New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 5, 1928, Page 6

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New Britain Herald RALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Teswed Delly (Sunday Ezcepted) | At Hersld Bidg., $1 Church Street GUBSCRIPTION RATES 6. & Month Eatered at the Post Office at New Brit- ain 8s BSecond Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Business Office ... 525 Editortal Rogms .... 926 The only profitable sdvertising medium City. Circulation booke and press ® open to advertisers. Momber of the Asmoclated Press The Associated Press is exclusively en ditled to the use for re-publicaticn of all pews credited to it or not otherwise credited tn this paper and also local wews published therein. Member Aodit Buresa of Circalation The A. B. C is & national organization which furnishes Dewspapers and adver- tisers with s strictly honeet analyels circulation. Our circulation etatisticy audit Th! local sdvertisers. The Herald ia on sils dally in New York et Hotaling's Newsstand. Times | Square; Schults's Newsstands, Entrance | Grand Central, ¢3ud Btrest. e | company. Hubert Work is managing the Hoover campaign, and a gentleman named Good is western manuager. That ought to somewhere. insure Good Work woman hit and in With an alleged run driver sentenced to Bridegport, it begins to look as the | equality of the sexes is no longer a myth. sail Seems that everybody had a day off yesterday except the trolley motarmen, the bus Wrivers, railroad engineers and conductors, railroad station employes, taxi drivers, filling station employes, fireworks seller restaurant and hotel employes, morning newspaper workers, and | Al Smith, who made two speeches. As an instrument of disaster on the Fourth of July, the deadly toy | pistol seems to have given way to | the gay-colored motor car. | While traveling in a steel railroad | coach through southern California Mayor Walker of New himself 1n pajamas, reception committecs. has traveled during hot weather in a steel coach will agree that the wmayor exercieed good sense. | York clad | regardless cf Anyone who | course. The former Thus the United States Lines and the American Merchant Lines, the two finest services operated in the | | North Atlantic by the government, enormous wealth as will pass from its hands in due line comprises five ehips, the latter ten combina- tion passenger apd cargo vessels. The former German vessels Mt conditioned at a cost of $12,000,000. Included in the batch of ships | which will be placed on eale will be the Leviathan, the biggest of the lot It looks as if the government will out of the shipping business November elections roll get before the round. PROGRESS IN MAINE Two progress items of importance were reported from Maine this k Th 000 wer opening of the new $3,00 utomobile bridge across the of Connecticut being one ot those present at the dedicatory ex- Announcement a $7,000,000 power project on the upper Kenne- bee by the Central Maine Tower company, financial support being extended by Martin J. Insull, president of the Middlewest Utilities The Maine hydroelectric concern Is a subsidiary of the Insull concern {rom the middle west. ot river The bridge is regarded as ushering in a new era for northern Maine. | Heretofore getting across the Ken- | nebee was a slow process, the fer- ries plying only every haif hour and being inadequate to the demaads. The bridge constructed and in use, a “flood of traffic" is expected to rush into northern Maine. For three centuries northern Maine has ex- isted without this bridge; now it is to boom, declare all from Governor down. Perhaps they are right. The power development on the the public £peakers Brewster upper Kennebec will be the largest of its kind in New England. It will entail the construction of a 90-foot dam and a 60,000-horsepower sta- tion. Thousands of men will be em- ployed In construction work. The velopment is expected to be fin- tend nine miles along the Kennebec 5,000,000,000 feet of water. The law In Maine still holds that | been done only twice before, bLoth | power from the state cannot be ex- ported to other states. Maine con- tinues zealous of its power resources, | fondly hoping that when there arc «xploit and died more monster hydroelectrical velopments more industries de- | come to the state. Or maybe the In- THE SALARY SITUATION i As we get it, if the Common Coun- cil and the respective boards do not concur about certain salaries the sulls hope that the nged to allow power That is th: more proba law will be export le. NEW | came to his death by falling from a | plane crossing the English Chunnel. had f by a attained £ Midus hed the end of his career Thus a man W i touch rea |by opening the wrong door of the waters f the destina- ! plane and care the below. The pilot, continued