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New Britain Herald ERRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY feongd Dally (Sunday 0d) Ezcopt As Hersld Bldg., 61 Church Streer ION RATES The profitable advertising medium in the City. Circulation books and press roomm always opea to sdvertisers. Membow of the Associated Press I'he Associsted Prese is exclusively en- tled to the uwse for re-publication of I news credited te it or not otherwise of Cireulation The A. B C is & national organization Andit Baresn which furaighes Dewspapers and adver- tigers with & strictly honest anal: o sirculation. Our circulation etatistice are nased upom this auvdit. This insures pre tection aguinst freud in mewspaper dis- tribution @gures to both national and local advertisers. ¥he Merald 1s on sale dally in New York st Hotsling's Newsstand. Times Square; Schults’s Newsstands, Eutrance Grand Central, ¢3ud Street. e—————— A HOME PROGRESS EXPOSITION It costs money and effort to put on a home progress exposition and for some of those participating the returns may be doubtful. Particu- larly is this the case with manufac- turers who by nature are not de- pendent upon local business for much of their output. But Hartford has had such an exposition for sev- eral years and evidently is finding it worth while. It is our opinion that New Britain would also find it of advantage. Reasons are not far to seck. A proper display of home products at- tains two objects: The possibilities of elling more home-made goods to the local community and the build- ing up of prestige and inculcation of .“W‘I his age to become president of these United States. John is a likeable lad. He is woo- ing happiness first, and once that | has been attained we feel certain he will gain all the other furbelows that life has to offer. All the world loves | a lover, the saying goes, and the ‘ennre citizenry of these United States ! unanimously wish all that is worthy and good for the son of the Presi- dent, l i LETTING THE WORLD GO BY | When President Coolidge | his vacation at Swampscott the | movie cameras clicked | 50 did other cameras. The President dodged few of them. When he spent his vacation in the spent constantly: Black Hills the story was the same | This year it is different. He is in the wilds of Wisconsin and as this | 1s written had remained in constant seclusion. The weather was bad and | that may have had something to do with it; anyway, cameramen can cool their heels two miles distant for ali | the President cares. He decided not to run. A SIDE-KICK FOR SMITH Of all the uggestions so far made within the Democratic party look- ling toward the selection of a run- Emlm mate for Alfred E. Smith the iname of Nellie Taylor Ross, former i governor of Wyoming, intrigues us nost, The reason: Well, Mrs. Iloss is as dry as the world's dryest desert. Not as a speaker, of couree, for she is | said to be quite a talker. But as re- gards prohibition. Indeed, she has an amazing reputation in the north- west as a “dry campaigner,” and is one of the best and most relished speakers that the W. C. T. U. ever heard. As a running mate for Governor |8mith the Wyoming ex-governor would permit the Democratic ticket {to plant a wet No. 11 shoe in the wet eastern cities and a dainty feminine foot in the southern dry regions. A happy combination? Hardly. pride in home endeavor. The latter is in the nature of an| intangible. Yet it is something well | worth attempting to attain. The citi- | zen who visualizes an attractive dis- | play of New Britain products cannot | help bulging with increased pride in his community. He feels more Kindly disposed toward the enterprise that makes this;possible; he will discuss | them with his family and friends; he will feel like the apostle Paul when he gave evidence regarding his home town—that it was “no mean city.” Take such a remarkably versatile institution as Landers, I'rary and Clark. How many know that this New Britain {nstitution has 6,000 articles on ita catalog? Would not a display of even a part of this grand galaxy of manufactured articles arouse enthusiasm, admira- tion and good will among citizens generally? Then there is the American Hard- ware Corporation. Few citizens have | ever had an opportunity to glimpse even & part of the amazing diversity of articles made by its various &on- stituents, We are accustomed to reading advertising in various pub- lications in which concerns identified with this corporation told the world how superlor their product happens to be, incidentally handsomely ad- vertising this city at the same time. For local citizens to have the oppor- tunity to see these products would be even more effective. We cannot mention plants which could with such an exposition in addition all the hi be identifi to the merchants. We would he had 1y mistaken if the Stanley le & Level, the Stanley Works, the 'afnir Bearing company, Hart & Cooley and all the others could not find a most adequate way to show about thelr produncts and do o in instructive and educational manner Some such Ehth have enough d c directly to a he d dend bucket because of sick P position. But the cost wonld | slight and the good will an standing engendered would worth much. JOHN COOLIDGE. 