New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 17, 1928, Page 8

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New Britain Heral WBRALD PUBLISHING CUMPANY losved Daily (Bundey Kzcepted) At Hersid Bidg.. 61 Church Streer SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Year. $2.00 Thres Mouthe 18c. & Month Eatersd at the Post Ofice at New Brit ain a8 Secomd Clase Mail Matter. TELEPHONS Busioews Ofice Editorial Roome . caLLs .2 926 The only profitable advertising medium @ th 3. Clrculstion books and press room » open to advertisers al Mewmber the Assuctated Press Fhe Aseocinted Press 19 exciusively Utley to the uwe for e publicatlon Ol uews credited to it or Dot othes credited tn this paper and also a vublished thereiln. loca) Member Audit UBaresu of Circslation The A B L 1» & ustwnal urgenization which furuikhes Oewspapers ano adver- tisers With w strictly honest wuaiyaiw of elrculation Our circulstion etatistice are Naped upon t udit Thie \Dmures pro tection net fraud in B tribution figures to both b local sdvertisers 04 on The Herald 1o on sale Gatly (n New York st Hotaiing's Newsstaad. Times Square: Schuitz's Newsstanda. Eatrance Grand Central. 423d Street. S omebody who ‘What is as rare a admits he didn't enjoy his vacation? an enum- In more cases than we erate, when wifey returns trom her trip hubby goes back to a corkserew and can opener dict. 1f anybody wants to tell the world he is well off let $50,000 to a campaign fund. him contribute What with the Rev. Dr. Straten and the Non-Rev. William Allen White throwing bricks at Governor Smith at the same time, the Al executive has no time at all to con- verse about the iniquities of the summer heat. Josephus Daniels tells us that | some people in the South won't vote at this election. Which will be about as usual. Somehow we are forced to wonder | what the parties would be arguing | about this year had the 18th Amend- ment and the Volstead Act never been concocted Standing in the hot sun is hard work. But try working in it. The memorial monument and ac- ccssories on the top of Walnut Hil look impressive. Better ro: help the appreciators. A motorcyclist out west we will be lucky to have Canada so will be a definite change. And 8o mhe =oar bt all Toeay | tord mean? train. But not over a crossing. close | However, it is interesting to brief- | for dimes. Is. “Give me my old hot-water| A. Litterally it means “huckster's Aok ¢ . o ST, e lonInG he bottle.” ford." It is a locality as well as & ; e Meanwhile we will construct the ly trace the development of th ‘ What this country needs is to [y e s thl‘om!r : mer. Which S8 e cones el Bnjatian o) exgmetem e Ratpuion SR e el oot ""‘d""‘l;n“s"‘"’k‘“ My faithful friend, conld you and 1| Q. Ts polyzamy still practiced by HOME CANNING ractically idle a summer. - 8 ma - Seet §) “The Congress ehall have | York once a year and al ew York- | ) 2 P ) s pedite exports; and mayhe the gov ction 8) “The Congress ghall have ! 'r 1 @ S “be parted the Moslems in Turkey? et i AR b s Ve el e rne e hs al evidently is not a source of irritation orpment will assist the farmers to | power to declare war ers visit the couniry once a yeas. When I am gone, whose bottle| A. The new civil code adopted of the pantry shelves. Our Washington Buresu has just completed an en el company or the scheme ex ! and e rules conee 4 es | e will you be? by the Turkish National Assembly tirely new and up-to-the-mirute bulletin on Home Canning of Fruits and fotneiisenhces i tigton A sohppe ojaid i expoits, and make wnles Gancetains caplisesl Hamye oy sfar han i bratos ®iae a4 enfiucs Ao knbw. that bn|on cHebiuAry 1926 prohibits || Vesetables. It contains full directions with individual thstruction for the sweet girl operators When the time arrives for us to on land and water 4 | Rats! If she had brains, she would- had started ;pn]\'gnm\' = various kinds of products that may be canned, the method of preparation A bunch of championship amateur baseball teams is better for a smal town than an also-ran contender’ in some two-by-four professional base- ball league. e | any | s to get to the top by those who ride would beat a other matter. As Alderman Johnson |every day | will be quick to agree, it the thing |motor and { keeps up even the clerks, typists and | the summer | the janitor in