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gD NSRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY leseed Dlly (Busday Sscepted) & Hesld 61 Church Btreet SUBECRIPTION RATES 3500 & Year. $200 Thres Mostha T6c. o Moath. Batersd ot the Pest Ofice at New Brit. sls @2 Gscond Clam Mall Matter. TELEPHONS CAlLS fhe only profitable edvertising medium 8 the City. Circulation books and press mom siwaye open to edvertisers. Membes of the Aveuciated Fress he Awociated Pros 1o exclusively en- ttled e the wee for re-publicativd ol &l news credited to 1t or Dot otherwise oredited 1n this paper ssd elso local aows yubiisned thercia. Member Audit lluresu of Clesiativn The & B C 1s o oatiousl orgapization | 0 which furnishes papers end g tisers with @ strictly hevest aaaiysle ¢! elroulation. Our circulation etetistics are ~ased upom this audit This iasures pro- teotion against fraud fn mewspaper dts- tribution fgures to Soth Datiomal sad iecal advertissrs. The Hersld is on sale Gally 1a New fork ot H Nowsstasd. Timer Square; Schuits’s Grand Ceatral, ¢3sd Surest. ————— Numerous newspaper articles re- ter to Miss Trumbull as “of Hart- ford, Conn.” Somebody evidently is trylng to make a big town girl of the nation’s best known swectheart. If jobs and prosperity are going to be the chief issues it will only become that much harder for Hoov- er to carry the big textile centers of Massachusetts. B A woman, wearing less, naturally can dress quicker than a man. But does she? The only time the average hubby gets whipped in the dressing | rece is when he has to contend with a collar and necktic that do not jibe. Proof readers have a unique place in lite, Whenever they come across anything they cannot understand they refer it to the editor, and by the time he is through figuring it out the paper has gone to press. It anybody can make a living off political statistics about prosperity he wouldn't need to work. Serious motor accidents ra cur on poor highways; perhaps be- cause there are not enough cars on them and perhaps they cannot go fast enough to hurt anybody. President Coolidge no doubt is en- joying the campaign immensely. To | date he hasn't even assisted in pre- paring a single speech, In fact, so it is said, he doesn't even listen to any. LETTERS MUST BE SIGNED Once again, and it seems we shall never stop, it becomes necessary to warn the New Britain public that the Herald will not publish anony- mous communications, whatever their merit. Today the poor editor received one that was a slight var- iant from the usual “Pro Bono Pub- | lieo.” It was a thoroughly able discus- sion of a political subject, one which we should be glad to print had we known the source of it. It was signed “Samuel Peterson.” It there is a a Samuel Peterson in New Britain we should like to meet him. Who the devil ever heard of a Swede named Sam, HA, HA, IN OMAHA The “Happy Warrlor” last night was happier than usual. Which is 10 say he was at his best. Humor flowed from him in a never ceasing stream, and as every quip hinged up- on an angle of politics, the Omaha | audience was vastly pleased, Most important, was Smith's announcement that he stood for the principle of the McNary- Haugen bill. The candidate moves forward cautiously, but there can be no question that if anyone accepts the principle of this measure the mechanics to put the principle in "force is merely a matter for perts to adapt method to principle. By coming forward with this dec- laration the Democratic candidate glves notices that he thinks his for- tunes in the East are sufficiently se- cure to warrant him in meeting this demand in the West. The tion the campaign throughout the West, where Smith stock naturally will ri The attack on Hoover as a foe to agriculture is hased, of course, upon the fact that t Coolidge twice vetoed the faugen bill and Hoover ns to let it be known he is willing to fol- Jow out the Coolidge policics. addition, Hoover was in the and as Secretary of Comm: however, ex- declara- intensifies a vital hand in shaping the adminis- tration’s cconomical policies, The campaign is getting woozey. The McNary-Haugen principle ixj pens while this is under way is the | was felt all ove not liked in the East—or wasn't up | noise about lunch carts and gasoline | parti to quite recently. There Is no evi- | stations; other lines of business duly | ous dence that it is much better Joved than it ever was, although it is far from being a vital iss .lv-u.un. Batrence | business men of Omaba was unique. Against the advice of his political advisers he accepted the challenge. This takes courage, and is made vastly easier by & gift for humor, Little wonder that Smith's witti. cisms as he “answered” the heckling questions proved a popular diver- sion. FIGURES ON UNEMPLOYMENT Obviously nobody knows the exact figures on unemployment. That does | not prevent the manufacture of sta- | tistics, however, as this is a high- | powered industry purpose of giving a semblance of au- | tmority to the figures. In 1921, Herbert Hoover says, there Were between 5,000,000 and 6,000,000 unemployed in the United | States. That was the time, of course, | when started and things were terrible, the close of the Democratic admin- istration. 