New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1928, Page 6

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'New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPA! Tssued Daily (Sunday Excepted) At Herald BMg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES a Year §2.00 Three I $8.00 smths T5c. a Month Entered at the Post Office at New Brital as Second Class Mauil Matler, TELEPHONE CALLS Business ¢ : Editorial Rooms ... ertising mediun ks Associnted Press titled to all news civ credited in paper uews published therein, and als) Member Audit Burcau The A. which tisers with 4 circula Our based upon th tection against tribution i local advertisers. Newsst The Herald is on York at Hotaling Square; Schultzs ) Grand Central, 42nd s e e p—— Walking Gehrig with two men o1 the sacks reminds us of strategy — indetinitely politica and press ted 1o it o ot othevie Jgw does not mentioning was popular—even among clvic poli- ticians—to advocate more and bet- ter school buildings. Nobody seemed | to care about the cost. Now we have { obtained some of the school build- |ings that were thought necessary and will get more; but politiciuns, thinking it popular to apply the brakes here and there, are attempt- |ing to throw bags of sand In the | machinery. When all thelr perscruta- tions are over it will be found that there are no two roads to travel witn regard to the elementary schools— the city. willynilly, must provide ac- commodations. | But the senior high school leaves an opening | viding the straw n for a harangue, pro- with which the { politicians can tickle the school com- while it is tied to the political stake. The state enforce as stringent | regulations for providing high school space as it does in connection with elementary schools. Unless the ad- ministration furnishes the money the school committee cannot move for- ward with its plans. On this point thé politicians can win temporarily, but the victory cannot be anything tut illusory. Ultimately there must ! mittee’s collective hide be action, and the modernizing of the high school will cost just as much then as now, but with the dis- advantage of interference with the proper flow of education at this im- ! portgnt department of the school system. : 1 1 something remotely approaching the 1ssue. Those suffering from might do well to g0 to Mexico City and be rocked to slecp by one o the native “quakes.” Eliminating wuste in high school but what sports is one thing; boys are more interested in is elim indting deteats. More proof that the campaign is getting hotter is the announcemcn! that Governor Smith will make rear. platform speeches throughout South. Saving the voice is not as im Iportant from now on as saving the party. We have never known it to fail When a crowd begins throwing €ggs | at a speaker nearly everybody or the platform gets hit except the ora tor. Or maybe duck, Lenigncy for Hickman? Wha nerve. Well, Governor Smith may mak Louis and that ana -4 population a speech in St cheer up the deprs Conditions may have been bad in Philadelphia, but the police at leas never permitted such rotten liquor to get into circulation as to kHl 3 voters in two days. Everybody lilkes a winner. Lver the fans along Church street bet on St. Louls began checring & the finish. That's one way to obtain one's money's worth. P. T. ASSOCIATION HEARD FROM; “AND HOW” Batire, irony and biting criticisy formed the bulk of the Hiscussio of the senior high school problem at the meeting of the Parents and | r. Board of Teachers Association. Kdward ‘Hall, chairman of the Finance and Taxation, was there t explain things. Like King Canute, h did his best, with the broom at hand, to prevent the ocean of censure from engulfing the land. He would hav been better satisficd, no doubt, had there becn more rosewater and les: briny salt to handle. The attitude of the easily assoclution 1 understood; it prefer tha secon action rather delay. The committee progressive progressive investigation pointed stead of needs of the s out at by the mayor, in upon th 1 i coneentrating h th ior school, all “investigating”’ an school a week, and more to look into. By M held, the job will b by that time the committec probabl bl reaching schools, rage of on: has around 2 1, S0 it 4 Ll y complete; an ita to ke M will have enough busy for another the high school problem not on mains unsolyed portunity to beconie strategy of delay engineere w tion is of Lenefit to notn The history of the it polities oard of Ed i the city ha ¢ been interested in polities; s not divide on political when dec ne We thin Th and isions are essar politics are not consider this I8 & matter of local history the board is conce it ha function o ed upon t gun decrepit and lagging school accon school