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8 New Britain Heral HBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Teswed Dally (Sun Ezcepted) At Hersld -'Ul n“'m Ereet Batered at the Post Ofice at New Bril sis s Second Clam Mall Matter. TBLEPHONBD CALLS Business Office 28 Editorial Rooms only profitable agvertising medium n.’!h‘. City, Circulation books end press room slwaye open to sdvertissrs, Membes of the Ascsisted Prese The Assoclated Press Is exclusively es- | titled to the use for re-publication ef o}l news eredited to it or Bot otherwise oredited n this papesr &ad @lso locs) wews published therein. Momber Audit Dareas of Cweslation The 4 B. C is & Dationsl organization which fursishes Dewspapers and adver- tigere with @ strictly honest emalyele clesulation. Qur circulation statistics @ ~ased upon this audit. This losures pro- tootion ageinst fraud in mewapaper dts- tribution figures te both matiomal snd lesal advertisers. Herald 1» sale asily ts N Hotaling's Newsstasd, _Timee Square; Schults's Newsstanda, Batrance Graad Central, ¢3ad Strest. — e - e = Winsted was visited by the atate | police yesterday and 24 people were arrested, 14 of them being allc ged liquor law violators, others being charged with gambling. When there are 14 places where liquor is handled in a place the size of Winsted there must be many meore in larger citl.es admirable com- | Which is an mentary on the popularity of the | Volstead act and its effectiveness | about the country. True the state police did good | work In cleaning up those suspected of violation. But there will be an opportunity | to repeat the act, in all probabilities, | in m eouple of weeks, with just as many suspects to haul in. And it is more than possible that some of those taken yesterday will be in the toils of the law again. Such is prohibition. Chap in Rio suiclde, climbed into a cage of lions, carrying a gun. neiro, intent on | Zoo guards attempted to rescue him, the lions were probably un- | obliging, so he shot himself. He might have shot himself in the first place had he wished to be| efficient. But, efficlent or otherwise, he was certainly thorough. It appearcd that we were to escape | our usual week-end of storm Snl\lr-\ day and yesterday until late in (hul afternoon. | | | And then we learned that we were not. Two thunder showers gave folks of the western part of the state plenty to think about for awhile, unfortunately damaging our tébacco crops and taking a toll of trecs and structures hit by lightning. POLISH F Rr New Britain those of Polish descent, will receive RS SAFE AFTER UE folk, particularly {aviators in have been a great deed for repre- sentatives of a new country, in its present state, and would have been hailed as such. The aviators, unfortunately, met with the same result that is common in transatlantic attempts, in either direction. Fortunately they only €0 miles from other side, after flying to a point north of back toward Europe, when they came down alongside the Samos, German steamer. Full explanations of their circular flight have still to be made at this writing, possibly they will be in before the later pages of the Herald go down to the press room preparatory to circulation on the street. We commiserate with the that th failed, for we congratulate were whatever them upon their rescue. reason, BATHI AT STATE PARKS The writer, in an attempt to es. cape the heat, of yesterday made a trip to Hurd Park, one of the many state reservations, located the Connecticut river between Port- land and East Haddam. He was not | the only one that had hit upon this pleasant spot for a sojourn in the shade, There were several hundred, possibly a thousand, vacationiste for | a day in the locality, with their pic- nic lunches and their bathing suits— all having a fine time in a woody glen with a big river in front and a cold spring for drinking water. And, as far as we could determine there was no provision for the safe guarding of the lives of the bathers. many o; whom could not swim. there being a large number of chil- dren in the crowd as well, though if the truth must be told most of the younger generation were at home in the water than their elders. Luckily there was no accident to mar the day for everyone and de- prive some family of one of its members. more Why people should choose to swim in the Connecticut river is beyond us. It is none too clean, which must be evident to the bather even be- fore he has entered the water, and it is highly dangerous with its currents | (and eddies, even for an accomplish- ed swimmer, Notwithstanding, there were hundreds of people in the water all day long. Little tots waded | along shore, older folks, who could not ewim, got further from the banks, others played about the l)it'l’.