1.5, John Coolidgs, E nite fre quently of Plainville, is not worry! ha!f as much about his future of pation as the arm iends who hase be newspaper ronortere making fric he intends to rather think John is m material, nquiries as i e G ntoth o fer a commonsense 0| mind that can think bey job offered and giimpse more in the future no clo "ot nd t eves that can thar perpetual full moon and We haven't interviewed John, t we know he Is destined to draw som uncommon sweetnes: 1if At any rate, he has started well by go- from ing to Plainville fer stimulation. Then, when he visits his daddy in Wisconsin and receives additional adviee and an ensemble of ideas, he will be fixed to face the world in the well known Coolidge manner And there can he no doubt that th world will have to g begins edgi maclstrom when John his way the that leads to a €n Indeed ful and useful career. 15 a8 good a chance as his dad had a" Cordell Hul, vitriolic and com- bative doctrinnaire from Tennessee, moderately dry, or Senator Joseph T. Robinson of Arkansas, fairly dry, also are regarded as having a fair chance at the running mate post. From all of which we judge that the Democratic board of strategy is in favor of linking up some sort of dry with Smith. That's politics. i | NEW TREATIES WITH CHINA | Among the first moves of an in- ternational chafacter made by the | mew Chinese Nationalist government | will be the negotiation of mew treatles with forelgn powers to take | the place of territorlal pacts still remaining in | force. The new government knows where the shoe pinches and is going | to use some new corn plaster. | Fortunately the powers long have | recognized the necessity of |treatics. Pledges had been made at the Washington Conference of 1921- 22 for the abrogation of the ex | territorial jurisdictions and revision of the Chinese tariff schedules, The Tariff Revision Conference met in 1925 and agreed of Chinese tariff . The Com- also to the principle autonomy, to begin in 19 Extraterritoriality, mission authorized by the Washington con- ence, met in 1926 and was favor- able to the relinquishment of extra- on territoriality, but concluded that the 1 system of China at that fon &till ina ate im- time W mediate action while R 1 ler extratervitoriality. Great Brit- Relgium gave their rights up action looking the United States in proposed united toward abrogation of unequal eaties and t an- ed i prepared to relin- torial rights rnment which to = arrived, no romain for the ~ unequal treaties. frov time im- Aithfully stood by the inject a j city excheq without 4 zood o “hody n 1920 to 1921 thought of the plan to pay real estate ox for an ex- | pert appraisal of real property. This would he c function nd if the p wsnal nobody or ame of the mo the unequal extra- | new | Commission which | | was authorized by the Washington | You've guessed it; $1,500,000 of |the “experts' fees” were diverted to ;rhe campaign fund of Mayor Bill | Thompson, But the ever watchful | Chicago Tribune etarted a taxpayer's ;s\m and after seven years of work 2to the decision. The boodle wi have to be returned to the elty, ac- cording to the Hugo Friend. It the Democrats decision of Judge want to show how rotten the grand old party can get the opportunity is present. For blast the Tammany Tiger let the Smith boye every campaign against trot forth two or three horrible ex- amples of zrafting from Republican | P cities. Mayhe this has nothing to do with but then, a national neither has Tammany. vampaign; THE HELL G The Interstate Commerce Com- after due deliberation, has that the bridge, having been built 1= vania and New Haven railroads at a theee two rail- TE BRIDGE mission, annoy »d its conviction Hell Gate by the joint efforts of the Penns cost of $30,000,000, roads alone are entitled to the serv- yielded the and not sundry shippers of freight on Long by span, Island who wished to have the bridge used in making freight ship- | mente to the west, Moreover, the bridge is for pas | senger service only, and trains pass over it and into the tun- | nels under the Manhattan Island and , or vice the Hudson river to the wes verea. Freight cars must be carried past New York on barges. The decision of the I. C. C. is as anticipated. But after all, enormous advantages accrue to the INew Haven on account of the bridge? It is a handy route for through passenger trains