New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 20, 1928, Page 6

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farm relief favored a joint congres- slonal committee to study the prob- lem and draft legislation. This is no extended analyeis of the speech. One reason is that the sena- tor did not put New Britain Herald NBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY tarsed Datly (Suadey Kxcepted) At Horalé Blag.. 61 Cburch Btreet forward anything e S strikingly new. The significant point sae Tour O |about the address was that Curtis Enanee Mute T ot pevit fne. evisnsies | politics to interfere with his convie- Eatered at the Post OMce at New Brit- tions. This is c ain 80 Second Clase Maill Matter. TELEPHONM CALLS Business Office ... 926 Editorial Rooms .. . cditable in any man running for offic; | The New York Herald-Tribune, as {head G. O. P. organ, has been claim- ing that Hoover's prohibition stand | permitted all those who favored The only profitable advertising medlum | odification to support the G. 0. P. @ the City. Circulation books and press | g reom siways open to advertisers. But this the Curt, speech, There can be no doubt left that attempted modification is not a part of the Republican doctrine. It was before Member of the Asclated Presy fhe Aswciated Prese Is exclusively en- titled to the wuse for re-publicaticn ot " 5 al) news credited to %t or mot otherwise |may make no ultimate difference Iso local g AR one way or the other, but so far as campaigning is concerned the main Member Asdit Baresu of Cireulation | iss The A B. G is @ oational organizstion which. furnishes Dewspapers and adver- tissrs with & strictly honest circulation. Our circulstion statistice are > continues to be between the drys and the wets, with the candi- | dates of the two l definitely adverse | parties taking stands on the tection sgatnst fraud In A ARAPSDS subject. In short, a referendum. tion figu EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 20, to the Berlin railroad station, could just as casily drop off a pouch of Kensington mail at the post oflice of the latter town; but it doesn't. The Kensington mail goes right aboard |the train at Berlin—wlen it doesn't | | 80 to Hartford direct—and then goes to New Haven. There it is'sorted into a Kensington pouch and in due time {a northbound train brings it back to |the Berlin railroad s |it ultimately finds Facts and Fancies! BY ROB QUILLEN Even in the old days the amateur was rich, but he got the riches first. A logical contender is one who can damage an opponent miost and Rickard le The number of unemployed de- pends on whether you call golf sport |or labor. ion, whence its way to the Kensington post oflice. An overnight service is guaranteed; indeed, mail | There's always compensation. 17| arely takes longer than 24 hours to |YoU scrve cheerfully as Bpels Lhe: Well-Named, We'll Say? 1 = = ‘. g boy se norale. | et between New Britain and Ken- | HESAE IO Tuprale ations get their name because | “ e ou cal t an answer to an by | sington, | Fortunately, none o our religion| There never is—there never was qu:;mn of fact or information by| A AN .organization founded by All this is according to the best |and politics get mixed except thed A ;I’\mg oy u:n‘ (oklm f?umll‘ EliE e D e e Dt:u;ml‘ G‘uggel;rclm for the purpose | est gra | Than the pocket-hool ol he 5 of stel va | post oftice practice. The rates on let- | OWest grade. e Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, | 20 (09 ninE the ;‘g«;::sc:mfsm o | ters and other postal matter are low, | i 1333 “::‘c‘:‘;;’; ':;en“:zn;“‘:";’tflf:" Madison Ave., New York city, N. Y, | | and there seems to be no disposition | | Selling Wimseldl, for reply. Medical, legal and marital cd\L:{-:t e (t(l‘u Lames gt.c the jto raisc the cost of transportation | tate Agent: “Will - ¥0u |agvice cannot be given, nor can ex- s \-rimflsa ’dA'f'kSul“ll_m; el and distribution unduly. Things work | ? cReally, this is very |lchded research be undertaken. Al| b OB Avka ‘}‘j;‘;ho fl“a“r’; 1()“‘ according to a preconceived plan | B e ¥ |other questions will receive a o 1I'd like to think it ovel |and we'll bet it isn’'t changed often Ilivd in thinking too fast a service | b s-| Handicap: Something that keeps ' You don't | between nearby towns is not nec The best way to handle a traftic | Real Estate Agent (absently): not be answered. All letters are con- 28 the years'go by, cop is to move your head up and You'd better grab me at once. |fidential.