Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
edium Cweslation | orgeatzation " | pie later. In fact, there hasn't been Irunmnz twice where Al Smith to bolster ticlans Who are disappointed at the way the boss runs the show must keep thelr emotions under -their tedoras. ‘The Democrats are not subject to discipline. Any politician in the Jeffersonian cavalcade can say al- most anything he chooses and do as he pleases and not run the risk of being denied a single chance to eat any pie since Wilson's' time and it is hard to deny the boys a share of what doesn’t exist. Thus we edge back to the begin- {ning: The boys who favored Thoms Itor governor now say they are per- fectly satisfied to have Morris run- ning instead and will vote for him like true gentlemen of party loyalty. They concede, even, that Morris, in there was no up the ticket, was entitled to marked consideration this year. The Thoms forces have the satisfaction that in spite of this | they nearly put over their candidate, and thus at least won a moral victory. The real victory against the | o0 ST GRS i Square; Gchults's Newsstands. Setreace | Grand Cestral, ¢3ad Greet. ——— Why is it that the average man so easily forgets the date of his wed- ding anniversary while the average | woman is never troubled with such forgetfulness? The women either | have better memoriew or they arc | more interested. There is one thing about a politi- cal speech being broadcasted that will never make for popularity. | Nobody can add interest to the pro- | ceedings by asking the candidate a few pointed questions from the floor. | | It being the prohibition era the candidates perhaps can be pardoned for using hard soap instead of soft soap. | Stickers on windshiclds cause acci- | dents, Stoeckel says. Consequently they are barred. But the accidents | continue, leading to the supposition that too many drivers have stickers | on their brain, Anyone who reads an anonymous, unsigned electioneering diatribe is wasting time and insulting his in- telligence. Anybody or any organiza tion lacking the courxge to sign its stuff is prima facle stigmatizing it as slander, libel and untruth, We are asked to be calm; that the carth won't split; that the earth will last at least a billion years. By that | the Senate. Mr. Kellogg himself s | bliss than in music. When the palr time the prohibition issue will be settled, New Haven is proud of itsclf in having been able to accommodate two state conventions at the same time, it being claimed that no other city in the state could have done it' Which probably is true considering that the Yale bowl was at hand to help out. They could have held the Republican convention at one end and toe Democratic convention at the other end and there would have been no interference at all. It John Coolidge is going to work for the New Haven railroad, let him | be assigned to New Britain to in- crease the efficiency of accldent pre- vention at the numerous grade cross- ings in the city. THE DEMOCRATIC STATE TICKET Thirteen of the 17 New delegates to the Democratic state convention favored William ‘Thoms of Waterbury for governor. They returned to the city satisfied at the nomination of Charles G. Morris for a third time. None of the del gates, diligent inquiry reveals, suf- tered from broken skulls or black- ened eyes; indeed, ruffled feelings. They could not con- firm reports of indicating there remarks by Britain they even lacked a near-riot, merely were some pointed individuals who really were not as foolish as they scemed | to be how highly ind will vote for the Al Smith “from top to botton:.” As Connecticut, between the state is that the momantarily. Just nant they 1o show they ticket 1 is widely known of the two magor parties in the o throughout one differences Republican organi- zation is operated at 100 per cont surface efficiency by one master Henry Democratic mariner, J. Itora whils the with vorries along party two factions. The lutter sy tem s much m 10 produce spirited conte There are thos who say that when ther lively contests within a party for nomina tions it is a good sign. It the Demo cratic party is us certain 10 be licked as some of its Republican erities aver then there would be no sense whatever in haviig a contest over anything; a flamboyant nominatio ruction would b« dressing one’s self with no place There may be sonal frrit. al as senscloss npoin a tuxedo to go as much per jon amon rain poli work v the Repul lican eamp as ever occurs in Democratic wigwam. but i the 4 to Tron-clad grand old party it is not bob surface discipline kecps the ; galcitrants in their ghaces; the poi- How to the aspiri | ward rather suddenly | days prior to the convention. Before the dominant faction headed by Thomas J. Spellacy came in the nomination |of Augustine Lonergan for U. 8. ! Senator, who put the Spellacy can- didate, Robert P. Butler, former ! corporation