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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tesued Daily (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 a Year $8.00 Thres Montus 3. a Month Entered at the Post Office at New Britain a3 Second Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Busincss Oftice Editorial Rooms The only profitable adsertising nicdium in the City. Circulation Looks and press room always open to adiertisers. Associnted Press ‘The Associated Press is exciusively o titled to the use for re-publication uf all news credited o it or mot otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published therein. Meinber of the Member Aud: The A. B. C. whichi furnishes newspapers and tisers with & strictly honest analy circulation. Our circulation statist Bureau of Circulation is u national oiganization adve in voth tection agalnst fraud tribution figures to local &dvertisers. The Herald is on sale dai York at Hotaling New Square; Schultz's Nuwsstan Grand Uentral, 42nd Street, S ——————————— It Mayor Gillis of Newburyport really carries out his plan to start a wet wash laundry atter he leaves the county jail, after having learned the trade while confined, he will have to be careful to pick a site which is not in a residence zone. Or maybe by now, along with other accom- plishments forced upon him, he has learned as much. Now we know why everybody has become dippy during the election campaign. The bootleggers who have been using the environs of Shuttle Meadow lake for a rendezvous prob- ably have dropped of ‘their product into the waters. some Having made speeches in certain states, Senator Borah has made an announcement that said certain states are sure to go Republican. Borah has an enormous total of con- fidence in the persuasive powers of Borah. It is clear qhflt Commander Byrd does not think the election is inte esting enough to wait until it is de- cided before starting on his jaunt to the South Polar regions. Or maybe he can't stand the heat. TIME TO GET THEM “Key workers” is mild The individuals who on 30 occasions have entered homes cases stolen property burglars. These burglars have a term. and in many are plain never been seen, it is said. It is time they were | seen and by the police. Ultimately, we have 1o doubt. they will be seen on the inside of a cell, where they ' belong. 1t is reasonable to suppose that if | the police force were as large as it | ought to be in a city of this size such burglars would have a rather poor fleld here for their operations. They have made the ci especially the women folk. A woman told us yesterday that the governor ought to call out the militia to-help the police. DISCIPLINE policemen nervous, Varlous and super- numerary officers have been “on the | carpet recently; some got repri- mands and punishment, others were acquitted of various the public is served. Efficiency in t 18 not exactly a mere slogan. Tho & Thus police department we have not sufficient cops, thos: have ought to be par excellence boys have everything that about, they shown The been coached to know citizens ask them tanght to he polite, like undry bl how T to act prrfoct gentlemen. when coats don’t of routine come to all the det told s they thout thetr malefactions n to toe the mark. Thus the force is bron perfect the first 50 years will be 1) CAUSE One of the the 1o indoor 1 Herald office has the deerepit t. Tt hitching It stree used to hang sort of anhandled by so t some walk It is no lor imes it 1 from the at an 5 degrees. nice “new and handson ing taken 1 to its place, an tache one of th company's iror aents. 1t now will be ditficult (utomoti get at and injure the Which master Erwin has tor s to letter hox. reminds us that post new letter hoses for i diplomacy and pativg N a long time, « 1o do this, it appenrs: The ter boxes but finally they ar city is due to have other let- A NEW PARK? Possibliity of providing a park at Osgood avenue probably wilt meet with the citizens in that new cencral approval of tion of the city. * to other routes. Especially attractive is the chance to possess u park there with a lake in it. This needs careful scrutiny. The | people in that section of the clty are pleased at the prospect. rLAt LE. CROSSING TENDERS At a hearing before the Public Utilities Commission the Northamp- ton division of the New Haven rail- running through Plainville, | Southington, etc., was the topic of | road, discussion. It seems that the branch line has !come to a rather low estate. Accord- ing to the evidence of the railroad | officials, the only service over the |line now consists of one freight train cach way, making two trains a day. It is no passenger line at all, and seemingly, nobody misses the lack of passenger trains. Even the freight which used to be more numerous, have been whittled down | to only the one local freight each | one thing, the line are not strong trains, | way