New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 31, 1928, Page 8

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astute mind which preferred to see some things done which turned opt to be impracticable. Quigl | chairman of such a committs 2 ii1n hanbideans it wantoulic ey pathy witht he original school build- |ing program and with the |enlarge the present high rather than construct a new building in the north end. But when he had New Britain Herald RBRALD PUBLIBHING CUMPANY as in- Iswned Dally (Susday Ezcepted) At Merald Bidg. 67 Church Streer SUBICRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Year $3.00 Three Moatha 6. » Month T— | Eatered st the Post Office st New B » &8 @econd Clase Mai) M TELEPHONS CALLS Busibess Office Editorlal Rooms . plan to echool | examined all the facts regardin |latter he came to | with the majority of the rec | mittee of 14, that the nort | school plan was too expe | committee report was the the conclusion, t com- end high The conformity sive only profitable & the City. Circulation books end press room elwaye open to advertisers. hool likely that 1 find no rea- with the contention | com the of ittee. Tt i6 entirely Member of the Assucisted Press new committee w fhe Amsuciated Piess 18 exc titing the use fo1 re-pubile il oews credited to it or Bot otherwine credited 1o this paper and elso locas aews vublisned therein. Member A Buress of Clrculative Lthe A B C 10 & Daliodal urgapizatio which furshes oewspapers aud aaver | SChoOl population tsers with & etrictly GoDest aDaiymle «i | (jpo i eirculation. Qur circulation etatistics ere | " g ¥ ~asvd upon this audit. This inmres pro- tion would epecdily tectiun sgaiast traud in epaper die- | % tribution figures to both oational ema | 1Y remained statio local sdvertisers. isn't the With The Heraid W on ssle @ally, tn New 1€ need foraction a Tork at_Hotsling's Newsstand. Timer ' like it or not Square; Schults's Newastanda Eatrance Grand Central. 43md Street. | Some day catch up wi going Will be easier. cames it will be a to son to urge a different h all the facts have a as been follo b policy than that wh ed Wh pr g need is for enough accommod for the the ions which with is grow re but that case growth comes this co. no doubt nool growth and the W source of satis- Two accidents of moment in two days on the Milford pike, with one fatality. Looks as if the gendarmes have begun easing up the patrol n that time ction citiz realize that during the building expens properly job was done Semator Robinson in his accept- ance speech warned against the use of libel and slander in the cam-| paign. But William Allen White is in | Europe and probably won't read the AIRPLANE ACCIDENTS There are said to be 500 conce en faced it will ! the city will | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, | MORE SPEED IN COURTING Do the swains put in some of their time “calling on a young lady” now- They call, all right, but they “don’t sit around in the front “parlor™ like they used to do. The swain calls with his automobile and together |t T b oy Baumgartner 136. {hey hie themselves where interfer- | |Leupold 168, Schroder 173, Micke |109; Vogelsang 184, Doerr 60 on the sofa in the| -A nine picked from the factory teams will play Barrett's Regulars!| charms. The UEMS | yor)y for the city baseball cha were dimmed and there Was no pionship. Vickery of the avaerican ty to wonder whether the Hardware will be the All-Sta in the other automebile down | Pitcher and Sowney of Lander. | play first base. he r 3 the road could see more than was P o n o P ameer 1 2004 for them Papa, on the nighs took charge of his first prob the y man called, usually made 'a drunkard, today t scarce around the house and 1,h:’r',‘,‘;,j\s,”’:a;:;:::;:’:w e to a lodge meeting laiat il center. New men include Kooyum- slan and Olcott. The new principal is interested in athletics and sports here are looking up. The Hartford German Rifie club | defeated that of New Britain in tm | | first shoot yesterday, 1,082 to 1.023. New Britain men scored as follow | ada ce 16 sl Yet parlor h sitting ad its nec par s hims freque! | silent for two nights, and i sure of not getting in the Way. lthat this welcome sound has | stilled forever. Councilman MeMillan presented | | Mayor Bassett with a Scotch b | pipe today. The mayor has a fine sentiment, | pine collection from all p unabated. | world except Beirut and is just as &°t one from there soon. | The first and second wicket teams The onlY | . tices last night at Walnut Hil. | is th.t many the young man anq Sam Whaples of the second n saying fool things (team won the