New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 18, 1928, Page 6

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New Britain Herald SERALD PUBLISHING OCOMPANY | Tssued Dally ($unday Kscepted) ! 4t Herald Bidg. 67 Church Gtrest | SUBSCRIPTION RATES " e Yo 3.0 Three Mouthe T8¢, a Mooth. Eatered at the Pust Ofoe at New Brit- | ain 9 Gecond Clase Mail Matter. TELEPHONS CALLS Businces Office 25 Editorial Rooms . 926 The only profitable advertiving medium fn the City. O d press room alwi Mewber of the Associated Press The Associated Press 18 exclusively titled o the use for re-publicailon uf all news credited to it or not otherwise ereditcd n this paper and elso locul | mews yublished thereln. The A. B. C. i» & Datiopal organization | which furnishes newspapers and adver Risers with & strictly honest analysie « circulation. Our circulation etatistics are based upon thie audit Thie inmures pro. tection sgainst traud tn mewspaper dte- | tribution figures to both matiopal and local advertisers. The Herald 1s op sale daily I8 York st Hotaling's Newsstan Square; Schuits's Newsstands, Estrasce Grand Central, ¢2nd Street. ! P, New imes The 2epublican national of Niagara Falls. | the bhoys. It monotonous living Connecticut delegates to ‘hv‘ couvention are returning by way Well, don't blame must have been up Salt Creck so long. . we | canovists gtield hombarded It vesterday were thrown from an airplane. hottles hil the a from the boat. i in New England that the public has | been endangercd ss air- 1‘ plane joyride by pop bottles | One of the | fow water inches iis is the first time by In leading the blind clergyman from church President Coolidge gave the photographers an opportunity to take something distinctive in pic- tures. And by the way the President, In going to church every Sunday morning, sets a good example te his fellow citizen-motorists. I Senator Hetlin heflinized at Al- | bany and was given a guard of troops ! by order of Governor Smith. Thus | liberty of speech and public as- scmblage was upheld in New York | state regardless of the claptrap that might have been uttered. THE “FRIENDSHIP ACROSS made a gallant GETy The “Friendship! effort to fly from land to the Atlantic but did not quite reach und over | her goul, coming down in water off the of Ireland. The ship, | equipped with pontoons, was prepur- ed for such a contingency and as this is written the outlook is bright coust for a quick rescue of the pilots. | Miss Amelia Earhart, Boston so- cial worker, joined Winier Stulz and Lou Gordon for the thrill that was in it; perhaps also some popular ac- claim. This is kept busy ap- plauding ath and aviators, and the supply is equalling the demand NGER AT CROSSINGS 2les sc someone is killed at « rail- road grade crossing is not proof that is not properly pro- tected, in essence is the report of the committe, in- councilinanic which vestigated conditions at the Wooster the New Haven railroad in Barnesdalc. street crossing of eh o conclusion is logical, Pwo- ple have been Killed croseings where only The fault not always to be placed at the doors a fow trains a day pass for crossing accidents is of the railrouds. Autoiste have been known to drive their cars pellmell into the have be. sides of railroad trains; they known to crash thr gates; cross track n crossing 1 have without id known to the stightest crossing warn bells, The course; t Atention b 10 railro: o if tracke re wou crossinzs. But this fact turnisies no valid excuse for motorists to dodg: 1 principle that will involve th Jd operate cars on t other fellow for & That Waost is not stre d rous in this 1t 1 cinity nied, « protee 1i Qangerous tected, 1 stats cros every g were to be p men operating e the railroad would be cnormous would come out and the really this expense passengors shippers The should struction of hridges or un dangerous be eliminated by and this as rapidly as possible, Cross- ings that are arded dangerous necd shifts tratfic night kuch as Wooster strect. don: re as less watchmen in two until ends after mid- The less dangerdus crossings. require nals. Th thing Mmust exereise due caution, s no less an guthority than the I, § Suprems Court in a notable decision a few months ago laid down. s L anitoists | LY more ANOTHER BUS LINE L Seldom has there been alacrity shown about ceming to an ugreement about the necessity tending transportation rvice than of ex- s has been the case relative to the Farmington avenue line, But trolley lines are not casily cx- tended; tracks, trolley poles cost avenue trolley is paying wires and money. The Farmington proposition. What to do? or supplant the with buses altogether. The Connecticut company itself, only Simply add buses trolley line a few years ago