‘ Despite the fact that the tide wus running fast as a menace to those who could swim but who might tir off despite the sudden holes in the bank, where the channel runs close to shore, to threaten the lives of despite the chances of somewhere shore, the waders, cramp or sudden submergence engendered by the large number of people in the | water, there was not a life guard about as far as we could determine, nor was there a boat, excepting the tenders of some yachts, which could be used by an amateur life-saver if one was present. There was a large life-precerver on the pier, that was all that we could see. There have been many drownings at this same Hurd Park. Memory tells us of one last summer when youngster from the Swedish Orphanage at Cromwell waded into a a hole, There might very easily hay been several yesterday. he state park, though he live mistaken, keeps a earetaker at the it we are not some distance from 1l water. When so many people are in bathing there should be a lifeguard s well. His maintenance for months in the summer would be comparatively cheap when measured th of accident. against possibiliti the news that the two Polish avi- ators, Majors Idzikowski and Kuba have b rescued with tions. The first will that the intrepid aviators, atfempt- ing a transatlantic flight from east been rescued from a the two reac- naturally he to west, have watery grave, second reaction will be a pang of regrct that they ' were unsuccessful in their long tlight. Polish prople race. Oppressed tfor gencrations they new Poland and with tave great pride of have welconied the its national entity hearts, avid and ewelling tor its success in iy The every line of endeavor Poles of this country, or rather the bring about the tenth anniversary of Polish extraction, that of the new Americans of to e in: feel a pride akin citizene of P'olund proper, and they can do this without impairing their the United loyalty to States one whit, flight might « tained in the Proof their interest in the wsily have been ob- Herald office all day Saturday. Phones were ts for constantly ringing with reque informa- tion as to the progress of the acrial trip across the great salt pond. Ex- pressions of enthusiasm, followed by explanations that the speakers were Polish, came imm y after re- ports of progress paper was first able to give. As time which this news- wore on and arrival in this country was due without sight of the plane, genuine pangs of sorrow were eii- dent in voices over the Had the Poles be the trip they would have been the complete flight, to west, from whatever other first to accomplish from cast France to New York, point in the’ might have or touched. ANNMIVERSARY OF WORLD WAR fourteenth an- Saturday was the niversary of an event which affect- | «d the lives of nearly everyone in | the world to some extent, more thin others, of course, but a of the number people notwith- standing. 1t wi fourteenth yes 0 a since German troops in- vaded France drive to ¢ tackle was undoubtedly fore Belgium in a and probably land, as it n by the Englind would declare war and at- tempt to destroy German dominence of the world /There were years of fight next fail the which igning ot the Wy finally involved. my nations, own, we Much water has pa bridges as the years have rolled by The of the changed by the map, lobe has formation of new revistons of old. disuppearcd and dic taken countries and nations and have ators charge the risen, of whols schenie of politic Meanwhile, in Amsterdam, are ing held the Olympic ga changed. athletes from nations which opposed are striving each other in warfare for honors in comprtitions of speed and stamina instead of blood. The rci are still many of us, in the world who cannot forget the lossve in i, though the res 0 able to make against its perpetrators 1s losing its cdge in the wear of time. As a new toin succeeds witl such and other gene s, memories of events as the Olympic Gan land on the | the Azores and turning a grieved. down | some | r0ss Eng- German militariste that ny long will armistice ~-in including our | 1 under the been Kings republics whole be- nes where | war and our ntment expres- | pass. In the furtherance of understand- ing between nations through such agencies as the games lies the solu- tion of the puzzle of how to keep out of war, its final elimination from the general scheme of things. And all of us, on the anniversary of the opening of a sangulnary conflict, | may sincerely hope that neither this, nor succeeding generations may hate |as we bated, nor grieve as we have THE MEMORIAL DEDICATION FUND The committee in charge of funds for the defraying of the expenses entailed in the dedication of our monument to Workd War veterans is to meet tonight and consid estimated expenditures of the gen- eral committce, With power, pre- sumably, to check what is consider- ed extravagances in estimates, which it now appears the sum