—Iiditor. { o vh i inist several other parties have looked The post office is somewhat justi- |down as he finishes cach sentence. |Severa I ‘ : [me over and are crazy to grab me| Q. Has Poland a navy? Are QUESTIONS ANSWERED sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- there any ports of any considerable buttons first used in Europe? A. Buttons were first employed in southern Europe in the 13th or 14th century and the manufacture of buttons in England dates only from the reign of Queen Elizabeth as a trade of any importance. Skell buttons were invented by B. San- ders, a Dane, who in 1807 moved from Copenhagen to Birmingham and there began their manufac- ture. Horn buttons were introduced about the middle of the 19th .cen- tury by E. Bassot of Paris. Q. What is the home address of William Howard Taft? A. 2215 Wyoming avenue, N. W. Washington, D. C. | Q. What is the Guggenheim Foundation for Aeronautics? land, Mississippi, Nevada, New Mex- ica, New York, Okluhoma, Penn- sylvania, Tennesses Texas, West Virginia, Wyoming. COMMUNICATED Ttah, |cipal center of southern states and over portions of ) you will be"so comfortable and- like our climate 80 well that you will not worry about ‘“Banks” that “Bust” or a little wind or rain and after that you will Boost not Knock the sister state of Florida. A VISITOR. Observations On The Weather Washington, Aug. 20.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair tonight, slightly warmer in western Massachusetts. Tuesday - partly cloudy; gentle variable winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Fair in south; showers in north portion late tonight or Tuesday; warmer in central portion tonight; gentle variable winds. Conditions: Pressure is high over the north Atlantic states and southwestward to the Gulf region, It is low in a long trough from the northern Mi ippi valley southe westward to New Mexico with prine minimum pressure over Nebraska, e . S8howers have occurred in the -| size in Poland? the upper Mississippi and Missour} and L X ¥ee you from doing your best—like be e Tt o 5 . a valleys. Temperatures’ are not iecal advertisers. ‘ = - Ay, In these days of telephones it fmx riilotedito e e et whe Do 122X TO L1ZZ1E TONZLY A v’v“‘_c tepublic of Pol.\lna A Visitor Knocks severe in any district, ‘cool - nights —— CONNECTICUT LAGGING is comparatively casy to put through | - By Maurice Molitor i“‘l‘“l!ll(“v"* '0"‘ vflm S \‘mum ahwlve Us For Knocking Florida and pleasant, sunny days prevail The Hersid te on etle aatly (o New IN SURFACED ROADS |a message between the towns, | Music helps athletes, and what the | A boy named lzzy i e pm_‘;"ots“}"‘:“’";": Editor, cast of the upper lake region and ::;:“ g ey || The ald saying ithat “figgers don't | But one wonders, all the same, ,'\h:n.(- e to ul.-d at present is :'uil b City of Danzig is now Poland's out. | NeW Britain Herald, alf‘.l;u‘.‘uwé\l‘;.;m‘s}.«::p;;gflhrn l,r‘esdlslcnac: % (e Y e 5 | £ 5 B 5 c refrain from slipping. ra amed L/ = City. o et e 1 states, - Orand Ceatral, ¢3nd Street. {lie” have a new application in con- | why the post office depends so much | aa sty And e sang a song to let to the sea. Dear Editor: ditions favor for this vicinity faip " ncction with the percentage of Con-|upon the railroads for the mail| Hoover has done much for the |Tell Q. Who played the part of the weather followed The gentle news having been duly :necncul nighways, state anf local, broken to Senator Curtis that he | Which are improved. If the “pay us was nominated for vice president, |YOU 0" policy were as perfect as let the artists “retouch” his picture |its Proponents assert Connecticut and register surpri ]5\“'&‘1)’ would provide a better per- centage than 23.8 of its roads s |faced. But those are the figures, as Bosp R, Do IJ:I::”C e |the Associated Press reflects from 1§ for office. Wieaton;iarpel puuning the official record provided by the 4 litical parson who . 