counsel of Hartford, | completely to rout. There seems to |have been some deep thinking in connection with the Butler candi- dacy, he having been thrust for- Just a few the Butler candidacy it had been generally believed that E. Kent Hub- bard of Middletown, president of the Manufacturers' Association, would be the top-faction candidate, Neither could compete with the popularity of the ex-congressman. Each section of the party ha\i/mrI gained victory, satisfaction | probably will be generul. The re- | mainder of the state ticket, set up without much ado, will gain much from the Al Smith year; but how much, and to what effect nobody will know until the fateful Nov, 6. a NOT A PARTY ACHIEVEMENT As was to be expected, Herbert | Hoover has let the stand that he considers the Kellogg- | Briand mutilateral treaty a great | achievement of and by the Republi- an party. It would be too bad, how- | ever, if this claim were emphasized | during the political campaign. The | would be that | Democratic senators might take the | claim seriously and begin opposing |the treaty on political grounds | | when it came up for rafification m! country under- | most serious result | somewhat alarmed over the prospe | of throwing the treaty into politi and lost no time in radioing his | | displeasure, } This treaty should be kept out of | the political campaign. President Wilson no doubt 1y of Nations as a party achievement in the sense that the League was form- | | ed through his instigation and sup- ported by his Democratic adminis- | | tration. But that very fact helped to | | defeat it in the Senac. There were | Republ senators and many cans, others, who favored the League un- | [til it was made party football. Then came the crash. Chairman Borah of the Forelgn | Relations Committee is on record as saying he did not think the multilat- | cral treaty would have much diffi- | culty in being ratified in the Sen- late. But this was before Hoover | | started claiming it as a great party | achiever: nt. Iriends of the treaty should do all in their power to soft- | pedal the political side in such an | a important international movement. What should gommiend the treaty | to the Scnate is the fact that it con- tains no provisions that if any na- tion starts an aggressive W in | | employed by Gatti-Casazza to uphold | | until his wife wallops him over the | in him. | the poor man is no maestro and his Geneva and had another of those | metropolis. The percentage of speak- [New York to Boston is being plan- may | easies to the population in Philadel. | ned. It will come through bere on heart-to-heart talks that eventually prove important to his- torians. N phia must be much greater than in New York. The same holds true of the first day. School reopened today with all teachers present and an attendance There can be litle doubt that it [Chicago, where speakeasies, beer- |estimated at 500 more than that of Briand had his way there would nothing to haggle over between France and,Germany in a very short time. The discussion at present, of course, hinges around French occu- pation of the Rhineland, where 60,- 000 French troops continue to be housed, according to the stipulations of the Treaty of Versailles. The German contention is that as that nation has joined the Leugue, has signed the Locarno pact, and has agreed never to desire Alsace and Lorraine back, there is no need for these troops to remain where thy are. Almost everybody in Frame is sald to agree to this contention ex- cept Poincare, and even he is will- ing to take the troops out “at & price.”” The price Poincare thinks about has to do with reparations. It is difficult to follow all the reasoning, except that Poincare by nature is & bargainer and is inclined to yield no right, technical or practical, without some definite thing in return. The solution probably will be left with the five European powers most interested. Of these it is known that England thinks the Rhineland occu- pation naw s a doubtful expedient, while Italy is reported to take & similar view. Obviously, a mere hand- ful of 60,000 troops in the Rhineland are of no advantage to France ex- cept it givés her an opportunity for additional ‘bargaining according to the Poincare principle. The indus- trialists of the two countries, France and Germany, have joined together in 50 many trusts and combines that they too are opposed to anything that feels like sand on the rails. Moreover, 8o many of the French soldiers are marrying German frauleins that a husky generation of French-German children is growing up. If the French troops stay in the Rhineland until 1935, as allowed by | the treaty, the poilus may never care to return on account of family ties. Such is human nature, by the way. THE ARTISTIC TEMPERAMENT So Francis Alda, a singer with the voice of the nightingale, cannot get along with Giulio Gatti-Casazza, maestro of the Metropolitan