1t is distressingly disagrecable to g0 back that far, however, if the “official” figures of the Department | of Commierce of 1921 are quoted. The report of the Hoover department at ithat time was that 3,500,000—not between 5,000,000 and 6,000,000— | were out of work at that time, according to the statistics {avly quoted, only 500,000 unemployed in the coun- try. Maybe less. By the end of the | campaign there should be none at an. I The Democrats, equally prolific in | the quotation of statistics, declare without hesitancy that there are more than 4,000,000 unemployed in | the nation. This must include house- | wives driven out of the kitchens by Now, there are nothing to do but go to afternoon | teas, card parties or the movies. The wise man or women will not | tuke much stock in any of the fig- | ures. Our ability to count | ployed noses is admittedly weak, and (it makes no difference Whether the | U. 8. Department of Commerce, or the U. 8. Department of Labor, is | cited as an authority. The Labor De- | partment, in fact, asked some months ago to hurl some dependable | statistics into the political hopper | took less than a weck to do its duty, unem- ¥ oc- | saving there were only 1,500,000, and | | not 4,000,000, who wete minus jobs. | This is a large enough country [to make the gathering of statistics |in a hurry a most unreliable process. | The only way reliable figures could | be obtained would be by taking e | specinl census, which would result in Ino unemployed being reported be- ! cause all the unemployed could be | given jobs in taking the census, It may have been noted by those who turned to the right page and the | right column that Roger W. Babson | has something to say on unemploy- ment and that he employed what {purports to be official !from the Department of Labor. The |index, he said, was 3 per cent less |than a year ago und payrolly 2 per cent lower, We do not know how Torrect these figures are but sur- imise they are better than “esti- mates” about the actual number of unemployed. At any rate, they do not conform with the figures being thrown to the winds in political dis- sertations. Yet that may not be sur- prising, considering that politics is not an exact sclence. SMALL THINGS; MUCH FUSS On the principle that a dog fight |in the neighborhood is of more in- terest in that nelghborhood than downtown, two squabbles in this city have clicited the hearty interest of virtually all residents in their vi- cinities. 1f anyone wishes to find a long discussion having nothing in | common with politics, let him wend | his way in that direction and talk | to the men and women who by long | practice know the ins and onts of | the situation. | The two “bones of contention,” of | course, are thowe involving the pro- {posed “diner” or lunch cart fn Franklin Square, and the proposed | gasoline station at West Pearl and | Glen streets., | Fverybody must eat | family buys gasoline; but as iwr having the lunch carts around the corner from one’s home, or the | gasoline station and nearly | ev across the stre | why, that is an entirely different | matter. | Whenever such neighborhood ar- | gument brews the zoning laws are Both under discussion concern sites which | immediately involved. cases are in the “twilight zone,” which, the downtown section and the first ad- acent- residence section, susceptible of changes. As the busi- bulges out, it hovering between :h\yxim is always ness section grows, | bumps into the twilight zone around | |1t and these naturally feel the pres- sure. About the first thing that hap- | follow. | It is_too bad of course. that the that serves \llel the Harding administration | what with the close of the war and | labor saving machinery and having | statistics | many a more important occurrence SPEAKING OF MACHINES The unearthing of wholesale gin graft, police pap, bootlegging boodle and wobbly wickedness in Philadel- phia seems to have gone entirely un- noticed by Mrs. Mary Walker Wille- brandt, who has been too busy mak- ing prohibition and political speech- es at middle west church meetings ‘(0 bother about such things. It would haye been too bad, too, to have the federal prohibition unit horn in at Philadelphia, regarded as a trim and feliable Republican city. {1f the Vare machine there has been rotten, distressingly odoriferous, it {must be remembered that it isn't like the Tammany machine. The lat. ter is in the metropolis and is out- standingly democratic. If the federal prohibition forces are going to do anything for politics they naturally |cannot be expected to busy them- !selves in a Republican city, When Mrs. Willebrandt started her political