every day. For bridges on the cnough to stand the weight of the larger and more important freight | trains that used to roll over the | branch, these having been switched | In spite of there being only twe | treights over the rails daily, how- |ever, and the offer of the railroad officials to stop them at ecach cross- ing through the towns and have a | man walk ahead to the crossing with |a flag and thus protect traffic, there | was a demand for regular grade tenders. There are said to have been citizens who favored -the railroad's ! plan, but apparently they were too | busy to show up at the hearing. | A line that has descended to such | |a low estate as to have only two way | freights a day over it hasn’t far to go | ito do away with even these. Our bet is that if the railroad fs forced to | provide crossing tenders for two [trains a day in the near future | the line will be ready to be scrapped and the little freight hauled over it will procced to the towns by trucks. GONE THE JUDGESHIP It is acknowledged generally that French tool in the pay of Napoleon; (that he was so dishonest that none of his statements could be believed. | Tt was said of John Quincy Adams !that he cheated a’ turnpike com- pany through & legal quibble; that he was dishonestly in debt; that he charged the government for jour- {neys; that his father disinherited 'him after a vicious quarrel; that when minister to St. Petersburg he | procured an American servant girl for the Czar; that he had gone bare- |foot in the streets of Washiugton; {that he was a corrupt and polished libertine in foreign courts. It was said of Andrew Jackson that he was an adulterer, a gambler, a cock fighter, a brawler, a drunk- lard and a murderer; that his wife a without virtue wno had lived with Jackson before her divorce had become effective; that he had dishonestly ruined associates in Nashville business deats. It was said of Lincoln tnat he was | without manners or breeding, unfit | to occupy the White House; that he | as secretly in league with the South; that his wife sympathized with the Confederacy; that his wife introduced southern spies in Wash- ington and kept them informed of cabinet secrets as well as the plans | of generals in the field; that Lin- | coln's quarrels with his wife were the scandals of Washington; that at | one time he was much the worse for liquor. It was said of Grant that he was a drunkard, liked fast horses and fast lving; that he was the weak tool of a military ring; ‘that he was cor- rupt; that he had committed a dark deed in the Civil War which gave a blackmailing hold wupon him by Ben Butler, who boasted about it. It was said of Rutherford B. Hayes that he cheated the govern- ment in income tax returns; that he kept $1,000 belonging to a private Killed in the Civil War; that he kept the property of an executed desert- er; that he wus secretly a member of the American Alliance, which planned to deprive the vote from foreign-born citizens, It was said of Garfield that he had been drunk in the army and lived a profligate life in Washington; that cts and Fancies The only creatures that make a noise like 4 whispering campaign lare geese and wnakes. Speaking of peace treaties, how !many laws would be effective if the violator had only his conscience Ito fear? Among the yellow peoples are the Orientals and the man \ho wishes ‘to say it but doesn't wish to | be quoted. Of course nobody doubts a can- | didate’s promise, but you'll notice | the price of farm land hasn't in- creased greatly., ' Having seen many _elections, we can’t m to get excited about | some stranger's effort to get a job. was a woman L Mothers whe have made the poor- st job of tralning their brats are the ‘ones who tell the first-grade teacher how to do it. Quantity production reduces over- Lead. Physician's bill for one baby, $30; for triplets, $10 each. It must amuse Polar bears when they come across a torn flag cling- ing to a sharp point of ice. It docsn't help & party much when a prominent member pro- claims his loyalty in a tone of mar- tyrdom. Americanism: Hastening to buy the new play-pretty; wishing you |had waited for the improved model. When a man talks much about saving the party, the method he has lin mind consists of applying a hatchet to the party's head. There's one good thing. Some cx- perimenter ~in developing home- made hooch may yet produce the | perfect varnish remover. Thank goodness! Another scason | gone by without anybody trying to |introduce watermeclon served with | mayonnaise. !