ening to unaware to o tragedy, his | Vernon and Monticello will be re- | tion. | Loewenstein was one of the Baltiun mines shareholders in th system, owned teel furnaces in the north of Spain in coal mines in t Ruhr, in the Belgian Congo. Untll a few ago was practically known in the United States, but not after he had offered to loan Belgium §50,000,000 for two years interest in order to Saar basin and the enormous rubber plantations | years he un enable Short san her to stabilize her currency there- he offered to rance a ar amount at 2 per cent inter- ' Kennebec at Bath, Governor Trum- loewenstein once said he had built his fortunc sound businee: hunches as to the trend of industry. on The sen of a banker in Brussels, he fairly modest circum- stances, the start only a He | got an idea that artiticial silk wauld the world heavily. He would begaa life in having at few thousand franc early lwin its way in and in- vested in it lieved hydroclectric power great strides and became int [in it South Amer op- | portunitics for investment which he ! seized with vigor. Such methods he | continued for 39 years, and begame | the richest man in Europe. A man who had attained a for- | |tune of tueh dimensions it is dif- | In ica were ficult to count it and in the ac- quiring thereof showed undouted genius, was so thoughtless as to open |a wrong door in an airplane and fall | from it. What ! played by the unwise alike, BOUNCING OVER THE FALLS | The main story in the Spring- field papers today has to do with the without | amazing tricks are | fate upon the wise and | BRIT |acually needs. Such a policy would Inot reduce the public debt, which in turn would not distinguish the |American government's finances from those of many nations of urope whicl are forced to adopt the principle from necessity. | The American debt was not reduc- «d entlrely from the~ surplus, of course, as that would have been lm—‘ possible. I ully debt was reduce £540,000,000 of ti 4 from the sinking tund, which exists for that purpose alone, and from other | ment funds chargeable against r ! ceipts; but the remainder came from the surplus. There 18 no fault to find with the asury under Mellon's tr manage- ment. is $17,604,000,000. Tn 1921 it approximately $24.000,000,000. More was than a quarter of the 1921 total has | been paid off a result that has been ieved by the ather than the permitting it to joying lower will to pay it off casier method ay high and en- taxation, the debt is reduced we get the lower federal As taxation way, having Iiss inter- est to pay. make | rested BY ROBLERT QUIL The good don't dic youn seems that way because jover it while young | Doubtiess Mr, boy. Heflin, arried water for the even a elephant | Avout an Frominent ¢ |you can't see. ou get out of being a izen is a fine funeral [ Some husbands have no desire petted, They are dead, How strange that Christian hould eall their worst 1 ts of God to b people amiti cxploit of a fellow citizen, one Jean Lussier, who rolled over Niagara | alls in a specially contrived rub- ber ball and lived to be taken from |ished in 1931, The project will ex- the contraption fully aware of what had transpired, but a bit dazed or | {river and the dam will impound i seasick, | It was a wonderful feat and had times wor in barrcls and once by & an, Annie E. Taylor. £he had never realized anything from her in an infirmary, T'he other successful Niagara hopper will | was Bobby Leach, who went into New vaudeville and met aland when death slipped in he on an oran . hay bility of cash- & | before him the po would-be recipiepts of the cmolu- A BOY ADVERTISES THE CITY € In on Deing a man of distinc- ments do not get any. Which ie to say, if the Common Council and the boards for various reasons, political and otherwise, can- not agree, the unfortunate gentle- men hired by the city can whistic for their money. Go to court, maybe, and let the judge decide what their services are rgasonably worth. To anybody but a law} action over salaries makes no instant appeal. It is an uncertain and ex- pensive manner of settling a disputc | which can be settled less expensive- Jy and expeditiously in a more ac- ceptable manner. In other words, the city hall hoys need only to quit playing ping-pong and come down to earth re elemental civie management. . a court wrding SELLING THE SHIPS plan of the 8 Shipping the finest of the aegis The Board to sell operating under government s now thoroughly un- der way, The eklds have been greas- ed and the launching will be the ships ploughing into the priv Greasing the skids liners of the one of ate operation. for the event i not entirely metaphorically speal ing nor Is it The sales committee board had come to an unanit Thiz only through hyperbole. ship of the ous verdict verdict was possible the to the 1. Cone mbers Hu