New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 3, 1928, Page 6

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New Britain Herald MERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY at Horald Bidg., §1 Church Birest JUBSCRIPTION RATES $8.00 & Yo $200 Three Monthe 5c. » Montb Eatered at the Post Office at Ne: 88 Becond Class Mail Matt TELEPHUNE CALLS Business Office 928 Ecitorial Rooms .... 926 The euly profitable advertising mediun: n the City. Circulation books and press | room 8lways open to adiertisers Member of the Aesiciated FPress The Associa xclusively e titled the use for all n vdited to it or not otherw! ‘redited in this paper and also locai published the Momber Audit Bures e A B. C. u which turni nd adver tmers with @ strictly honest analyels of circulation. Our circulation statistics are nased upon this audit. This insures pio tection sgainst fraud in pewspapor dis tribution figures to both npational aad iucal sdvertisers Circulation organization The Herald 1a o York st _Hotalin Newsstand. Times Square; Schults'e Newsstands, Estrance iiand Ceatral, 4iad Btreet. le daily tn_New —————— Call money scems to be something you call for but don't get. It neither the board of public works nor the health board can by induced to take charge of the dumps, let them take charge of themselves, as has been the case for about a generation. It is stated that more than a bil- lion packages of chewing gum were manufactured last year. chawing tobacco industry is down to a shred. Folks don't carry cuspidors | around in automobiles. When a radlo set records every trolley car passing the door—with the emphasis of a ton of bricks—it is prima facie evidence that it is a §00d set. The taste for luxury is rampant | Statisticlans have | in the nation. ! figured out that prohibition has al- ready cost the government more than $225,000,000 in enforcement and has resulted in a loss of revenue total- | ling more than $3,000,000,000. It has been & nobby experiment. or NG OF CONGRESS ‘The short scssion, so-called, Congress opencd today. It is notable for the number of important issucs still unsolved, and which are likely to remain unsolved at its end on March 4. The short session is one in which ‘filibusters are likely to de- velop; It usually finishes with a ter- | rible jam of legislation that thus of dies, clearing the boards for the fol- | lowing Congress, which after March ! ¢ may be a special session. The pres- ent session is also the lame duck Congress, thus called from the fact that those defeated for re-election in the previous November have a final opportunity to sit in the capitol. Naturally the lame ducks are more or less irresponsible, are more likely to vote as they like rather than as party loyalty dictates. The election is a month past; yet the new officials elected by an elec- torate which went to the polls in un- precedented numbers will not take thelr seats until after March 4. If at that time President Hom»r‘ does not call an sentatives will not take their seats until December. No one thinks the system is very cfficient or flexible, | but no widespread campaign is ever hegun to change it through an | amendment to the Constitution. No | amendment that could be proposed | would have less opposition. THE SUNDAY JUGGERNAUTS There was a time in the history of newspapers when nothing much hap- | Papers on ! two or ! g00d sor- | pened over fhe week Monday were filled three, sometimes nd. with more mons; and one conld read all about the Chincse and natives in Afghanistan tended flocks. Times have changed in this. The papers nowadays sitnation how | their as in everything else Monday nevs hate fewer sor- mona and more automobile « Reckless drivers, hit and run drivers, drunken drivers and just careless drivers provide the Monday Er zets the mpression that the the papers with columne of terror. Every Mon- ¢ one following Sunday is all day. But rives we (rthstone st Sunday cos with deat out with for the h and dis ister and tire sang-froid und a hopr best A JOYRIDING Policemen POLICEMAN ave ma oncious tasks fo perform but none is quite as heartbreaking the as to be foree he d to investigate results of a {ic Joyriding frip by men. This happene one of the was involved in a collision, one d ye regular me of their o terday when on the foree and after being brought to the police station— like any common citizen running afoul of the law—he wa and had to clared to he drunk cell for a until it was considercd Kept in a certain length of time safe to let bim out on bonds. Chief Hart, of ' Colorado is today, and perhaps more Atlantic City But the | extra session of |y Congress the new senators and repre- | course, upheld the honor and in- egrity af the force by immediately suspending the erring cop. The city expeets much of its police ! force. The men ought to set an ex-; ample in upstanding righteousness, | even when off duty. Nothing rcads worse in print than a story of drunken policeman causing an auto- mobile smashup. | 'H Except GRIDIRON football Old Man awsty,' ANON games in | Winter as south- the for climes doesn’t get ern California or Ilorida, game of where such noble college football is about The are done for this al t particular about the season. profis- sio ns, however, not so weather. Nego- etill | these tiations are under way for another professional game parts; the likelihood is that the pro- continun in fessional games will “un- til snow flies It is the that are over last. The grand | Saturda of | the sport, that Stanford-Army game having been a corking exhibition. Interest in this game was nanon-[ and there s col