‘lhu pet ambition of Mrs. Mabel | | Walker Willebrandt has been to be | the first woman to obtain an ap- | pointment as a federal judge. assistant attorney-general and pro- | hibition enforcer had quite a clear | field for a long time; there were | few who doubted that she would gain a federal beneh in Californfa. But Mabel herself has ruined her | chances. Perhaps she thinks it s | worth while to do so on the sacri- ficial altar of public duty as she sees it; or perhaps later, when the campaign | | The | is over, | she may suffer from the pangs of regret. Anyway, there isn't a politica | writer and observer in Washington | who thinks she can be confirmed ! by the Senate for such a post. Sen like her style of cam- paigning and they think she has too | ators don't many fanatical convictions on pro- Libition to make the senators popu- lar should they happen to confirm such a nomination by a president. We think too that it | more mental equilibrium than Mrs. Willebrandt has shown to become a federel jndge. In this important mat- ter, i it ever comes up, the Senate is vt even likely to be influenced | hy that greatest of lobbics, the Anti- Saloon Leaguc SLANDERS OF THE PAST Tt 4id that during a political campaizn one can say almost any- counter to the Few candl- to run down d; if they did the campaign would be over be- got fairly started. They find themselves the vietims of cir- It almost thing and not run libel or laws. w dates evor have time every slander that is uttere fore they comstances, s distressing that slanders qite campatgn should in every instead of issues have such an important part. Some dainn A1 of democracy on this score, t that system the: othe wonld m entire hut have yot to show any < of government is free of the the evil mind. New York World trouble to ¢ on the ago fook th 1l some dozen volumes of Amert- the lookout for had n o history on that figured 1t brought in a storic was forth I'rom the time At notable rican mp: s, and a of the present effort coerting list Washington to e nder seemed to an ammuni- tion of democr It George Washing- $5.000 more than vas said o > drew iry from the treasury during t ferm; that he held the peo- that he had onee a murder; that he was so the Revolution that letters to in contempt committ cowardly during wrote secret abandon aid of John Adams that he yster, and through trickery procured the acquittal of murderers that he got iis son to marry a British princess in the Boston massacre; and s in the and | President; that he b by fraud [ 103 hemed to have nobiifty colonies a hereditary ame President and knavery. of that lived a grossiy private life, that he who would overthrow all rcligion: that he "an habitual liar; that was said Jefferson he impure was an atheist was he was a | of jobs and frauds; that he favored | compiled specches from an encyclo- | requires | he built a house costing $40,000 out laws to please business friends; that he savagely quarreled with his wife: that his wife had started to obtain a | divorce but withdrew it after his | nomination. It was said of Grover Cleveland that he had betrayed a woman in | Buffalo, abducted her and imprison- ed her In an asylum; that he had kidnapped and secrctly immured | their child; that he was the patron of vicious dens in Butfalo; that he Now they are scarching and pad- locking hom The only further step to be dreaded is ‘the stomach pump. Why work so hard to get pub- licity? The same encrgy would pro- duce work good cnough to get by without it. i The Chinese hav new battie- ship named “Peace To a China- - Wi ; MOYE0” | man, peace is something that gets pacdla; that while a friend 1ay dy- | (jered when he tries to get his ing he ostentationsly went down the | pights, So that explains that. Potomac to attend a duck-shooting | — dinner; that'he beat his wife while | 13ven though you get in the public drunk, and that she once left the "l‘o‘ok’fl' l',',';"\;,:”;,:}'r':‘,i{f luleaiis White House in the middlc of the | S night; that he had cscaped war | It the deads know cverything. service by employing a convict in his Shakespeare must have an unflatter- place. ing opinion of the generation that began its literary development by All of the foregoing. it must be |expurgating him. thoronghly fig- ments of the impgination, although | nobody claims that becausc a man becomes President he has led a 100 | per cent perfect life. The list might | be extended to include McKinley, Roosevelt, Wilson and Harding. understood, were — Correct this sentence: 1 know John has a tooth-ache,” suid the ife, “but he's too proud to let me him groan or complain.” 1928, Syndicate Copyright. Publishers NS OBJECTIONS The Radio Commission on Observations Cn The Weather again has bren swamped with letters of in- | dignation. In its attempt un- scramble the radio the | ! Commission has acted boldly, but as usual everyone eannot he Eastern listeners by the tens of thou- to el Washington, Oct for Houthern New ! tontght, warmer, southeast ¢ 11.