Opera Company, The famed opera director ms unable to woo happiness with the singer. The couple have been married for 1§ years, They have had plenty of time in which to get accustomed to one another's ways, but sometimea there is more art necded in domestic also se part it will not mean the severance of business relations between them, however, the singer continuing to be the prestige of the aviary at the | Metropolitan, and shé will continue to be under bis management and di- rection. | Divoree, dike getting a new piano | when the old one is still shiny and sound, is merely a luxury. Some of our tage stars scem to get divorce oftener than they change apart- ments, Others worry along for 18 years or longer before taking the leap. The poor man, howe to afford greater luxuries than an automobile or a Kord, has to wait er, unable head with a rolling pin before the stic temperament beging working then he may subdue the animal, patch up the spat and buy his wife extra doses of ice er during the next automobile ride. But Even m wife is no singer. THE CLi Mrs. Mabel 8 -UP INDUSTRY Walker Willebrandt, attorney general in charge of prohibition enforcement, assistant U, violation of its principles the other nations are bound to go to war with such mation. Tt thercfore is nof a “peace and war” treaty. The multi- fup. Of course, lateral Kellogg treaty merely speci- fies that in case of violation the of- fending nation is branded * Its morul force, than in the « treaty. It The it immediately as an “outlaw therefore, is greater of a “peace and war' is new international law signatory nation whicl the Law, all relations with other seraps is out of pule of international immediately are severed, and national odium is the well-m uke Far ment, such a treaty is in realt from being o party achieve turn to the prineiples of internation- will 1 by President Wilson, inculcated and The to climax his 1 good war president failed 4 points country, vith » suceess in his own the But wi although ue W born all the same can say politically minded the edifice politicians and the lone excepted, that multilateral not an built upon seeds of international good will wn at a most frying period by Demoeratic president ? The nation has had one experience what happen if polities is cted there b into a treaty ratification no more of it RHINELAND Aristide sllor Herinann Foreign Minister Briand of France and Chan, Mucller of Germany have been talk ing things over late, gpd the other day they met at quite froguently of Justifies her activities in New York | City by claiming it is the wettest spot in the country and needs cleaning- blames Tammany | for the liquor guzzling she says gocs lon there. There being some polities connected with the cleaning-up | process in New York it would seem that Mrs. Willebrandt s not suf- ficiently inclusive in her allegations as to what causes the wholesale non- enforcement of which she claims, 1t doesn’t appeal to anyone's sense of impartiality the night clubs are clamped down, much as they descrve such treatment, wh approximately 25,000 I when only asies are not molested « Mrs. Wille- brandt’s agents. The becanse speakeasios are not bothered to do so which would courts, are already ¢logged clog the | in no other place. Many a small city, too, is wetter than New York on a population basis. These small cities are not all in the East, either, One need only to read western newspapers fairly con- sistently to discover that the clean- ing up industry has been carried out In numerous small cities for nine years, conditions showing no im- provement. Perhaps, it Congress appropriated six billion dollars to Mrs. Willebrandt's enforcers, and permijtted calling out the army and states, and martial law were declar- ed throughout the entire country, the cleaning up industry would be more prosperous, or efficlent, Facts and Fancies Peace is the period when promi- nent Americans remain in Europe | until it's over over here, Perfect bliss is unattainable, but something like it comes to the sec- ond baseman who gets four hits against the team that released him. Mussolini seems a great man to the kind of people who think that |kind of man is great. 