slow o sce the ad- vantages of extending lines, agre that this can be done if the Public s Utilities Comnuission is willing. Perha vealizes that if the trolley company the Connecticut com pany does not attend to such an cxten- sion some independent bus ope will be given an opportunity to at- ator tain this end, although Mr. Waguer himself, operator of the nearest in- dependent bus line, anxious at this time to Farmington avenue field. When a trolley line necds to be ex- tended and the profits in sight do not justity such an extension, logical move is to utilize buses for the extension. But to operate trol- the line and on the entire line is not the acme of leys on part of buses efficiency. In such a casc it is in- evitable that the buses will supplant the trolley line altogether. This has happened in along the Berlin line, and is certain to be done in the case of other lincs ne®ding extensions, or when present suburban trolley lines deteriorate to the point where pair billy are an addition 10 overhead. In other words, the field buscs widens, field 1or trolleys is constantly re- > too heav for the stric constantly While LIBRARY BOOKS, The New Britain Institufe is one the tions efliciently without much nois about it. Indecd, there has been less the library in the past year than ever before. 1t merely book horrow the of local institutions that func- publicity about keeps on growing, are constantly increasing, library’s sphere of influence is | growing lurger, and the city has rea- son to be proud of it. Noting liets of new and important thought should upon the shelves of the on wrote Greta I librarian, that it th for the purpose on be pur- books that we be two occasions Brown, the Wwas any money hand hooks the might chased, 1t wasn't any of our business | ypiican and Democratic groups. At | at all; we merely wanted to be of it possible by muaking Darmless and mild sug letters assistance thes estions. On of thanke were promptly received con- information that all the both occasions taining the books noted hud already been pur- chased. That's public service of the highest type. It seems to us the library isn't overlooking any important publica- The the libri ar tions. yvields to the money city ry cach year is well invest- A WIDER POST ROAD widening matn seriously in all is heavier than The business of lighways is taken states where traffic the existing roads can accommodate it. Connecticut was not an also-ran in developing the idea, having widened the Milford turnpike or the Boston Post road and is widening other sec- Officials county, New York, have also seen the light and are planning a 54-foot wid- tions. in «ning of the Post road in that county The wider from New In time the ultinate result will be ATl the to New Post roal York way Haven widened road probably will extend all the way to Boston With e conmes the n wider a trafiic on them roads in prospect for better regulation of not like 1t Howed to operate on new Milford pike, What has been of this and for a time from the expericnes vider with the speed and utoists are left to it en the highway is that i s comes mor wiore accidents if cir own voiitior i not too to say that v rouds wider there must also be twice ny motoreyel hand I the cops on speed artists in check. RIDGES AND TOLL ROADS in are increasing on throughout the Walker the ted that, Mayor only rich as New 1 nnot f the money de- to mest the toll the bridges that arc only way build mformity with onstriction of which is a toll it Moun- “xucts tolls when trafic was great structurds of the The ross the Hudson, now under in the ca; spans. is about over <pat constrnet e i vill a toll bridge. L the d. One Zested tor Connecticut, Whether it w over e question. T Toll rouds througho! nation likewise are being brui such has beer cntuate 18 & hand it how- tould ne 1AL eatistied with the ever. i€ sy to patroniz - not a gorgeously | the | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 18, 1928 |would we be willing to permit a | private roud carporation to have the 'power of eminent domuin. Those in favor of private enterprisc in indus- |try, however, if consistent, should heartily favor the development of private toll highways. Pehaps they would be the first to usc them—and | perhaps not. HOOVER PRECEDENTS It Herbert Clark Hoover is clect- ed 1o the presidency in November he takes office. more precedents than president in our histo firs 'will, when he shatter any othe Hoover is the for president who never ran for any other ofiice, 1f elected he will be the west of the president is on the man runniv fivst Mis whos: president horn issippi and the first legal | Paciric coast. HE ulso will be the first president who Jias three names but |uses only two. Hoover dropped