—Foree igtand: pt on Friday fair, rising temperature in Connecticut and northern Massachnsetts; moderate south and south Conditions: low pressure from Utah northeastward to Minnesola 1t is causing nasettledweather with seat- tered showers in the dis- triets, Snow ota weather 1 satisfied, ‘ v s, are writing i H | sands, it app con- demnatory epistles about curtailing the broadeasting of siation WGY at ¥ the General Eleetric Cotpany and one A lonz trough of Scheneetady, owned Iy ENLe of the pioneers of ether communica- tion. Much forth western was reported and Wyomins. contim viver. in the Maine rapidly from d to Montar | freezin Conditions weather North Ple nt '« east of the Mi The temperaturs ndrihern distrie to Wisconsin but Wisconsin west- it is below | misinformation hus gone Ixoun regarding this step and per- the The annot Ihaps it is becauke of complaints this that issippi rising from falls w is have originafed that WGY station {story has been ¢ AL broadeast after started in California at nightfall KGO gots Th . where fayor with for this vieini rising tempera- western station is owned by the fair tn company and has been put on the same wavelengtlg mperatures y This sounds had for station as WGY Teet that nightfall on th 10 p. therefora, such o gr mtil one pauses to | Alanta Atlantic Boston Buffalo Chieag Cincinnati Denver . Detroit Duluth Hatter o Kansas Ciity ... Los Angeles Miami Minnen tive. Nantucket w Hav the iin- Sl o reflection N0 New York . Norfolk. Va. . Northfield, Vi Pittsburgh Portland, St Louis Washington re Pacitie e coast WGY, | broadeast from p. m. Pacifie.” is m. at Schenectady. is privileged 1o morning 10 “when the sun sinks into the until Considering that after 10 p. m. at the station usually are chain af which eastern listeners who may be interested can obtain from any other comp: Ly chain furiated fans the broadeasts 1irs nearby station, upon doubt will conclude they were a bit hast The 1dio Conimnis- sion concerning WGY should b act the ion of Mo con It is Com- soling from another standpoint quite positive proof that the mission is not dominated by the in- terests of the hig companies. Mature deliberation will snggest t further public decisions reserved nntil Matarin a tures Kly relieves it Hornry Con nattng Tosh Wighly esteemed for producing copl- SIFIED ADS ' ous watery evacuations. after November 11, when the new dispensation goes into efivct. 'READ HERALD CLA! i | e to Stock Up for the Winter? Chilesauce and conserve brewing! Folks, we must be up and doing. Jine our mental shelves across With funserve and with cheeri- sauce! What of it? Mrs Newlywed (at breakfast) — Will you have your coffee, 8weet? Newlywed—Yes, Sugar. Lis‘lesst Barr, '33—So you think there isn't enough pep to my cheering? Haley, '29—~Yes, you know noth- ing about life in the ra —Alber Bergen What 1s the Worst STOMACH ACHE You Ever Had? Here is a department which tcel will interest young and old as every one has stomachaches. You will enjoy reading about other peo- ple's stomachaches and they will | enjoy hearing about yours, for mis- | ery loves company. Address your letter to The Worst Stomachache 1 Ever Had Editor, The I'un Shop. we | Dear Sir: 1 will never forget the stomach- ache I had on the day of the EIks' picnic one Fourth of July. Right after lunch T ate a couple of hags of | peanuts, some popcorn. and a bottle of soda, and was sitting under a big cak tree thinking how nice it was to be out in the country. when all at once an awful pain seemed to shoot through me. It got worse and worse and el- though 1 went to the lunchroom and drank four or five cups of cof- fee, it got no hetter, and finally 1| had to go home and my whole aft. ernoon was spofled by the stomach- ache which was the worst stomach ache T think T ever had. Miss Lotta Cramps Painsville, Ohio. Dear Sir: Just a line to lot you know we had two stomachaches (one apiece) last summer which might prove of interest to your readers. We motored through Maine wnd one night decid- | led to stop at one of those motor camps. We were hungry as bears though the small lunchroom there had nothing but pork chops we finished & dozen and a half between us and prepared to turn in. We are lLoth very large people, our com- bined weight being over five hun- dred pounds, and you can imagin the problem which faced us when we discovered they had no twin beds, We sat down trying to figure out what we had better do when we seized with violent and al- e grew worse and worse, un- 30 they were so bad that we hoth doubled up and slept in the same bed. Mr. and Mrs. Longacres, Mass. Srondhead BLACK I8 1 Chilld of Sound! Old Mammi Echo sat. one day, dis- coursing with her pet Young offspring, and discussing in rules of etiquette, Among the things she told her child that it should n.ver do Was this: “Young hoes must not speak until they're spoken to.” it | “But if a prying cam’raman should come around this glen And try to et a photo of you,” the ravine, then Another motto bear in properly, 1 ween), ‘Tis simply this: “Young i shonld be heard, but soon.” aid mind (and Fehoes not bhe ~Ruth Halper. . e The Ugly esst | The weather's badly mixed | 1 solemnly declare; She fakes my heart by storm While she herself is fair! —Vernon Fraser low! 1 