Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
New Britain Herald EBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tswed Delly (Bundsy Excepted) At Herald Bldg, 67 Cburch Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES 800 & Year. $3.00 Three Montha T6c. & Month. Batered at the Post Office at New Brit- ais @ Becond Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Business Office 26 Editorial Rooms ..., §2¢ The only profitable advertl medium s the City. Circulation books and press room slways open to sdvertisers. Momber of the Asociated Press The Associated Press is exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local oews yublished therein. Member Audit Baress of Clrealation The 4. B. C. W & Dational organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisere with a strictly honest analysts of elrculstion. Our circulstion etatistica ased upon this sudit. This insures pro. tection against fraud in newspaper d tribution figures to both pational local edvertisers. The Herald fs on sale datly (n N York et Hotaling's Newsstaod, Times Square; Schults's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Cantral, ¢2nd Stree —— THE NEW SCHOOL Polish ¢ 2 fully justified in looking with pridc ens of New B at the latest manifestation of their’porcentage of progress in the city, the dedication ot the new Sacred Heart junior high school on Orange trect. The event was deemed of sufficient importance o attract the atteadance of religious leaders throughout the state as well as state officials. In the lives of the | Polish people of the city it marks an | epoch of accomplishment. The Herald is pleased to extend congratulations to the Sacred Heart parish in consummating this im- portant advance in its educational facilities. CITY ACCOUNTS The city is going to see to it that accounta of public departments are kept properly and no one except those immediately affected are likely in time for the first delivery or re- in the short n of next Decem- mailing to points in Michigan where ber. But be that as it Boulder | necessary. This service of course will | Dam is a problem of such magnitude also include a (hat a thorough knowledge of it is Toledo, where in fact one air mail by the puplic ihrou line will connect with another to De- the entire country. The has | proje similar service to cesential troit recent filibuster against the in the t gincered by the predatory power ew Brit- | tc ring the > of the Scnate w not en- he improved terialized as the gestions ema ain and service result of eug- from Cons! sts, but was the work of the two vicl scnators from Arizona and senators t commercia of both parties from other states of ¢ cities and v of good | the seven aff air 1 service to them New | government da nd power manu- v t will turing plant. herished by \ees and | The kernel of the problem is not commercial communitics and also by one of government versus private the g 1 public. ownership, but one A proper divi- | _ sion of the wat and power be- | RIOTING AT YALLE tween the seven states concerned. | There may be truth in axiom Objections of Arizona hinge upon the not aim t t is entitled to a with riote. Th dent | diversion of the waters from t officers river flowing through that nd Ihe A1 questions involv:d merous a 4 hinge chiefly between hav incide to the division of bene Wit between these states upon natural exu h; but | the states. out a prior restrain reemen: ve been entire project undoubtdly would ta . 0 . and | thrown into the courts, resulting in ar ago a simila ident interm Jle delay and contention. occurred in Cambri feet | 1f that should eventuate contentions | t; the might occupy n the about Boulder Dam 1pon the publ by dvertisin longer th nstitutions of | the public mind ult of such EHINE O R Ea et contention about Muscle Sho The is found in the Boulder Dam discus- ! sion. Arizona claims supcrior right avior is of the worst. Few of the quintesscnce of state's 1i in censuring such a to reflect tivities, t only a emall s | 1o any of the other states in the de take part in such hoodlurnism, that | vclopment of the Colorado river. t t lik and unwilling itselt to de paus ndergradu > majority a gentlemen un- Unable all circum der ’ Word from Yale is that adcquate | opposes any plan which would give by the university authorities and the | from. The attitude is one of state's police. No one will sympathize With | rights to the breaking point. boys who are caught ae partici- | A cer- or along its may be | does not start there and does not end because it runs western boundary. It pants in such ignoble prank tain amount of tomfoolery permitted where young adventurous | there, but mercly | spirits foregather, but there is a|through Arizona for a longer dis- | point beyond which the playfulness ; tance than through any other state | hecomes plain rowdyism and €hould | Arizona looks upon the | be considered in no different light | river as something of an Arizona in- [than rowdyism committed apart ch California from intellectual pursuits. The fact | until far below the site of the involved are under- stitution. 