of approximately $30,000. May | !it meet with much success in so far keeping down the allotments that the “Roman holiday” aspect of the | coming dedication will and in its place will arise the pros | pects of a devout and | pression of the better feelings of the | are to reach Aisappear sincere e populace towards the deceased and | the alive veterans whose ! shait is supposed to perpetuate. | It may take radical cuts to effcct memory | this change. Several items will have | |to be eliminated |they might be,—we might name a few even now, But it appears that it is in the hands of the committee | on finance, more than any other, to | decide upon the character of the | dedication, whether it shall be gelebration or a day of devotion. Many of the gencral committe | men, it appears, are in favor of the | curtailment of | wish to spend the original amount ! hoping to |buck” of saving onto some other group. Let exch one of the general | | committee realize that public senti- entirely, as well | a expenses—but they | themselves, “pase the | ! ment is very much averse to a circus !day at Walnut Hill park when the | ! monument is unveiled and take the hands when it reing in their own | comes to changing plans, radically rey scheme of spepding | even though it may hurt their own | pride in so doing, and the work of | ing their !the financing committee will be so I much simplitied. This is no time to play politics, no | | time to add to the personal prestige {of the individual that may happen to be in charge of some phase of the ! }dmli(‘:\'iou ceremony, no time for :uny person to bask in the reflected | | light of the glory of an item in con- | nection with the day. It is time to | consider what are certainly the | wishes of the families of the de- Icu. d soldiers | to submerge personal identity and to for an effective the pride in sailors and marines, jwork quietly memorial service with the monument that is bound to fol- liow. Lets do 1t. | THE STROLLER Motorist halting traffic to ask cop how to get to Middletown. ! Nervous bluecoat nearly there, | Juby etrapped in baby carriage on sidewalk white mother shops for |another pair of bootecs, | People taking mail to the post of- | fice, carcfully avoiding the letter "hoxes. Postmaster Erwin running to cateh a trolley car. Cop eyeing a parked automobile; | discovers it belongs to a doctor who | | doubtiess 13 indulging in an opera- tion on somehody. i | Chier Hurt discussing the police | {convention program and $1,500 to | the pension fund out of how many | pages of ads. | Bill Barrett discussing the weather 'and the talkics, as usual. “Pl to grow Sign on lawn se give the grass a chanes 7 There goes an and a Wonder, empty trolley car motorman-conductor. the lonely how Connecticut com- 1,_.“ pays expenses these days? | Ralph Benson telling a friend he ‘ean play ball as well as his sons, if | not better, A freight train blocking the Main street crossing, gis usual, Another “Tenement to Rent” sign sign of the times. What has become of half of the hoy bootblacks usually infesting the Central square? Out fshing in § loy Quarter park, perbaps. Where do all the automobiles go out West Main street? There girls and a driver in the front seat and the npty. They like crowding, The deserted. rear seat for some reason, road for arcade, the days when it Main strect. block Washington Oh f | was as crowde Another new business rumored—this time on | stres Arch strect; still the same, or less, No wider, A future Heifetz toting a violin to more more indifferent. his lesson during hot weather. Patrolinan Joe motorist Kennedy bawling , out a who has erred once too often. There goes Mayor Paonessa, dis- ssing fishing with a politician A half filled i bachelor hubbies whose wives are in ¢ the country, Hurray. That youth walking so slowly is restaurant with United States they slons of international amity all feel- inot a messenger boy—merely on th This would |ing engendered by the confliet will ‘way to a dentist for a “painless’ i tis that you can't {John D, is still goes a machine with three | almost | ormance. Another girl without ‘What is the world coming to? P stockings. Letter carrlers going their weary rounds while loaded down with fourth class matter. Aftcr the first ,of the month will be loaded down | with letters containing bills and statements of moneys due. Chief Noble, riding in a gay ichariot, waving a brawny hand to kids yelling “Hello Chief!" There goes another motorcyclist in a hurry, Whoever saw one going | only 40 miles an hour? g That man? George A. Quigley ! with his blood up. A reporter out on a story in a high-powered car, Thus back to the office, hot and ragged with observations, Facts and Fancies! Jail: A place where they the vietims of unjust discrimination. keep | i Fame: The brief publicity enjoy- ed by one who mukes a record