campaign in New York she vehemently declared that New York was the center of the illicit | liquor traffic and that the first thing | to do was to cut the heart of the traffic right where its headquarters was located. But since then comes the informa- tion that the headquarters of the booze ring has not been in New York, but in Philadelphia, and that a large part of the country has been getting its supply from the Quaker city, Perhaps even New York got some of its giggle water from along the Delaware. It at least looks that way. The forces of law and order and the anti-bootlegging drive in Phila- | delphia is getting a bad deal from Mrs. Willebrandt. Instead of aid in the good,fight against Demon Rum there is nothing but indifference. Republican Philadelphia is left to clean its own hearthstone without interference or even counsel. Dispatches have been trickling up from Washington, too, that the po- lice force in the District of Columbia has been derelict in its manifest duty to keep things dry in the vi- cinity of the lady politician's office. Citizens—not the prohibition unit— are making demands for a.shake-up of the rotten conditions. The aid of the marines may be enlisted. More than a third of the police force in Washington have been put on trial during the past year, the charges be- ing drunkenness, graft and corrup- tion. This is how prohibition is en- forced right in Washington, Occa- sionally some innocent citizen has been set up as a dummy to show how the dry law was being enforced, and got convicted on the perjured testi- { mony of police stool pigeons. When | this system was bared by the rotten | newspapers whose editors are not in | the employ of Mrs. Willebrandt cit~ |zens naturally aroused themselves | ' still more. But none of this interests the grand old prohibition unit of the | government, Citizens of Washington have no vote, hence it cannot be re- garded as either a Democrat or Re- i publican city. Fhey are left to stew | in their own brew. A first class scandal 1s In tue works in Washington, Dry congress- men who drink on the side may find it necessary to obtain their supplies elsewhere in the future. But if this I horrible thing occurs they naturally will not be able to blame the pro- hibition unit. THE AFTERMATH, RUT WHEN? Roger W. Babson, famed econo- mist, yesterday uttered words that seem sound enough to the thinkers among our citizenry, but there s little likelihood that they will stem the course of events. He s somewhat {in the class of Irving Fisher at Yale, profound and statistical, but having small influence upon the surging multitudes who- lot their emotions be their guide. Babson has been telling us that the “craze for speculation is still up- on everyone.” which seems fair enough considering the ‘*crop of amateur stock buyers,” to uee his |own words, who are actively | 8aged in making things hum in Wall street. But what gives us pause for thought in his statement that “it is Florida all over again and will ine- | vitably bring the Florida after- math.” The pools, which have suc- ]:Cl‘edt‘d in advancing stocks to new | high levels, he holds, have the situ- tion in the palm of their hands. Should they decide to unload | fore election day,” he adds, | effect will be significant.” may be putting it mildly. 17 the pools have the power to | create a stock disturbance before | clection day they also have the pow- cr to wait until after the election. en- “he- “the ‘Which In short, they can manufacture dif- ficulty almost at will. It is a public service to be warned in this man- ner. When the unloading takes place, | before or after election, we at least will not be in a position to grope for the The aftermath of the the country, but ularly in Florida and contigu- es. where there were many cause, |bank failures and where land went | down in value quite as fast as it had | ¢ in these | lines of demarcation between Lusi- | gone up during the boom. The after- | & 1-000-foot cliff near Sandberg, 74 parts. By taking Wold of it in the |ness and the first line of residences | math of a stock break of serious | West. and charmiing the Fast with | cannot be forever kept as they hap- | proportions would extend further | Florida boom | at least a short time—untll some more pools got busy, Fects and Fancies A probe is an effort to discover which way the bullet or the treas- urer went. Calles, pronounced “Kay-us,” has decided to retire before he is pro- nounced *dead.” The first American words an alien learns to understand are *“drink,” “dollar” and *hands up." You'll notice, however, there has been no marked-down sale of fight- ing material since the Kellogg treaty was signed. Alas! Many a poor cotton grower spends his money for gasoline when he hasn't & quart of calomel in the house, You can tell when a man really loves a girl. He yearns to improve her mind. “Bull” meana *“cop,” but it doesn't always mean that when a Chicagoan is shooting the bull, The