running between Boston and the south, but they are comparatively few in num- ber. | The New York tunnels and station cost approximately $200,000,000, 'and returns must come entirely out |ot passenger traffic. Morning and llater afternoon Penn Terminal is | packed with commuters and the railroads claim there is no profit in | them. The railroads also claim they carn no profit on Pullman passen- | gers. And finally they tell us that only a emall portion of their income | comes from passenger traffic any- | how and point to the fact that some of our most prosperous railroads are no great passenger haulers. T ENDS the more sordid was brought to | | THE LOVE The page from side of life which public view by the arrest of a man in the company of a love-smitten girl with it a sound carried ! osity of youth and self-restraint arc mortal focs. | The girl admits two serious mis- takes, She conecnted to the plan of her lover to desert the army and she consented to “honcymoon™ about the country with him without benefit of marriage. It was not an unintelli- gent, empty-headed damscl who did that, but a girl who had graduated from the Willimantic high school. She had been employed in a store and the life apparently was of a lumdrum character. While visiting Newport she fell in love with a man in uniform. How easily that happens. | The army musician, finding him- | self the object of the girl’s affections, scemingly found it pleasant to abide within earshot of her words. Maybe Jie fell in love with her, but we doubt A instincts of high for the object of his affection which is part of it, will not it, man, hound by the honorable love and ceteem degrade himself and the girl by be- no freight | what | moral lesson for the young. Impetu- | having that | \Facts and Fancies 1t's called an innocent bhook now |if she finally leaves the other man {and goes hack to her hushand. ‘ Every community has at least one sucker who will do all the work if given a few chairmanships. | One reason why peace seems bore after war's frenzy is beea here's nobody to shoot craps with | | | | Tn the old days a man could sily cow his wife, imt mnow he !can’t even affcet her with bull. 12 list of campaign contributors ludes everyhody who buys any- thing the contributors have to I whete the A hick town seven natives are tourist's car. place examining The two unfortunates whose every the priconer and the candidate. Romance will get a frightful b lin the futurs when little girls are hown grandmother's seven wedding outfits. “The fact are more prone to be humble than the lean.” This does not, however, apply to a fat purse. Americanism: Spending a vear's avings to impress other summer re- | sort guests who are spending theirs 1to impress you. Long ago you couldn’t make a silk purse of a sow’s ear. But a’modern genius on exchange can make a steam yacht out of her reputation. Weak minds are inherited, and if the parents are foolish enough to | give the kids money enough to ruin |them, the kids probably wouldn't amount to much in any case. One reason why Sunday scems to mean less than it once did is be- cause everybody wears Sunday | clothes all weck. | For that matter, no man is a hero |to nimselt when he lies awake in “\) | | bed. ! Life in like bascball. You can't | place your hits; bit it you hit the Lall hard enough, a lot of them fat- ten your average. | The quick way to learn whether any practice is harmless or evil is to observe the kind of people that delight in it. st ! The average man pays for a home I by the time he is fifty, which cx- | pl ains why there is no effort to pro- {vide old:age pensions for landlords. The white vest was a great re- | shonsibility, but it enabled the cas- | ual observer to pick out the import- Lant citizens, Correct this sentenc e the correct time,” said the shand to the wife, “so 1 will set y watch by urs.” m Copyright 1928, Publishers Syndicate. 25 Years Ago Today H. Johnston of the committee of the Bus- ssociation has called a Chairman sement Men's ine meeting of the committee this eve- ning. The committee will take up the matter of an outing. As it has already been to L and Branford another | ing sought. A. J. Sloper is first vice-president Compounce locale is be- coming a fugitive Whether he was in love or wheth- he er wasn't, his actions indicate he took advantage of a trusting fe- male, as men have done from time immemorial. The species of existence followed naturally could not last long. A re- volver was always near at hand, and the girl apparently was so far under the man’s spell that she did not mind the prosimity of the gun. When a policeman called, as he inevitah would, there would be ehooting, the airl said the lover had told her. She evidently did not flineh when he old her he would not hesitate to <hoot down a policeman But Fate did not sacrifice a po- \ceman's life, It was the man and ot the zirl who opened the door when Detective Sergeant William . McCue ealled. Hence the fellow, lose habit it was to note callers om a bathroom was taken un- sares. 