the city building will | drownings than usual | bad, The only place mankind is r but the mayor. brought has | be wearing gold silver Everybody, in fact, | The tatter, although | {must feel that he doesn't need tojor demolished by or | safe is at home. is liable to be hit by ligh he has one, | hous: a gale. | wear it, being conspicuous enough | | hardship that gives a go-getter reach | without it whenever he browses 4 CENSORSHIP WHICH FAILED |and grasp, or just board-house train. | |around to see whether the ¢ity There are various sorts of censor- |ing. | | servants are earning their money. ships, some official and some pri One of the most astounding of THE HIGH PRI Maybe it had of high prices for meat, Cyeles apply | to the meat industry as well as to OF M cone, |latter clasification was this to era ed by the chicf owner and ma after a a vegetarian, was firmly conv a vegetarian diet was good for industrics, and now, in the cattle other period of hard times papers record fatalities; And even then the that which for several years had been attempt- of a great chain of restaurants. He, but more really | lat tning ivate. f the | fen th | nager | on inced r the Fects and Fancies take a chance and one to catch him words that don't mean anything. BY ROBERT QUILLEN Jaywalking requires two—one to it. You can’t tell whether it's former Styles may have cheapened wom- | Lots of people lose interest in | e circus after seeing the parade. Popular song: Seven or eight old| " es tied together and supplied with wi Golf: A game in which you hit And neither has a plank on jokes; Let's build the kind that ought to Carpenters All e've read the party platforms. Folks, ith nails of humor, boards of glee, . be! belt comes an an ng prosperity. people he refused to sell meat little balls at intervals and talk| Cattle raisers are dreaming of paying dishes in his restaurants. %alroul it the rest of your life. e Cianks Canasd Aloslat off their debts and buying better Everybody, we suppose, likes loi S Mrs. Brayton: “Mrs. Deane is | cars have others do as we would have | celebrating her tin wedding.” | folk ties who | them do. But they won't do it. This | Mrs. Fredericks: “Impossible! | Meanwhile folk in the ¢ who . v is | i dabd simply must have their beef are restaurant proprietor found out, in paving dcarly for it. Enthusiastic the course of a few years, that Cool- | Brayton: “I know it but | cattle belt citizens forecast this will idge prosperity was no good. People | she has just opened her tenth tin {last at least five years. who ordinarily didn't eat much meat | of soup! The government helped the meat | simply became wild over the fact| Modern bathing suits wouldn't - \ !have seemed immodest in the old ou A s t placed they couldn’t buy it if they wanted \padssmisayyaiian s mlnoel e i “% | days if women had been shaped like embargo upon importations from |it. So they quit coming around.fa brapm. handle. Argenting, where the foot and ! Finally the vegetarian restuuranteur s mouth ¢ ase is supposed to be pre- had to give in to save the business America won't dominate the Olym. from running into the red. ‘The moral of it is: Give the ple what they This There is much that every news valent. So far as mere city dwellers can ain, this disease is com- | municablz only through live cattle, so that importations of slaughtered er want, includes newsp: make no difference. | argo attains its object | publishes that it wouldn't publ readers didn't dema The smart-ale meat would But the all the same, the cattle industry on its feet; just eml m: aid object being to put ' lines huve a lot to say about the papers ought to print and they should not print; but they several years ago an embargo was against bulbs from boost the ! put into effect Holland American bulb industry, in order to GRAINS FOR LEXPORT each en- | PROTECTION ABROAD steamer: Thirty ocean deavoring to load grain for foreign optimistic reports of late, dec parts at the same time, is the pic- | that all is well in Nicaragua an | ture which press dis- | the coming election under Am patches from Montreal; which illus trates once again that Montreal is comes via auepices will be a square and battle of ballots, Sandino, of c something of an ocean port. |is not yut captured: but the election | o o LS Tower and the e _‘:\. Deaths in battle numbered | tna¢ he abused har with curses and ;::::‘fl;l:h Vi o :g | e er of remains in | will be held regardless of this litt adiz - .1 ] 2 £ < . threats in public. ° TR SE—— | p6an sxnarien ol srain o s s ibe nelbicegurdlces radintor cap has two more featherS| G0, oy think Il shift to the| Q. How tall is President Cool-|'"pe marrinse which Miss Gray | POTt1and. Mo. meoummn 56 a wonderful position. It has only | pinprick. in the wings. | othsr potitieat garty this L2l idge? Ty m‘h oy e ;‘“’ St. Louls .. .xvamomee 93 o et ea r - . Phe B i ave broken was her v - . 