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New Britain Herald WBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY teswed Dally (Bunday Bacepted) At Hersld Bidg.. ¢7 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES Batered at the Post Ofice at New Brit- ain e» Second Clase Mail Mattor. TELEPHONB CALLS Busisess Office Editorial Rooms The ealy profitable \a the City. Circulatiop bool reom siwaye epen to sdvertisers. Momber of the Assucisted Press Fhe Associated Press s exclusively en- titled to the use for re-pubilcation of ol credited to it or mot otherwise eredited in this paper and also local sews published thereln. Member Audit Bureso of Circulation Che A B. G is a Dational organization which turntshes wpapere sud adver- tlgers w'th a strictly honest apalyste of eirculation. Our circulation statistics a Nesed upon this audit. This {Beures pro- tection sgainst fraud in mewspaper dis- sribut! res to both netional and local advertisers. o Herald 13 om sale dally In New l-’r’: st Hotallug's Newsstand. Times Square; Schults's Newsstanda, Entrance Grand Central, ¢3nd Street. e The water trough at the Center has had a steady stream of cu: tomers lately. The hotter the at- mosphere the greater the public thirst. Why doesn't the city provi a “new and handsomer” likewise more modern, water dispensary this point? The present outfit looks as if 1t were 400 years old. e The mayor's fish in Stanley Quar- ter pond by this time are quite hap- py, but they would be even happi and the children who are taken to the park would come ih increasing a numbers and enjoy themselvea morc | it there were ducks in the pond as well, as is the case in Meriden and Hartford. Our duck program is dycks In that pond and benchea in all the parks. more IF IT WERE ALWAYS HOT Whew! If it were always What a terrible life it would be. It a hot wave caused more people to dle from its effects than are Killed by autamobiles during the same period, what a distressing outlook for the race. As for physical comfort, where ecould we find it? Maybe at the seashore, or in the family tub, but nowhere else. And of course, nobody could work under such‘con- | ditions—recreation to lure cool breezes would be the hdighth of all ambitions, Most of the hot weather distress is caused by our failure to dress for the occasion. We wear clothing that is a first rate covering during the majority of moderately cool days; when the sizzlers come along we are simply caught witn too much on. The men especially are victims of overdressing. What a hero is the man who on a day with mometer boiling at 95 in the shade ean wear a collar and necktie, or the ther- even a coat. We could learn much, from the people who live tropics—provided, of course, that we had enough of this hot stuff to make it worth wbile to do as they do. But it only lasts a short time in A STRICKE! The town of 1 population, has more than 600 per- | sons euffering from sore throat. There have deaths. Emergency te combat the epidemic of sickness have been taken; doctors and nurses from near and far have hurried fo the tewn to succor the people. And what caused this It has been definitely traced by the health authorities to ths milk sup ply. A milk dealer’s helper, #o the story runs, was taken il two ago. Germs infected the milk and he carried them with intected others. As the “germs soon more peopl septic been twelve measures epidemic? seks about him and often happens spread rapidly,” were getting i1l than doctors could attend. Still, there the oversight of the often overdone. those who think milk supply is A PARK IN PLAINVILLE Plainville has acquire a park of 1 opportunity to irly acres and ehould accept Th H. Norton to give : opportunity with alacrit round fo the town i on strokes of philanthrophy ich no flord to pass by secms to be on tion to Plainville 1esidents thing of a swamp part of What of it? It well as the present th s the t Plain in duty bound to ground, no matter how s sometimes perin tly drainage. T and comparativel the cnd sought Plainville It s just f portant p and Bristol. 1f Plainville makes the mistake 6f not secepting the park offer #1 will bitterly rue Its lack of foresight in the years to come. and future generations will indulge in may is duc to 510 ieelf rapidly ing as an im- hot! | and offer of Charles | no end of critjcism. Plainville need only to refer to the park history of New Britain. The hardware city would not have | had Walnut Hill park had it not been for a gift, and at the time the land was donated to the city there no doubt were some citizens Who thought the town would really never need the park, or who would have preferred to see the land cut | up into building lots. Now we've got the park and con- | sider it among our finest posses- | sions. Plainville has an opportunity to | go through the same delectable ex- perience. COMPLETING THE SCHOOL | 1t is imperative that “ways and | mieans” be found to complete the Isracl Putnum