1t does not pro- zona can- ket for the electrical power it can claim the that the boys graduates at Yale posed dam. Although Ar gives them no not claim an immediate ma special privileges to act like fools; to take umbrage at the new method. | they e€hould he models in deport- need of the stored waters for irri- The board of public works, the ment. | gation purposes. The descrts of school department and the city | R | Arizona need water badly; every clerk’s office are due to experience this change. There is no possible rea- son why the present system of laie- sez faire should continue. We have already referred to the circum- stances relating to the school depart- ment and shall not go into detaile connected with the board of public works and the city clerk's office, which have been sufficiently aired following the meeting of the hoard of finance and taxation a few nights ago. There i8 no criticism from any source that eity funds are not pro- perly safeguarded; the ecriticism centers wholely upon what ie self- evident, a poor system of accounting. In the case of the school department the eriticism entails a lumping to- gether of money in the school con- struction fund without regard to any particular purpose. Everyone will be after & more modern system of ac- much happler counting i& installed in these de- partments, THE SUMMER WHITE HOUSE After due cogitation Dresident Coolidge has selected his summer White House, and the West chosen for the honor. New I will be somewhat surprieed at the choice, having taken it for granted that the President would rotate tween West and East and that this year it would be the turn of this section of the country. WHh President happens to & mer monthe, hov wish him happiness good fishing. The indeed, is said to ! ciding factor in select a summer home on the gain is igland be- d th ation will 4 plenty of er, latter advantage ve been the de- ansing him fo river, 39 miles from Superior, near the Canadian the fishing paradies sident will 1 and in all prot border. To ma more cor non bility can Tieart’s content at the fror door. Last year the Pres n the Plack Hills was [ agriculinral eu famed for its s year he wil perience a 1 change, the s densely wooded region of pr il wildness, 8o far from the customary haunts of man that decr ros disturbed through the g f n It can 1 this year the DPresident will far removed from outposts of civilization as e to the lot the fact t t i ambitious o few hours' motoring aw f less, depending upen the &tate o gravel roads and the presidential chauff AIR MAIL TO DETROIT Announcement by Pow win that the air mail s this city has Lecn ended 1o vide first class 12-hour s - tween this city and Detioit ouzit to be greeted with satis tion hy t community. Beginning Junc 4 1 11 malled by 5 p. m. will arrive in - troit at 6:30 a. m. the following day citizen of the state thinks that with proper irrigation from the Colorado ough the nation- AUTO MERGER$ It was said for years that the ulti- mate development in the automobile —brought abont making field would be the forma- al government—the tion of a few big companies. With bloom like the rose. the emphasis on mase production | those who cannot attain it are at a deserts would California, howesver, offers an im- mediate and big market clectric power to he generated, and The need disadvantage compared with those who can, though there no doubt will also for some of the water ays be room for some of additional water supply for Los concerns providing a specially superior articls not primarily intended for mase fornia, and much of the power to be use developed can be used to pump the The vast development of General Water over the hills and mountains. Motors, which resulted in keen com- | California undoubtedly —would fur- petition for the original mass pro- duction plant, that of Ford, is being the ation, the third largest in the the government for the outlay inci- dent to the creation of the dam. the power in- followed hy Chrysler-NDodge The objections of ke i mossnlity combi industry. The so-called independent |terests is hased Inotor manufacturers are getting less | of competition in the southern Cali- fornia ficld, which at present s dominated by the California Edison company. 