game for his team and made the first team. He scored 20 runs and had to allow himself [to be put out in order to keep the | scorers from quitting. to b Mama went to sleep early change. - But no matter material civilization gets, ma- doas not displace continues automobile parlor. o hew cony trouble ho cannot 1 to a voung lady until he manages to | buy one. UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS Democrats are telling the | . intry that up to recently mere<F t d F 3 1,600,000 unemployed in this | cots an anc'e° ooty The fiziineslonisinany carae | from Washington, and as they prov- | ed a eource of irritation when an other set were sent out later, the | So live that you can criticize "’Pi new figures saying there were only | police system without making peo- 1,000,000¢ uasmployed. | The Dewios |10 wonderswhistiyey siera pulled crats, however, stick to the 4,000,000, | wer You can be an ardent’ Volstead follower and still wish radio speech- es weren't quite so dry | The structure of e | gates FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, W—.nmunh‘lu-mknl Shop Editor, care of the New Britata Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. SHOP INSTALL ’ ach mind sheuld LET THE FUN 'E be Equipped Jokes, Then tempers Could never with cheer escapes of blanng savagely IC PREPARATION! What's the idea of roaming the streets ng a ukelele?” s preparing at dru Berliner r he other night. that 1 passed over the river, that the chariot swung and carried me, not to the pearly but to the land of fire and brimstone “Who knocks for entrance into the infernal regions?” “It is I, your Majesty, e “And pray tell m write?" *1 am a jokewrite Fun Shop rea and be happy.” “Your name has long been on the ean an Au- what did you I write that may laugh o TS 1er | I low | warning. 1t is possible to dispense education in a portable school house but the scholars never work up much en- thusiasm for the building Well, here's hoping it got cool quickly emough to suit the most fastidious. HOW BIG SHOULD THE AUDITORIUM BE? How large should a high auditorium be? There are two sides to this ques- tion, ltke all other questions. But it is impertant that both of them should be before something is done about it which will make the city sorry 20 years from now. For years there has been senti- ment throughout the city that there should be an auditorium large cnough to take care of important publie gatherings. In hundreds of progressive cities i 1s considered proper that inas- school | thoroughly understood | engaged in manufacturing airplanes and parts. The industry is booming and some optimists say it will grow like the automobile industry did be- fore it. Whether it will or not no- body knows, but there can be little | doubt that it will become a constant- ly more important factor in our in- | dustrial progress. We are making first class planes. Yet as a nation we are not renown- |ed for a general desire to fly. Most people stiil look upon airpiane joy- riding askance. This attitude is due to the proportionately large num- ber of accidents that are chronicled in the newspapers. There is this difference between an automobile accident and an air- plane accident: If an automobile accident occurs it does not get any publicity at all except in the region a specially spectacular nature. An no publicity in Connecticut unless there are four or five killed at a time. But an airplane accident, no mat- ter where it happens, seems to get | | | accident in Ohio, for instance, gets | the better to illustrate their claims about Coolids> prosperity. Which | figures are correct nobody knows, not even the partyites, who merely guess and allege. Unemployment figures in England are in a & politician will claim 10,000,000 are 'out of work; another will place the total at 6,000,000; another at | 000,000. But none go lower than the latter figure. | Those who are employed must {support those who are not; and no | | matter what we say or think about | |1t, that 35 what happens. In Eng- |land it takes place through the dole |system; in America through rela- | | tives or charity,” or through the | construction of “necessary publc | works." where it happened—unless it is of | [WHERE ARE THE SCANDALS? As is well known, the Coolidge & titude toward the oll scandals was |one of silence. From the time he 'succeeded Harding he had “nothing to say” about oil. In 1924 his re- milar state of chaos. One | roll. Welcome. You will be assigned | to the Undértakers' Department.” | The psaimist praved to have a , “and what, v, will be my | " i watch kept over his mouth, which indicates that the woes of the