plant turning the city'’s orstwhi modations into a semblance of civ essentials, and it left alone is our opinion ind not blocked Ly tical considerations pressur from outside the hoard, w complete the job to th i in tim factio of all fair-minded citizens A few years ago there was univer sal censure hereabouts in connectio with the schools. The manded a modern school plant insomnia the | the | Mr. Upshaw, despite | 'his physical infirmity, knows how to who ep it 1e but has had the op- minds of the city ad- at- be- public ae- It HALL'S DUTY The plain duty of Chairman Ed- ward F. Hall, chairman of the Board of Finance and Taxation, is to call a meeting of his hoard to hear the Board of Education relative to the high school problem, and other | problems if desired. Those who oppose the school com- | mittge's plans are also entitled to a hearing before the board. Chairman | Hall can do no better for himself, and New Britain than by giving all sides the fair deal to which they {are entitled. | Even the muayor is entitled to a i hearing before the board if he wants it. | | ! | t THE HOME RUN GAME The fans are satisfied. Home runs | during world series games look as |big as balloons—and in popular | imagination seem to travel about as far. The team that can produce home runs and win largely on that account is bound to be popular. The . ; Yanks right now are on the crest of as much popularity as a ball cver had. They are universally | popular throughout the nation—per- haps even in St. Louis—because they carned it. Having n team e y lost four stralght games be no doubt that 8t. Louis was outclassed In this serles. 1f they |are good sports the Cardinals will admit as much, In the last game the Yanks delivered the kind of drub- bing they are capuble of. They did it with spectacular home runs. Long pmay Ruth, Gehrig & Co. prosper to | provide national entertainment. there can t r t ON THE SQUARE No Coolidge prosperity for the Yank-Cardinal baseball magnates. After paying these high salaries for home run hitters the men they pay so handsomely to produce were | 5o unthoughtful as to deprive their employers of the income after the first repeating the record of year. But it is con- siderable proof that bascball remains “on the square.” n four nes, o e S SHOALS POLICY Hoover went into Ten- 1d a brilliant opportuni- ty to state specifically what he fav- | ored doing with Muscle Shoals. That is the state where interest in this cnormous gover #nent undertaking s at fever heat. A candidate who jour- > shadow of such a ng with right is ex- it at some Whea Mr. nessee he e s s n a ap neys within t _ vast undert: _ pected to talk length | Dut while in that neighborhood < Mr. Hoover took eare not to say too much; indeed, he said very little, Tt vas after he had returned to Wash- n ifter a duy of conferences vith Dr. Work and other G. O. P. that his definite statement was issucd. Something had ahout the effect of the ech made in Tennessee, for of all upon ngton, chicftains, more to he don I things, an editor had announced the candidate was not only in favor of , | Fovernment _ownership T Shoals, but alsy of government op- cration. This, it seems, was going " too far for Mr. Hoover. The smoke having cleared away somewhat we get that Mr. Hoover wishes to think like Mr. Coolidge on this Muscle Shoals business. All he i ry K likes i to ha it for agricultural rescarch purposes the develepment. of fertilizer, and as » the government run itional defense reserve. Tf there such as clec- he favors the disposal hy-praduct e trie po on such terms and conditions and protect all 1 will safegnard i public interest, But i Mr Hoover M hoals primarily as a plant for the manufacture of fertilizer he " really does not agree with Mr. Cool- idge, bad memory. President. last message or a in to s his 1 Congress, at Muscle Shoals in out of date. add- ing “this leaves this project mostly of Muscle | regards The | 4 the fertitizer procss | {concerned with power.” Now Mr. | Hoover, un engineer, harks back to | ! tertilizer as the main function of the | | ptant. | Of course, there will be a lot of | ! surplus power at the spot. According ' to the Hoover plan, this would have to be disposed of las the government lacks the means {of disposal—L e.. the power lines into adjacent, states—it will have to dispose of it to the concerns owning |such cquipment. Which will mean :rhm they will get the power for ap- | proximately what they care to pay | for it; for if the government cannot dispose of it elsewhere, and has no means of furnishing consumers di- ! rect, the government will have to |take what is offered. On the gther hand, it will not be able to regulate the rates for Muscle Shoals power !in the various states because that is some way, and ® state