school so that it be ready for occupaney in the fall. | This is the school, it will be remem- | ered, which was damaged by fire | carlier in the year and for which | the School Board received $70,000 | in insurance money, which at time was deemed miore than suf- ficient the school. Now for several weeks no work has | been done on the building because there has been no money on hand the to reconstruct for the purpose. The Board of Finance and Taxa- I fer tonight and it is to be hoped | that Chairman Hall and his col- | leagues will find & way to provide money with which to complete the | building. As everyone knows, | 870,000 insurance money was plac- |ed in the “general fund" 1 other things regarded as more press- ing than the reconstruction of the school. The School Board has made a candid explanation and has given reasons to justify its action. That water having passed over the nla;, we have ne desire to refer to it again and accept the board's reason with grace. All of which, however, does not help to reconstruct | to be scrved with satisfactory school accommodations this fall. The Hall committee being on the job In this matter it is likely that something definite will acerue quickly. There should be no need for further delay. THE NIGHT CLUBS | The report of the Committee of i 14 regarding conditions in the night speak- casles in the metropolls includes a | statement that vice conditions now are worse than they were 20 years ago, worse even than in the days of the old Ra‘mes law hotels, which operated on a go-as-you-please plan. It is distressing to all well-wishers of social improvement it this report should be accurate, | clubs and certain types of | their method of subtracting | sums from patrons, to all report large this according being done on the holdup plan. Not only is food and drink sold at unconscionable rates, but in many of the clubs if not all of them there is no menu card or | Vill of fare in sight. and when | patron orders “wine" he gets | champagne, which costs many times | when he the impression they | cost any liberal sum he finds they iln\"lrmM\ cost him four to | times what he expected. The girls, or hostes expected to lure | him Into as liberal a frame of mind | as circumstances warrant. Member- | <hip fees, cover charges ana inol help to rat: the cost to cus- | tomers to dizzy heights, and thos: | who haven't enough money ¢ their bills before leav e checks. of amazing mor under are s, are what them to p: ing can les It is a holdup proportions, 1f spenders called no- body would complain, perhaps: out of the thousands of translents in town all the time are recruited [ the game only wealthy but majority of customers, to vietims who are anxious try anything onee, | 1t is for this reason that scarcely "anyone sympathizes with the night | clubs when they run afoul of the law. Unlike legitimate enterprises, | thelr ex-customers, an army of men their throughout the country, are sreatest enemies. THI On AN AVIATOR country's wr of the bitions aviato most am- has flown and thinks of he- who thousands of mil, ing a transoccanic flier, has been sued for divorce by his wife on the core a married aviator has no busi- ness risking his life in stunt flights; that it is the business of such a man to think of his wife | stunt fiying may be all right the and children, single men, but ried We quite : | When @ mar not for mar- iety. with the ree woman. ed aviator Lilles of necessary risks it 1s the woman ! entldren who are left to suffer should a marrled man take bonds of matrimony lightly? Being a commerclal aviator, how- distinguished from being a as a result taking md his | ever, a ot between New Britain | stunt flier, {8 nothing for a wife te | landed The Britich s fjust announced that durlng as during the two previous s not a single passenger was lkuled during ¢.450 commercial | divorce about Air Min- st i years, | tion and the School Board will con- | the | of the school department and expended for | il school building that needs it if the | residents in that part of the city are | A feature of the night clubs that | is not greatly stressed seems to be | orders concoctions | five | with | for, | un- | Why | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HuRALD, flights. Passengers carried were 18,- 874, The commercial aviators fared equally well. Such a record of air safety not been made in this country, but it is time a start were made. has HOWARD ELLIOTT Fifteen years ago Howard Elliott stepped into the presidency of the | New Haven railroad and saved it from the utter ruin that seemed ‘!immlnem. It was he who followed |up the disastrous regime of Mellen |and the | friends and saved the railroad. He | checked the back on its feet sufficiently to allow the building up process mence, slowly at first, but constant- ly better since that day. He saved | the railroad for its stockholders and |New England. Associated wilh him extravagances, put it to com- of $40,000,060 