Sandberg. accession of 1wo new 1 hoard—Rear-Admiir and Samuel S h These gentler were outspoken | advocateos of getting ri v 1 of the ships fore they were ind« pointed to suee 8 \ppo to th hoard; that a, is y they were Admiral 8. Bensgon and I had been at odds with the adminis- The those tration plan the simple: on Pl e hoard the who favore sale of the opposing vith And ir men their thus we have what we Fhave n O'Conn vho con- ently favor ships, 1s the other me ship sales committec therefore s unanimou le. The plan to sell th ferred to the week. It took than a week to committec the committee come to a decision The decisior going through th bating the matter committce item that ne is the pian of procedure—how to s=ll for the b and magbe even that will not be much to worry ahout. I were 1 s particular attention them possible price: As we understand it, the ne reels will show all about the finals in the Atlantic City marble shooting tournament, and as Dominic Cartelli of New Britain with the was the contender winner the name of this in all likelihood will forth to millions of screen fans th coming week. Thus it remains for a city blazg boy to produce more advertising for | the city than anything happening in w decade, Our marble champ made a game t and entitled to the mendation of his native city for the efforts which nearly landed him at the top. Only one could win the match and the reason Cartelli didn't been due to the fact from Olio wae just a hetter is comn- win must have that the hoy shade the player. Good portsmanship dictates being satis- ficd with the outcome; in this, as in all other things of {life, let the best lad Since win. Cartelli shooting did €0 well in the have shooting marble sport we oticed more marble around the city than ever hefore Some other lads seem fo be in train- for such honors The it 15 come with looting. has much to commend zame A at least ha hoy prac- ticing marbles will for more mischicvous pastim 1t is and summer siesta of bereft shooter cve during rort dangers no had rt. This times, good marble cultivated habits from following the sp: cannot be said of all as most of them may be e city in the te interest taken 1 rou ont the fortune telli quich of Car illust once again ho citizens, to fellow old young, warm up anybody who distinction A 1ad Cartelll won the brings upon the hom. to firet class celobration was champion- failure to win in aia admiration th, ; but even his nl shig the fi match not Iy dampen the t bogan to run rampant. 1f the excort had been able to n tions and arrive in the <chedule co ity on the welcome at the ra station would have surpasscd any- kind in years. s DEATH indeed the 1 that the richest man in Lurepe isited narrowly wak tame to Belgian { H United escaped venstein, 4 but ceently tates where ath when getting 100 close 10 the ravolv- ing propeller of an airplane fate was bound this “Henry Ford to snateh €rom Iif: of Europe” he s | debtopayers, lod and his train road wanner | Alfred Lancier, ¢ [tlon. We are not intcrested so much | in how he does it as we are in the rubber ball *t in diameter, cushions specially constructed This ball, built with and a hard rubber weight on the one side to ca ihout 12 { inside : it to remain upright when possible, scems so simple that it s 'a wonder no one else had ever thought of it. In st addition, tightly Lussier vas apped onto the | cushions, including his head. Al he had to do was to stay in his prison— in also | supplies—until the ‘0 simple, perhaps, Stil, fow which there were oxy trip was over that anybody for wnce. No company need be formed to give the falls for the can try it would care the ex rides over to such as to v fun. There is enough exeitement dodzing automobiles, | THE AMERICAN TREASURY Financially hard-pres Eure- 5 the have we to think the an- ooking a pean nations, at these another item of When uc ocean Unite had abo United nounced Stat the report of States Treasury was this week the Which to Europe statistics will be that we ad well 1dditional evidenee more money th n is good for us. The cringing under 62-year contracts, wondor pay money to a nation hav- ing more than it needs, | the s 15 the talk gentlemanly and courteous. The Awieri to the v is a desite for mor: an treasnry, according W. Mellon, a healthy condi- port of Andresw its secretary, is in tion. The surplus mounts §i in real monvy, The esti- the fact that actual surplus was less than the mate was $4( the rior estim that curately all t re §3 tes indicates merely it is not possible to guess as- - time, The expendi- tures w 644,000,000, and this sum also was more than the estimat- cd expenditures made carlier, this estimate havi 1,006,000, I ordinary v $4,042,- woo,u00 which also was slig than th tin which had b £.076,000,00 incom were $2,174.000,000; ad been $ debt wa 000—a Leeeipts estimate 