Byrd expedition seems to be equipped with every reminder of home except bill collectors. Now they have decided to get the finger prints of bootleggers, they might examine the throat of law. Americanism: A hungry man eat- ing peanut butter because his wife ate at the bridge party and doesn't care for anything. It may be an impudent question, but can Europe tell us what be- comes of all the cooties in time of peace? Numerous creatures squirt nasti- ness when they are scared, so po- litical parties aren't unique, Actually thepe is very little im- modesty now. Ymmodesty consists in showing something that doeen't show all the time. The busicst man can find time to listen while a caller tells him how wonderful he is, Freedom became a myth at about the time everybody began to de- pend on baker's bread. 8o far the fight is even. Each candidate has been fortunate enough to gag the most vocal of his fool friends. You can tell a country-raised boy. He can swat and scratc mos- quito bites without interrupting i .e conversation, It the man stead of “my car, in- been car" has our he | married since a year ago last June. Correct this sentence: “He disap- peared day before yesterd eaid the official, “but we Pnow it is un- necessary to employ an auditor.” Copyright, 1928, Publishers Syndicate 25 Years Ago Today The Old Men's club met yesterday at Take Compounce. Over 40 members were present. The average age of those in attendance was 82. During the past year nine of the members died. The championship game between the New Britain rifle club and the Hartford club will take place next month. Each team holds a victory over the other and a close match is expected, Dan O'Keefe, hoss of the mould- ers’ strike, has left for Buffalo to consult officers of the main union. At the meeting of the common council last evening, the motion to dismiss the members of the fire board was defeated by a 17 to 13 vote. The fire board will be in- structed to keep in closer contact with the council from now on. The price of cotton hak been raised sky high and the American Hosiery Co. of this city has been kept busy lately fillipg its orders. The tin roof on the New Britain Cpera house was blown out towards the street last evening by the heavy gale. It was necessary to have the police department rope off the street around the theater. Gus Marholdt, a lineman in the employ of the Southern New Eng- land Telephone Co. fell from a pole at the corner of Myrtle and Grove street today and was seriously in- jured. It is thought that he came in contact with a live wire and was shocked. The annual Inspection of the fire department will be held Saturday fternoon on Franklin street. The fire board, mayor and common council will be present. New Britain was struck by a ter- rific rain and wind storm yesterday atternoon about 4:20 o'clock. Signs were blown down, trees uprooted and wires stripped from telephone poles. Bodies of Two Michigan Persons Are Located Tos Angeles, Sept. 19 (UP)—The bodies of Mr. and Mrs. Albert La Huis of Zecland, Mich., who have | been missing since August 18, were found late last night at the base of miles north of Los Angeles. It was thought possible that an- other body was in the wreck of the an anti-prohibition iseuc, Smith ]MA:pl'n to be, but almost everybody is|than in one section of the country. | automobile they were driving when two tails to his Kite. | ot d to see the city grow: and | People. everywhere would be affected the accident occurred. As the races for pennants grow hot- ter each day And the race for the White House as well, Folks, we say Let's race to The Fun Shop, now cool days are here, Sce who will be first at the wire of cheer! The Hectic Pace! ‘Customer: “Do you ever sell any Dream Books? Book Seller: People don't sleep have any!" 0 call for them. long enough to FANTASY OF THE GRATE By Edwin Rice Likened unto many things Is the heart of a man and maiden; Be it light or be it laden, Simile the fancy brings. Fancy, roving here And there, Laughs the lit'ral mind to scorn, Hearts resemble popping corn=— Good, old-fashioned popping corn. Popping corn is hard, you say? So, saith Fancy, blithsomely, May the heart of mortal be, 'Till the flames about it play. Flames of love thelr warmth be- stow— POP! The stony heart is gone! Thus we &ee, in Fancy's ahow, Hearts resemble popping corn— ‘White and glowing popping corn, But pray listen, all who should— It there be too hot a fire, Carelessness, or hands that tire, Popping corn is apoiled for good. Mind the way its fate is met, You whom Fancy seeks to warm; Some, perchance, don’t need it—yet Hearts resemble popping corn— Quick to change is popping corn! Want Plums! Ellls: “Office-zeekers are cer- tainly kecnly interested in the com- ing elections, aren’t they?” Fowler; “Yes, they're going plum =Audrey Hilllard Or, hearing a talking-movie first time; “Vitaphoney noise?" s the movie fan asked on for the GEOGRAPHICAL By W. E. Wentworth