1t is held by the power in- terests that if the government goes large and less as this mergeritis continues; far back | when most if not all of the consti- Motors one easily remembers not tnent elements of General were independent concerne. linto the power business on a scale it will mean the reduction of But there are lively independents left and they are not being left be- hind in the rush for & Several of them issued statements recently that they had nothing to fear from the big boys, that they could eq P 1verag power prices to a point where the private companies cannot compete. Thus while the interests of South- ndardization. ern California are bound up with the construction of the dam, the ‘elec- tric power intercef al them in style and price, principles—the competi- on straight busines e when the H at a ti prevention of government tion. Arizona, which has nothing in nmiotorist is morc sophieti- cated than he used to he, demanding common with the power interests, is olor, style, good looks and all the Flatest i their most staunch helper so far. T r 1 bus. Should Arizona through an agree- iness e onneeted with the ment with the other states be able to il i The Dodge brothers Secure a larger paft of the water originally were connected with the |and power it would swing to the Ford organization. Leaving the Support of the dam. That is its ob- parcnt org tion they started iect, not the object of helping the {heir own factory and were success- | Southern California power combine AL At the deaths o o0 brothers | 1f Arizona is given a larger division f 1 ir widows Of water and power, however, it will | o, il maelves un- 1 that much less of an advan- v5 of husiness, | 1Ag¢ o southern California, the big- for sale, It Dillon made offer of $146,- O water and power it would be an ad- gest market for hoth Even if the built a contract giving Arizona with- G5 banch dam were more is sensation cash ler-Dodze merger 1ine 1 & Co.. the fi- Vantage to that etate. The state it- o took over the Dodge S¢If his never attempted to develop irrigation or power along the river; plant, with the Brady interests add- a1 ombination §s more cvi. NOW that the government is willing | : that the great fi- | (0 enter into such a development | Arizona kicks lustily merely because it thinks it will not get enough of the % themselves up with the me A astry Motors be. | Tesults. So far As Congress is con- - i 1 cerned there is littie evidence that it et will permit one state to stop such v an important development in the All o P: “,- 1in the = < e plant West. We are ears Ago loaay | g | t the | There was teresting program | arted in at | carricd out be the ninth grade of the Grammar school yester after- 3 noon. The following gave recita- tions: Charles Barre The War FHEL STATUS OF BOULDER DAM Has Actually Begung” Flora Clark, Gaw Lhatit moke has cleared | “$aldwell of Springticld clyn Z torex, “Sheridan’s Ride How- is pertinent to Aller coration Day;” Foster the pro 1 cons of the he Great Question tion, which has will ie health commit- an Curtis chairmanship of st scssion of ! b 1. Consid- at th council meeting Wednes- € 11t Conzress has wrestled |day cvening. Inasmuch as the com- Musele Shoal Hiec's work on garbage collection | o yet completed, the resignation poseible that DUssibl By not he accepted \Boulder Dam will not be settled even | It has been sugfested-that a por- i by the proposed | \elop the potentialitics of the river it | himent will be meted out, both 'un advantage to other states there- | The river runs through that state | Colorado | for the | Angeles i€ stressed in Southern Cali- | nish the major market to reimburse | oppose the dam | the | ton of the west side of Walnut Hill park fitted up for a ball ground nd a tennis court. There are now three so-called diamonds there but fit for use The lcense committee held a hot s laSt night and discussed hackmen display their rates none are prominently on their vehicles. The iotion was finally put and the vote <tood 4-4. 1t was moved to table ticr and again the vote was finally decided to bring up in the council mect- ual meeting of the Clerks' association of was held in Middletown noon. H. C. Brown of v was elected president. Barnes won the ping pong gt the Y. M. C. A. last | There is only 18 feet of water in itile Meadow fiow, and the level nt down nine inches last week. 1f (lie drought continues New Britain face a water shortage this sum- 7 arrests in New Britain 33 were for drunkenness. bulls defeated the clerks yesterday, 1§ to 11 as follo Trum- Out of month The T} Plainvill ie lineups were hulls—Byce, cf; Oaks, Zb; I Trum- ull, ©O. Conlon, rf; A. Morgan, ; H. Trumbull, 1f! McGee, 1h Wheeler, 3b; Gwillim, p. Clerks— Hird, p; E 1b; Prior, v, 3b; Down- rf; Simpson, If. and Gwillim starred with ce runs apicee. cele hits and | - Facts and Fancies | | RBY ROBERT QUILLEN servants of the law do their lity, and some never get shot at. who uses s ideas. A reformer is a man your money to put over Power companies have two kinds of power: elcctric, and the kind they get from the inertia of the public. Why should men break en its possible to he so v crooked without ute? ¥ violating a