10,000,000 people to feed, yet its} It appears that American inter-| . 0 _‘m“ “In the last reel| Mrs. Grant: “That proves theold| A. H} is five feet ten inches. second. Her first husband was John | W 25NNEtON wwwnromwwe 78 acres extend from the Atlantic to the | vention abroad therefore will Win | yo yor eep and gives him a pr:)}\'flrh.' e Q. Who was in command of the | Gorecki of Milwaukee, to whom she| 1 . ey . Pacific. It is a granary that feeds a | another dccisive victory. Yet there is | pain, they are both forty. rant: at's that?" | world cruise of sixteen American | was married when 15 years old. A ok 000 & peir 40 Fun { b Mrs. Grant: “The worm will | battjeships in 190 son of this marriage 1 first class pack of fox hounds. large part of KEurope, where they no doubt that the entire system of o 4, . rriage is now living 1 { turn, A” Admiral Evans was in com- | with Miss Gray's parents here. | also raise grains but not enough for protecting the lives and property of | —Edith Chauncey. |mand from Hampton Roads to San| Both Boag and Miss Gray are the populations. | Americans abroad is based upon e Irancisco where he turned the fleet| understood to be in Europe, Miss | The United States 1s in a slightly | executive precedent, practice and My Old, Hot-Water Bottle over to Admiral Sperry. The ships|Gray in London and Boag in Ger- different position than Canada, al- | dec | though it also cxports grain. In the stitutional and congre: first place, it takes more to feed our |rant. The question ssional remains population of more than 100,000,000; a large proportion of our citizenry |are engaged in industrial and mer- | be brought forward again at th session; but s during which the protec lands considering the | cantile pursuits; larger percentage of grain vield every year. In we probably will be a grain import- we are consuming | yo a our own Americans in on such foreign exclusivel by the P than one with ‘(hwl' of the army and navy, it 50 yea action of ing nation, rather grain for exportation. At that time |likely that at this late date there |procassional be a grain importing nation the want, or think they s sitting on the no financial stake in the premises. Secretary Wilbur has been making ation rather than upon con sident, or commander-in- It in. peo- apers. paper ish if nd it. side- what what ¢ have lal ic a laring d that | erican d fair | w ourse, war- | a live one in Congress, and perhaps will | e next | e many | € tion of hinged rdered | ¢ a is un- [ But the Constitution (Article 11, |n't stand there helplessly with a pis- button. better America great. ers, betting a thousand dollars each, | make a new Wall Street millionaire. avoid the crowd; eating the dust of to avoid the crowd. ces: college columns one must read to steal the be a ics again until the athletic events clude sitting still and pressing a The quickest way for a darned ien to get accepted as a true Amer- an is to do some athletic stunt than any Amertcan can, work that makes One thousand suck- It is team Americanism: Starting early to thousand others who started early Preparing a New York stage suc- is hard work. Think how many | magazines and newspaper isecracks. { You can tell a new-model car. The No, Mr. Shaw, I never thought of December 1907 and returned early marriage— in 1909, = At least, 1 never thought of it| Q. What is the meaning of| Montville Man Slain and again; “Tenafly" ? 