his middle name when he went into war Irelief work and today signs himself residence " lsimply “Herbert Hoove: 1 into |office a family of ¥ Hoover will carry anford Univer- be the first clecied sity graduates. He will esident whose wife has the same P [aima mater as her husband. Herbert Hoover, Jr., is also a Stanford grad- luate and Allan Herbert Hoover, | younger son of the secretary of Com- merce, is now a student at the Cali- fornia school, Hoover, a trustee of Ihis California residence |cumpus of the university and | brother is a professor there. Further Stanford and the denc; cabinet is the | Ray Wilbur, brother Secretary of Navy Wilbur, is pre {dent of Stanford. He was the chief physician in &ttendance on the late President Warren G. 1 Ulatter’s fatal illness in San Francisco. in the anford, has the his on Ninks with and Lyman fact that b Another unusual feature er of Hoover is the fact that ten years after he cast his first vote (Re- party Hoove publican) he became his | candidate long residence abroad had prevent- the United States for president. " ed his voting in Nuntil 1918, Herbert Hoover at the agze of ndfather in the svents bids fair to he- is twice a gra and normal run of |come a great-grandfather before he reaches the age of 70, And, lastly, eight years before his for president, Hoover's not nomination admirers did with which party he was definitely affiliated. In 1920 he was mentioned as a possible dential candidate for both Re- know pres this time he made the statenient that he was 4 “Progressive Republican.” A PACE v already N The' has a o state of assortment of fine high- ways but has will be nothing in comparison with what it will possess once the plans for fine roads from cnd to end in the state arc completed. Access to New New | York—and New England—nus veen greatly accelerated through the eon- struction of the Holland tunncl; but that is only an incident. New Jer: | posscsses the most famous Atlanite }n-wru along the coast and every what it now Jereey frou year more people are having access |to them by automobile. The Phila- | @elphia-Camden bridge has greatly letimulated motor travel Into New Jersey at this end of the state and the state evidently thinks that noth- ing but the finest of roads will keep the autoists coming, If New Jersey built these highways on a pay as you go basis it would be unable to meet the demand, THIRD PARTIES confidence but, We in third-party Britisher said recently, politically the United #t The fact is that the prohibition issue, and the reli- haven't much movements; as a s is a “peculiar country.” the farm relief issuc cutting across party nazing political gious issue arc lines and create texture be the issues have played a part in the development of third-par move- expected. Tt so happens that all of it that they may do so the pact, although wiclded a powerful Prohibition party ments in the past; is possible thercfor: Some of in. minor partics in the successtul, influence. The though it never attained anything approaching suceess during its long lif never a alone, succeeded in influencing the other parties and what we War an issue through them put over have. Lven An for a time, and before the Civil “native -ricanism’” was religious issues also were prominent. Of course, there have been some minor purtics which have been with us for a long time without creating cnough dust to show for their pres- political highways. The the Socialist partics have been worrying along, go- but they still g on, The La ollette third party during the last |election polled nearly 5,000,000 votes, wnce on the Socialist-Labor, and ing from bad to worse for some reason. Ibut has since dicd. And we have had “Prog Jgrese to goad the regular G. O Farmer-Labor — and cnoug cssive Republicans™ P. t | frantic protest. The first minor party started way back in 1832, the party, which got only 7 presi- | rding at the | irom which anything might | in Con- | “Anti-Masonic” | electoral I pubiic roadd The main objection 18 'votes In 1856 the AfnericAn (Rnow {Nothing) party did little better, get- [ting 8 clectoral votes. In 1860 the Democratic (secessionist) party poll- ©d 72 clectoral votes, and the same year the Constitutional Union party | clectoral votes. In 1892 the (Populist) party polled the Progres- 'sive party polled 88 electoral votes. 