extracted from the federal government, which was w one of the important turning points |in the New Haven's history from a llow to respectability. This | contrasts with the claims of apologists for the Mellen |yregime that the government ruined the railroad, the government, $40,000,000, saved it. state amusingly | when as a matter of | fact Ly loaning The career of Elliott was climax ed in his own New England, where | he proved to be the sort of builder {the Northeastern states sorely need- NOTABLE EX-SENATOR PASSES George E. nator from Oregon, who has just ! died, was the “father of the selective Chamberlain, former | araft 1aw” adopted during the war. | |He held the important post | chairman of the Senate military | committee at the time | embroiled the United this position he was of tates and in one of the most influential and powerful men | |in the nation, | Chamberlain, Mississippi, leaders of Oregon's political life long originally from became one of latter's monopoly-inspired | were such men as Moorfield Storey | and Walter D. Hines. In 1918 a Joan | the conflict | vote, to be nearer the exact ratio. The electoral system originated during the non-partisan system pre- vailing a few years after the adop- tion of the Constitution. With the development of political parties it is a consant menace as described. As |the result of a close election the ! minority - candidate may legally get into office. This has happened twice | The Waterbury American succint- |ly described the problem in the fol- {lowing words: | he electoral system, Y re- tained in e of political parties, has res in the choice of President and Vice President. not by the vote of the people, but by a vote of States. Thus it may, and twice has, happened that a President who actually received a minori- ty of the popular vote has been put in the White House. This is because a party that carries by narrow margins enough states to give it a majority of the clectoral college can win the clection over its rival which carries its states by huge ma- jorities but ‘which falls short of the required number of elee Fects and Fancies The whole world grows better You never hear a trained clocution- ist any more. We can't help wishing Ananias had lived to write ut least one mor dog story for the popular maga zines, that astonishes not what Al says, he says anything. The thing politicians is the fact that the hut You'll never rise in the just by sticking tizht are, world re you Look at the Pullman window. The Latin inseription for TLou- vain doesn’t matter. The kind of people who might take it seriously can't read Latin the | | before he entered the larger political | | fleld in Washington, D: C. His rec- lord was particularly noteworthy be- | cause of the fact he was a Demo- | crat. Indeed, he was the only Demo- “crat ever named to the Senate by the Republican legislature of Ore- | gon. | His break with President Wilson | during the war was due to what One reason golf is expensive is cause the custom of dressing in a public locker room necessitates the tiscard of holey socks and ragged undies. / {1 only political fences strong enough to keep the bull . | friends of the senator termed his in- | dependence of thought of the His criticism War Department in 1918, | when he said it has “ceased to func- ! tion,” his other serious could have and criti- result than alicnating the affection of the War President from the indomitable senator. Senator Chamberlain, though nomindlly still a Democrat, !later supportéd Senmator Lodge reservations to the League of N | tions. His rift with Wilson was com- i ciems, no other a- pointed to the Shipping Board by President Harding, a “close friend.” | The life of Chamberlain indicates {that as a Democrat |a good Republi more ways than one. This extended from the }4!;),\,~ when Theodore Roosevelt aid- {ed his political fortuncs in Oregon |to hie final Washington. he n in political fortunes to | | THE ELECTORAL COLLEGE | The clectoral colle is one of those things which have come to us trom the days of idealism. Accord- Iing to its electoral system, the vot- | er does not vote for the presidential | candidates directly, | representatives from states in th 1t is ucky that the clectoral college gen- | tlemen do not have a sort of polit- | ical conventi; | but for the the clectoral college after the election is determine who fs listen to over in order fo | elected and speeches. some hot with the elesteral college is to bring about a | The only way fo do away constitutional amendment to that | effec heing attempted. perhaps because the 100 husy looking won't . This isn't politicians are tor issnes that hurt anvene's feclings; per- haps some of which are “non-con- {troversial.” | Should the coming election {close dnd shou!d it happen that the | candidate getting the majority vote | | should happen to land <lectoral might PP vote in the 4 minority then about college, something cventuate |the decripit e. c. The | paople would be numbskulls indeed if they cared to continue a sy | which he American ave (he winority candic | the presidency To discover low casy this happen | | ! it is only necessary to re- view the populur vote for President during recent elsttions and compare | the relative differences hetween the | party totals with the votes obtained Lin the i vlectoral college.