,000,000 or more a year. | The income of 99.89 per cent has| SOme are born with the grand " | manner, some absorb it from riches, been around 11 per cent smaller |ang some become floor walkers, than in 1923, The latest figures in- dicate that 41 per eent of all | bor corporations have no net income. | "°UNd 10 keep the president’s pledge to Nicaragua. Does he recall a man These represent the small concerns nameq Wilson who made certaln If Russia uses her new army against the whole world, how will she fgllow her anclent custom and |, change sides during the fight? Borah thinks America honor- mment can help one group olation of cconomie laws, hut can't do it without hurting an- agalnst the mass production of the giants. ‘m‘ The competitive struggle is being | accentuated through mass produc- |other group. tlon and its high percentage of pro- | ductivity per worker plus machinery. | Thousands of comparatively small | ;" 1a0ing one foot in front of i concerns are finding the going |other at 4 a. m. The rewson movement isn't pop se it cons Policeman: “I know, but he had no car!” | President of the Republic of Texas until its annexation by the United Zlales in 1845; Senator 1845-69; l overnor 1859-61. He wears the ) deerskin dress of pioneer days. Both |are the work of Elizabeth Ney. Q. Is it correct to say I feel 4" or “I feel badly™? A. "I feel bad” is correct. Q. What is the average annual production of sugar beets in the United States? What state produces the most? A. The average annual produc- tion from 1921-1925 waa 6,606,000 short tons sliced beets. The produc- tion in 1926 was 7.588,000 short tons. Colorado, which has the largest crop, in 1926 produced 2, 406,000 short tons. Q. What is the duty on cameras imported into the United States? A. Twenty per cent ad valorem. Q. What is the official abbrevia- | tion of Pennsylvania? | A “Par | Q. How many casualties have iere been in the air force of the United States Navy since 19232 A, 1823, 17, 1934, 11; 1 [J"‘;‘G. 13; 1927, 19. —L. §. Furlong (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) I ba 1 en? much do steel rails | hy per | to Texas, October Messrs. Belding. Buckland, Chase, Platt, Cheney, Punderford and Al- len, The personnel of the 1928 nomin. ating committee follows: Represent- ing six basic business groups—agri- culture, Henry Trumbull, vice-presi» dent, Trumbull Electric Mfg. Co, Plainville; banking, Lewis 8. Reed, vice president, Citizens’ & Manutuc- turers National Bank, Waterbury; industries, Frank Cheney, Jr., chair. man of the board of Cheney Broth- ers, South Manchester: insurnace, James H. Brewster, Jr., vice-presi- dent, Aetna Life Insurance Co., Hartford; public utilities, J. K. Pun- derford, president, the Connecticut Co., New Haven; trade and com- merce, Frank H. Johnston, presi- dent, City Coal and Wood Co., New Britain. Representing state at large—Fred- erick N. Belding, vice-president, Hockanum Mills, Rockville; Stanley H. Bullard, vice-president, Bullard Machine Tool Co., Bridgeport; John B. Byrne, vice president, Hartford, Connecticut Trust Co.; Edward I, Jones, proprictor, Winsted Steam Laundry, Thomas W. Russell, presi- dent, Russell Mfg. Co., Middletown, Representing organization mems bers—H. C. Chappell, president, Motor Truck association of Connecti- cut, New London; Ralph E. Her- man, president, Connecticut Bankers’ association, New Have: Herbert Loewith, president, Connecticut As- sociation of Insurance Agents, Bridgeport; Arthur H. Merrill, presi- dent, Connecticut Investment Bank- ers assoclation, Hartford; H. H. Skerrott, Jr., president, state auto- mobile dealers association, Hartford. TSI TENSE Shanghai, May 7 (P—Today's dise patches from Tsinan sald the at. mosphere there was tense, the situas tion quiet. The northerners have been homb. ing Tsinan spasmodically and one of their-planes crashed yesterday, kill- ing its occupant FRACTURED SKULL Middletown, May 7 (®—M Howard Haynes of Hartford is at the Middletown Thospital suffering from a fractured skull received when she was struck by an automobile near Cromwell. THer condition is critical. Piles Go Quick Without Salves or Cutting Thousands who have piles have not learned that quick and perma- nent relfef can only be accomplish- ed with internal medicine., Neither cutting nor any amount of treate ment with ointments and supposi- tories will remove the cause. Bad circulation causes piles. Thera i a complete stagnation of blood in the lower bowel and a weakening of the parts. Dr. J. 8. Leonhardt found the remedy and called his prescrip- tion HEM-ROID, He tried it in 1000 cases with the marvelous record of success in 96 per cent. and now it is sold by druggists everywhere under a rigld money-back guarantee. Don't waste any more time with outside applications. Get a package of HEM-ROID from Fair Druz Dept. today. It has given safe and lasting rellef to thousands and will do the same for you, or costs you nothing. the Goldfisih owners who unwittingly would (Funinee o GOLDFISH EDITOR, 1 cents {u loose, uncancelled, U. QUESTIONS ANSWERED Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, tended research be undertaken. All | ' FOR STATE C. OF C. fdential.