1n 1924 the Progressive (La Follette) party polled 13 clectoral votes, spite of the fact that this party w got 3y People vlectoral votes, In 1 in "also endorsed by several other minor | political organizations i 1t is evident that th gers will have a vear the ma- rd task cut out for them to sutisfy the | within their | Wwhy |dor party mar cloments That been straddling on some of divergent { parites. there h: "the major satisfy all the people who muke up the major Amcrican d in is onec reason ssues, It is impossible to parties, : “considerable nonsensical humbu the platforms results, of 'folderol can be interpreted diffgrently in different parts of the! ‘r\-omm-_\- 1t is this straddling, how- | {ever, which in the past has given rise | {10 the more or iess temporary minor | the typ which { parties. | i Facts and Fancies' |1t clothing made man hairless, the | good people of 5000 A. D. are advis- {ed ot to read Darwin. | I | Favoritism seems especially unrea- [sonable when you look at some of |the favorite sons. You see, cruel and unusual ishment ix forbidden, and now punishment would be unusual. The bigamist always looks muek, but you can't tell whether that is cause or effect. of davedevil stunts, irst man to travel - under side of a flat world. pun- any | Speaking | |16 he smokes a cigarctte without | smoving it from his mouth, it's a | waste of time to offer him oil stock. A vest used to be calied & waist- jcoat. You sec, men in those days |had a waist, | “All men are liars,” \hd\ll\: again failed of Saul's job. said David, election to Tt may not be significant, but when you say candidates are dodg- \ing something they all know what you mean. Growling lecause there’s nothing to do on Sunday; growling becausc you must go to work again on Monday. e ions i sl W ouator will be so tactless as to mention the {bonds that unite various clements of ithe party. > ! Girls weren't so hola !days. boy knew OlId Dobbin |wouldn't wham into tree, so he {didn't need so much cooperution. j Mussolini has d ithe house fly. Here great public good baldness. in the old| ided to abolish at least one resulting from | 4 | Wives are |1 i Is—in short, I don't like Thursday, Preparing for Hot Weather! | Cretonne slip covers on sofa and chair \ Start us to thinking folks' tempers should wear Slip-covers made of the cheertones of fun st our good spirits fade heat of the sun! in the They Do It Helene: “Where did you learn to waltz so well Lagry: ! prize-tight a heavy-weight A SONG OF PAITH IN THE YEAR AFTER THIS By Samuel Hoffenstein The day 1 like the least is Sunday, Aud after that, T don’t like Monday, And after that, T don’t care whose day Tuesday is—I don't like Tuesday, And after that, let other men say, and “Bah,'—I1 don't like Wednesday. And atter that, my very worst day And after that, my evil-eye day Is—the fact’'s,—I don’t like Friday. And after that, T wen't grow fatter, Because they have a day called Sat- urday— But tl ¥ And after that, I don't like Monday, day 1 like the least is Sun- And after that, T don’t care whose day Tuesday is, T don't like Tuesday, And after that, et Attractive! First Lipstick: “This girl certain- has a pretty mouth.” Second Lipstick: “Yes, it has the skin you love to touch up!” —Vincent Hendrichson Iy "Tis better to have rheumatism than astigmatism. There is 80 much to be scen these day SPIRES AND Clarifying Tt? Contemporary Paragraphers ¥ind more things to dispute about than any class of men. The ‘more per word they get for their disputes. the more things they find to dispute about. For sometimes they have been arguing about who started the dash business—you know—like this. My idea is that the reason the first man used the dash was because it | was easier to make a dash than to decide how it should be punctuated. I admit that 1 didn't start it! But “IT” has brought on more discussion than anything else. They have chased it and traced it hither and thither, even back to Mother Eve, However, if my memory is right, the earliest record I have of the extensive use of the word oc- curs in Madame Castoria’s famous memoirs. Remember, “Children Cry for IT. RGOYLES ean —Sylvia Wolf. My Soldier Boy Jimmy Reese was a lucky bimbo from the land where spaghetti plays hide-and-seek with garlic and olive oil, His old man turned a big deal in garlic, and was able to send Jimmy to a military academy for a four year rest, i people who are forever trying to find room for one more piece of furniture, | Eer | The Pronibitionist | oce jonal three fingers reminds us [that little Willie must take castor lnn to please parents who won't. who likes an | The Grana 014 Party is optimistic but,it would rejoice to see somebody itrying to entice the United States linto a league. 