wrote, v The Other “My heart's a violin, is for you to draw the strains Tn any sort of measure.” | But thengh my metaphor good, Aside T fain must toss it: My heart gives forth but when She draws a bean across it! —George A. Carlat. Between Girlay Lucille—I just had a lovely dinner! MHa Il! seemed discord fish Who was the fish, dear? —Doris K. Bussing TRIFL TRIFLE Trifle TRIFLE TRIFI. Angered by the Smallest Trifle “Performed on at your pleasure: | His Face! Thompson—I called on Gaines last night. Clarke—You did? Didn't you know she said she didn’t like your. face? What did you do about it? Thompson—I1 put it right up te her! iss —Alan Forshay (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Questiez Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Burean. 1323 New York avenue. Washington D. C,, encio:ing two cents In stampe for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. Ail other questionr will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not he answered. All letters are con- Adentlal.—T.ditor. Q. Are there any full generals in the active service of the U. 8. Army now A. No. Q. What is the approximate cost of a Curtis-pursuit airplane? A. Eleven thousand five hundred dollars. Q. . What was the time for swim- ming the Panama canal made re- cently by Richard Haliburton, the author A. Fifty hours actual swimming time, spread over nine days. He swam from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Q. ‘Where Caverns? z A. In the Shenandoah Valley near New Market and Luray, ginia. Q. When did the first air mail flight take place? A. The first air mail flight are the Endless in on May 15, 1918. Lieut. Torrey H. Webb left Belmont Field, New York, at 11:30 a. m. and reached Phila- delphia at 12:30 p. m., carrying 144 pounds of mail. Here he was relayed by Lieutenant J. C. lidger- ton, who reached Washington at 2:50 p. m. Lieut. George A. Boyle also started, but met with a mishap to his propeller blade 25 miles from Washington. Q. Why is the figure “30" u: by printers to signify the “end A. The first press association, organized in Civil war times, was composed largely of morning papers published neaf the eastern seaboard. Each paper sent into the central cffice items of local interest, which were there edited and tclegraphed to all members. It happened th the first message sent to the asso- ciation totaled 30 words. and this figure, with the words “zood nigh and the signature of the sender, were placed at the bottom of the sheet by the operator. At that time pleccwork was the rule on all pa- pers. The daily grist was usually set up, corrceted and in the forms by 10 o'clock, but the compositors were compelled to wait around at their own expense until the for man_announced in. printers, symbolizing “the end"”, Q. What is eugen A. * The science and proving the human rac ing the laws of inheritan acteristics to the seleetion riage mater, with the aim of curing to the offspring a desirable combination of traits, including re- sistance of untoward condition Q. Which of the states ccleb “Admission Day"? A, Arizona on dlifornia on September ada on October 31, Q. What is the area of the city 1Los Angeles, California? 82,055 neres. is the meaning of art of im- February 9 of the the history of the world took place | No. “30" becamc a byword among 14; | and | name Borich A. It is a Hungarian name and means “stranger”. Q. Do a pound of feathers and a pound of lead weigh the samp-? A. Yes. Both are welghed by the avoirdupois acale and therefore weigh the same. Q. When and by whom was the late Chief Justice White appointed to the supreme court? Where was he born? A. He was born in the Parish of Lafourche, La., November 3, 1845, the son of the seventh governor of Louisiana. Kebruary 19, 1894, he | was appointed associate justice by | President Taft. Q. How old is Laura La Plante? Is she marrieid? A. She is in her 24th year, and {is married to William A. Seiter, motion picture director. | Q. Isit necensary that applicants | for admission to the United States | native born Americans? A. No, so0 long as American citizens. Q. What is the difference be- tween an atheist, an agnostic and a theist? A. An atheist is one who denies or disbelieves in God as a First Cause or ground for the universe. An agnostic is one who bélieves that the theory that first truths, substance, cause, especially the hu- man soul and a First Cause can neither be proved nor disproved and must remain unknown and un- knowable. A theist is one who be- lieves in God; in the personality and sovereignty of one rightcous and cternal deity who has revealed him- self supernaturally to man. Q. Does the name Omar appear in the Bible? What does it mean? A. It occurs in Genesis 36:11. The probable meaning is *eloquent.” 