can- | didate aren't new. | dut e | “You will have an casy job. All you have 10 do is to ask the Under- | {takers what they do when they have la day off!” | | Smile for today: As hopeless as a | little fat man’s effort to be digni- ied. Seldom! Customer: “Do ycu ever have & aint about your work?” Barber: “Only about once thousand shears!” —Mare So many leading citizens are lead- ing the instaliment collectors by on- ly three jumps in 2 Roebling Advice to Politicians: To thy ‘own salve be true! Lets Stop Somebedy Frem Doing Something By A. P. Herbert The study of higher mathematics, | councillor Lusy and Mr. Nose, the however, doesn’t teach a college| yjemper from Riverdale, girl that a 9-foot car can't get into |y 1y Secretaree of the Socictec a 3-foot space at & 45-degree angle. |~ (0 “\iiing the Public Good s [ Were walking around the town with 3¢ easy o ‘alecover how much a irown, for everywhere they the average American carns. Just| o discover how much he spends and |y y01g bad citizen doing thin BIvidsthy Skvs, against the law; said the Honor- which werent This won't do!” able Nos “1t cortain! retaree of *he 8. 1If the republicans carry the south, it will be a great relief. Good demo- cratic merchants have been carry- "won't!” said the See- MNP G | sonai reply. | graphic will? | and Nutional | stop i the Amecrican league. Lind- 1928, Beware This Hootch! An old preacher was greatly wrought up over our young hip- | flask generation. One recent Sunday night he no- ticed his worst worry in the congre- gation. Next day he met the young man. “Benson,” he began, “I was very | glad to see you at church last night.” “Oh, swallowed Benson, ‘'so THAT's where I was!" | —Rev. H. B. Walters | The Bad Man! | Mrs. Schuyler: “You say in your youth you did a very bad thing?” Beggar: “Yes, ma'am. 1 used to work in a tailoring establishment an’ every year we went abroad to | select tae different parts of men's| suits. One man used to pick de | buttons. another used to p: goods, an’ I picked de p —A. W Pelkey (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) | i | You can get an answer lo any fact or information ‘ TIONS ANSWERE] | | question of oy | writing to the Question Editor. New |is | Britain Herald, Washington Burean | 322 New York avenue. Washington D. C., encio ing two cents in stamps for reply Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given. nor can ex- tended rescarch be undertaken Al other questions will receive a pe: | Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- | fidential.—"iditor. Q Do crmelon’ words occur 1n Ne, What is meant by Q a A will that is entirel dated and signed by the testator himself. Q. What does Bernice mean? A. Dringing victory (Greek). Q. Yor how long were Indian head one-ccut picces coined? A. They were coined every year from 1859 10 1509, inclusive Q. What are the three most fre- nd of the | quently consulted books? | A. Probably the dictionary, the encyclopedia and the Bible, Q. Who was the best third base- mun and shorlstop in the American baseball leagues in ive A. For 1427 Kamm of Chicago was the best third baseman and Sewell of Cleveland the best short- | he afterwards said that “The By: | of words a man Jumping from an airplane b | for its raw silk. | districts and | country this morning, into print everywhere. Consequently there seem to be relatively alrplane -accidents and fatalitics. The psychological effect on the pub- lic mind is easily comprehended. large auditorium anyway, it uld possess one large enough to © care of civie gatherings. There is & sentiment in New | Britain, favered by those who wish | If there were less stunt-flying and to be as economical as possible, less chance-taking with fog the that the auditorium in the enlarged j”ford would be more favorable. high school should be as small as ' Fliers who take undue risks turn possible; no larger than would ac- back the clock rather than advanc- commodate the most elementary ing it. needs of the institution. ‘There is other sentiment for an auditorium that could be utilized for eivie affairs. one large enough for the purpose. | 1oh as a high school needs a fair- | | | COMBATTING AIR CHAOS The Federal Radio after having announced that around | 130 broadeasting stations would not One side says it should not be | have their liconses renewed, has the business of the school depurl‘imsn reconsidering the edict and ment to furniah a civic auditorium: |row it appears that some of the in- the other side saying the school de- |terdicted stations will li partment, in co-operation with the | Some of them, of course, deserved city, ean make no mistake