1 ’“"”"l" “°"d( “‘kn:“s how to | Federal Burcau of Public Road. Aten wiblDIY, oy | The Nutmeg state, to be sure, is Lt Inot as low in the scale as North | Dakota, with only 1.7 per cent of her According to the political experts, | Roach |roads surfaced; but it certainly is a | run a newspaper. A little extra effort | A R e, | 122Y ot dizzie, but he didn't get | women voters have not yet learned 10 .y grom Indiana, which tops | to speed up the mail service between ;h,s,o\m\"‘,T"‘M:,T‘;O,‘:‘?":?\'\‘.\(Ihlf‘.),j c Llzain, ol Ve o, to scratch their tickets; most Of | yp oyt \ith 65.3 per cent. the towns would be vastly appreciat- | age of their prejudices i Bizein i them, ~when they wote, Vole] “gonnocicyt, on the basis of the [ed by the public at large, however; | : Late Suitor! “straight.”” We have no doubt, hoW-lg.,,00 is only an average state in |but if it cannot be done, we'll have Baxter: “Young Caswell says he ever, that as soon as they find them- |, o\ 4 i provement, not a leader, a8 |to forget it. up at four o'clock cvery morn- selves being looked upon as reliable | 0o e politicians in Hartford e o game by the party chicftains they |\Couia jave us beliove, " AIDING LUNCHEON CLUB! {12 citetiles et Sl gons will begin scrambling the political | eggs, just to show the parly moguls | .n that they are covered with that in this, as in all things, they €an |, 5o o oonalt or concrete. It means | do as they please. | roads that are treated to be smooth, | regardless of the method. In In | 10T | gfana the majority of surfaced roads To be sure, surfaced roads do not | M. Hay, candidate Senator in Missouri, until recently Charles |are covered with gravel or crushed | | stone, which suits the autoists as be- ‘V |ing better than nothing at all, was a spellbinder for the Anti Saloon League. He is a Democrat. He now is supporting $mith, His ap- peal to the voters runs this way: “I Smith looks too wet for you, just re- | cept for the fancy concrete roads in | | Connecticut, most of the unimproved | like they roads 4 were 30 years {suxzrslions from between the towns, There |suffering, |are trolleys and buses, yet these do |about the Amer | not seem to be utilized there is no rail service. service nd perhaps he has heard an business man, Her that he longed to 1 her Mizzie Sweet Mizzie, at all \mlns‘!{ Americanism: Once grocery store, | “Be Let there be | three filling stations, five rcady-to- lou!y one train a day on a branch ’\\var shops for women. | {line and the post office is content to = | nes o e | The question to be decided is utilize it for the mail service; where- | ; | whether there are more Smith re- as nine times out of ten a bus line |publicans or more Hoover demo- would do a better job. crats. We are not telling the postal boys | SR - 9 B0 Y51 still, steamship travel would be | |how to run the governments busi- | yncte) to0, if the ships were so con- ness, however, any more than we |structed as to bust when half way | T would allow them to tell us how to | across. | my M Letame Kiz ! My line is Bizzy! You gotta have dough 1f you don’ wanna nough e no lizzy Mizzie for | sofal” Lunchcon clubs, smarting under the criticisms of Sinclair Lewis, H. L. Mencken, George Zarl T. Bissell Those biographers have been dig- ging up naughty things about all { great men, | Tsn't it about |them to discover was quite a rounde An old boy merely fe that way, | but a wrinkled prune actually looks | younger when it's stewed. Mr. Mencken nor Mr. s entered for the Olyr won the hammer Jean Nathan, and others, are asking constructive these devastating critics. We doubt whether they will | ther St | sinclair w BEh AN pics, so Ircland It is all right for Lewls, Mencken | oyent, and Nathan to throw bricks; that's e | their trade. But No light without heat? Rats! Did | you ever notice the cold light in the | of time for one that JUSTA HIC cording to W, I the lower han 'OWN! Wentworth of the Hud- to produce a few member that I am dry enough for you. And if I look too dry, just re- member that Smith is wet enough for you, and stick your straight ticket into the ballot box.” Which in our estimation entitles Hays to that leather medal. |ago, which means they are carcfully | {avoided by motorists. | Connecticut has a lower percent- | |age of surfaced roads than the fol- | |lowing states: California, Florida, | |Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, | Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey York, North Carolina, Ohio, HOT WATER AND SALAD | Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Wash- “After a luncheon consieting Of |j;pi0n, and Wisconsin, And some of | one glass of hot water and & small |y | New are far above Connceticut in the list. | The evil of not having sufficient | surfaced evident to nllw‘ Trafic centers upon the main high- | vegetable salad.” This is our idea of a hot meal. Perhaps you may think John D. Rockefeller the elder munificent meal. In which case you are wrong. It was what a famous man ate and roads is enjoyed this | | ways, vastly intensifying congestion. That is the trouble in Connecticut, “not the great increase in the nume called a meal; however, otherwite we | e of The. state has wouldn't it at all. The | no¢ gept pace with the automobiles. | gentleman who enjoyed this healthy [y 1 egisiature and casily digested luncheon was antomobile mention “authorizes” new | road improvements every two years, | Henry Ford. |but the fmprovements not And let it be said that Henry's | qomncoming until health, at his age, is very good. It 15 | nioney on hand for the purpose. This as clear as daylight he is not digsing | sounds splendid in theory but is any graves with his teeth. | doubttul in practice. If most of the 3 |other states had such a system the | are there is enough FORD AND PROSPERITY Henry Ford knows prosperity when he eces it. He is cspecially con- automobile prosperity. greater part of the Still be @ hog. | cerned over SMALL TOWN MAIL In fact, he is an authority on it.| i in Connecticut are close to- Anything that threatens to interfere | goiner, but that does not mean mail | with the consumption of flivvers he | otyween them travels along the most | opposes. | direct It happens that he now is inclined | yijo, for instance, about the speed of | to be a Republican, He rather independent in his and the Democrats once thought he was one of Jefferson's faith, just as route. Ask anyone in Plain- | has been | the 1mail to New Britain and he will POltics, | jupher about it as long as you care to listen. Yet the two towns are less | than ten minutes apart on the rail- Hoover was onc | road which carries the mail, The rea- they once thought of the party. son why mail between the two cities | Ford, although favoring HOOVET, tikes longer than ten minutes to doea not happen to be aligned with | cover the distance 4s because it| Republicanism which the old-style €aw nothing but national disaster if to usually first to Hartford, where New Britain mail from many travels the Democr: Perhaps this grand old | jg gispatehed here quickly enough to | varty moguls occasionally, but that | jpeyre overnight service. The | isn't worrying the motor king. He | rcason for this—at le s ot tholl continues to speak his mind, even in |y not cnough | s happened win. surrounding towns accumulates and | irks the an . or sons—is that there a campaign year. | mail from the small towns to justify | His declaration that prosperity is |, certain to continue no matter who is scparate pouch for every other nearby city and town. ected president not please | Or take the mail from New Britain station GOP, which has been broad- | 1o o Tow does simple that | rmington. casting just the contrary. We are in- ' 1o0ks; the fwo towns are so close clined to think Ford is right. together that once they were one. But when the motor magnate govs | But the letter to Farmington goes 80 far as to say that if the dry law | first to New Haven. and then travels is changed he'd have to shut up his | up on the branch railroad line run- | ning through Farmington. As there due preliminary thought. Ford hap- | js to pens to have plants in C plants he evidently is talking without quite a ible railroad service nada, and on this branch line the mails like- no onc has yet heard of their buing | wise suffer. But the post office closed up after the dry law Was janages to deliver mail between the ditched in that country. two towns within 24 hours, and | CURTIS' GOOD SPEECH nator Curtie of speech of acceptance, made an ad- that's perhaps going some under the circumstance Kansas, in his Then one can, if one wishes, con- sider the system of transporting mail between New Britain and Ken- sington. The Ke: is within a dress that did not pussyfoot on any point he