single ! Baggy trousers at least reduce the | hazards of a picnic. It's easier to get at the ants. We are a nation of quick climbh- and you needn't he surprised to soe a man in evening clothes spit on s hands when spades are trumps. If nobody says anything against him there isn’t g0 very much to say for him | It's easy to cook in a modern Kitehen if yon have a good founda- fion in mechanical engineering. sl lands oldest rooted. if all of the stolen public restorad. a lot of our trees would he up- were family Amerfcanist Calling great | wealth a menace; feeling chesty be- {causa America. has richer men than |any other count Words needed to get a reputation “Yeah,” as a clever conver | Yes, indeed, hat's righ ationist : Any neighborhood is a bum neigh- horhood to the man who “won't take nothin' off of nohody." Brishane, parachufe fraining is necessary so a flyer ean drop to a battleship and take charge when it surrenders, | You see, Mr | One way fo fest the strength of a |derby hat is to drive over a detour {the rural gentleman describes as “a purty good road.” Murder frial: A fight between two sets of relatives with the state 15 referce | | Building political platforms should casier this time. A lot of the old planks never were used. We are an idealistic people, but a reform hasn't muc ance if it threatens to interfere with business. 1 soft nothings r by him as they At this scason, wi . whispered to b siroll through the meadow at twi- light, there is a new significance in the sign: the bull.” | Correct this sentence: “Well,” said 114 land boomer, ince you can't finish paying for the property, Tl just return the money you have paid.” Copyright 1628, Publishers Syndicate COMMUNICATED COMMUNICATED Editor, New Britain Herald, o the People of New Britain: | Have you no national pride at all? | Have you no respect to the American | lag? Do you not know how to pay | respect to it? A man should remove his hat and place it over his heart. A woman should place her hand over | her heart. 1, as 1 paraded, saw a very | small pereentage of the spectators do | this. 1 do not mean for one flag but jor every flag in the parade. 1 hope |to see cveryone pay the proper re- spect to the American flag in the ade. spectiully. One of the Color Buarers. | = Lditor'e note—Tge editor, being a at the fact had so nmuch { { military an, wonder. that a color hearer time fo look around, e first nsed toward | the end of the 10th century in Eug land. ' the law | Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. SHIP AHOY, FOLKS! Though we can't go abroad, take a voyage this year, We can wear a broad grin of humor and cheer, Be tourists of mirth as we sail on our way | And ours he a voyage of living each day ! NO ‘CAN" ON! Mrs. Newlywed: “Have you any | corn Stare Clerk: “Certainly. Would you like some nice canned corn?” | Mrs. Newlywed: “No, give me| the sober Kind THE INCORRIGIBLE ! By Roslyn Green | He didn’t like authority; O'Kelly was his name; He wouldn't do a stroke of work or play a single game; They did their best to make him, but it wasn't any use, He resisted all coercion and deaf to all abuse. was Their efforts to instrnct him he per- sistently ignored; He wouldn't look at anything they wrote upon the board; He wouldn't translate Cacear or at-, tempt a simple sum, And when they asked him questions he pretended he was dumb. He wouldn't rise for carly school, he wouldn't go to bhed, He wouldn't answer “Present” when the roll-call was read; | He wouldn’'t do examples, and he wouldn't learn his lines, And when he lost lib'ry books he wouldn't pay the fincs. He wouldn't keep in bounds, and they discovered him one day Very early in the morning breaking out to run away; As this cl W the moment their authority to show, The head expelled O'Kelly, hut O'Kelly wouldn't go ! THESE MODERN WOMEN ! Blaine “Is your wife exercising Iana running to veduee her weight ™ Norton: “No. She stopped run- ning when someone told her that haste makes waste !** —Horace Eisherg, THE LOVE CALL By Ella Cannon Levis Out of the dusk she came to him, eagerly, with her lovely arms out- stretehed to enfold him, soft red lips half-parted and Kiss-Hungry. He drank in her ravishing beauty with glittering eyes. ently he waited, poised on tip-toe and, when she re; ht her in is sfraining arms and songht her pulsating mouth avidly. They stood in passionate embrace for eons. With dual moans of ecstasy they drew apart, only to melt into each other's arms again “Ilove you! 1 adore yon! 1 want you ! he whispered huskily. he swayed back in the circle of his arms and gazed at him longing- T love you too.” she hreathed ‘We shall love as the gods love You are mine! Mine! MIN Come with me and let us devote the night to love hencath the stars Love! Love! LOVE!" They kissed again. “We shall not shackle love—you and I—but let it n hour day—a year—until it has flown. Marriage and family tles—the prison live— | bustion cided to buy the libretto of “The Mikado.” I approached his stand. *“What can I get you, please?” he asked me. ‘Mikado libretto,” I said. “What?” he asked. Mikado libretto.” 