4 Thank goodness! Another season ending without anybody trying to introduce roastin’ ear served with mayonnaise, Another thing we like about hard- boiled scientific knowledge is that you never see it ktound in limp leather, * A woman is a person who thinks it's against the law to take your time about answering the telephone. It's easy to do the right thing by doing what the right people do. The hard part is to decide which are the right people. Mr. Hoover may have some good points as a politician, but you can't imagine Al calling them ‘“mere photographers.” “Giving 1s a process of substrac- tion.” For example, the pulpit that gives a politiclan thunder seems much smaller. Americanism: “Give me liberty— but cramp my style if I seem to be endangering my soul.” Russia wasn't invited to sign the pledge to quit war. She quit, you will remember, long before the Allles did. All that remains to be decided is the relative numerical strength of Smith republicans and Hoover dem- ocrats, Keep Church and State apart. Two good little boys, being brought together, become two rotten little boys. Middie age i the period when a lover 15 too old to write silly poetry and too young to write silly letters. Strange how radio enginecrs can time the introduction of improved models to fit your last installment on the old one, Sanily is the even balance enables you to believe or without getting mad because other fellow believes or doubts. Well, it's a nice friendly spirit that enables campaign leaders on both sides to point out the others' political blund that doubt the Prominent man’s mail: Nine beg- ging letters; seven invitations to make speeches; ten letters from |eranks who know just what is the matter with the world. Correct this sentence: “My per- |sonal fecting 1 the judge, 1 influ me in fixing the | punishment convicted crimi- nal.” Copyright 1928 Publishers Syndicate of a 25 Years Ago VToday Mrs. 4. M. Burdick and family | have returned from Phelps cottage, | Cromwell, where they have been summering. Councilaan Richard Schaefer re- turned from the west Saturday aft- with prohibition cascs. As Walker has pointed ouf, attemipts to took yor nforce the prohibition lusw Mrs, ining up New long 1 thought of ¢l York, but it was found that making arrests and convictions different things 10 vere two While several entircly a would wait 1 trial he would be out on hond and running umgther speakeasy. He conld o pay his fine from the profits made white waiting patiently until the law I New York 13 the “worst spot” for drink- vears until his case reac asily is not certun whethe ing in the country. wither. Reports from Phi are that there are “Iphi; | = In the city and Willehrandt | crnoon. He is a member of the com- mittee of five grand officers of the | Sons of Hermann which met in St. { Paul and Chicago to revise the con- | stitution. The state council of Min- nesota was in session at the tin nd last Sunday, on his birthday, it presented Mr. Schaefer with a handsomely engraved umbrella as a | testimonial. He was also cmpowered | to puren a safe in which to keep [ the records of the organization. He brought home interesting photo- graphs of Clifton, Ariz, which has been wiped out by floods, | Mr.and Mrs. J. W. Marsland hive spent the day in Chester Captain John Curtin of the High | school foothall team has called a | practice of the eleven and the can- | didates be held at Walout Hill park tomorrow afternoon after school. So far, games have been ar- ranged with Meriden, Torringten, 23,000 speakeasi " Philadelphia s a much smaller / and Bridgeport. Another automobile run from navy, as well as the militia of the! be | running and gang warfare exist like |Iast year. Principal Akers took up his duties at the High school. The Model school opened with 300 pu- pils, NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN Talking movies — gracious, we've had 'em all the while; The guy who reads the captions aloud across the aisle, The bright child just behind us who's sure to pipe up, too, Lach time the action changes, what they goin' to do? ‘Now " HEREDITARY TRAIT @udge: “Chicken stealing again, eh, Rastus? Have you anything to say, any excuse this time?" Rastus: “Deed y: Jedge, Ain't my fault, Jedge, i e fault ob mah high-up ancestors.” ® Judge: “How 50 ?' Rastus: “Well, Jedge, mah ances- tors dun come over in de Mayflower, an’ evah since Ah was born Ah has an uncontrollable desire foh Ply- mouth Rocks!" BIRD “Tu-wit! Tu-wes Baid a little gray bird; “Tu-wit! Tu-wee! Tu-wee! We'll sing you the jollies song e'er heard; Then Hsten to it, to we.” LOGIC “Tu-hoo? Tu-hoo? Howled a big brown owl; “To who? To who?" howled he. “Your grammar's bad,” he said with a scowl; | “Say 'listen to us,' not ‘we.’ * | “Tu-wit! Tu-wit! id the little gray bird; “Tu-wit! Tu-wee! Tu-wee! To expect good grammar me's absurd; I'm too little; to wit, too wee!” from Wrong Stake! Customer: “How about a small steak? Waiter (absently): What'll we bet on?" “All right. You can get an answer to any Question of fact or information by writing to the Questin= Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1323 Now York avenue, Washingt: D. C., enciecing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can es- tended research be undertaken. All other questionr will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answpred. All letters are con- fidential.