® 124 Coon recoived a papu; 016, while Davis gol u total of | say, the loss | than doun the Democe college, Republicans polled the votes garncred by ats. Tn (he 1924 electoral the Republican votes while the Demo- crats zot only 136. Tn other words, |the Republicans” got more twice as many votes i the electoral college as their than 3 1-2 times the Democratic however, than al- | | plete. Atter the war he was ap- | was quite | various | 6.503. That is to | opponents—more | Common itch isn't like the for office. Common itch lasts seven years. itch only Loyalty Las disadvantages, inet positions aren’t offercd <ection that will vote the ticket in any case. Cah- to straight Americanism: Dressing up to hide vour poverty; thinking others rich lecause they dress up. Field glasses are common now, cither bee of the war surplus or because of sleeping porches. The city feller may not be a suck- but he deesn't know any better than fo fish where the natives tel) | him to { A jail entence is the worst peo- ple gt for Iving; for telling [truth they are crucified in | | | They say you can judge a man's | character by the way he sounds his auto horn, That's the only way the | family ¢an judge daughter's friend men are hired to de 1 Only able | questions, but anyhody | cide busines lor death | The eriminal who gets by with a I plea of insinity isn't like the jury. llny\ lack of brains was just tempor- ary electric sign for French harbors: “You are now en- {tering T devastated by darn | ed Germans, &a1cd by those ful Americans.” | Distribution is 11 problem, We need Chicago | roblers in Ari- zona or Arizona cashiers in Chicago. | | Correct thi |20 to a never hav my hnsl sen “When w: caid the wife, “1 an uncasy feeling nd il spill the beans.” i s Copyright. 1928 party, Publishers dicate W. C. T. U. Say Will Win Election T, July 10 P — A issued ifrom mnational of the ‘Women's Temperance Union today t Hoover could los> 1 still be elected dent next November. The republican nomince be defeated in New York, | vania, Massachusetts, Connecticut nd Je and still win « ty of nution's the statement said Two or three wet neighborhoods in a state do not give the state 1o mmany,” the W. C. T. U. officers sserted, citing figures to show that 61 “wet” votes in congress came from scattered districts in 15 states. The Temperance Union also de- red that women of the middle west are organizing “almost entire- Iy on an anti-Tammany basis.” anston, statement I headquart Christian said that 19 most of the ¢ {5 might Pennsyl- votes, | Tt is said tha: these with very red |atls have a misty temper, are im- pulsive, but never bear malice. D e ey were a| boy ’I electoral § Tumowal, JULY f— Seud all communications 0 Fes Shop Editor, care of the New | | Britain Herald, and your lettar will be forwarded to New York. | 7 Right in Our Line! y-cations, Folks, we hope they'll be, No matter where you take’ em, { On hill, by sea, may each day be As funny as they make ‘em! | Ga: | Just Rescantment! ! First Fly (on fly paper): “There's {one feilow I'd like to murder before | second "Who's that?" t Fly: “That guy that used te ch to me about the value of o-it-ivencss! THE MUSIC PIRATE! Iy Rosaline Greene | How shall we punish the | bold, » Who's not—like his namesake fea ‘_ ed of old- | An ocean-c | sold, ! With a skull unroll’d, But a wolf around the music-fold. Who kidnaps people’s airs. Pirate man in feathers and and-crossbones flag Sweet notes, not addressed to him, he'll pri; Opera, ballad, fox trots, iig; He burgles composers little and bl | Lor their keys and bars cares not fig, And no musiclan spares. | i | | | | | 1 Prepared and resolved such crimes a Common the Mode! Yvonn-: “Wouldn't you like to go to this restaurant and have a nice, big, beefsteak dinner?” Dorothy: “No, I'd rather be om the outside looking thin!” —Milton P. Knight THE RACES Mike, the Milkman Oi wuz to th’ horse races rainy day racently. Ol took Mrs. Clancy along because it wuz mud- | ders day. All iv (' scats were filled lso we had a erand stand on th’ | grand-stand. Whin Oi wint to th’ = O had a big voll in me pock- an’ me head full iv systems f'r beatin® th* races, but— Oi towld Maggie she would have to walk home from th' etation, but she shouted thot wuz imposible be- cause she could har-rdly shtand en her ftate, Thot woman %knows her bunions. So Oi had to tilliphone to th' liver shtable an’ ask me boy Den- nis to come down wid his Maek truck an’ take his mother home. | She always sits cormfitably in a { Mack trucl Th' races were a fine lot. A foine lot to fose yure money on. An’ O} had me trouble wid