d. His most im- portant two points, of the 14 he specialized in, were those dealing with prohibition and farm relief. He | much mail to and from New Britain came out flat-footed gets on the rafls. One would think of prohibition, and in the casc of | that a mail truck, while taking mail discu sington post office stone’s throw of New | Britain Junction in Berlin, where | against repeal country would | can de | real basis of sound investing is about "ramor has commenced the laying of successful speculator makes a bus- | v. Lucian Bojnowski is not act- | e ' bl iness of it and attends to it as re- |ing as foreman of the work of huig. | | Kepublican song: “We're Going ligiously as any other occupation, |IN% the new Polish Catholie church, | 100%™ o oo board and always watching for | mon since the eontroeting flrm rn—",v,J,,';f,‘,‘,; ’:;r:.-\,“:r")‘_sn:}r:mml; ;Drlo?e | “signs.” | fused to finish its job. When it fs | .. ' RERS p a trench feet deep. filled with sofl preparcd | China. Monsignor Froewis, an Aus- | roses, The luncheon clubs won't get them | Tt is called by various and sundry names and s inhabited by various ind sundry peoples. As in all towns of its the people consider |themselves quite urban, The Town, | being located convenient fo water | transportation, is a trading center of no mean importance. The town has a f de jand also a police departinent, A «Pardon | fr€ Dublic library is also onc of the | conveniences of which the The Takus Kleenan Causes are obscure, and few realize that New Bedford workers Literary buffoonery |0 on wirike hecause freight trains take their wag rom this Gource. These boys are not | built that way. Aoea nat s depsnd for lucre upon constructive conceptions. | 5 | Great batters are seldom gr 3 5 b L [golfers, probably because they can't LAMBS B FLEECED OF {1y the ball by swinging three clubs | MILLIONS they approach. An article in el Correct this sentenes ' said the truck driver. suceess and the Savings Bank | Journal, penned by Reginald Roome, | ¥ president of the Excelsior Savings =~ | bonst. Tee 3ank in New York, makes the (Copyright 1928, Publishers | Cream Bmporium is a favorite loaf- Bl 3 L Ll syndicate, ) ing place for the swains of the vil- tonishing tion that an analysis [ iaEa: A matiine ratsHtE M At obithe of savings bank deposits in New | |25 Yét;rs Agofi' oday | fast sct is the Elite Drug Store & York city indicates that probably ten Tonsorial Parlor, which is a very million dollars a month s being modern drug store, carrying a com- = " | plete line of hardware, sporting Bitnarana by denofitoss swhotbava |51 o) v il dEon i posetved | Cagds | Al et o decided to stry “take a flier in Wall |a postal card fron ot |is abroad. It was thus and doubtless | OV e 4 ‘ G | Rév. M. W, Gaudian will take the | foreigner), is one of the town’s best WL vo wnll Shs el oF diban, | children of St John's German Luth- [known citizens, Another well known average man never Wwill learn that |eran church out to White Oak by a | citizen is a fellow by the name of he never gets something for noth- |special car Wednesday afternoon, | Walker. 1 do not know what kind ing, and if he has heard it he prob-| The big smokestack at Traut & |of a position he holds, but I under- i | Hine's was succosstully raise v, | sta > is on the town's parole. forgotten that it “takes | HiNG's Was successtully raised today, |stand he is o wn's parole 1 I, McMillan, who | branch post office, He bad a pleasant trip A fellow by the name of Smith, fan uncommon name, (probably a ever ably has It is 125 fect in height and has There are several amusement money to make money.” In other | Giametor of 315 fect, waces in town, and they say you words, it is well nigh impossible lo‘ Rev. G. E. Pihl and family have | can a fine time, especially if &et rich in Wall street without one |Bone to Chicago for their vacation. |you go over to Coney Island, Ho- The mayor and Building Inspector | hok 1in vast amounts and has 1, or Jetsey City, B s {Turnbull visited Wolcott mountain | 7The town also has a few nice resorces fo tide over depressions. |ioduy and inspected the work belng |building A ca paign of education on the |done in the new reservoir. The eon- the only solution, them: and the should take the banks lead in concrete. [ A committee ‘from the