3 ! Maybe it’s called machine politics !because the success of a machine de- pends on the nuts staying in place. | RO The lad who uses his sheepskin in {an effort to land a good executiv (job is going to wonder at times It jit wasn'tya mistake to take it from the sheep. | Correct this sentence: “John works very hard,” said the wife, “but the | company pays him all he's worth.” | Copyright 1928, Publishers Syndicate i Observations | On The Weather | | | Washington. June | for Southern New England: Show- crs tonight and Tuesday, Not much |change in temperature; tresh south {and southwest winds. | Conditions: A long trough of low pressure overspreads the in- !terfor districis from the lower lake | region southwestward to Arizona. |1t is producing showers and thun- der storms from Tennessce north- ward to the lake region and from [the western portions of the middle Atlantic states westward to the Rocky mountain district Conditions favor for this {unsettied weather followed showers. Temperatures yesterday: High 82 0 6 18.—Forecast vicinity by Low (1] 60 58 60 62 6 58 58 60 [ Atlanta Atlantic City | Boston | Detroit Kansas City | Miami w Orleans . New Haven New York .. . Washington .... Jimmy proved to be a class mili- tary and mathematical stydent, and the Scnator from the home town ap- pointed him alternate to West Point, The Appointee could do a right face, and Jimmy entered America's most exclusive army circle. His four years in West Point fitted him for the great future that destiny held in wait for him. Did Jimmy succeed after leaving st Point? I'll say he did. Within two vears after leaving West Point he was promoted to head usher at Metromount's $50,000,000 movie emporium! —J. 8 Morris < me Mercury — ‘cause sometimes “Dey cal sometimes Pse hot aw’ Tse cold!” THE MIRTH OF A NATION HEFLIN PRAIRE Opponent of AL SMITH TTALY IMPRI Critic of MUSSOLINI C. C. PYLE SIGNS EX- ¢ Subjeet of KAISER BYRD TO MAKE HOME Here And Not AT POLE ! powers were taken Analyzed? Peter: “Why are modern shows like restaurant cooking?” Roger: “I don't know. Why 2" Peter: “The stuff that is not over- done is generally raw!" —John R. Brougher (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) ' = ; 3 | s Z | S | - QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Burean, 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 be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—J:ditor. Q. What are the powers of the Speaker of the Upited States House of Representatives”? A. From 1811 to 1910 he almost absolute ruler over the pro- ceedings of the House of Represent- atives through his power to appoint all committees and his control of the rules committee. These two in 1910 but he can determine which-members shall address the House and has absolute power over assignment of bills. Morcover he rules on points of order and usually is sustained by the House. Q. 1Is it possible to copyright a pen-name? | A. No. | Q. How many packs of playing | cards are sold in the United States | in a year? ! A Tax collections for the fiscal year ended June §0, 1927, showed | 421,835 packs so'd in the United not quite one pack to eve. LWo persons. Q. Who is the author of the fol- | lowing: “We are such stuff as dreams are made of and our little | life is rounded with a sleep™? | A. It is a quotation from Tempest” by Shakespeare, Q. How old is Snookums, baby film star? A. He was 1924, Q. mean? A. It is the feminine form of the | masculine Viljalm, a North Teutonic | name nmeaning “resolute helmet.” Q. What is the origin of fln-‘ name Rome? | A. Tt is supposed to have come from the G Kk word “rome” mean- | Ing strength, foree, As applied to city it means stronghold. were two older citics in Ital the same name before the pr city of Rome was founded. Q. Is it proper to call both Sen ators and Representatives “Con- gressmen A. Literally Senators and Repr sentatives are “Congressmen.” is the custom, however, to ref only to Representatives as Congress. men. Q. When and where was Dolores Del Rio horn? A. In Durango, Mexico, August 3, 1905, Q. What is the meaning of French phrase “Noblesse oblig A. Tt means “rank imposes obli- | gatlons”, or in other words, much is | expected from one of high birth or | station. Q. Who discovered gold in Cali- fornia? A. Gold was discovered in Cali- fornia in 1848 by James W. Marsh- | all, who was digging a mill race at | Sutter's Fort, at the head of a gang | of Mogmons. He found gold dust in | i was | '1|.‘,1 the | born Scptember 1, What does the name Vilja with | nt 1! he the sand. The news spread rapidly to the Atlantic scaboard, and in 1849 came the gold rush to Califor- nia. In the next five years over $30,- | 000,000 in gold was mined in Cali- | fornia. | Family Stuff | afternoon on | gagement, so he was forced to leave { region indicate congestion from toxic A There |'or endanger heart., ~Guaranteed relief Q. What religions do Governor Ritchie and Scnator Bruce of Mary- land profess? A. Both are members of Protestant Episcopal church, Q. Are citizens born in foreign embassies in the United States, American citizens? A. In International law embas- sies and legations are regarded as territory of the nation that main- tains them and children of diploma- tic representatives to the United States are not American citizens. Q. What are the five largest in. dustries in the United States? A. Motor vehicles, iron and steel, slaughtering and meat pack- ing, clothing, and petrolcum refin- ing. Q. What are the home addresses of Pola Negri and Lillian Gish? A. Both reside at Beverly Hills, California. Q. What do the names, Louise and Doris mean?’ A, Marie (French) bitter; | Louise (Old High German) pugna- cious; Doris (Greek) “the Q. Yor what does the * the name Salt Ste. Marie stand? For the feminine form of the French word for Saint “Sainte.” 5 Vears Ago Today On motion of Councilman Hum- phrey, the common councl last eve- nifg passed a resolution expressing its belief that the fire department’s enrollment should not be reduced. This was done over Mr. Curtis’ pro- test, as he said that any ch action would be interpreted as censure by | the fire board. ¥. C. Monier and sister attended | the Williston seminary ficld day and prize speaking contests at East- hanipton Wednesday and Thursday. Theodore Monier is a student there. Rev. Lyman Johnson was sched- uled to address the W. C. T. U. this City Problems,” but was delayed by business an had another en- the Marie, the socie nd Mr. Ly and postpone the month. By request, Supt. Stuart and Prof. Karlson addressed the Carpenters’ union last evening on the subject of manual training in the schools. Some of the carpenters believed this recent innovation encroached upon their trade, but after the specches they wed resolutions urging that the training be continued. overnor Chamberlain today pre- | nted diplomas to the 85 members of the Normal school graduating class. communication from the Meat Cutters' union was rveceived last evening at the meeting of the Busi- ness Men's association. The cutters offered to work all day July 4 if they should have a half-holiday on the Lumbago Pain and sorcness in the lumbar speech for a |poisons. Asper-iax, amazing new as- pirin in laxative form, quickly neutral- izes the poisons and eliminates them, ‘anishes all pain, stiffness, discomfort |as if by magic. Won't upset stomach or no cost. All dealers. following Tuesday. It was decided to let each trade take up the matter of closing for itselt, 50 no action was taken by the association. The high school graduates held their banquet last cvening at the Hotel Russwin. President Charles E. Hart, Jr., acted as toastmaster. Edward Farrell responded to the toast, “What 1903 Means to Us." Benjamin Pouzzner answered to “What We Have Gotten From Our Books.” Claude Barrows read the the class poem. William Coholan and Miss Jessie Gladden read the class prophecy. Ralph Wainright treated the subject, “What We Leave the School The New Britain Gas Co. has ap- plied for permission to erect a brick building, 55x30, off Meadow street at a cost of $4,000, EIGRT HURT IN WRECK Springfield, Mass., June 18 (P— Fight persons were taken to Mercy hospital here early last night after two machines collided and turned over at the intersection of St. James avenue and St. James Boulevard. Seven of the injured were from Rockville, Conn., four of the Rock- ville men being able to leave the hospital following treatment. The Rockville machine turned over twice and was completely demolished. FALLS TO HIS DEATH Detroit, June 18 (® — While a large crowd looked on Michale Bar- ron, 19, a student aviator, fell 2,000 feet to his death here when a para- chute with which he leaped from a plane, failed to open. Two American towns are named after Rudyard Kipling. Instantly Goadbye hay fover tore Tmreclosan iessrare, weshes away headache, fever, ing, excess —ermeneyback. Free Examination HEART and LUNGS Tuesday and Friday Afternoons NEW BRITAIN CLINIO Booth Block DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN NAT. BANE BLDG. FAMOUS PIONEERS The story of America is the story Kenton. Kit Carson, Genera Custer, Bufialo Bl nee Bill—coudensed histovies of th tors—are all contained in FAMOUS PIONEERS.” You will be inte of these men. Fill out the coupon bel CLIP COUPON HERE Washirgton Bureay, York Avenue, W I want a copy of the bulletin FAMOUS PIONEERS, uncancelled, U, e and Landling comte. five cents in lcose, to cover post NAME STREET AND NUMPER CITY STATE of the frontier. Daniel Boone, Simon Wiid Bill Hickok, Paw- exploits of these picturesque charace our Washington Bureau's new bulletin entitled vested in reading the thrilling sto ow and send for the bulletin: Dally New Britain Herald, Ington, D. C. and enclose here~ S. postage stamps, or coin, WHEN MOTHER STARTS IN oN A PAINTING UoB SHE HIZES ALL THE BARUSHFS BUT oNE. \,

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