—Editor. s that denomination were minted pri- | A, They were married In 1917 | 3,00 bhoen gelected by the nominat- frequently seen on the #ore Kimball. The vote on the nominees, based on fact or fiction? |at the general business session of is used for Charles Rogers us the | ppe gificial ballot contalning the Q. How Those nominated to serve as direc- yard. Standard rail weighs 100 Mills, Rockville; G. Buckland, Legion be held th the Chase companies, Waterburs the Reorganized Church of Jesus | secretary, International Silver com- w drafted in the Army and Navy | gsioner of agriculture, Hartford; rep- made by the commanding officers 10 | trivs, Frank Cheney, Jr. chairman pendents. surance commissioner, Hartford: Commission requires inspection of @ |senting trade and commerce, Ed- than a horse? S the floetest horse. " A. The onl tions open 1o tlons. low or mean; a corruption of “or- postage «nd handling cost: Hall in the United States Capitol | lished the first American colony on | ploncer. The other is or Sam Hous- | You can get an answer to any | 1322 New York avenue, Washington, other questious will receive a per- o e e v s s Lt of Divegtors to Be Voted On vately. | Hartford, May 7—The personnel and diverced in 1914, |ing committee to succeed the 11 A. Rex, Tony, Sliver King, seven of whom have been named to A, The narrative is fiction but it | o "annual on ention at the Hotel aviator. The flying feats in the pic- | \umos of the nominees will be mail- weigh? !tors for the next two-year period 150 pounds. | vice-president, New York, New Ha- A. San Antonio, Albert E. Lavery, vice-president, Christ of Latter Day Sain pany, Meriden. during the World War compelled 10 | yesenting banking, John B. Byrne, persuade the men to take out insur- of the board, Chency Brothers, Q. Is a railroad locomotive in-|representing public utllittes, J. K. locomotive every thirty days but ward N. Allen, vice-president, Sage- A. At full speed the estrich s Q. How can a woman obtain a women in the U Forest Service | Q. Ts the word “ornery” correct? | dinary” used deprecatively. and who was the sculptor? | the site of the present city of Austin | ton, leader of the Texas revolution, | harder; they are finding there 15 a reduced margin of profit per dollar | The “blussings of poverty” of sales; they are finding that the [ o i principle of huge production at & |weeks ahead of anybody else? smalil profit per sale is a great prin- ' ciple for the giants with enormous : ! production but a distinctly had prin- ‘::'"lf','\‘,:}:d[ ]-"’; e n;“;iy:(‘;‘: ciple for the smaller fry Which are | fvo never thought of that. unable to provide the mass pro- | Copyright 1928, Publishers Syndicate production. To these mass produc- —— tion prosperity is not a blessing. | are poor two Correct this sentence: “I don't THE M A miser died the Observations ‘R aner aus na | On - The Weather For years he | had been a sort of ragpicker, lived | on 15 cents a day, and was proud of | it. was some miser, New Haven and vieinity Cloudy tonight; Tuesday fair When he died prying hands dis- | slightly warmer, Conditions A distur is centered over | Florida. Tampa, 29.78 inches. 1t is producing showery weather in the Atlantic coast districts from north- crn Vlorida to southern New Eng- land. A strong area of pressure overlies the lake region and extends southwestward to Texas. It is caus- | ing cool temperatures in the north- their | €N states cast of the Mississippi | river with frosty conditions in the [lake sections, Temperatures are vis- | ing over the Plains states and the Rocky Mountain districts due to {disturbance over Manitoba with trough extending southwestward to s gaining wide currency | (50 of no value except for | Ty iing from last week's | 25 Years Ago Today :1 Strongheart, the Pup hundreds of thousands of | dollars to his name. Everybody was | sed. He had no known the of death; but covered Proficient! Prof. Barn “You ought to take an_essay course. Madeline What fo v, I've got more K. A, than half the girls in hool now!” vastly surp relatives at time they probably now will turn up. people getting rarer Fortunately few live that —G. H. Mctz and Wiy misers Larer to tunds \ 1o majority of people prefer P. G. DUVAL SAYS— s limit the credit live to Lucky for Moses that he never tried to obtain booze from a rock in a dry country! .