1 S It's not the institution 1 disparage, A. It is taken from a Dutch Killer Then Is Suicide All man wants is a wife smart nough to be proud of and simple nough to think him a wonder, Tunney yearns to | writer. Well, for this high alling there is no equipment more | esirable than his million dollars. They Mr, few amateurs turn For that matter, com- aratively few people swap dollars Comparative A o Give me my old hot-water bottle, Love comes D. C., advice other sonal He is and h; eyes. tures Q. U-20 A. Q. | servie (By X. P. Herbert) sailed It's just the thought of Woman gives me pain. word Q. And you can keep your wives, and goes, ar well 1 ic knows, But this old pal survives. woman, so the poet sings. an raise the soul to better things: 200 wood, Q. L) Warming the toes of some detest- business of farming in these United |Section 1) also reads: “The executive | 10! in her hand while the hero gets ed she? )| States wilt be among the most profit- | power ehall be vested in a President | °2¢ VP Give me my old hot-water bottle A s Before T make my will, Q This may not (who) shall be and of the mi able of occupations, occur until that time arrives, {ir chief THE COST OF § GHTS he shall that the la re As a wayor. Bossy Gillis doesn’t | Ty flights we have been read- | faithfully executed.” need any law. He opened another g ,hout cost money. So far the| ‘Thus the power to use the gasoline 1illing station without & p,.pere have been more or less in |forcea in the absence of a d permit and dared the authorities t0 | ¢h. hackground, where perhaps they tion of war comes from his do anything about it. At least, it wa a to zet a play Boston newsp: good way pers. S WITH BADGES in the ! S belong. The Byrd how- has no such expedition, tutional power as it ever, philanthropists this power, |standing as a rear gnard and dona- | exists in time of peace as well as tions are welcome. Nearly a million | during war. commander | litia of ft { |the several states and (Scction 3) |2nd their voices were uniformly gen- It aws be | armed | eclara- consti- | commaunder; and ‘ has been assumed, | 1o build a brick oven at street 1 excep- | as Jeff- | abroad ife and e. Thies | REDEC | dollars will need to be collected. | There has been only one This is getting to he a more badge | <, far most of the profits hma:vmm from the time of Thoma bedecked town every day. The time [ gone to the airplane manufacturers.'erson to the present, that the Pres- is mot far distant, if the present|peerything that advances aviation |ident did not regard the fise tendency continues. when even boot- | jjkcwise advances the future of the laf armed forces to protect | blacks will wear badges As for the . anyfacturers. Most plane plants | property as a power of offic calloused-handed sons of toil Who 4re husy. The plants which make the exception was President Buchanan, mees up the streets for the board o [ public works. they even may wearing badges or later that is. it nobody much to the Alderman J. Gustave Johnson Tha thing thag huilding commission sooner happens to pa attention shouts o about th that irks e f ‘motors are extremely busy. Rarely who claimed that without the have we Leen left in the dark as to ity of Congress the Presiden anthor- t could | what type of motor has propelled not lawfully nuse the armed forces ! ¥ | successful plane, |abroad even for tue protection of | €| Some of the courageons aviators American lives and property, In a Who sk their lives to advance special message to Congress on Feb- ® aviation are not =o fortunate. Ex- iuary 18, 1852, he recommended that ¥ | cluding those who powers have made the it passa law conferring such didn’t ask avybody's permission be- | qypreme sacrifice to advance av Congrese did not pass 1t | fore they went and bought those 4i5n and mark up new records have Senator Borah, who claims to be fancy insignia for the coat lapels If juen those who gained no enormons an expert, says the President has they had taken some of the hizher competence through their efforts. | the right to use marines in Latin- ups—if there are any—into their Thepe is Captain Harry Lyon. navi- America when occasion demands. | confidence about it nobody would sator of the Southern Cross. He re- | Yet there are freguent grumblings | have cared. Five extra badges 0 pyens 1o his home in Massachusetts | from a minority in Congress. In our town. affer all, make very little dif- it 6,000 in the rid and $50.000 opinion the law is not explicit but ference. We already have €0 Many potentially in the same color. An custom and precedent seem to be the | heing sported by city officials that mazing result guide. There are NUMErous