by pro- to live, the chicf charge viding what in effect would be a|them having been that eivie auditorium. | Commission, ve against they were There The latter sentiment has prevail- |should be room in this country for ed in & great many progressive ci- |a fow independent broadcasters as ties. We think it ought to prevail |opposed to the affiliated chain here considering the difference in | broadcasters which naturally would cost will be but a emall part of the | jike to monopolize the air. cost of constructing a separate au- But what caieed the ditorlum such as the city now needs | 1o hesitate about some of the and will need to an even larger €x- tons was the opposition by the sta- tent as it grows and develops tion owners themselves. They .The matter has been weighed and el brought decided in other municipalities 10ng | (riends to make cood before the question arose New and in some Britain. Tha many cities which pos- sese large high school auditoriums. small and independent sta- got forth for instances there hearings casily claims in them was no lack of congressmen in the districts who were “up in arms hebalt of local broadeasting Where has on enter- good to travel designed for civic purpos well as high school purposes be wrong s as annot all | price volit enters TRAFFIC COPS NEEDED While M. g the workinzs o Micaza district. it 1s stated st Mt by the ecommis- ‘or Paonessa i€ & i 2 correct atti- anire more Tet he might also with profit to him S and advantage to tha citv the traffic situation obeer stations in £ S tivities o Commer oA and Pro Main, can discoter tion Lttributes which oc sof K the asior Solomon pert locate solution others ITS WORK CUT Ot§ W Limited time at e INg to the mayor's the into sehool situation * no matter how lone it tales reans we are to get a Yhoro port This co! 1t ceived ideas abont s is not to 100! § gocrn. Tt is 1o and et tactor in its report Sehoel affairs in the « plicated. They have baffled N the out wait these b hound th court To th has never been done before. ity are best of our any an many | commission | ward was a landslide. ing it long enough | Hoover was in the cabinet at the| , roie sar who disguised her- | gelf couldn’t get a job, which proves had nothing to say. Neither Coolidge | nothing except that nobody would | | recognize a diamond in a ten-cent | | nor Hoover were implicated in the | store. course; but the _— | i\\ily Democrats occasionally stress | Americans A determination to | the allegation that both must have | 8¢t the other 'f‘"o“; :’ Ht‘flh‘;‘"" 0o ¢ mucl arts him lenown something LAY hat ks by SRR RO enuEh L huy | | ing on. Even if they did it probably |was none of their businces. | Claude Bowers in his keynote |speech tried to inject the ofl 'scandals into the present campaign. It is estimated that a kitchen six- He devoted nearly all of his in- |ty by eighty feet would hold ali of |vective 1n that direction. Since that |the things a woman would like to ! ti buy at a ten-cent store. itime, however. no one has been able to note much excitement about the | | oil ecandals. Extensive as they were, ' tlon in Brazil larger than North oy y . Caroline. This is the fi time he | | they somehow refuse to click in 'he’h“ arllat dunntity® proustion | public mind. Either we as a nation | methods to trouble ;hm" grown callous or we are inter- | ested in scandals of our own. ! — Sl COMMUNICATED g B Belicves In Repealing Prohibition The death of two men within an hour of each other in this town this [week, from poisonous liquor, is one [of the strong . arguments | | against both the 15th Amendment [and the Volstead act. It is deplor- able These two laws actually incite | peopl: to drink intoxicants, who [were pever in the habit of using them before The too-totallers’ victory was gained when great excitement pre- |vailed; 1t 12 devoid eof common | sense and ought to be repealed. It is the only important issue in | | our next election, and must be de- !cided in favor ot Al Smith, and V!’"