1 The 2.165,000,000 public reduced by important point ani one which ought to a al strongly The to the American people. fulnee crnment surplus has been much dehated i Congress. Some would gots: or, putting the matter in an- other light, collect no more than it | have mx‘ the | A friend in necd would gladly help you Lie spent his st dollar 'he use of too many s s a lawyer politi- who that a friend except yeste Redundan: | words; i !cian, i It's too late to feel vindictive, but | we hope the two ants old Noah took wboard got into the butter, 1A same boss™ mule's “political way Whichever w %o, the nosc is out in front. Americanism: that Harold will [ness and become I torced through college leads nose in the docs. A sublime great man if Mr. Reed favors ‘“impartial forcement.” Everyhody will cnforcement has been partial in on. | sense, en- agreo The latest statistics show per cent of the valedictorians now | huve good for chaps who dropped out at the 7th grade jobs workin | The reason the trout take the prosident’s flies reluctantly is he- cause they think any insect that big lis @ native mosquito. 'S Pity the girl, who has bran Man's vanitg impels lim to fall {love with an inferior i | There is a little v-first con- SErY in all of and when | Henry Mencken took off his coat at Kansas City he revesled suspende doesn't change, and Adam said My osh an't you get a b r than that | Human nature doubt {woman lig lea i 1s [view avink, all for a drink rd to get o the the Hdiced for a an unpr mien look world ' Fach |one great work tion produr diberal thinker” consists in saying t leact vhose i Darn religion.” | Correct this sentence: s {only ehild,” said the gossip, he dovsn't resent eriticism,” '8, Publishe Copyright 1 rs Syndicate i to ! | et i Two Reglistered Pha | iy less | No need te suffcr from hay fever You can RELTE colin, amasin: di o Bos] of maintaining a | 0 As if ' have the government cxpend afl it debt retire- | The gross debt of the nation now | v the mule decides 1o faith § over his dumb- | that §3| seems looking | | | Shop Editor, care of the New Gritaln Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. Our Suggestion for the Motor} We're thinking, Folks, at once agatn the “hotdog™ stands appear motor highways there should e established stands of cheer T'o serve what tourlets really need; fun-wiches, epirits gay, Then traffic jams and road-hogs, too, would lose their sting, we On Too Mu Hardware Dealer: “It wouldn't cost you much to have your house Customer: “No, but when a fel. {low's got & house and eight daugh- Lters he can't very well attend to { both WHEN BLACK IS READ — Quick, Watson! I'n ot a college graduate | Good lady, get me right; 1 louk like this because T slept In this blue suit all night! —Henry Griffin When Cissie Swims! When Cissie swims, by strict com- mand ¢ doesn’t venture far from land, | But shows her skill where all may ! view Ieyond the waves a yard or two; And oh! her paddle stroke is grand. Up swings her hand, One snowy white, the other tanned; And water-wings are quite taboo When Cissie swims. gleaming arm and Her course no current can stand, Yet, all the time, her smile is bland, | While now and then above the blue | 1A little foot appears, and who | Would guess the other's on the sand When Cissie swims? —William Saycr . e Never Lven Newlywed with- . Moved! lhese biscuits are | terrible, dear. They are absolutely Llack on one side.” wiywed: “That's the fault of the recipe, dear. 1t said Wait till | they are done to a turn’ and I watcherd them carefully but not one | of them turned!” —Horace Liveright Politicians see little prospect of a third party in the nest presidential election, A third par about as popular love! in politics secms as a third party in | A YES-MAN SAYS NoO! By Th son B. Streep All of my lite I have been a poor | es-man. It somebody said it was cold, I hastencd to say yes, even I mogped my brow. If they give anything the merry ha-ha, I join the chorus. The high-pressure salesmen me easy picking. 1 ing from a for my cigar find hey sell me any- patented windshield lighter to a Haddinok “8.* With a NO in my heart, my tongus says YES, My decision to be a worm that turncd followed my journcy through the Bankrupt Court. I clipped the well-known coupon. Standing before {the mirror I would repeat for hours, NO-NO-NO-NO-NO. 1y confidence surged upward. 1 would be a NO- Man, The Salesman entered my office, ure of his victim. He was thinking | sbout a new car he would buy with his profits. 