CoNgress- nobody can tell exactly what they men who continually grumble about ire all about, and five additional SHARKS AND SNAKES the wse of armed forces in various sparklirs, we say. will not confuse | Nows that there are sharks off parts of the world without the prior | us v more than we already are the shore of Connecticut need worry consent of Congress, as they I:nm! i 4. But this ing badees none of the flivver artists who niotor the Constitution provides, but they withont permission and then throw- down to the shore cach week-end. yarely do more than irritate the De- ing the bill in front of the Common “Tley might be consoled with refer- | partment of State. The last time the | Council for payment is £0ing 100 wyce fo the statement made recently matter was brought nup it was in far. That, we take it is one of the by a sciontist that sharks never at- the form of a rider fo the naval points that Mr. Johnson wants W human beinzs unless they make appropriation bill, the rider ealling brought up. o mistake. Some such mistakes, for the withdrawal of marines from | Getting down 10 a bagis of reason- however, have heen made. Nicarngua, The rider was defeated. | ing that even a moron can under- That is like the scientific data ha®- | not on its merits, but because a stand, we'll put it this way: If the it that a rattlesnake never at- question of such importance should members of the fire board, and the tacks unless he is met suddenly and pot have been a rider to an appro- | gentlemen of the police board. and can’t beat it elsewhere, or thinks he | priation bill. This attitude undoubt- | such other office-holders who hap- can't. The difficulty is to zive due ediy was correct. 1t is a question pen to be hedecked with emblems. | notice. Dispate had it t & fhat shomld e debated and solved wally need the mto show how im- fellow was bitten by one of the tribe oy its merits, not as a rider portant they are. then the monsivurs last week e e of the building commission also re- | We are afrald of sharks and dis JACK TRIES AGAIN quire them. But this scheme of b like to mest snakes But neither a _"l:':: m A.'{f.‘.)rn':‘.’\.f'{,"l\,,.,'f.:k'r;‘r‘ ing them without telling anybody as dangerous as antomcbites, air- | [0CS fi;f' Al ethaling knlr “;; about it until the bill arrives is an- planes and the beaches. Virtually | peayyweight title, {CopyTight 1923 Publishers yndicate | partment will give a benefit enter- tainment in the Town hall tomor- | | Cowles served Acting Town Correct this sentence: “7 watched onr ladies playing bridge,” said he, le and sweet.* 25 Ve éa‘r::g;—}oday I A Hornkohl has made application | 220 Elm | The Parker Shirt Co. shut down ast night for one week. Chief Rawlin, visited Camp Chamberloin yesterday. Members of the Plainville fire de- i row evening and will appoar-for the | | first time in their new uniforms. The railroad is making changes| at the depot so that when passen- | Rgers are forced to take an extra third rail ear they will not have to cross the deadly third rail as at| present The Sovereizns Trading Co. de- cided last night not to purchase the | Main strect block where it has been | conducting business for so long. At some date in the future it will erect a commodious new building. Deputy Sheriff Stockwell today served papers upon the mayor in a | suit brought by . M. North of | Berlin for damages for personal in- juries sustained in tripping over a street hydrant which projected three inches above the surface of the | sidewalk And Deputy Sherift Clerk Andrew Turnhull with papers no- | tifying of a suit brought by a New Jersey man who owns property here and claims 1t is being spoiled by pollution of a stream with sewage. Supernumerary Officer Harry | Mount ordered some young men off | the street after midnight last night, and one of the youths complained | to Chief Rawlings today that the supernumerary was officious. The second day of caucus regis- fration brought the total number to 57. One man insisted upon regis- tering as a “mugwump” and will have the privilege of attending a cancus by himself. Both divisions of the A. 0. H. plan to make good showings in the Hartford parade Wednesday. The irst division will have 250 men and the Philharmonic band: the second And let me clasp at my last gasp his stocking feet and with his shoes | | Order Now While They Are Stil! | Dictionaries The good red flannel still; jat the exact geographical North l 1332 New York Avenus, Washingtom, D. G And when I reach my long last hed, | Pole? Btrew no| flowers ofer wmy head, | A. 1t would point south to the T want a copy of the bulletin HOME CANNING OF FRUITS AND But, nice and neat, lay at my fest | Magnetic North Pole. Al direc- | VEGETABLES. and enclose herewith five cents in looss, uncancelled, Alice, my old hot-water bottle! | tions on the earth are south from U. S. postage stamps, or coln, to cover postage and handling coste: | the geographic North Pole. Asa Obedient! matte® of fact the magnetic com- l NAME ... s e s e e e o T s el i “What are vou doing with your|pass In very high latitudes hecomes 5 | shosy of 7" Dickie sas sekedtas he|sinretiaple. Kince it {a thsn top near STREET AND NUMBER suvveeee. comsivermsmen | stood on the porch of his home, in | the Magnetic North Pole to fune- I oy 3 i tion in his hand, contemplating the wet| Q. What is the difference be- 1 am a reader of the Herald, i lawn, tween high and low German? > J “Oh." he answered, “Mother told| A. High and low German are _—— - —— e - - - me not to get my shoes wet.” two dialects of the West Teutonic —Mrs. . W. Shumaker When a man goes aboard ship he s not necessarily on the water wagon! E Pluribus um's LITTLE BLACK and BLUE BOOKS | 10,000 Titles to Select From Five Cents! 1605 Improve Your English. By an old pool player. 382 Guide to Pronunciation Including special chapter og Pullman car names. Patriotism One Thousand Ways to Beat Your Income Tax. 618 Fancy Drinks and How to Mix Them, Sex Books 941 Facts for Young Men on Training a_Mustache. 40 Facts for Women on ?GY- ting Rid of Them. ¢ What & Young Girl Should Know (about cotton stock- ings). Business Helps 148 735 How to Remove Ink Stains| From Postage Stamnps. 1452 Business Forms as Seen in a Turkish Bath. Good Health 762 How to Live a Hundred Years. By Two 50-year old men. 294 Care of the Teeth, in a glass of water. 154 Latest Names for Stomach- ache. Psychology 386 Is There a Bogey Man? 324 How to Marry Without Biting the Nails, 964 Are You Crazy? Send for this Book. 666 Ten Living Americans and Englishmen who can spell veho- Analysis. in Clothing — Or what Gravy on a Vest De- division. 125 men and the American band th will have floats. M. J. Harteon was today appointed a regular letter carrier. He has| heen emoloved at the Stanley Works. | New Rritain now has 15 regular, two rural. and three substitute carriers Hair for the hest violin bows comes from white horses. notes, arn to Say ave Money in a Shop. “No."—and Barber | || division of the Germanic group of |snot Schultz in the abdomen. Schultz | Mr. E. Pluribus Unum, || the Indo-Germanic languages. High | crumpled and fell to the fioor. | Publishers. || German 1s the literary language and| Canow then went to a little room | | | the language of the educated classes. [ at the rear of the store where he | Dear Sirs: || Low German is the folk language. |lived, and reloading the gun, shot off | T hereby ordar the following || Q. What causes a stye on the|the fop of his head, He fell back | numbers. If you're out of black ||eye? onto a small couch in the room, | or blue, my next choice of col- | A. It is caused by irritation, |gead. | or is plaid. | | especially from a foreign substance | Name ........cvvi0vseeseses || Betting into the eyelid. A | Reason 1| Q. Where does the supreme court | || _A. The supreme court of the W (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction | United States sits in the supreme 0’( 77|e flllhfl' QUESTIONS ANSWERED question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Burean, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, for reply. Medical, legal and marital tended research be undertaken. Al Schweiger. | men were Killed in the United States nationality and studio address? studio address is mayor of New York City needle of a magnetic compass point West Toonerville News Item Forbidden) court chambers in the capitol build- ing at Washington, D. C. Q. 'Which word is correct in this sentence “with” or “by”? “The two magazines that I sent down with Frank” or “The two magazines that I sent down by Frank"? A. Either may be used. . They are synonymous, meaning “by means Washington, Aug. 17.