25 Years Ago Today The new charter providing for consolidation was defeated by 33 votes at yesterday's election, 1603 to 1636, The first three wards were in | favor and the upper three opposed. | The town went license by 2399 to 538. Newton R. Hurlburt and Rich- ard O. Schaeter, democrats, won out in the contest for selectmen, Charles Nelson being the third member of the board. The republicans carried the other offices. L. D, Penfield de- feating Charles . Andrews for town clerk by 764. C. H. Moore won from £. 0. Kilbourne for collector. The prohibitionists had a ticket in the field. This included Truman L. Weed for town clerk, I%. G. Platt and T. 1. Wooster for selectmen, John Sloan for collector, H. N. Lockwood for constable, A. C. Sundberg for grand juror, J. K. Klingberg for school committee, and J. M. Burdick | for auditor. I party polled 39 votes, F. G. Platt and Secretary Godard have been appointed a committee to | purchase a safe for the Y. M. C. A. | Guns—double bharrel, single bar- rel, repeating hammerless. You'll live longer for a day off in the | Herbert 1. Mills. 1in’s clections surprised yester- | day. For the first time in four y the town went no license, the m they are | | | | Military Academy at West Point be | | o | ailments as an ity being a bare ten. Only the ond district went license. Berlin also turncd down a consolation plan and went republican. nville P, J. Prior polled 320 YOUR VLOORS AND A talletin of treatment lnoleum, s finishing wood atment for floors, taking care and Keeping wife will fnd useful and mail as directed o ng practical nd el for you floors, staining. P filling, of oors, linoleum info cleaning atjon below _——————- | DITOR, FLOORS York 1 Avenue, herewith amps, and ene five postage STREET AND NUMBER I am a reader of the New Britain Herald, P COUPON HERE Washington Bureau, » Washington, D, . copy of the bulletin CARE OF FLOORS AND FLOOR-COVER- to cover postage and handling costs: otes and was reelected first man but saw the rest of the cratic candidates bow in defeat. tax collector W. J, Hemingway,.yv publican, defeated ' M. O. R J democrat. Charles Cénion was elapt. ed a grand juror. Plainvjlle went Ii- ehse 254 to 207. o Tomorrow wight at the Rusowin Lyceum—M. W. Taylor's big scenic production, “Why Women 8in."" A triumph of scenic splendor. A mar- vel of bewildering surprises. The National Guard has been re. organized, but New Rritain rething its two companies under Capfaine Griswolg and Rullen, New Rritain is to have a basket- ball team compesed of men teachers in the schools. Mesars, Moody and Matthews are among the candidates, the latter being an experienced. bas- ketballist. Andrew Turnbull received notice today that a case involving the title of 160 acres of land in Arkansas, which has been in litigation for the past three years, has been decided in his faver. The case was before the The land is considered valuahle he. national land office in Washington. cause of tfie presence of zinc ore in paying quantities. City | Auditor H. L. Curtis has made his quarterly report, showing that the street department is over- drawn $4,572.09 and the other ded partments within their limits. Judge James E. Cooper has con. sented to make an address at the Swedish Lutheran fair this evenin F. G. Platt and Truman L. Weed had no election expenscs. ; Ferdinand council has elected James M. Gaffney chairman of its reception and ball committee, Father Coppens announces ' that the receipts from the St. Peter's parish fair were over $900. There promises to be a revival of interest in high school football, and the team is getting in ghape for its contest Baturday with Holyoke. Old Sores and Ulcers Can B_e_Healed ! This sincere letter,” says Peterson, ‘gave me another happy day and a8 nearly every mail brings praise for Pe- terson's Olutment, is it any wonder that I keep cheerful all the time?" “Dear Sirs: 1 had & bad leg for 30 | yewrs, tried everything but mo benefit. I tried’ Peterson’s = Olntment and five 3§ t boxes healed my leg. I can never praise it enough. My leg was so painful at first that I had to put fresh olntment on every two hours/ night and day. 1t Stopped” the pain at once, Mrs, Mark Richards, Lake Linden, Mich g Bexides yunning and old sores and ul- Covs, Peterson's Ointment is just as good piles, eczema, itching skin, sore feet, prickly hea sunburn, chafing, cuts, hurns, bruises, scalds and scores of other drugzist anywhere will tell you. A generous box 33 cent 10 the : STRAND THEATER G Yo Sl‘xl'\ahu'dvlr At 282 Mam Seet FLOOR-COVERINGS information and suggestion ing of all kinds of floors and of ¢ our Washington Burcau. 1t vainishing, waxing, olling, * painting conciete, composition and tile floovs, treating old woud floor coverings, vemoving spots and similar materials in good condition. Any in this butletin, Clip out the eoupon ettt New Britain Herald, onts in coin, or loose, unclnullod‘l HER BED Room WINDOW EARLY THE oTHER MoRNING. MYATLE WORTLE THOUSHT SHE HAD SOLVED THE r‘h(.rrtn'(L OF THE “PEEPING -ToM" wHoe HAS BEEN ANNoYING FOLKS OF LATE, WHEN SHE LooKED ouT