function. BRANDING THE OTHER PELLOW Down in Morristown, N. J., a trial has been in progress, and if it were | not for the humorous featurcs con- nected with 1t and the prominence of the litigants it would not be more |important than any other little neighborhood brawl jerked nto a courtroom for adjudication, The point about the trial is that when women geo into the public arcna, where mud sometimes flies, they must expeat to have a gown ruined occasionally. You will get the | | meaning, no doubt, without a chart of instructions. It appeara that Mrs. Helen Brum- ley Baldwin, an official of the D. A. R. of Boonton, is or has been a zcal- ous worker in the cause. When she read In a newspaper that the Rev. William H. Bridge of that town had Invited Mrs. Lucin Ames Mead, noted Boston pacifist,ito speak in his church she didn't like the ldea at | all. Which wad her privilege. Per- haps others in the town didn’t like it either, while & fair portion were | willing to listen with patience. Mrs. Baldwin, however, didn't stop with thinkihg her opinions. She stepped out in public about it, writ- ing, a scorching letter to the local newspaper, In which she attacked the Rov. Mr. Bridge and Mrs. Mcad, | stating that these and the Rev. John Haynes Holmes, Professor Robert Morse Lovett, Oswald Garrison Vil !lard, Jane Addams, Sherwood Eddy, | Rabbi Stephen 8. Wise, Mrs. L. K. Elmhirst (the former Mrs. Willard D. Straight), Stanley High, and Sarah Bardfeld were all “playing the Communist game.” When anybody steps out in public in this manner, throwing a cobble- endeavoring of re- | | | a | stone of invective and to besmirch ‘the reputation nowned public characters, a lack of | care was exercised insthe first place. And in the second place, the party | who does this deed, to our way of thinking, should not be at all irri- {ated if some of those uimed at re- turn the fire. That is common sense, we believe; the person who throws a brick should at least expect any- thing from a pebble to a boulder in return. The Rev. Mr. Bridge took up the cudgels on behalf of all. He also wrote a letter to the little local pa- per saying that Mrs. Baldwin's statements wer2 “lying Illlp\llu_flonn." Maybe it the writer had not been a minister and the object of his wrath had not been a woman, he would have written even a hotter statement, using words printable ®nly on asbestos. And so the - war Mrs. Baldwin sued for slander, demand- ing $5.000 damages. She claimed a grocer and a butcher had spoken to her about the letter and that she had recelved many hotes mentioning it, s0 that she was quite unnerved, if not worse. Why go further? Except to that her original statement about Communists was not so very much | for the reverend pastor to get excit- |ed ab lost all its force by being too sistently applied. 1t is forceful, indecd, than the much- ‘ulnuu‘d word “holshevist.” Every- . body knows plenty of hoth sort of | people nowadays—the folk who do started. say con- not more | thing Mr. Borah is opposed to. | oil will prevent snow blindness. | (quals the old black slouch for talk- !ing through. | candidate; wondering how anybody |away at motorists. ! votes from those who were repub- lter to the st | Yor seeing that the word has | \Fe cts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN On this bright and Leautiful morn- ing we pause to wonder what new They say the inventor of the gin fizz is dead. His mastcrpiece pre- ceded him. Great men seldom are misquoted | in print, but it's charitable to think they are. No wonder Tolstoy was an ideal- ist. His home was named Polyanna. Example of being humane: Re- fusing to take a criminal's sending him to the pen to kill & guard or two. On old-fashioned man is one who sees a giri smoking and believes he could pet her but doesn’t care to. Doubtless it is true that cod liver We never saw a blind codfish, The brown derby and fedora have their good points, but nothing Mr. Mellon denies a rumor that ha once controlled the liquor bus- iness. He doesn’t do it even now. Keeping an the ear Americanism: other open for slander about can be fool enough to believe the tales about you. How thoughtless we ure! The passenger pigeon and the buffalo are extinct, and yet dry agents blaze fhe present campaign has more whispering than usual, just as the present tooth-ache is the worst you ever had. Trose whe wouldn't work in stricken Nlorida couldn’t eat. Mak- ing the rule universal would cripple the manufacturers of reducing ma- chines. ‘he cafeteria is more popular with men than women.” You can't chunge your mind in a cafeteria. Smith gets his Literary Digest licans in 1924 but where else could he get them? A man's great thrills are the first time he kisses a girl and the first time he hears his office