1 smiled as 1 thought of the shock he was going to get. He gave the usual line, and placed the dotted line under my nose, saving, “‘you can't go wrong it von sign here. My tongue said NO, even signed! as 1 | { "1 GUESS L\ STOP i GOIN' WITH CYCLONE, [ HAVE To DO ALL THE WAGGIN' FOR BOTH OF { us!” | | 1 | Strongheart, the Pup Frightful? Kirke: “Life at home is terrible! Barker: “How's that?” Kirk baby is getting old cnough to deny some of the things 1 do myself and b on him!" —Christopher Sausscr DRAWING MADF &impson, Art Director you had sweeth i, and you want a real picture for your windshield. Doesn't that Inspirc you I with the ¢ ¢ to hecome an artist in five casy lesson | Select a good huckground | your Sweetheart. It marrie llhzat the wife or husband some other state. Place easel handy place. You are now | begin your first picture. | Mount camera on easel and snap | picture. Follow instructions care- | fully. From straight lines and curv- :-'l circles to portraiture in three j easy lessons. How simple s our irounef And how simple are our students! Now with your pencil make a dot, two dashes, dot. Ask messenger boy getting ASY By L. | Suppos and be sure is in in a ready to what it means. If he dovsu't know send us yeur check for §5.00 and we will raise it to $30.00! Lave plough on your farm City Man: “Of course, not. They're always breaking down.” Hoskins: “Breaking down City Man: “Certainly. Every time 1 ever saw one there was a horsc rulling it!” —A. J. Hilhoff (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS 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- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fdgntial.—Tditor. Q. What do the words Beth and Israel mean? . “Beth” is Hebrew and means house”. “Beth Israel” means “house of Isracl”. Israel means “prince with God” and was the new namre given to the patriarch Jacob. Q. What was the cause of the 1848 uprising in Germany? A. The demand of the liberals in Germany for a constitutional gov- ernment. Q. What titles do the children of English dukes, marquesses, early, viscounts and barons have A. In the peerage of Great Britain and Ireland, the eldest sons of dukes and marquesses take, by courtesy, their father's second title. The other sons and daughters arc styled “Lord” and “Lady”. The cldest sons of earls take, by cour- tesy, their father's second title, the vounger sons heing styled *The Honorable”, the daughters “Lady”. The eldest sons of viscounts and barons have no distinctive title; they, as well as thelr brothers and sisters, are styled “The Honorable", whether males or females. Q. How can the North Star be located in the heavens? A Of the seven stars forming the big dipper, the pair farthest from the “handle” of the dipper are called “the pointers” because they point to the north star Polaris. The pointers are five degrees apart, An imaginary line through them will intersect with the North Star. Q. How long ago was Emma Goldman deported from this coun- try? A. She was deported December 22, 1919, Q. What are the latest films in which Louise Brooks appeared? A. “Evening Clothe: and Girl in Every Port.” Q. By what railroad Moffatt Tunnel used? A. Dy the Denver and Salt Lake railroad. The tunnel is 6.09 miles long, and cuts off 23 miles and 2,406 feet in elevation from the old line, Are cannon balls used now? A Cannon now shoot bullet- shaped projectiles, called shells? Q. Are the wives and dependent children of immigrants, resident in 1his country, who have declared fheir intention to become American citizens, now given preference in immigration quotas? A. Yes, under provisions of an amendment to the immigration act recently passed Q. Who published “When You wore a Tu Wore a Red. Red Rose" A Loe Feist, 235 West street, New York City, in 1914. Q. Can a label on a package be “A s the the song p and 1 40th | States Supreme coury which copyrighted A. No, but it can be registered il the Trade Mark Division of the United' States Patent Office at Washington, D. C. Such devices are protected under the trade mark laws and not under the copyright law, Q. How many acred are there in {the grounds of the Soldiers' Home !u! Washington, D. C.? When was the home established ? A, The grounds comprise 512 acres. The homec was established in 1851 for men who served in the regular army. Q. What ia the value of a United States large copper cent dated 1801, also one dated 18207 A. The former is valued at 10 to 50 cents and the latter at 3 to 25 centa. Q. How many wards are there in a novel? p | A. Novels may run from 70,000 to0 150,000 words. | Q. Where and when was Jesse | James born and when was he killed? ! What was his wife’s name? A. He was born in Clay County, Missouri, in 1850. He was shot and killed on April 3, 1882. His wite was Zerelda Minns whom he mar- ried April 24, 1874. Q. On what dates Sunday fall in 18592 A. April 24 Q. What became of the suit which the United States hrought against the International Harvester Company? A, The United States brought suit against the International Har- vester Company under the Sherman anti-trust law in 1913, The case was tried in the Federal court at St. Paul, Minn, and resulted in a {ocren ordering dissolution of the rust. The case was taken to the United States Court of Appeals in 1915 and finally reached the United ren- dered a decision in 1918 sustaining the decision of the lower court. 