1t wae all over in a moment sout ten seconds before the fel- low was able to draw his revolver The detective sergeant is entitled to u od praise for effecting the of a dangerous man under particularly trying circumstances. His life was in jeopardy and the officer must have known it before he sought entry into the room. Oklahoma University Man Wins as Orator Los Angeles, June 22 (B — Carl Albert, a freshman at Oklahoma uni- versity and the son of a coal miner, ist night won first place in the als of the fourth annnal intercol- | siate aratorical contest on the con stitutior | Albert received a prize of $1,500. |of the State Bankers' association, i which will meet at Hartford tomor- row Sanitary Inspector Turnbull says | people must stop raising chickens in | their cellars. Complaint has been | made to him against poultry fanciers "in several parts of the city who use their cellars 1o hateh out chickens. | Professor George P. Matthews is receiving congratulations from all sides on the splendid musical pro- gram which was carried out under his direction at the high school iduation yesierday. A well known musician said the work of the or- chestra, and chorus surpassed any- thing in his experience for such young people. Professor Matthews has heen hert for seven years. He will go to Maine next week o join his wife and family, who are sum- mering there The Y. M. C. A. minstrels will give their first performance tomor- row evening. Among the numbers will he “Who the Overalls in Mrs. Murphy o by William H. Latham The Sentinel Asleep™ hy M.J. Sheehan Mr. Benediet has been reclected principal of the High school in spite of the action of a New York school in voting him as its superintendent. rview street residents are up n oarms about the mnew building lines. They are particularly mad over the sment of henefits, but the ten d iime limit is expired | and they cannot file appeal. They | are considering petitioning the com- mon council to have the whole mat- ter reconsidered. DANDRUFF FALLING HAIR | S‘l”OPlFVOUI’lI.LIBE 'LEA’S HAIR TONIC Alse Restores Beauty and Youthful Color . To Gray or Faded Hair iALI. DRUG STORES §1.00 A BOTTLE word may be used against them | Now That We've Heard 'Im All, Folks! Commencement. Days—Convention Days induce this state of mind: cheerators, not orators we need, There'll he a shortage of the hot-air prouting kind the mirth-producing sort is indeed! Sounded Swedish? | -‘i i \1 ‘.[MURPF_V“l‘ N 2 What'll We Do Now? (Being Various Ways of Keeping a Party at ull Cry) By Edward Longstreteh and L. T. Holton Truth and Penalties There are many variations of this quaint old method of shocking your children’s ancestors, but about the neatest all-around version, includ- | ipg the time-honored “Truth and Consequences,” is the one herewith submitted for your delecation: An Inquisitor is chosen by com- mon consent. He asks cach one of the assembled party a reasonable though perhaps personal question. he person asked has the choice of cither answering the question truthfully, or of putting a chip in the kitty.” (A kitty may be any handy receptacle such as an empty bowl or ash tray.) Yach player is given thereafter the opportunity of being Inquisitor in turn if the players are scated in a circle, or by any other plan agreed on beforchand. The question asked must be one to which the person sked could be expected to know the nswer. The Inquisitor also acts as bank er. If the player is asked a question and answers truthfully, he takes a chip from the “Kitt with that chip. 1t the player refuses to answer the question truthfully, he puts a chip into the “kitty” which is taken by the Inquisitor. If the questions are cleverly put— and this method of penalty pro- motes good questioning—it may be exceedingly difficult to avoid an- swering them by implication even by putting a penally in the “kitty.” The answer in all cases must be given as “Yes” or “No.” For example: If one of the men asks a lady, “Do you petting?” what is the young : gentle- dislike lady to do? Even books on etiquette will be of little help at such a time If she answers truthfully Yes,” v spoil future dat If she silently puts a penalty into the “kitly” she becomes a lady with past!! Must Be Good! Ross: “They sa Edwin Clayton is very clever.” Hill: “You bet. He visited at our house once and heat the family to the bath-room thtee mornings in succession!” —B. H. Dibble. A song at Once Tender and Infor- mative nei- Gl tr z{""es0 By Samuel Hoffenstein You a cook, but she can’t cook ye | You ch her hy candle, bell and hook, ye You sho her, as if she were in her