Several generations ago when T went to school we had to study a book called geography. Some of you older heads may remember back that far, Well, in the study of this bock you will remember that there was a thing called the Great Divide. Now lots of people have wanted to see the Equator, and a few have wanted to see the Tropic of Cancer. But not me. I have never felt equal to a trip to the Equator, and I had an Uncle once who had cancer—and since that time cancer has been ta- boo in our family. Life ran ita little course. I mar- ried and prepared to settle down. After about a year, my wife decid- ed on a little trip. She decided it was time for me to settie up, so she took me to Reno—there she showed me the Great Divide. In fact I was the Great Divide. Bhe got the Dividend. We are getting into Mathematics now. Let X equal me. Divide by 2. Give one part to the wife, the other part to her lawyer. What is left is me, It is the way the sines read. Then I fell for another girl, but she wouldn't allow me much lati- tude. She treated me frigidly. She said I was just another actiaent in the Cosmic Race. Accidently I signed my name to my letters, and I found that one didn’t have to go to Reno to see the Great Divide. The same problem—and the same answer! Strongheart, the Pup s Not Attractive! First Carrot: “That's the ugliest looking Kitchen range in the world, I'll bet.” Second Carrot: *“Well, get into a stew over it!” —<cCatherine Bonsel let's not FUN SHOP FOLLIES G Big Going Over Big PAR Point Point Point TLa Huls was wealthy and had 8mith’s reply to page ads ol ques- | as”it grows the kernel of central ‘and the result would be considerable tions hurled at him by Republiean / | business houses naturally expands. Vindustrial and financial gloom for been interested.in oil properties. In Kern county, California. Point Point Point Six Points Below Par he's ooking for & drink!" ——Ansel Conover (Copyright, 1938, Reproduction Forbidden) .QUESTIONS ANSWERED Tou can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Questic= Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1333 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., encloeing two cepts In stamps for reply. Medical, I and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended rescarel be undertaken. All other questionr will receive a per- sonsl reply. Unsigned req can- not be answered, All lettors are con- fdential.—T:ditor, Q. What is Lindberg's full name? A. Charles Augustus Lindbergh. Q. How large is the Wembley Stadium in London, England? How does it compare with other large stadiums in the United States? A, The Wembley Stadium located in the suburbs of London has & seating capacity of 126,000 people end is four times the size of the Colliseum at Rome. Its surround- ing wall is half a mile In length. Other famous stadiums are the Besquicentennial Stadium at Phila- delphia, seating 125,000, Grant Park Stadium, Chicago, seating 100,000; Franklin Field, Philadelphia, 83,500; Yale University Bowl, New Haven, Conn., §0,000; Venable Stadium, Bal- timore, Maryland, 78,000; Los An- geles, California, 75,000. The sta- dium in ancient Athens was the largest the world has ever seen; it could hold 350,000 people, Q. What is the present popula- tion of the United States A. The 1927 estimated popula- tion of the United States is 118,628,000, Q. Through what states does the National Old Trails Road go? A. It touches the following states: Maryland, Pennsylvania, West Vir- ginla, Ohile, Indiana, Illinois, Mis- souri, Kansas, Colorado, New Mex- ico, Arizona, Nevada and California. Q. Who was the leading man in the motion picture “Laddie”? A. John Bowers. Q. Whers was Anna May Wong the motion picture actress, born? Is she married? Where could one address a letter to her? A. She was born in Los Angeles, Cal.,, Jan. 6, 1906, and is not mar- ried. Her address is care UFA 8tu- dios, Berlin, Germany, where she i appearing in German motion pie- tures, Q. TIn what picture will Gilbert Rajand next appear on the screen? A, His next picture will be “Craig's Wife”. Q. In the game of checkers is a plece which enters the king row by jumping an opposing piece en- titled to make another move or jump or must he wait until the opposing player has made his move? A. He is not entitled to make another move or jump until- after the opposing player has made his move. In other words if a player captures with an uncrowned piece one of his opponent’s pieces and lands in the king row, his move is completed and he cannot move the piece until his opponent has moved. Hoyle's rule on the question is: “When & man reaches the ‘king row’ the piece cannot move from that position until it has been crowned and the other player has moved.” Q. What kind,of & name is Van Cocyman? A. It<is a Dutch name meaning “son of the cook”. The name ap- when in public places. Q. Will ordinary ink do to make drawings on a alicker? A. No, ordinary ink will not take on the oily