25 Years Ago Today E. N. Humphrey has been elect- nber of Hartford lodge, B. did Easter Of the two New Britain riders in to Palmer, Mass, Jean H. Bartlett was the only one to finish. , He had a game time of it, meeting Wwith several accldents on the road, but he stuck to it. Eight miles from the finish his front fork cracked, but he hjt his highest speed and finished among the leaders. As he fell off, his wheel collapsed. “Bar- ney” Doherty, on a wheel built by himself, received his quictus at Woodmont when he was thrown in- to a bank and injured his wrists and hands so that he could not go on. New Britain's Y. M. C. A. team finished second in the athletic meet at Morris cove yesterday. Ernest Teiche was first in the shot put and the pole vault and George B. Clary second in the running high jump. Frank Olcott tied for second honors in the 70-yard swim. won the tub ruce, and was second in the high dive, & The crew of a train through here last night reported that the train liad struck a man near the Stanley Works, but Chicf Kawlings hasn't been able' to find out if anyone was | the Canadian Nerthwest | far southwest with a trough of low | pressure between them. the auto cycle race from New York | crew looked for the victim but could not find him. A meeting of those interested 1 the Plainville camp meeting W held in Berlin las night, and it was planned to build a New Britain church house at the camp ground. It was stated that it could be built for about $800, H. L. Mills and family have taken a cottage at Middle beach, Madison, for the season. Last Sund to placate some | boys, the proprietor of the merry.go-round at White Oak gave some noisy small boys a free rides One insisted upon having the pe formance repeated, whereupon & spectator took him and spanked himy The spectator was tried in Plainvile last night ut was freed. C. F. Conlon was prosecutor. It is possible that out of this affair will come prose- cution for violation of Sumday law at White Oak. Observations On The Weather Washington, July 5.—Forecast for Southern New England: Local thunder storms this afternoon or to. night; cooler tonight; Friday fair and cooler; gentle to moderate shifting winde becoming northerly. Forecast for Eastern New York: Fair tonight and Friday, preceded by local thunder showers this af- ternoon or early tonight in south portion; somewhat cooler tonight gentle to moderate shifting win becoming northerly. Conditions: Pressure continues relatively low over the Middle At- lantic states and New England. It is high over the lake region and the southern states. Temperatures con« tinue abnormally high east of the plains states and scattered thunder storms were reported from the Mis« ippi valley eastward to the coast. Centers of low pressure pretail over and the Conditions favor for this vicinity local showers followed by fair and cooler. Temperatures yesterday: High .02 .18 92 82 86 9 Low T4 68 i 68 02 3 62 . 88 4 . 60 50 84 T 88 4 94 78 86 o 82 . 88 92 86 90 84 Atlanta Atlantic City . Boston Buffalo .. Chicago ... Cincinnati . Denver | Detroit , Duluth Hatteras .. Jacksonville w..... Kansas City . Los Angeles . Miami shville ew Haven . New Orleans New York . Norfolk Portland, Me. St. Louis . 92 Washington 9% R T T S N =Ty Free Examination HEART and LUNGY Tuesday and Friday Aftcrnoons NEW BRITAIN CLINIC Booth Block hit. The train was stopped and the When you turn your dial to tune inventors and ecicntis lias made possible modern radio. send for it: RADIO TLITOR, 1323 T l v 8. STREET ' cIry L Now York Avenue, nt & copy of the hulletin ONE postage stamps, or coln, ME AND NUMBER West Toonerville News Item FASTENEP A SKYROCKET <Te CLIP CUTPUN BERE ONE OoF THOSE “ToY A BUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO in your radio set, do yoy kmow that the instrument 1n front of you (s the tesult of a hundred years of develop- merit? It was in 1827 tlat Savary made the discovery that s wteel needle could be magnetized from a Leyden jar, and einc that time hundreds of have contributed a bit here and a bit there which Our W bulletin of 6,000 words of condensed infor: development in tho pnst lundred years. Fill out the coupom below aud Washington Bureau, Daily New Britaln Herald, Washington, D. C HUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO DE- SLOPMENT, and enclose herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. to cover posta and handling cost T am a reader of the Daily NEW BRITAIN HERALD. e S e By Faontaine Fox THE HIGH SPoT OF THE DAY WAS WHEN -ToMBoY -TAYLOR AIRPLANES |

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