Today, the soup. tomorrow, a ladle. Well, she dorsn't learn, so although you need her, decide tha shonld feed her Rut vou're kind hy birth; you hate to fire her; vou it and wait, you do it What thanks de you get? She beats you to it! else You somebody So and before Taken at Her Word! son," ntioned mother, “listen to me. You must never, NEVER do anything bhehind my hack or when I'm not looking that you would not willingly do when T am looking.” “Oh mom, then T'll never have to take another bath, will 12" replied Dobby without hesitation. —Lillie M. Saunders. “Now n The Punch Bowl orved Lois Palemo) ( “Thousands who want to sin Rush te join in our festival Send at once for your tickets But do not apply twice ™ Chicago (111) Teibune Everything to he done through the papers nowadays! | Olson: “Did yez ate down-town Ole. Jr: 'Yes. Had a good appe- tite. 1 ate with gnsto.” 1 Olson: “Shure an’ oi'd be careful | takin’ np wid strange Swedes!” 1 \ sonal reply. “Specialty Salesmen ‘Wanted throughout the whole country to call upon undertakers. Must be live men." —Toronto (Can.) Star. Why? Mixed Rank! Dr. Hackett: “Why don’t you take care of that poor soldier they just brought in Dr. Pe ruling from “Got to walt for a the rson: Washington from | War Department.” Dr. Hackett: “What about?" Dr. Pearson: “Whether we can perform a Major operation on a Corporal in a Private Ward!" Mrs, L. L. Cedergreen. (Copyright, 1828, Reproduction For- bidden) QUESTIUNS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question 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 be undertaken, All other questions will receive a per- Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—Tditor. Q. What is the meaning of the name Russell? p. It is a British family name meaning “of reddish complexion.” It is a diminutive form. The French name Rousseau has the same mean- ing and origin. Q. Does the government operate the airplanes of the United States air mail? What is the average pay of an air mail pilot? A, Air mail is handled by a number of different aviation com- panies under contract with the post office department. When the de- partment has reason to believe an air mail route would be of advan- tuge to the public it advertises for Lids to deliver mail and the lowest responsible bidder receives the con- tract to carry mail on that line. There are certain requirements to be complied with in the matter of equipment. The pay of pilots on mail plancs is fixed by the com- panics and varics. Some pilots re- ceive a flat v while others re- ceive a salary and commission. Q. What the name of Pope Adrian 1V, the only English Pope? A. Nicholas Breakspear. Q. When do the Loan bonds mature? A, 1938 . Q. Arve people who die at sca always buried in the sca? The disposition of the body of a person who dies at sea de- pends on the refrigerating equip- ment of the ship. the distance from port and other conditions. In many ships it is possible te bring hodies nto port. Q. How can T get my brother in Montevideo, Urugnay, who is a Hungarian, into the United States? A He should apply for a Hun- garian passport at the office of the Hungarian consul at Montevideo. "hen he should go to the American consul in Montevideo and apply for an immigration visa to the United States. He will have to come in under the Hungarian quota. The fact that yon arc an American citi- zen and that you are sending for him does not entitle him to come to this country outside the quota. Q. How did Sing Sing prison in New York get its name? A. It is an Indian name meaning “the place of a stone*. The prison was named from the place in which have been named from John Sing Sing, a friendly Indian who lived in the days of the colonists Q. Where in the Bible 18 the quotation “Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today and forever” > | | i 5 ourth Liberty | it was located which is supposed te | found ? A. Hebrews 13:8. Q. What is the value of the Ericsson memorial issue of a five cent postage stamp issued in 1926— color lilac grey? A. Dealers offer them for ten cents if uncancelled and six cents if cancelled. Q. Where was Jesse James born? A. In Clay county, Missouri, in 1850. He was killed April 3, 1852 in his home. He is buried near Kearny, Missouri, in a corner of the yvard of his mother's old home. Q. What is the origin of name Nall? A. It is British (Anglo-Saxon) being an abbreviation of Attenall, meaning “at the hall”. The re- ference is to a family who lived at the great hall or near the town hall. Q What is the chemical com- position of gasoline? | A It is variable. gasoline contains some or following ingredients: Pentane, hexane, Octtane, nonane, decane, undecane. In addition there may bhe other hydrocarhon compdunds present. The percentage of these ingredients varies with the method | of manufacture