surface of a slicker. Paints of any desired color or the bronges that are used on steam radi- ators and other exposed piping in dwellings can be used. Asphalt varnish is & good quick drying black and will adhere to the alicker. Q. What is the annual immigra- tion quota for Portugal? How many people from Portugal were admitted to the United States in 1928 In what city is the largest Portuguese population? A. The present annual immigra- tion quota for Portugal is ¢57. Dur- ing the fiscal year ending June 30, 1928, 844 Portuguese- immigrants were admitted to this country, Ac- cording to reports of the 1920 census of the United States, New Bedford, Mass., had the largest Portuguese population of any city in the United States. Fall River, Mass., and Oak- land, Cal, were second and third respectively, Q. When did Houdini die and what was the cause of his death? A. He died in Detroit, Michigan, October 381, 1926 of peritonitis, caused by a ruptured appendix. He was_taken seriously 11l while en route from Montreal to Detroit, October 24, and collapsed at the close of his performance that even- ing in the Garrick theater. He was taken to Grace hospital, and fol- lowing a consultation of surgeons, was operated on October 25, His fatal illness was attributed to blows in the stomach by a student of McGill University, Montreal, ten days previous. He had lectured to the student body and invited stud- ents to come to his dressing room for further information, Two students came and commented on his unusual strength. Being asked if he would feel a blow on the stomach, and re- ceiving a reply in the negative, be- fore he was aware of the student's intention's, the latter gave the ‘ma- gician two rapid short-arm punches, which doubled him up in pain. From that time on he complained of pains in the stomach. Observations On The Weather ‘Washington, Sept. 19.—Forecast for Southern New England: Rain tonight and Thursday. Continued low temperature, Strong northeast or north winds. . Forecast for Eastern New York: Rain tonight and Thursday, except cloudy in extreme north portion to- night. Continued cool; northeast gales; possibly whole gale on coast; fresh to strong northeast winds in interior. Conditions: The {ropical storm | continued slowly northeast- Its center is near Wilmington, N Carolina. Weather conditions cleared in Florida and Goergla high winds and rain have est iin from Virginia Capes northward over the Jower St. Lawrence The maximum wind velocity Atlantic City during the night 73 miles per hour from the n east. - Four stations ruported inches or mare of rain City 3:00; Wilmington 3.48 and Charlotte ¢.02 inches, Temperatuves are rising over the plains states, under the influence of a disturbance that is moving east- ward over the Canadian Northwest with a long trough extending southe westward to Arisona. Conditions favor for this vicinity rainy weather with high winds and not much change in temperature, Temperatures yesterda: Atlanta Atlantic City Boston . Buffalo . Chicago Cincinnati Denver . Detroit Duluth . Kansas City Los Angeles .... Miami ..... Minneapolis .... Nantucket . New Haven New Orleans New York Norfolk, Vi Northfleld, Vt. . Pittsburgh . Portland, Me. , 8t. Louis . B Washington s . How Weak Nervous Women Grow Stronger Fool Better, Look Youngerand Have Nerves ! ing to your druggist and in, Ei’( ttle of this did mnml: t Mrs. Dora Robillard, of Bellin, 11 Mass., R.F. D, 1, Box 17, says: “'I ha ead- ata no digestion nor ite, aches laid me up in three da) time, I couldn't even do light house- work. Now I do all our cooking and washing in addition to the other work. Tanlac is as free from harmful Nature's own know this and for the past 10 have n::::mdd it o . women need a quick “pi that will put them on theirm give them a new interest in life, So confidest are the makers of Taa. lac that if you are not hel| yob get your ey back oa req Tanl, 52 MILLION BOTTIES [USED) = ° SCHOOL LUNCHES A complete treatiss, diawn from oflicial sources, on the proper food fer growing children, full of suggestions for mourishing food for school lunches, whether eaten at home, taken to scheol, or bought at school, is contained vur Washington Bureau's lotest bulletin SCHOOL LUNCHES. The parents of every boy and gitl who is going to school will find this bulletin of val Fill out the coupon below and send for it: ,--— - - 8CHOOL LUNCHES EDITOR, Wi 1322 New York Avenue, W cover postage and handling costs: NAME | cry 1 am & reader of the NEW BRITAIN RERALD, Family Stuff—Willie’s New Shoes CLIP COUPON HERE ETATE hington Bureaw New Britatn Herald, ington, D. C. T want a copy of the bulletin ECHOOL LUNCHES, and enclose here- with five cents in loose, uncancelled, U. 8. postage stamps, or coin, te conerw STREET AND NUMBER ......-................................-.....| A o’ By Fontaine Fox THE NEW SHOKS THAT FATHER BoUGHT FoR WILLIE WHEN MOoTHER WAS Too BUSY -Te LEAVE THE HoUSE. b Ay Syndicate, Tac)