somebody will break tomorrow. Frequently matrimony fails be- | cause the joining of two bad cggs can’t improve the flavor. In case of war, European plancs might bomb any Americans who buppened to be in the Azores. “Imaginative women than othe It takes agination to think to cry for. weep more | a lot of up anything How large a mole on a wife's chcek looks after a two-hour losing streuk at bridge with her as part- ner, Until the artist labels it, you can't tell whether it is a political cartoon or an illustration for an animul | story. Few of the big jobs arc held by, men who were taught as boys to fear the opinions of the neighhors. If experience proves anything, it uplift the world permanently by applying a barrel stave to the under side. Americanism: Spending money | you haven't got to buy sport clothes | tor games you don't play. | It may be that none but poor men | are hanged, but a lot of poor speci- mens have escaped it lately, A breakfast room is that little eubby-hole where net and supper fresh table cloth, darned you cat din- to avold soiling a Yon don't see much leather upholstery in cars now. Ga mechanics didn't like it to their hands on. A self-amed man is much like the other kind, except that he owns a hat. s0 wipe Hell, for some people, will be a place where the highways haven't any wrong side Other oil companies are putting up a bitter fight, but you'll notice ng out dimes. We have come to a queer when a politician is counted hecause he doesn't scrap his convie- tions when he's nominated, P: An nhibition 1s what happens when you wish to reud the comie | cetion but don’t because that high- brow over there might look scorn- | ful. Correct this sentency “Hie idge beea he likes it,” wife, “and not just to ple Copyright 1528, Publishe Syndicate 25 Years Ago Today Luke Carter and Walter Seymour, who live been engaged in the brass | foundry business in New Dritain for | some, have moved into the former Charles Johnson building on W. [ing stroet, Plainville, purchased by them some months ago. They have | men at work and will increase the foree business warrants, | Two New Britain motorists r ntly drove to Plainville’in 10 min- utes. They boasted of this feat over there, and a constable overheard them, As this was a 30-mile ghip and the speed limit is 15 miles, an in- lon is bring made, | Th was an amusing incident on South inley strect which was, howeve annoying to the milkinan involved. He was a Seibert ol Berlin, He left his horse and wagon in the road and deliver- ed soms milk, When he came buck the horse's legs were gone. The ani- mal had sunk in sofc dirt where a g1s main had been laid. Half a doz- en men helped lift th horse out, but they could not budge the wagon. | At last a trolliy came along, tied | |a rope to the cart, and pulied it out. Chicf Rawlings has procured an Cmeigency case for treating injured | prisoncrs swho are not badly cnough hurt to require the ices of a physician, The state deputy fire marshal was in town today and warned property ners that the excelsior and in- mable rubbish which has ac- lated in the rear yards of se Main strect blocks must be re moved within 45 hours. Inspcctor Andrew Trumbull says he has had much trouble with these yards and has warned tthe owners repeatedly. The city approggiation of $8,000 for street work is virtually exbaust- ed The court this morning wlen two boys charged with trying to confiscate Journals which were offered them bigher prices than they wished to pay came before Justice Kirkham 15 F. Gatiney defended them. The, were fine but judgment suspended The city has been subjected to & plays i the piad at se 1 a fla cum eral B 1 And this morning | newsboys' sirike was aired n | That's Where the Fun Shop Comes Int Humidity makes summer hot, Not heat, you know, so Folks why not Sea what humor-dity will do To keep glad breezes through! | blowing | Misnomers! : *They say that there was a stormy mecting of the Houe, Committee of the Golf Club yester- | day."” H “Yes. When T left they | were throwing the loving cups one another!™ “If No One Ever Marries Me—? By D. R, a Bachelor.With apologies If no one ever marries me— (And they don’t seem very keen,) For 1 can't pretend I'm handsome, And my purse is rather lean— If no one ever marries me, Tl get along all right— T shall play at golf the whole day through, And at Bridge the livelong night. I shall have a littie sailing yacht, And a motor all my own an’t ve plagued with chil- s bills Tor things that they've outgrown. when I'm sick of cv thing, And dull as dull can be, I shall think how glad I've some girl Who didn't m Ding Dong Belle! Merrill: lephone girls made me! are Oshorne: “Cortainly. “Isn't known as the Bell System?” —Manuel Behr, it Sunday is a day of arrest! She Knew Him? Five-year old Jane went to see her Grandfather the first time While shaking