and with the pur- | poses for which the Ordinary, al! of the the gasoline is used. Q. What nationality were the parents of Woodrow Wilson? A. Wilson's father, Rev. Joseph R. Wilson, was a native of Ohio. His mother, Jesse Woodrow, was born in Carlisle, England. Thé an- cestry on both sides was Scotch- Trish. Q. How fast does an elephant travel? A, The elephant is not a fast animal. Its greatest value to man is in its endurance and not its speed. An elephant will carry from 1,700 to 2,200 pounds on a long journey, maintaining a steady pace of about four miles per hour. Q. Is there a national tion of Audubon societies? A. The National Association of Audubon Socleties is located at 1974 Broadway, New York City. associa- Observations On The Weather Washington, June 22.—TForecast for Southern New Englan Rain tonight and probably Saturday morning. Not quite so cool Satur- day; fresh to strong east winds, shifting to southeast on Saturday. Forecast for Eastern New York: Cloudy, preceded by rain this after- noon and early tonight; Saturday partly cloudy; warmer on coast, probably followed by showers in af- ternoon or at night; fresh northeast winds shifting to south on Saturday. Conditions: Pressure continues low ecast of the plains states and | there is not much improvement in | conditions, due to stagnation of the iow pressure areas on the middle Atlantic coast. Showers continue from Virginia northward along the coast to Nantucket. An area of high pressure over the itime Provinces is moving very eastward, No material changes in temperature were re- ported. Conditions favor for this vicinity unsettled, showery weather with WALLACE BEERY MAY TAKE PART IN FLIGHT Movie Star Considering Dawn-toe Dusk Attempt in September Hollywood, Cal., June 22 (#—Wal« lace Beery, screen comedian and aviation enthusiast, plans to enter a monoplane in the transcontinental dawn-to-dusk flight which is to be a part of the national air meet in Los Angeles next September. He hopes to span the New York to T.os Angeles route in 16 hours or better, using a specially built tw seater open monoplane with accoma modations for himself and pilot. The project as vet is tentative, dependent on motion picture pre duction schedules and other factors % ¥ which might interfere, but Bee enthusiastic. He does most of traveling now in a speedy biplane, and at the moment he discussed the dawn-to-dusk project hetween scenes on location about 200 miles from | here, the little ship which brought him to work by air was waiting on a landing field nearby. The flight will be purely a sport= ing proposition so far as T am con= cerned,” said the comedian. “I'm not eager to win a prize or coves myself with glory. T just like flying, that's all, and the dawn-to-dusk race ought to he a real thrill."” ECHO OF LYNCHING Houston, Tex., June 22 (M—Foug men were arrested here late yesters | day in econnection with the lynching of Robert Powell, negro, who was taken from his bed in the city hos« pital and hanged to a bridge post several miles from the city early Wednesday. Chief of Police Goodson Saind said one of the men had made & statement which will elear up the entire case. RAIN PREVENTS FLIGHT Lakehurst, N. J., June 23 (UP)=s Rain prevented the navy dirigible Los Angeles from starting for Lows ell, Mass, today where an airport dedication ceremony is being held. Lieut. Commander Charles Ros« endahl, commander of the Los Ane geles, sald he would leave late today or tomorrow if weather permitted, [BIAR ALS L Combining two pairs in one, for far and near sight. A PINKUS) OPTOMETRIST | 3 RAILROAD ARCADE little change in temperature. When you turn your dial to tune the instrument in front of you is the ment? It was in 1827 that Savai could be magnetized from a Leyden has made possible modern radio. bulletin of 6,000 words af condensed i development in thie past send for it: s I l NAME 1322 w York Avenue, T want a copy of the hulletin' ONE VELOPMENT, and enclose herewith 8. postage STREET AND NUMBER CITY West Toonerville News Item EZRA FUTTY'S NEW SUMMER BOARPER WALKEP INTo THE BARNYARP WEARING ©NF OF THEM THERF SPORT eUTPITS. A HUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO made the discovery that inventors and scientists have contributed a bit lere and a hit -there which Our Washington Bureau hundred years, CLIP COUPON HERE RADIO EDITOR, Washington Bureau, Washington, D. stamps, or coln, to cover postage and handling .. BTATE I am & reader of the Daily NEW BRITAIN HERALD, )G in your radio set, do you know that result of a hundred years of develop- a steel needle jar, and since that time hundreds of line prepared a the story of radio below and A nformation ehwoing Fill out the coupon Dally New Britain Herald, HUNDRED YEARS OF five cents in loose, RADIO DE- ancelled, U, costs:: ur | I | | J