“ democratic; party. and when it is | there will be no change in business or manutactures All otirr questions will settle mselv They are a simple mat- r of routine and belong to either nty. {time the cil scandals broke. He also ' unsavory mess, of Porhaps the casiest way to keep | is to own a cottage at a summer re- | sort. Ford will govern a rubber planta- The man who thinks woman's| place is in the home is the very one’ who won't deed it to her and let her boss it | Luggested topic for a Smith-Stra- ton debate: “Which is of greater im- | portance, religion or publicity?"” A great part of the “silent vote” | is silent because it is listening .to | discover which one is the band wa- | gon. | “No man has vet conceived a way | rid himeelf of eafety razor blade: savs a humorist. What | about the sword swallower? Correct this sentence: “She mar- | ried a rich man,” said the gossip. | “but she never mentions her pos- sesions.” Yours truly, ) | JAKE. (Copyright 1925, Publishers. Syndi- | | ate) | 25 Vears Ago Today | | ne J. Porter was called to| in Stored Alcoho! on today to make funeral| New Orlcans, Aug. 31 (P—Alco- ments for a young girl who hol valued at more than $1.000. committed suicide by drinking 000 was destroyed by fire which olic acid. A short while 3go|swept through the plant of the tiipped over a guy rope at a!American Solvents and Chemical us and the fall made her lame. corporation here yesterday. Four depressed her and she had said | firemen were overcome by the heat preferred dying to remain |und flames, which spread from the lame all her life warehoute to the main building and Italian called at the city clerk’s 'almost destroyed the four-story morning with an inter- structure, which covered a city acked for a permit o block store,” 12x13 1-2 and 8| t high on Church etreet near the| x shop. The joke is that the Ehan‘} Leen up for som. time al- - without action by the buud-iMCB”dB y “ | nmitiee. Alderman Curtin 5| Apologizes for Ticket | be preparing a petition tor| Washington, Aug. 31 (#-—F. Scott crsal of the concil's.decision | McBride, superintendent of the Anti- | wooden buildings from the | Saloon league, said in a statement ’ trict | last night that “Senator Robinson's| John Curtin is captain of the high| remarks on prohibition are an eva- | <chool football team this season and | sion of the issne and an apology for | tred Teich is manager. There wm}m» wet attitude of the head of his| he seven of last year's men back: ticket ™ i amberlain, Brady, Rocher,| “He fajled to state,” he contirued. - | | | Fire Destroys Million were frequent. The canse of the fire was not known. | | | Says Robinson Noren, Zwick and Flannery. Harry| ther he believed Smith's stand I Itoche is expected to take care of on prohibition was right or wrong.” | Talk and walk and respirate In touch with all of your relatives |, Councillor Busy and Mr. No |Or made a report to Let's etop somehody from sometning! Every body does too much People som to think the; right to cat and drink, y've & and rink, Theater and bath and such So let's have lots of little regula- tion; Let's make la relations, re's too much Kissing railway stations, Let's find out what everyone is do- ing, And then stop everyone from do- ing it." s and jobs for our at the od on through the Summer night, And a young man looked at ladyfriend and suddenly smiled outright: And he hadn't applied for a li- cense, or been to the city hall, the Magis- trate’s court, or filled out a form at all ‘Did you see Councillor Busy; “Did you see THAT Honorable Nose; “I DID see that.” said the taree of the § M. P. G. that?" asked And * asked the Secra- “Let's stop somebody from doing something! There's too much smiling city You don't see me with a she: We don't osculate, and why he? Sornebody should Let's stop love and smoking, Let's stamp out unregulated joking, Wa've got noses and they're made for poking, Let's find out what everybody doing. And then stop everybody doing it!” in the in conversation should interfere! lollipops and is from PRECIOUS LVES ON TW' LIMITED! ( rgheart, the Pup Fittingly Described? Samuel: “Is Hickey a good estate man?" Walter: “Well, he's the guy that put the dupe in duplex!” —Chester Cronk real doing | walk- his | strom of New York was the best | third basenian and Cooney of Phila- delphia the best shortstop in the Na. | tional league for 1927, i Q. Are United States mail trucks | required to have state license tags A. In most cases the U. | trucks are supplied by the tes | with the state automobile license | plates. There are also some states | that do not require the mail trucks | 10 use the state tag. Q. What is the color of Rocking- | ham pottery? { A It is yellow in color, having | a dark brown glaze and sometimes | 1t is mottled by being spotted before Q. What is the meaning of the Nl luuiana ? | It 1s an Indian name mean- | ing "I clear @& open the thicket Q. Who Wote the poem Burial ot Moses"? A. Mrs. Cecil Frances Alexander. | Q. Can you tell me somethinr ! concerning the incident previous to | the World War when Theodore Roosevelt said that Wilson's elecu- | tion was that of a “Byzantine Logo- thete”? What did he mean? A. Aroused by one of President Wilson’s notes in the conversations between the U. S. and