'No spikka da Italiano, lad. said, Toe-dancing worms ! THAT'S why I married a blonde ! —Mrs. L. F. Delmar. (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden.) O QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Queetion Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research e undertaken. All other questious will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests ean- not be answercd. All lettcrs ave con- fidential.—Editor. Q. Toes our alphabet have the same number of letters as the Latin alphabet ? The Latin alphabet is identi- cal with the present English alpha- het with (for it Oy aind) S2n Q. What is phobia? i A morbid fear or dread. Q. Does the back fire in the com- chaniber of an automobile cnrich the mixture? A, “Back fires” do not occur in the combustion chamber of an au- omission of *“u” and is used), and the which tomobile engine but in the intake or exhaust manifolds. Backfiring in the intake manifold usually occurs when the engine is cold and the' mixture is lean. It does not enrich the misture but the heat gencrated in the manifold may re- sult in a more complete vaporiza- tion of the fuel entering the cylin- ders just after the backfire occurs. Q. Will it harm a platinum ring to wash it with soap and water? A, You can wash a platinum ving in soap and water without miiry. A soft brush can he used effectively to remove dirt from the crevices and carvings. Q. Has a King of FEngland ever ted the United States A. No. King Edward VII visit- ed the United States when he was Prince of Wales, Q. From what time development of the date? A. Tt is originally dated from the opening to traffic of the Stock- ton and Darlington railway In ingland in 152 Q How old is Eva Tanguay? Where does she live? A. She is In her fiftieth year. Her address is 124 Pleasant street, Holyoke, Mass, Q. Ix it too late to apply for il does the steam railroad compensation for injuries received in the World War? A. No. The injuries, however, must be of service origin and cause a reduction in earning capacity of the ex-service man of at least 10 per cent. Q. Has Gene Tunney any sisters and brothers? A. He has three sisters and one brother. His father is dead but his mother is still living. Q. 1Is there anything that one can put on the finger nails to help of wedlock—are not for us—we are the darlings of the God of Love himself, and .. “SAMUEL ! | The author threw ink pot peevishly “S-A-M-U-E-L !t !"——metallie voice loaded to the hilt with threats ou hear me? his pen at the scurrying to the foot of the stairs “Stop that fool scribbling, wind the clock, put out the cat, lock all the doors and windows, fix the fires, heat the baby's milk, spank Junior for putting a toad in Dorothy’s hed, get Betty a drink, sec which one of the 1 18 cutting teeth, walk him up and down till he quits that yelling and then come to hed:™ break the habit of biting them? A aste adhesive tape ov them for a while. Q. Whe played the part of the grown-up son in the motion picture “Sorrel and Son"? A. Nils Asther. Q. Are chemicals used by fire departments mixed at the scene of the fire or before? A. The usual practice is to mix the soda and water at the fire house, r “Imagine tellin' people how to sleep 17 It wasn’'t until she saw him in his golf syit that she called him her tweedie ! BAD MANS! THE Dear Editor: The new clerk in the musie de- partment certainly caught my eye. Tall and dark—just (he way I like em %o T decided 1o buy something, ind, if possible. make an impres- sion. 1 figured that if T bought something of Githert a Sullivan’ it weuld show that I was highbro | —but not too highbrow. 8o I de- but the acid is contained in a closed Northfield, Vt. . compartment and is not dumped Pittsburgh .. 68 hé into the soda and water until the St. Louis ..... e 10 63 fire is reached. | Washington wwwsus “ 50 Q. Where and wh’en was Gilda | Gray born? | 4. In Krakow, Poland, in 1900. [;APE THWN F [;lN[i Q. What {8 the value of a 20| cent plece dated 1875 with the “S” | SERI"US TR"”BLE mint mark? ‘ Are A. Collectors value them at 25 to 30 cents, { Q. What nationality is a child born on a ship in the middle of the ocean? o ocean: Police - Reinforcements H e same nationality as its ts, | 1 mgjn What is a play broker? | Ga“ed n A. A person who negotiattes the | sale of plays for writers to pro-| ducers for a commission. | Cape Town, South Africa, June 1 Q. How can the printing on (P—Police reinforcements from all flour and feed bags be removed? |parts of the peninsula were called A. Moisten the bags with warm 'into Cape Town today to meet a water and