hands with her, he said, bet you don't know me from Adam.” She smiled up at him and sponded, “Oh yes 1 do, you've : on.” re- ot | mor Nelson INTLEMEN, EAT il at Fun Shop Minstrel Show) By ¥. P. Pitzer Tnferlocutor: “Drot! sy on marricd or single?" Flori “Ah don’ know; courts hasn't decided yet.” Interlocutor: “Any dependents?” Florian: "Well, As is payin' ali- mony to fouh wives. Each one gits one-fo'th ob my salary an Ah Keeps de odder two-thirds { Interlocutor: “Then it is your fifth wife that is suing you for sep- Florian, ar m de “Yeh, she wants ne from mah moncy. going fifth wife.” Interloen Then who was 11 lady T saw you with last Sundeg” Florian: “Dat wuz mah ineéin sixth, Mah present wife she 1s drinkin’ all de time. Al secs her comin’ out ob de speak-casy —ebry night.” Interlocutor: Florian: “Well, she ain't She weighs 00 pounds an’ when | she am intoxicated dey jus’ rolls her Lome like a ba'l ob tar. Why, one night she comes home so pificated | dat she drank all de water out ob de gold-fish bowl an fo' {wo hours stood trying 1o stick a toothpick into de gold-fish thinkin' dey wuz cherri Interlocutor: “She must have been to She | t “Is she an inchri- dat, Florian: had <o many g round mah ho comes home 4 t dat Ah used to thinik it wuz a minstrel show holdin’ a dress rehe Interlocutor: “She ples.” Florian: measles onc Interlocutor: scy will noy Dat Man Ah Baby.' " ‘Not dry, withered. She ‘men frien’s sittin® wheneber Ah hadn’t an cAl | had de se “No, but she “Dennis O'Shaunes-, sing ‘When Ah Mot wid to Imk . AT GAL 18 A DUMB DORA ALRIGHT } 1 CLEANED THAT PLATTER The Unattainable )0 you think the Presi- the respect of every Amer- *Yes. except his bridge partne Mebbe You Know! If under the chestnut tree vou ,find chestnuts; and under the gra ou find grapes. 1f under the tree you find oranges; and under the peach tree you find peaches— Under the Dogwood tree what cold wet wave for the past three days. with the thermometer down to 60 degrees at noon. will you find? And we might in- quire about the bull rushes? —Laura Shard | cell by osmos | ! l Poor Soul! oman: “I want to buy a ticket.” Ticket Agert: ‘Where to?" Woman: “Any place.” Ticket Agent: “Surely you must have a destination. Woman: “No, you see it's like this. My husband is a railroad con- ductor, and he dreams he's on the Jjob, and t night he threw me out of bed four times for not paying my fare!” —M. A. Fischer (Copyright, 1923, 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 Burean. 1322 New York avenne, 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.—Tditor. Q. Who is the author of the fol- lowing: “As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean”? A. The line is from “The Rime of the Anclent Mariner” by Samuel Coleridge. Q. What Is the salary mayor of New York City? A. $25,000 per annum. Q. How does the sap of the tree get through the branches and | leaves” | A. Sap Is the liquid content or juice of plants; especially the cir- culating liquid in which take place | the changes necessary to vegetable | growth. It sarts from the root in of the | tonight and probably 1 are registered in Hollywood. The average daily demand ic 810, In ad- dition, there are, roughly speaking, 2,000 persons regarded as actors — tht is, players who receive screen credit intermittently. In the neigh- borhood of 1,000 actors are in oc- casional demand and the number of class actors is fixed at approxi- mately 300. There are about 100 featured players and 70 stara. Q. What is the meaning of the name ague”? A. It is Dutch and garden.” Q. How old Is Johnny Weissmul- ler and in what year did he set his first world's record for swimming? A. He was born in 1905 and set his first world's swimming record in 11921, Q. Who was the Biblical charac- ter Busanna? & i A. BShe was the wife of Joacim, | who was accused of adultery by the Jewish elders, and condemned to death; but Danicl proved hes ingo- cence and turned the criminal charge upon the elders themselves. The account is contained in one of | the apocryphal books of the Old | Testament, found in a number of old Bibles, entitled the “History of Susanpa” or “Susanna and the means ‘“a ‘| Elders,” Q. Do cloudbursts come frequently and are tides nowadays than formerly? A, he records of the weather h}ur(.m! do not bear out this impres- sion. In general, and taking the country as a whole, the average rainfall and the behaviour of the tides remains unchanged. more higher Observations On The Weather Washington, Aug. 6.