Greek | Orthodox Catholic church visited the ves this. The average man with a few building department and water de- hundred dollars saved from months | partment today and inguired about | and years of honest toil reads in the |@ Duilding permit. The Greeks own the former John Haffet property on iver street and plan to raze the house to the rear, then ercct a church on the front of the lot. Tt will accommodate 400 people, and there are half of {his many Gree in the city now. The Russian Ortho- WonAans, S0MC |0 cafnelic hurch was buith about more. Finally he makes up his mind |5 year ago, | and plunges. In the meanwhile the | A total of 1924 repub bull market has gone merrily on and | 779 democrats hay vofe in the party pri ¥ thi Wi M Suetnge e Gnp L el e people at- | tended the open meeting i Kirkham's grove yesterday. They came from all over the state. Rev. [G. E. Pihl of this city is president of the conference Tennis shoes v press glowin, fortunes made in ccounts of the Wall street. Day the bull money being rolled up by someonc. He thinks, he hesi- tates and then he after day he reads of market and the made his gamble the peak has been reached. He buys at near top prices, is ignorant of the signs, and holds on. Along come the bears and then the decline. Mr. up the paper, gazes at his favorite | Aver. ge Man picks | and 42¢ a pair at Gardner's sale. stock wher: upon he perchance de- The new city director names, will con- indicating that s cides to become a communist or a | tin 1 i e : the population of the city is 36,4 “1 wish 1 had someone to ‘skip’ e LR | A trick eyelist advertising o1q | With met” Wall street is no place for the un- | ffome Week in Bridgeport caused e initiated or the mazn of limited [quite a seneation here yesterday, | America Finding Hersclft s AT G g & mothing for | riding through the streets and doing | e o Above all, it i mvlnln;. ,uu |all sorts of stunts hofore the resh. | The Democrats anounce that the person to tamper with who h: 3 5 % : ¥, ) poing ig] e bit- i ? honr crowds. He'avas made up as | 10V are geing to fight to the bit to be other occupied, for the |/t 7O ter endt | ou,” Savings bank, home town real |<aid in future vears that Father | it in. | Boinowski built the chorch, the estate of proven worth, in- ) e Rk | statement will be litcrally true. inia: v thos “Come on outside and loc: words!” "l vears of age and s Columbus | ¢ i son there is located a small town | onstructive ideas 1is another thing banker’s eyes when you ask to re- | wiy E e entirely, | new? [ artment | natives | Student Prince in the movie of that name? A. Ramon Novarro, Q. MHow old is Gene Stratton, | the movie actress? What relation is she to Gene Stratton Porter, the novelist? In which of the novelist's books did she appear in the movies? A, Gene Stratton is fourteen the grand daughter of the late Gene Stratton Porter, the novelist. Her real name |is Gene Stratton Monroe. She has appeared in adaptations of Gene | Stratton Porter's novels “The Keeper of the Bees,” “Laddie,” and Q. My father and mother Italians but T was born in were this |How can 1 establish my citizenship in order to be able to vote? A. Having been born in country you are an Amerfean cit zen. To Jlish this fact you | must produce a copy of your birth | certificate, Q. Tow often did Jack Dempscy | fight Luis Firpo? | A Only onc ptember 14, 1 . | Q. What is the meaning of the name Il ¥ A. It is French and means “the king.” | Q. Were bets on the Tunncy- Heency fight paid on the basis of a knockout victory for this at New York City, | | unney ? A. According to newspaper wc- | counts, Wall street brokers and other York betting commis- | sioners paid off bets on this hasis, | That is, those who bet on Tunney to win by a knockout, won their | bets, { is, 3 What is the address of James West, Chief Scout Executive of Boy Scouts of America? No. 2 Park avenue at 32nd strect, New York Ci Q. From what is “Nothing in his life so became him as the leaving of it” taken? A om Shakespeare's Macheth, ct 1, Scéne 4, line 7. Q. When was the last time the | Olympic games were held in Ath- | ens, Greece? A, In 1986 under a Olympic dispensation games. Q. TIs platinum than gold? A, Yes. The latest retail the saying special for Greek more valuable price quotation on platinum is $78 