—Forecas! for Southern New England: Rain tonight and possibly Saturday morn- ing; not-much change in temper: ture; moderate to fresh south winds o Forecast for Eastern New Yol ! Q. How many votes in the Elec- ,s“’f‘"“ '°"<{“‘h' o atund i aighl | toral College has the state of Texas? |1 "o ooy saturday in south ¥ | ?|tion: slightly cooler in extrem A. Twenty. Q. What is Gene Tunney's real name and when was he born? A. James Joseph Tunney; born in New York City, May 25, 1898, Q. Who plays the feminine lead opposite John Barrymore in the photoplay “Don Juan"? A. Mary Astor. Q. What is Balsa wood? A. Tt is the lightest of all woods and is used for pontoons, , struts, rafts, pads or bumpers in shipping containers, gliders, radio loud speak- ers and insulation of all kinds, BOTH WANT DIVORCE Gidla Gray and Her Husband Have north portion; moderate to freil south and southwest winds. Conditions: A portion of ti western trough of low pressure moved eastward to the St. Lawrence valley and lake region and the southern Appalachian disturbance has merged with the northern sys- tem. A showery area covers the middle Atlantic states and con- ditions are unsettled in the northern districts westward to the Ohio val- ley and central plains states. Areas of high pressure overlis much of the country west of the Mississippi river and temperatures are lower over the Canadian berder states west of the upper lake region. Conditiona faver for this vicinity) local showers and slightly coole! Temperatures yesterday: can get an answer to any enclosing two cents in stamps cannot be given, nor can ex- questions will receive a per- reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- High fidential,—Tiditor. JFiled Separate Actions Seeking | Atlanta - vovveswes— 3¢ Atlantic City mmm——as 90 Q. What color eyes and hair has| Separations, Boston .m-y-.—- 9 Nils Asther? Was he a motion| yyigaykee, Aug. 17.—UP—Gilda | BUNSl0 wrwmsmrmsraweess 6 piciuretacionin fGenmany 2 Gray, who shimmied to stardom, | Chicago awewrswswmm 92 A Nils Asther was born in|anq Gil Boag, dance hall owner to | CiNcinnatl wmswmm— 78 Malmo, Sweden, January 17, 1902.| whom she was married four years | DERVer wovummmmmsmm 76 6 feet tall, weighs 170 pounds as dark brown hair and hazel He worked in German pic- before coming to this country. Who was commander of the which sank the Lusitania? 88 3 90 93 4 86 80 Detroit wweemrm—— Duluth i e— Jacksonville mumswr—s Kansas City sssmses Los Angeles gmummzmmmm Miami ET——— Minneapolis mssreswamms ago, have started separate actions to terminate their mariage. Miss Gray's action was filed July 27 at Port Washington, Wis., but it did not become public until Boag's attorney revealed in Los Angeles A German officer named |Yesterday that Boag will seek an-|M i nulment of the marriage on allega. ;::"“;::‘f:nm\-—- :: How many negro enlisted | 1on® of pre-nuptial fraud. s——— Y New Orleans s s New York smcvessmmmms Norfolk, Va. vwwmssem ‘The dancer’s petition charges that her married life with Boag was irk- some, that he drank to excess, and 86 80 e during the world war? wssrersceBARID from Hampton Roads in| many. Norwich, Aug| 17 (#—William B. Schultz, 55, Montville, proprietor of an amusement park at Gardner lake was fatally shot last night by Wil- liam Canow, 65, who then commit- ted suicide. The shooting took place in Canow's store along the lake shore. Schultz and Canow engaged n an argument in the store and Canow who was back of the counter, grabbed a single barrel shot gun and meaning “At the meadow". What is Dolores Del Rio's She was born in Durango, 0. August 3, 1903 of Spanish Mexican parentage. Her United Studios, Santa Monica Blvd., Holly- California. What does the name Craw- and treatment, the time and temperatures for proressing and everything the housewife meeds to know for successful canning. Fill eut the coupon below and send for it: When was William Strong From 1895 to 1597, In what direction would the _——— - CLIP COUPON HERE VACATION EDITOR. Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, e accurately, By Fontaine Fox | oLD MAN SIMoN, WHe MOVED HIS SECoND HAND AUTo PARTS BUSINESS OVER BY THE K.R. dRosSSING So AS -To BE NEAR THE S$oUREE OF SUPPLY, HAP A FINE PIECE oF LUEK THE OTHER PAY. L ]

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