—Forecast for Southern New England: Showers ‘uesday morn- ing. Warmer Tuesday in Connecti- cut and western Massachusetts. Moderate east to southeast winds. Yorecast for Eastern New Yor! Occasional showers tonight and Tuesday; slightly cooler at night in south portion; slowly rising tem- perature in central and north por- tions Tuesday; moderate southeast winds. Conditions: Pressure s low over the form of a solution of materl absorbed from the soil, called ¢ sap. Passing thence from cell to | mainly through cell | walls, it ascends to the leaves, where under the influence of light, | chemical changes take place, chief | among which are the absorption of | the middle Atlantic states and Southern New England this morning with centers of minimum pressure oft the Jersey coast and over Lake Ontario. Unsettled, showery weather prevails over the lower lake region, the middle Atlantic states and throughout the New England dis- carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and the formation from it and other | clements of the sap or organic com- | pounds, which on the descent of sup, now called elaborated sap, build | up the plants. The sap ceases to | flow in winter and its movement is | one of che first signs of the ap-| proach of spring. | Q. How is the “Nobile" pronouncey No-heel-ay. | What number was “The | Rainbow Division” of the A. E. I during the World Wa | A. Forty-second. Q. How can the male and the female purple martens be distin- guished ? The male is a shiny blue- | while t female is bluish above and brownish-gray be- | name | | Ttalian black black h. | When and where was Douglas | anks born? In Denver, Colorado, May ZS.i ent. , regent is Admiral Nichols Von Horthy. . Who was the sculptor of the statue of Admiral Farragut in hington, D. €., and when was it unveiled ? A. The statue was cast from a model by Mrs. Licutcnant Hoxie and Miss Vinnle Ream. It was unvealed in April, 1881, and cost $20,000. It represents the admiral standing upon his flagship, the Hartford, and it was cast from metal in the pro- peller of that ship. Q. How many registered extras are there in the movie industry in Hollywood, California and what number is employed daily? How many feature players and stars are there? A Approximately 18,000 extras Pathetic Figures tricts. Areas of high pressure pre- vall over the upper lake region, the St. Lawrence valle and southern states. Temperatures arc generally lower in the northern dis- tricts east of the Rocky mountains. Conditions favor for this vicinity cloudy and cool weather, followed by fair and warmer. Temperatures yesterday: : High Atlanta . the | Hatteras .... Jacksonville ... Kansas City was Los Angeles : Minneapolis . Nantucket .. New Haven . New Orleans .., New York .. Norfolk, Va. ... Northfield, Vt. « Pittsburgh .. Portland, Me. . 8t. Louis ... Washington TWO DIE FROM HEAT Philadelphia, Aug. 6 (A—The in- tense heat yesterday caused two deaths, many prostrations and wide- apread suffering. High temperatures for the year were brokeén when the mecury reached 95 late yesterday afternoon. The weather bureau predicted there would be little, it any, change in temperature today. ‘What Will you do k__ When pour Children Cry for It There is hardly a household that hasn't heard of Castoria! At least five million homes are never with- out it. If there are children in your family, there's almost daily need of its comfort And any night may find you very thankful there's a bottle in the house. Just a few drops, and that colic or constipation is relieve or diarrhea checked. A vege- a baby remedy meant for young Castoria is about the only thing you have ever heard doctors advise giving fo infants. Stronger medicines are dangerous 1o a tiny baby, however harmless they may be to grown-ups. Good old Castoria! Remember the name, and remember to buy it. It may spare you a sleepless, anxious night. It is always ready, always safe to use; in emergencies, or for everyday ail- ments. Any hour of the day or night that Baby becomes fretful, or 90 . 82 94 .76 70 58 82 G ARY, . 68 Atlantic Cit Boston Buffalo .. Chicago Cincinnati Denver .. Detroit Duluth Castoria was never more with mothers than it is to- ery drugglst has it. eleend- CASTORIA VACATION FUN Whether you stav or old, whether you ha tertain at your countr: Washington Burcau's latest unlque and interesting entertainments from bridge parties to week-end part at a party with house over t! home. or go on & trip, whether you bulletin V. re young two or three frionds or want to en- week-end with fifty guests, our ACATION FUN, suggesting dozeng of from porch parties to bLeach parties, les, from hiking to yachting—will be of help and interest in this, the vacation season. Fill out the coupon below and send for it: r VACATION EDITOR, 1322 New York Avenue, 1 want a copy of the bulletin VACATION FUN celled, U. & postage stamps, of coin to cover five cents fn loose, unca postage and handling costs: STREET AND NUMBER cITY T am a reader of the Herald. CLIP COUPON HERE Washington Bureau, Washington, New Britain Herald, D. G, and enclose herewith A FELLERS FAMILY MAKE 1T PRETTY -ToUGH FoR HIM WHEN HIS QIRL'S AWAY AND HE STARTS —To WRITE A LETTER. A ) * ~