girl say he is in conference. temember the happy school days when you carrvied a slat How they come back to you as you watch the man unload your winter coall They say hotel rates must be high to pay for the towels guests steal. But how can a guest get away with 36 towels? Correct this sentence: “T like the fellow,” said the reserved metropol- itan; “he patted me on the back the first time I met him." Copyright 1928, Publishers Sy ndicate MRS. QUILLINAN JOINS DISTINGUISHED FATHER Younger of ith to Teke 4'p Campaign b Daughter Governor I With Nomince New York, Oct. 10 (A —Entrance of Governor Smith's younger daugh- of the 1928 presi- dential campaign makes the New governor's personal traveling ty one of the most domestic pro- Francis J. Quillinan, a slim, Lride of four months, plans to desert her young lawyer-hushand |tonight for a period of nearly two weeks while she takes hes place in ber father's campaign tiain. With her elder sister, Mrs. John A. Warner, and her mother, who were tie governor's companions on his first stumping tour, Mrs, Quillin- an will taie part in the back plat- form appearances, and in the fune- tions arranged for the women in the cigies where the governor will speak. | mot agree with one’s pet belivfs. As for the minister's claim, what | does a “lying Politicians during a campaign imputation” nican? get ments. The whispering campaign of current manufacture is much more anderous and libelous and nobody | has yet read of anybody going to Jail. | The trouble down in Boonton, J. was that two individuals talked { out in public when they should have | kept their opinions in secret. And another trouble was that a country editor printed two communications which should not hav print | We are inclined to blame the editor for not using much judgment. He might have known that the woman's letter . had in | print if it tried to blacken the repu "tations of reputable the editor having taken this should have induced the tone down the sccond seen ! original no place citizens; and tep. minister to communica- tion, or should have uscd the fabled hlue pencil. Rut above everything else the is incontestable. deduction that those who enter the public arena should not he thin-skinned: should be will ing to take as well as give. away with much more serious state- | S imy Tt will be per first official parti- { cipation in politics and she admits | that, while she is very much | “thrilled” over the prospect, she is alittle seared, “If unyhody asked me fo make a specch the way they did Emily on the last trip, I don’t know what 1 | whuld do.” she said, referring to her sister's three b k platform addres- ses and the gen ral talks she made at women's luncheons “I have never made a speech in life and I certa can't start | néw. Curanci‘ Fl;d& Three \ Died From Accidents | Middictown, Oct. 10.—4P—Three findings of gecidental death were issued today'by Coroncr Towndes A. Smith involving two automobilists, and a motoreyclist. Malcolm T. Nichols of New Haven was exoner- in the death of Giuscppe Sa- lonia of Middletown who died on September 18 when struck at a street intorsection. rs. Gladys M Cleashy of Weth- ersfield wa ared ot responsibility in the death of Allan A. Bailey, 10 year old 1oy of Durham, who drove his coaster wagon into the path of her machine on the night of Sep- tember 21 Hall C. Gilmore, of 1 a factory worker | voryton was killed on September 21, when he lost control of his mo- torcycle and ran head on Into a ! boulder the find states. life; |, (him wiH you give open-mouthed and wide-eyed. Oh, for the Good Old Days, Fulks! In the bright October glow We went chestnuting years ago; The chestnuts in our world today Are things the poiiticians say! All in the Family! Robinson—What was the trouble the mayor gat into about the pay- roll? Griffith—He put on too many Heirs! THE POET'S DEMON By Harria N. Rossleigh Whenever I sit down to write, Perched on my table, near the light, There stands a little demon bold, With wrinkled brow, bent form, and old, Who chills my fancies at his sight. I.fain would “Love," A flower's fragrance, or the glovi My lady wors last night, when she And I were dancing merrily. The demon frowns on my above, sing of “Dawn,” or lin:s o 1 plan a lovely paragraph, In which “fair knights and ladies quaff The nectar pause. Yor in the middle of my clause 1 hear the demon’s mocking laugh. of the gods"—but On “Summer Winda" 1 fain would Autumn,” “Winter,” I'd Dut, mimicking Birds," The demon whistles forth these words: “That's all before my “Songs of been said, " long, long Howling Success! Hodge—1 don’t go to slecp any more nights. Chandler—What's Insomnia? Hodge—No, it's that fellow next door. His dog howls till he comes home and then his wite does it the rest of the