Germany over | the outrages of the latter's sub- | A he | T marines, Colonel Roosevelt refesred | fair weather and not much change 1o the chief executive in the follow- |in temperatures. ing ironic language: “Mr Wilson's | Atlanta : elocution and Mr. Wilson's action | Atlantic City .. are in flat contradiction. His elo- | Loston cution is that of a Byzantine logo- | Buffalo .... thete, and Byzantine logothetes were | Chicago .. not men of action.” In explanation | Denver | Duluth | Hatteras | Jacksonville | Miami ..... | Minneapolis Nantucket New Haven . New Orleans .. New York Northfield Pittsburgh . Louis ington AIDING NATIONALISTS of Mukden Said to Be Anxious to Assist—Many Troops . 88 . 82 2 78 72 80 60 83 . 90 . 86 64 78 .. 9 . 82 88 . 82 . 84 . 80 94 73 72 70 56 58 54 “ 7% 76 4 46 70 70 tine logothetes were lawyers and orators, who believed in the efficacy and could not be persuad- ¢d to draw the sword.” @ What is the greatest distance 1allen before the pa chute? A. A new world record tance in fal g from an betore opening the parachute was at Pensacola, Florida, in April. by Harold L. Whitby, a naval | opening for 4 arpl St W 1 | | | at 3100 feet and {ell 4300 feet be fore pulling the rip cord How the raw veed in the U nported? Raw silk imports to the Unit- es in 1926 a ted to 64.- 2,000 pounds. tirely dependent on forei; much of silk i Governar Ty (T e ) | | Being Withdrawn Ll ’“\ London, Aug 31 (A—The Reuter | corespond. at Shanghai says that developments show tangible |evidence of the desire of Chang . 'Hscuh-Liang, governor of Mukden, nase nationalist gov- Q. What are th trial cities of Italy He states that his evidence seeme given by the fact that §0,000 north- ern troops inside the great wall are leing withdrawn from Manchuria, 10,000 of these being sent to Khral ar for the purpose of protecting the western tion of the Chinese east- n railway against Mongolian tacks, The 2 there were colored men from Cuba and Porto but free men, ves with in Louisiana (mulattoes) Rico, in 1814, T these free mulattoes militia at th 'n, as they nto correspondent says that the reports these attacks are eing instigated by Michael Boro- din, one time adviser to the naticn. alist government who was subse- | quently ousted by the moderates, ot has : agents of the third in- rize for the best r the Pulitzer awarded this The situation at Khailar, where Mongoliun revolts have been report- @d. is very obscure and reliable in- | 2 ion is not available, but the ‘hat is the meaning of the Chinese and Japanese are on guard , in the belict that the trouble indi- cates an increase of Soviet influence over outer Mongolia. der for the Louis To Thornton Wil he Bridge of kind of a name is Nor- | | TO RESUME HEARING Pitisburgh, Aug. 31 (UP)—A United States s:nate sub-committee investigating the William 8. Vare. m B. Wilson senatorial contest resume hearings at Washing- Obserua[ians T - -CH V\\'i‘ansday. Senator on TI‘IG ,Veal‘,lef «‘“rilx:r:; '\o\d.;z;rman. of Colerado, The sub-committee yesterday con- cluded a four day hearing here. first name from Teu- New Haven and vicinity: Fair and ! cooler tonight; Saturday fair. Conditio: | The Ontario disturbance of | terday morning moved rapidly northeastward to the coast of New- foundland. Showers and thunder- storms were reported over northern | districts from the Ohio valley east- ward to the coast, also in the gulf from the Southern| valley regions. Pressure all portions of the except Ari- yes- Mississippi is high over zona. | Lower temperatures prevail over | a1l the northern districts from the | tocky Mountains eastward to the coast Conditions favor for this vicinity TENNIS RULES You may not bs a Bill Tilden or a Rene Lacoste, but when you ‘play it s all about. Our Washington Bureau hi and informative bulletins, containing the complete and up-to-date rules of lawn tonnis. Included in the bulletin also Fill out the coupon be- 1 a copy of the bulletin, LAWN TENNIS RULES, and enclose five centa in loose. uncancelled, U. S. postage stamps, or cols, pustage and handling costs: tennis you want to know what prepared ome of its interesting are suggestions on building & proper tennis court low and mail as direted CLIP COUPON HERE TENNIS EDITOR, 1 Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, New York Avenue, Washington, D. € hevewith to cover NAME AND NUMBER The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. By Fontaine Fox. THE PoWFRFUL KATRINAA ASSISTS IN GETTING ARoUMD THE SKIPPER’S 1RON C¢LAD AULE AAAINST BABY CARRIAGES oN THE CAR. (CFermaire Fox1928. The Bel! Synd

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