« e Nobody cares to own a horse that loses his shocs for somchody else's luc of than stow or salt away money on the sly ind be 1 us a poor fish needing charitable and ir 1o kno a assistance, | The beliet that mone Conditions the way, how | fair weathe cloudiness perature Tempe Atlanta Atlantic City . Boston .. Buffalo . Chicago Cineinnati Denver Detroit l.os Angsles New avor for follow h this vicinity ed by increased slowly rising tem- . o The man who growls thing leads a dog's life. wht el ray eny it will buy at every- is remai 101 Low ' 16 34 42 The nice things about a bad start is that it gives you something to brag about after you get ahead: High 62 Lying Lengthwis Why did you H Judge st this man?"” Policeman: “He was lengthwise in the street.” Judge: “Wha of it* A motoriet allow to do that.” cople patd 314+ Jast vear and W 1 Nen i hee ne 5 parked 24 58 Ired rn represent the r earricrs at the wil ntior Orlea question of fact or information by | writing to the Question Editor, New | D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps | for reply. Medical, legal and marital | advice cannot be given, nor can ex- ' sona! reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- | crnment ever minted any twenty- | five cent gold pieces? M 7M i A. No, but some gold coins of | At a“ 66 |8 When were Tom Moore i |of the elective directors of the Con- Alice Jovce marriced and divore¢@® | yeoticut Chamber of Commerce who Q. What are the names of the | (Jio O . . 4 . k| rms expire this year has more prominent horses that are | % (PR ST THR SR L0 erly, Pal, Scout, Illash and Sey Yes. | 0cceq themselves, will be taken by Q. Is the motlon picture “Wings" | 1j; members of the state chamber is based on exploits of American|gong Hartford, at 10 i ; ; a. m, on aviators in the Werld War. A double | 1purdgay Nay 17, ture are actually performed by stunt | .4 to the entire membership of the flyers. state chamber this week. A. The heaviest rail used are: General directors, Frederick N. railroads weigh 173 pounds Belding, vice-president, Hockanum Q. When and where will the Na- |y & Hartford railroad company, tional Convention of the AMENiCal | Xew Haven; F. §. Chase, president, 8-1 . - Bridgeport Hydraulic company, Q. Where ar the headquarters of | Briggeport: Roy C. Wilcox, assistant A. Independence, Missour!, Group directors — Representing Q. Were those who enlisted or agriculture, Philo T. Platt, commis take out government insurance? |yiec-president, Hartford-Connecticut A. No, although every effort Trust company: representing indus- ance, not for the sake of the govern- | South Manchester; representing in- ment, but for the > of their de- surance, Howard P. Dunham, in- spected regularly? Punderford, president, the Connec- A. The Interstato Commerce ticut company, New Haven; repre they usual re inspected oftener. | o0sc who were renominated are: Q. Can an ostrich run faster said to make 60 miles an hour and for a limited time it can outdistance position in the United States Forest are clerks and stenographers. These are filled by Civil Service examina- | A. It is a dialectic expression, | used in the United Btates and means | | Q. What two statues rcpresent | the State of Texas in the Statuary | A. One is of Stcphen \*. Austin, | the founder of Texas who estah- | in 1821. He is shown in frontier | garb and with the long rifle of the . Women Can Certainly Be Cruel to Each Other. CLIP COUPON HERE Washington Bureau, New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. — e — e ——— ARE YOUR GOLDFISH HAPPY? T¢ the Soiety for the Prevention of Crueity to Animals knew about ail torture their pets half the count be in fall. Goldfish are eaty to keep—if you know how. Our Wasi- ington Bureau has ready an authoritative bulletin on the treatment of goldfish—the kind of squarium to have, discases and treatment—everything you want to know about your pet fish. Send for it and save the lives of your fish! re, feeding and light, water, food, Dally Herald, I want a copy of the bulletin GOLDFISH, and enclose herewith five S. postage stamps, or coin to cover 1 am a reader of the Dally NEW BRITAIN HERALD. i o e e By Fontaine Fox.

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