night! the trouble? —F. E. Parks According to divorce figures this is either the land of the freed or the home of the rave! IN LILLIPUTIAN LAND Eyet Eyel “Johnny," cailed my father to my younger brother one day recently, “it you keep an eye on the baby I'll give you & nickel.” “And if 1 keep my two cyes on me a dime?” asked Johnny. —Albert J. Aircie Uh Hub! Little Freddie was being taken by | his father for a trip to \lvuxh\nlhm, D. C, The guide on the sight-tecing bus announced the names of the various buildings a» they were passed. nally they came to that section of the city occupled by Fi- the foreign diplomatic corps. Passing an unusually large and handsome building the guide called: “This is the home of the Siamese Legation. “Oh, mister!” blurted out Freddie, “Oh, mister, do they have that hig house for just the two of them —Lalllan W. Browne The Iufant-ry, the Infantr-ry, With the—o Mother and her two sons were sitting, in the living room talking. “Roger,” she asked the older boy. tell me what ‘chagrin’ “It means ‘melancholy’ or ‘sad,'" answered Roger. “How could she grin if she wera sad?" asked the kid brother, inno- cently. -—Harold M. Stinson “Hurry up, versel” stupid! Put it in re- Hindrance to Travel! Eleanor-—Have you ever been to Paris?” Cornelia—No. T can’t seem to find a man I'd be willing to be divorced from! —<C. F. Akerley FUN SHOP FOLLIES Going After the Rigger Things Some of Eacht Charles—When 1 got to her house last night I went right to the sideboard and tackled some of her ather's liquer. Very old. Paul—Her father? Charles~—No, the liquor. Ang then her father caught me. Believe me, some kiek. Paul—The liquor? Charles—No. the father! —Oliver A. Ferguson (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) congratulati on the birth of a baby be addressed? A. To both parents. Q. How old is Richard Dix A. 34 Years. Q. What is the origin and mean- ing of the name Slawson? A. It is British and originated in 3 nickname “‘son of slaw™ that is “slow". Q. Why is a called? A. A straw vote is an unofficial canvass of public opinion, conducted by a newspaper or private organi- ! zation, to determine public senti- ment in regard to measu and candidates prior to a nominating convention or election. It comes from the expressfon “straws in the wind", that is the practice of throw- ing a straw to see which way the wind is blowing. A straw-vote Is assumed to show how the “political wind” is blowing. Q. Who is the youngest male actor under contract in the movies? A. Little Sonny McKeen, known as “Snookums”. He was born Sep- tember 1, 1924. Q. Is the United States a mem- ber of the League of Nations? A. No. Q. What is the Singing Mem- non? A. A statue in Egypt which gave out a musical note when the sun rose in the morning and as it set at night. After the statue was tipped over it no longer sang. Q. From what does the word “pyjama” come? A. It is a Hindustani- meaning “leg cloth”. Q. Is it true that the dragon fly is able to fly backwards at the same speed as forwards? A, Yes. THINK WARFARE STILL GOING ON IN CHINA Mohammedan Uprising Already Claims 200,000 Lives in 2 “straw vote” so QUENTIONE ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or Information by writing to the Questic Editor. New Aritain Herald. Washington Burean 1323 New York avenue, Washington D. C., encioing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. Al other guestionr will receive a ner- sonal reply. ['nsigned requ not be anawered. All letters are con- Adential.—Tiditor. Q. Can.you give me definition of color? A. Color is the quality of an object by which it emits or reflects or transmits certain rays of light and absorbs others, thus producing a specific effect on the eye. Q. Who was Confucius? A. A philosopher of China many centuries before Christ. His teach- ings became the basis of Confu-| clanism, one of the great religions of China. Q. What does Erebus mean? A. It is another name for Hades, the Greek place of the dead. Q. Why are “dog days” called ? A. They recelved the name from the fact that the rising of the dog star Sirius is, during the period in question, coincident with the rising of the sun. The date of this hellacal rising of Sirius has varied through the centuries. The dog days are now usually counted from July 3 to August 11: that is to say. 20 days before and 20 days after the conjunction of Birfus and the sun. | Q. Who played the part of the | young aviator who was shot as a spy in the motion picture “The Legion of the Condemned”? Barry Norton. Q When and where was the first electric tunnel road or sub\\'uyi built A. 1In 1890, “The City and South London Line", England. Q. When was the Manhattan Opera House in New York City | word a good Kansu Province Shanghal, Oct. 10 P—Civil war- fare