sprinkle them with a good soap powder, roll them up, and leave them for several hour or soak in a fairly strong soap pow- der solution. Wash them in warm soapy water and they will be in good condition to use. The first treatment may not remove all the coloring but if the bags are used agd then treated in the same way, the first few times they are laun- dered, the printing will gradually | come out. More drastic methods may remove the color With one treatment but they are likely to weaken the fabric so the slower | process 1s desirable. | Observations On The Weather threatening situation which develop= led from several ugly incidents oce curring in connection with the une furling of the new national flag. The flag flown for the first time ye iterday along with the Union Jack in celebration of the eighteenth an- niversary of the establishment of the Union of South Africa. The demonstrations were believed to have originated from unrest among native biack laborers and |these laborers took a prominent part lin the disorder. Automobiles carrying small Union flags were partially wrecked. Those which carried the Union Jack wera not disturbed. Police charged the mob several times, and the crowd stoned the police. A large number of natives and & dozen policemen were injured. Nines ty persons were arrested. Lowell to Have Annual ‘Washington, June 1.—Forecast for Southern New England: In- e creasing cloudiness tonight. Satur-| Race for [Alrplanes day showers, Not much change in | Yashington, June 1 (P—A trophy, temperature; fresh southwest and fOr the winncr of an aerial race, to south winds. be held annually at Lowell, Mass, Forecast for Eastern New Yorl has been offered by Representative Showers late tonight or Saturday; Edith Nourse Rogers of Massie warmer tonight; moderate south chuset and west winds. | The race, which will be over & 45-mile course, will be limited o Conditions: A trough of low pressure extending from Texas the closed cabin type of plane and northeastward to Michigan is pro- is intended to stimulate commercial ducing unsettled weather with |aviation. ! thunder storms in the western and | The first flight will be on June :t central districts. Areas of high when the ncw Lowell airport 19 opened. A cup and a $500 cash prize will go to the winner. pressure are central over Montana and South Carolina. The tempera- ture continues low in the castern districts but is rising slowly from the Mississippi river, castward to the coast. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with ng tempera- ture, followed by increasing cloudi- NO WAGE AGREEMEN’ New Haven, June 1 P—No ugrees ment was reached yesterday regard< ing the w question dispute bi= tween the Connecticut Company and employes. John K. Punderfordg ness and probably™ local thunder president of the company, and John showers, 1. Sullivan, president of the State Temperatures yesterday: Trolleymen's union, met in confers High ence, but nothing developed. The Atlanta 5 .. R4 results of the vote to accept or re- Atlantic City . . _13 ject the offer to continue the scale of Boston . w10 wages were put in the hands of Mr. ’}u'fxlu . . . 36 Punderford. Chicago ... 62 —_— ‘I‘T':‘\{::a"V . DIVORCE TESTIMONY Denies Los Angeles, Cal, June 1 (B Mrs, E. Marjorie Warren, defendant. in a divorce suit brought by Van Court Warren, consulting geologist, testified yesterday that she had 10- Hatteras Jacksonville . Kansas City .. Tos Angeles . Miami ¢ ceived money from James Scripns Minneapolis Booth, Jr.. of Detroit, and his Nantucket ..... father, that she had made a trip New Haven ... east and stayed at the New York Tome of Mrs, Jessica Sargent, pres- ent wife of Richard Barthelmess, motion picture actor. New Orleans . New York . Norfolk P MAY BE PIGS But house ants—tliose pests that worry the lives out of hnusckeepers— are of many varietles, from the littls red felloms to tha big black varieties. Our Washington Bureauw's latest bulletin tells all about them and what measures to take to rid ghe premises of these summer-time marauders. Fill out the coupon below and send for CLIP COUPON HERE rNOCBZHOLD EDITOR, Washington Bureau, Daily New Britaln Her: I 1322 New TYork Avenue, Washington, D. C. I want & copy of the bulletin HOUSE ANTS AND HOW TO GET RID OF THEM, and encloss herawith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. postage stamps, or coin, to cover postags and handling costs: NAMB STREET AND NUMEBER l CITY sausee vess STATE ..... I am & reader of the Dally New Britain Herald. __A*u.,- [ e s e TR R e | T Hi core nous fessq acad fron ed i ous dem one War built *“new the poin Pr their pin, Boul June mer Galy werie Al annu ‘Wort 10 he hall ing gran T. L o'clo will dress costu tion uwar floor. will | C. Hy comy fair eral Mrs. Lestc Harr Ab and : repre Kpan elgn acter Joyal A and Berli be h usual rehe: hil ebure