Maggie. Onee i . “Thot filly has foine fet. | locks * her eyes on th Soclety buds says, “Do ye mane th fat wan in th' red hat? Listen to me, Moike, In want ye to kape yure |e Thin after & whoile she says “Ot | loike those two red heads in the fir-rst row,” an’ Oi shouted “They're off!” an' she says “Moike, 1f they are that way ve have no roight to shout it out so thot ivrywan can hear it. They look sane enough.” Of aid no attention to her but shouted “Neck an neck at th' quarter.” Of guess she didn’t understand or aidn’t hear me f'r she sald “Phwat { roight have ye to give thim a quar- [ter f'r neckin'?" Thin she saw Of { wuz referrin® to th' hor-rse race. Oi bought Maggle a glass iv orangeade an’ th' rain wuz drippin’ from her hat into her glass so that th* wan glass iv orangeade lasted her th' whole afternoon! | It Well-Known Headlines Were Rlustrated {will do if 1t's only a question of life that | Senators Shut Out Indians Not the “You've o ark ! Peter: been vaccinated, haven't Claire: “No, ter that you silly; that's my gar- se —Raymond W. Fenn THE PU BOWL (Served by D. C. Grieve) Great Expectation? “The flames broke out in all 41~ rections, but the firemen were soon on the spit, an® the flames were ex- tinguished.” —Winnepez (Can.) Free Press The Spread of Western Culture in the E ! “Proposed by Maung Ave. Maung. seconded by Maung Ha Thein, thet a farehell party be given to U Ba Shein and Maung Ba Hache on ¥ri- day.” 3 ~<Rangoon Gasette N 10 198, o Injuryt Felix: “What makes you ge dews on the littie achool-teacher you used te run around with? I thought you liked her.” David: “I used te, but we've Felix: “Did she send you back your lettera?" David: “Yes, and not enly that. 8he -marked all the errors in spell- ing and gave me a grade of 63 on the whole bunch!” ~—Herman Fetzer (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Ferbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERES, You can get an snswer to any question of fact er information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washingten Bureau, 1323 New Yerk avenue, Washington, D. C., enclesing two centa in stampe for reply. Medl legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertak Al other questionr will pecelve & per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential.—Y.ditor. Q. What kind of motors was the , Friendship plane used by Miss Ear- hart equipped? A. It was powered with three Wright Whirlwind moters like the one in Col. Lindbergh's plane. Q. How tall is President lidge? . A. § feet 10 inches, Q. What are the duties of a pur- ser on a steamship? Is experience required for the pesition? What ia the salary? A. The purser {8 the officer whe has charge of the accounts, pro- visions, pay roll, ete., of & el and the care of the passeng His duties vary according te the size and kind of ship. & ryle pur- sers are required ta have had office experience with & steamship agency thereby gaining & knowledge eof cargo and ship documents. They are usually sent on trips Airst as sistant pursers. 'The salaries range from $150 to $176 & month for an experienced man and $100 to $125 for assistants. Q. s Pauline Frederick still in the movie A. Pauline Frederick has refysed te sccept secondary roles and ix seldom seen on the screen in America. 8he has been appearing on the Lendon f and acreen. Her last picture in this country was “Josselyn's Wife' made between appearances on the legitimate stage in Les Angeles, where she was play- ing the title role in “Madame X" in 1926: Q. What is the value of a Columbian half dellar dater 18922 A. Fitty cents only. Q. Of what religious faith is the Mayor of New York City? A, Mayor James Walker Roman Catholie. Q. Hew long does it take quail egqs to hateh? A. From 19 to 21 days; 20 days in a falr average. Q. Hew should the plant “wan- dering jew" be cared for? A. It doos not need much care. It should be potted in a pot large enough so that the roots are not erowded, gnd 4 garden soil should be used! It should be watered regularly and kept In a sunny place. It will grow nicely without any further attentien. Q. How old is a racoon before it becomes mature and able to repro- duce? A. A racoon born one spring becomes mature and productive the next spring. Q. How much peat land is there in the United States? Where is it located ? A. It is estimated that there are more than 11,000 square miles of swvamp land in the United States containing peat bogs of good quality. Coo- TRYING -To o de -Te e R A S S 5D ‘The principal England a the Nerth states and along both sea coasts. Q. What does the term quixotic signify ? A. Don Quixote is a character in a book by the Spanish writer Cer- vantes, depicted as a morbid and chivalrous tnan lacking in common sense. The term quixotic applies to living persons having similar char- acteristice Q. What were the largest guns used by the British and the Ger- mans in the naval battle of Jutland in the world war? A. The largest guns of