following a Mohammedan up- rising in Kansu province, which was stated to have claimed more than 200,000 lives, was belleved today to be continuing In the western Chinese province. In addition to the ravages of civil warfare the area was stated in d- vices from missions to be suffering from an intense famine. This had been aggravated by the fighting and | the advices said that half the popu- lation of the province was liable to die during the coming winter. (The latest estimate of the popu- lation of Kansu, compiled by the Chinese post office in 1923, is 5,927,- 997.) Serious conflicts between the Kan- su Mohammedans and troops of | General Feng Yu-Hsiang, who | clalms the overlordship of the prov ince, caused chaotic conditions. D tailed information was not available | in Shanghai, but a letter from the | | ! This situation caused Geners! Feng to dispatch an army eerps from Honan province to n an attempt -to subjugate the. Mo- hammedans. Tl forces, however, were defeated and more seidiers were then poured into Kansu. - This resulted in civil warfare whick was believed to be continuing although there have been no reports later than August. The American head- quarters of the China inland mifsion, {is in Philadelphia. Qbservations On The Weather ‘Washington, Oct. 10.—Forecast for Bouthern New England: Fair, i continued cool tonight, Thursday fair; slowly rising temperature; moderate north, shifting to seuth- east winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Fair tonight; Thursday fair and warmer in south. Showers in north portion; gentle to moderate south. east and south winds. Conditions: Pressure is high over the take region and low over the | Rocky mountains. Scattered show- | ers have occurred during the past | 24 hours in the southern and east- |ern districts. Pleasant weather prevails this morning in all sec- tions. The temperature is about normal in the lake region and New England, but is considerably above normal between the Rocky moun- tains and the ' Miasisaippl river, Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather and not much change in temperature. Temperaturea yesterday: Atlanta | Atlantic City | Boston . Buffalo Chicago . Cincinnati « Denver Detroit Duluth . Hatteras . Kansas City s+ Los Angeles ., Miami Minneapolis Nantucket . New Haven ,vce New Orleans ,.. New York ..... Norfolk, Va. . Northfield, Vt. . Pittsburgh Portland, Me. , St. Louis bullt? i A, Oscar Hammerstein built the first Manhatton Opera House in| 1892, In 1906 he built the second | and better-known Manhattan Opera | House which was opened with *I Puritani” on Deccmber 3 of that year. Q. Does Malne have the same day for the election of presidential electors as other states? A. Election day is set by con- gress for all the states and Maine will have its presidential election on the Tuesday after the first Monday | in November like the other states.| of trertment Q. What is the income of Har- || juiean. 1t v vard University? trentment for stone con A. The Iatest fignres concorning (| floors, taking care of the assets of Harvard University || stains and hucpig tinole are for 1925-26. 1In that year the || [oWeC® o B Micames? trow) all” sources Aotallsg || OIo¥ o2% mauas diects $17.710,837. The endowment fund totaled $76,022.426. The total as- neta exclusive of additions fo the en- downment fund were $11.026.175 Q. What bathrobe did Gene Tun- ney wear into the ring in his fights with Demprey? Did It have some kind of special Inaignia on it? A. 1In both fights with Dempsey, Tunney wore into the ring the bath- robe presented to him before his first battle with Dempscy by the ! United States Marines, The rohe bere the emblem of the United States Marine Corps. | Q. To whom should a note of China inland mission headquarters at Lanchowfu, capitul of Kansu, ! dated ugust 1 stated that acute | started last spring. At that time arined Mohammedan bands be- | gan raiding villages throughout cen- tral Kunsu, robbing and slaying the inhabitants who were unazble to offer A bulletin vovering prastical info na el o, formation ~m—————- WORS ew York Avenue, Washi Metin CAR with five ¢ . to ccver post 1 am a reader of the New Brit The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang CLIP COUPON HERE DITOR. Washffigton Bureau, FREE TICKETS ) % 1o the STRAND THEATZEX Get Yours Nest Satwday At 282 Mam Mivet rmation and suggestions for methods Mds of fluors and of carpets, rugs and hington Bureau. methods ef ) covorings, removing apots and materials in good condition. Any in this bulletin. Clip out the coupom ---h--—‘ New Britain Herald, ngton, D. . OF FLOORS AND FLOOR-COVER- nta in coin, or loose, uncamcelled, tage and handling costs: ain Herald, —— —————f

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