—Tiditor. Q. be to enlist in the Marine Corps? How tall does he have to be? What is the period of cnlistment? A. To join the Marines one has to be healthy and strong and not less than five feet four inches nor miore than six feet two inches fin height~The enlistment is for four years and one has to be eighteen years of age. Q. What is tess? Al Q. representative of Washington, D, C. A. There is no official represent- ative of the Vatican recognized by the plural of hos- Hostesses. 1Is there an official diplomatic the vatican at the United States government in Washington, D. C., nor is the Unitea States rcpresented diplomatically at the Vatican. The United States does not recognize The Holy See at Rome as & sovereign state, There is an un- officlal Papal representative in Washington but he is not recognized at a member of the diplomatic cerps by our State Department, . Do such names as Point Ad- ams and East Aurora have any spe- names of A definite system has been adopted for naming Pullman cars. To a railroad man a “Point” car or East” car carries a meaning as to its capacity—the number of sec- tions, compartment, drawing rooms, ete, Q. How is water distilled? * W oevaporating it by boiling | and then liquifying the vapor by Q. Has the United States Su- preme court ever passcd on the Con- —Fred Seibert. The way to success is to follow the Loss' ‘‘no's.”” AT TIMER EVEN IMPORTA Little Mary, about four years old, W Viei her aunt when an old acduaintance arrived from out of town. The lady, by way of conversation, asked Mary where she lived. “Well,” sald Mary, very import- antly, “you know Bobbie, the cat? 1 live right next door to him."” —Margaret Cole. THE SCREEN TEST By Samuel Berliner Rubino Zcegaro came to thig country all puffed up with spaghetti and ambition to be a movie star, He was handsome in a soup and fish, and the movie casting director thought that he had found the find of the year, until they made the screen tests. Rubino failed in the nonchalant test. Rubino smoked incessantly his voice didn’t improv He smoked a ecarload, and coughed three times during the test! One day he ran out of smokes, and refused to walk a mile for his favorite brand! The Director was in despair, but he decided to give Rubino one more chance, The supreme test. Rubino was chosen as the Blind- fold Test of the Month, It was the supreme moment. Rubino failed, He chose a Corona! The Department of Justice wishes to announce the deportation of Ru- bino Zeegaro as an undesirable alien? CATS ARE NT! but Mrs. Billings: dress for a son; Billings: “Yes, and on the first of the month I'll be presented with a record of the song!” —Jane Ann Miller. FIN SHOP FOLLIES Down “AL" SMITH Low-Down on “Al" “Bert, 1 got this . The Smith! 3 "TION Ez ‘I heerd they quite an attendance at the Company's annual election night.” Uncle Eben members was there, Uncle Ezra: “How did the alec- tion for Chief come out”" Uncle Eben: “1t was a tie.” Uncle Who between 2" Uncle ‘Euch of the 25 got had Fire last g whole the 25 hen one vote! Paul G. Schwartz, stitutionality of the 18th amend- ment? A. Yes, It ruled that the amend- ment was constitutional. Q. What kind of colors should be used in tinting kalsomine? When should the color be added’ A. If Kalsomine is to be tinted, use colors that have been ground fine in water, but avoid colors that are affected by ime, such as chrome yellow, chrome green, Prussian blue, ete. The tinting colors should be add- ed to whiting mixture-before the glue is put in., Q. Have tliere®been very fatal accidents on Kuropean cnger and commercial airplane lines? A. The many Imperial Airways, Lid. (England) and its predecessors, have flown more than 5,000,000 miles in seven years and carricd some 75,000 passengers with only four ftatal accidents. Fifty German air lines flew 3,814,000 miles last year, carrying = 56,268 passengers with cnly one fatal accident. Q. What is the meaning of the name Charlotte Stanton? A. Charlotte 1is Teutonic and means “noble spirited.” Stanton is an Lnglish family name derived from a locality, It means “stone town.” Q. Is the total arca of Soviet Russia as great as that of the old Rbssian Empire? A. The old empire of Russia compromised one-seventh of ,the land surface of the globe. Its arca, without internal waters, was, since the Treaty of Portsmouth, §417,- 118 English square miles. The total arca of the Soviet Union in 1927 was given as 8,241,910 square miles. So- How old does one have to! viet Russia is now the most extem- sive area of land within the con- fines of a continuous boundary te be administered by a ceatral gov- ernment. Q. yWhat part did George Stome play {n “Tenderloin?” A. The part of “Sparrow.’ Q. Is there a book in the Bible called “The History of Susanns * A apocryphal addition to the Book-of "| Daniel and is not contained in the King James Version of the Bible. Many old Bibles do contain the apocrypha, however. / Q. What was the ruling of the Supreme Court of Tenessee in con- nection with the sentence against J. T. Scopes in the evolution trial A. "The Supreme Court of Ten- nessee on January 15, 1927 reversed the sentence against J. T. Bcopes, but upheld the State's anti-evolution law, and recommended that the case be nolle prossed; the court later de- clined to' entertain a petition to re- hear the case (January 21, 1927). Q. Do any stars really fall to the earth? A. Stars do not fall; so-called “shooting stars” or “falling stars™” are in reality meteorites—small masses of matter which are attract- ed tfom outside space into the grav- | itational field of the earth and fall toward the earth. Their rapid fall through the earth's atmosphere causes them to become red hot by friction and most of them are con- sumed before reaching the earth's surface; a few fall to the surface masses of blackened stone or metal. Observations On The Weather Washington, Sept. 10.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair tonight and Tuesday; somewhat warmer except on the northeast coust; moderate northeast shifting’ to southeast and south winds. Forecakt for Eastern New York: Fair tonight and ‘Tuesday, except possibly in extreme north portion; warmer Tuesday and in interior to- night; moderate northeast shifting {to south winds. Conditions: A long ridge of high pressure centers over northern New Fngland and extends southwestward to the lower Mississippl valley and western Gulf region. A distuggnce is central over the upper Mississippi valley, and low pressure extends southwestward to Arizona and thence northwestward over the great basin, Showers prevail over scattered sections from Texas northeastward to the upper lake districts. Tem- peratures continue cool in the At- lantic states but are rising in the interior districts, £ Conditions favor for this' vicinity | fair weather with rising tempesa- ture, followed by increasing cloudi- nes “Iemperatures yesterday: High 4 Atlanta Atlantic City . Loston ffalo .. Chicago .. Cincinnati .. Denver Detroit Duluth Hatty brepared ome of it interesting and complete tow and mail ae dirested: to cover pustage and handling coi NAME STREET AND NUMBER “L'm TIRED oF THAT MONKEY CARRYING THINGS oUT oF THE HousSE! L woN'T HAVE T 3 YERSELF HE WELL ,YoUu ¢AN SEE FoR HASN'T doT ENNYTHING THIS TIME - = of SBusanns Is an | w, Herbert Lagerblade of Hristol won first prise in the prq, golfers tournament staged by the Profes- sional Golfers Association of Con- necticut at Shuttle Meadow yester- day. Hc covered the first nine in four under par and came in in the second in 38 giving him a 69 and a lead of two strokes over Louis Chiapetta of Sequin, Chiapetta and Chet Irwin had o chance to tie Lagerblade in the fi- nals, Chiapetta just breesed into a trap on the 18th hole and with a beautiful show from the sand he went atraight for the pin but ever- ran the green. He took a six to 1¢se out. Chet took a nasty six at the 17th hole and although he took par at the next, he was behind. One of the largest entry lists of the season took part in the sweep- stakes at the club Baturday. South Africa Will Get American Taxi Service Washington, Sept. 10 (M—Ameri- can taxicabs are to be introduced into South Africa by a company or- ganized in Johannesburg, G. A. Ab- bey, United States vice consul, says in a repott to the department of commerce. P The company plans to inaugurate a service in the capital with 15 taxi- cabs. 5 READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR BEST RESULTS ' SUNBURN VICTM 1S GRATEFUL TO RABALN *‘An umusually tender skin eoupled with » leve_ of the out-ol-doors makes me & frequent vietim ©f suabura, in spite of the bast precautions [ ssa. taks. I don’t believe anyone has tried mere remedics than I have, but with them all I have Bad to stand my share of suflering, I ea tell you. That is, with all ezeopt Rabaien. Sines & frisnd recommended Rabaim, the pain of sua- ‘burm has no more terror for me. I never sew any~ thing libe the way it soothes the skia. Its bene- fta begin the moment it is applied. Wiile it is several days before the rednems is all gose, the pain and smart go almost instantly. And sines 1 have used Rabalm my siin hes Bever blis- tored.” 1f you slso wufler from owmbure, you, foo, can obtain quick relief with Rebalm. It requires 0o painful rubbing in. Will not stain clothes or You may not bs a Bill Tilden or Rene Lacost tenuis you want to know what it is all about. Our Washington Bureau has CLIP COUPON HERE TENNIS EDITOR, Washington Bureay, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D. C. bed linen. Pleasantly {ragrast. Two sisss, 60- conts aad $1.00 ontaining 3 times e mech. RABALM is for sale by all druggists. but when you play informative bulletins, containing the up-to-date rules of lawn tennis. Included in the bullstin also are suggestions on bullding @ proper teunis court. Fill vut the coupem be- 1 I waut a copy of the bulletin, LAWN TENNIS RULES, and encloss lierewith five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. po STATE (CPortaine Fox, 1928, The Bell Shndicose. inc ) s