the British fleet were the 15 inch guns of the battleships Malaya, Valiant, Barham, Warspite, Queen Elizabeth, Royal Oak and - Revenge. The largest guns of the German fleet were the 13 inch guns of the battle | crulsers Derfflinger and Hindenburg and the dreadnaught Lutzow and . poasibly the eight 14 Inch guna of the battle cruiser Salamis. Q. Do the cow bird and the Coo Coo lay thelr eggs in the nests of other birds? A. In North America bird, belonging to the blackbird family, lays its eggs only in the nests of other birds. In Europe the Coo Coo has the same trait but the American Coo Coo does not. Q. Who played the lesding fe- male role in the motion picture “The Lunatic at Large”? A. Dorothy Mackaill. the cow Observations On The Weather Washington, July 10.5Forecast for Bouthern New England: Mostly cloudy, probably showers and thun- der storms tonight er Wednesday; not much change in temperatur moderate, possibly fresh south and southwest winda. Forecast for Fastern New York: Partly cloudy with local thunder showers tonight or Wednesda: slightly cooler Wednesday in morth portion; -moderate seuth te south- west winda. Conditions: The disturbance of the lake region is slowly oving eastward but cloudy conditions have advanced eastward to the coast dis- tricts and the showery area is pass- ing eastward over Central New York state and Pennsylvania. Tempera- tures are slightly lower in all dis. tricts east of the Ohlo valley. Con- ditions favor for this vicinity un- settled weather and not much change in temperature. Temperatures yesterd Atlanta Atlantic City Boston . Buffalo .. Cincinnati . Chicago Denver . Detroit . Duluth .. Hatteras .. Jacksonville . Kansas City - T,08 Angeles .. Miami Minneapolis . Nantucket . New Haven . New Orleans New York . hen you turn your i the instrument 1n front of you to tune development in the past send for it: T want & copy of the hulletin ONE I INDUCE PAP Ne wHE erTY N THAT WASHASLE LINEN SUIT. CLIP CUUPUN BERE VEZOPMENT, and enclops herewith five esnt 8. postage stamps, er coln, to cover post: Northfield, Vt. Pittsburgh ..... Portland, Me. St. Louis ... Washington ., 74 ” ”" 25 Years Ago Today Becguse of the many helidays Jately work has been piling up in the factories, and some of them may, have to work overtime to egtch yp. The Corbin SBcrew plant worked Sat« urday afternoon. Frank H. Johnston, president of the City Coal and Wood Ce., ace companied by his wife and sop, will sail for England on Fridsy, July 4. They will remain abread during the summer, visiting in England, Scote land, Ireland and France. Justice Ryder in Plainville is try< ing an unusual case regarding a plank bridge over a atream, A man carting wood over the stream found the plank missing and was held In his work for four days,'so he sucd for $36 and the cost of the plank. By order of C. J. Parker, ,the ! dles in the egploy of the Parker 8hirt Co. were'served with lemonade yesterday afternoon. The Central Labor upion is being urged by Waterbyry and Bridgeport strikers to declare a union ban en the trolley company here. The o« cal organizers, however, do net want to involve New Britain {n the troy« bles through which her sister cities have been passing for the past months. They further fear thyt {f such a ban shoyld prove rathey un- successful the prestige of the ynion would be conglderably lowered. Chief Rawlings has been warned to be on th koyt for William Rudolph, the ispour! Kid,” g des« perate and heavily armed eriminal, There was less sale of beer Sunday, than in the past byt the recent reids had not quite succeeded in making the eity “dry.” It is theught that the campaign against the Sundey sale of liquors at amysement reserts will be made permanent, and the county commissioners are waid to be back of it. ‘The Boardman team eof Hartford put up the worst exhibition ef the season here yesterday, showed little evidence of knowing anything abeyt baseball, and lest to the Barrett's New Britains by 30-¢. R. C. Merwin passed Syndasy af Waodmont. The interior of the Berlin Cons gregational church wijl be repaired and improved this summer. Because Pope Leo XIII is beyond hope of recovery, prayers were of« fered at 8t. Mary's chyrch Sundey that the pontiff have a happy death, A RUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO 18 your radio set, de yoy knew that the result of & hundred years of develop- ment? It was in 1837 that Savary made the dlacovery that a stes) Besdle could be magnetized from a Leyden § inventors and sclentista have cuntributed bit has made possible modern radio. Our bulletin of 6,000 words of condensed inform: hundred yesrs. and since thet time hyudreds of here and & Bit there whish shwoing Flll out the eoupen belew et RADIO EDITOR, Washington Bureau, Dally New Britain Wereld, 1323 New York Avenve, Wgshington, D. C. HUNDRED YEARS OF RADIO DB. in leose. yncescolied, U. snd hendling gosts:: T am s reader of the Dally NBW BRITAIN WERALD. —-.-—_.-———'———--J