per ounce for refined platinum. The price of gold is fixed by law at| $20.67183 per ounce. | Q. What islands are included in Australasia? A, Australasia is a geographical term applied to the greater Aus- tralian region, which includes the islands of Australla, Tasmania, New uinea, the Bismarck, Solomon and New Hebrides archipelagoes, New Caledonta and New Zealand. Q. When were shell and horn country. Am I an American citizen? |Or in any other In reference to your editorial of | Aug. 18th under the heading *¥lor- |¢ ida’ Storms™ I do not know in-what s to place you. As one of the | “Binder Boys” who got hooked, or | which “Bust” and torrential rain you time to think of the coming election A few Tlorida banks failed direct. |1y following *The Boom,” no doubt that as many would have failed here scction under the sume conditions. Only that the same condition || could never apply to Connecticut as | | this worthy state has more kinds of | weather, than “Heinz” makes | pick You say Florida does not adver- tise these storms, wonld thie state how many sustamned injuries trom falling on icy walks, or who | Washington . Many thousands of people in Florida use products made in New Britain but, I think they should boy- cott things made in any city where editors like you show such prejudice against Florida . Florida does not pick any particu- lar state when they publish pictures of snow, but you pick Florida and ride it although Virginia, North and South Carolina and Georgia receiv- ed more damage than Florida tn this last storm. 1f you are one of the “Binder Boys” we cannot expect much else from you, but ehould you be one who has never been there by all means take your vacation in Florida | tennis you want to know what it fs all prepared one of its complete and up-to-date rules of lawn t low and mail as directed: P - CLIP COUPON TENNIS EDITOR, Washington Burea 1322 New York Avenue, to cover pustage and handling costs: NAME STREET AND NUMBER buttons first made? When were vestmente in the same classification | 2dna Bahr | may be slower in comparison hut | TORT en the Hogs Die Laughing! they arc safer. There s no fast ex-| London, Aug. 20 (B—Pelief that taiesr “ihd, e Hal- i press 1o the land of wealth for the MONSiznor Frocwis, prefeet apostol- | hink yow're simply killing.” i man. |ic of the Catholic mission at Sin ond Butcher: “Oh, you think | Yang Chow, in southeast Honan |so. do you? | province, was tortured to death by A rose-hedge should be planted in | brigands 18 expressed in a dispatch three feet wide and two|to the Daily Mail from Hankow, First Butches |so much w | . | you slay it Sure I do. It isn’t it you slay as the way —S. D. Gibney 19 Reproduction orbidden) just as if for & bed of cutflower |trian. was captured by the brigands (Copyr two weeks ago, | temperature. “One” who has never been to Flor- |Atlanta ... |iga. | Atlantic City .. From your statement of, Banks |Do8ton ...... hurricanes with | Chitago seem to think | Cincinnati that the peopl f Florida e Denver . he people of Tlorida have no Datait s High Low . 84 0 . 84 64 . 82 64 | Chicago .. (13 58 62 also you infer that they are most |DUIUth «..ooue 52 common, let me set you straight, | Jacksonville . i Having lived in the North thirty | Sansas City . ) vears and Florida six, I know that | /0% Anseles ... 80 you are decidedly wrong in your de. | JAMi -..ouis 88 i Tinneapolis . ... 56 | Nantucket .. New Haven . | New Orleans | New York | Nortolk, Va. . Northfield, Vt. St. Louls .... | Son Francisco | clams have proved to be a menace dicd of pneunionia if they were look- | (¢ deep-sca divers. |ing for winter visitors? TENNIS RULES Yeu may not be a Bill Tilden or s Rene Lacoste, but when you play interesting and informative bulletins, are suggestions on bullding a proper tennis court. Fill out the coupon be- Washington, D. C. T want a copy of the bulletin, LAWN TENNIS RULES, and enclose [ - herewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, by increasing loudiness and not much change in Temperatures yesterday: Pittsburgh % ortland, Maine 86 In certain tropical waters, giant about. Our Washington Bureau has containing the nnis. Included in the bulletin also HERE u, New Britain Herald, U. 8. postige stamps, or coln,

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