games, however, he finish was one worthy wide, most astonishing of all m to be millions of people who are willing to listen to a r:ldio‘ announcer telling all about it, judg- ing from the number of radio hook- | ups employed. the dials at tations v Lelling the citizenry all about it; as for the sub-stations who plugged in their legion. The football game seemed to have covered the entirc radio map. We are not convinced that this is | necessary; but the competition be- tween the various rival hook-ups is | getting fiercer and ficrcer, and it | seems that every broadcaster in the country concentrates on the big games—or the big game—every Sat- urday afternoon during the scason. In closing we are pleased to note that we guessed right some time ago | regarding the possibility of Ken | Strong, of West Haven, the burly Ihalt back on the New York Unive sity team, becoming the nation's | l«fldlug scorer. The young man has gone through with the best record, baving attained 161 points. With | Yale having been badly ditched throughout the it a i pleasure to note that at lcast one Nutmegger is on top in something connected with the game. And now, sports editor | would agree, have some hot basketball, hockey and also a few Iflgh!s. A casual juggling of Saturday afternoon disclos- od four major broadcasting b number was season is as the let's TIOUS KING King George of Englund. despe ately ill, scems to have been in fair health until Armistice Day. The king has always been what the people | understand as a “good fellow,” and a conscientious gentleman., On Armistice Day it was the custom of | officials to review the parade in Lon- don, and in order to do homage to Britain's dead and living, the king. | 63 years old, acted just like the younger men in the government— he stood Lure-headed for three hours in & drizzling rain, and subjected to raw winds, while the troops marched by. From that time on he me il —pncumonia, now heart trouble. A CONSCI pleurisy, and The king has dutics to perform; but we wish he hadn’t been quite as standing bare- | rain. [ s not so high as to bar a re- He bas been a monarch of | stinction in a gquiet, unassuming potentate who is endcar- ed to the subjects of the entire Brit- ish Empire conscientious about headed in the However, many ways, for his high qualitie a man as well as s those which befit a king. May he recover, is the wish and prayer of millions, THE M'NARY lers of o newspipers ginning to read all about the farm relief Lill. But it bill as that which MeNary-Haugen but this e MeN. ary is not the same was known It ovizinal bill the as the bill still has one names of 1he authors, MeNary is an entirely new edition, with ol cctio ures” eliminated. The dentistry job of taking out its tecth has leen perfoct tr the which i vestern farmers will he pleased satisfied—if that 15 possille donlt AGED NUTMEG FOOTIRINTS 1 ¥ North anford, Conn., the Tax iding en Water company has heen mains, Digging through the Trisssic period Ao footprints on or Maleoln rate cabody o the ition 1he <sor becar 1 that the rinta in the those of nd othe Conmner wooden nutn {hnown in Conr Tanda Yills cticut he wag not one nf A nd valleys, Lot rocks: Bradford m a4 West ountain. Pinnacle rock, ar ak-—theee were ag high- er. The state was az mountainous as high as the Alps, and mayie |for cven a cave ! shepardia. h ;drv;-ahlwd to New 90. Dinosaurs and other huge beasts roamed around, and it was no place man, it is No footprints of dinosaurs, stated, a looking for Manhattan fleeced by the progenitors of sland, there to be the modern monvy-takers on the is land. We are especially interested in the | announcement that one of the pre- historic amphibians whose footprints ! was discovered in tin rocks was the Only once in the the history of paleontology have footprints of this animal heen discovered in this We a for the beast mething on the or- country. always owned to weakn 1t has a nice name, anyway der of a shepherd and we aid the dogz, hope he some shepherding work if needed for these clongated shepherd interested dinosaur, monsters dogs. We 1he of | asuchian ani- in footprints the batrachopus, mal; or by the sigandipus, the tor, atu Connecticut, were a pa nehisauripus, or the ubrontes, the gralla- or These the triaenopt o the original inhabitants of ugly as their names imply, and as ornery We much prefer beauty and hate to think that Connecticut of such in our be once was the abiding place | gargantuan and irresponsible speci- mens of prehistoric life. The footprints were discovered far underground, while a tunnel was be- ing built. The flora and fauna of the cra was no less interesting than the prehistoric footprints; ately we never were strong in botany. regarding that as too effeminate a study for a he-man. Anyway, we never intended to go into the florists’ | busine Back in 1926 the first fossil in this vicinity of Connecticut was discover- ed. 1t also was the footprint of a dinosaur. Now we have some more, regarded as the haul of recent years.” All of which proves that prints on the sands of time continue to remind us if the profes- sors keep this up. CHILI'S QUAKE Thirty distinct ecarthquake shocks were recorded in Chili; toll of dead and injured is high; loss of property runs into around $15.- 000,000—a high sum for a country where buildings are cheap. Lut this devastation compared with the 1906, is nothing Chilean earth- when in Santiago 00 people were” killed. Chili spreads along the quake of coast and t 5 Andes. These mountains are the mbled of the South Every so often nature shakes them up. The land will never be safe from shocks—cxcept at such a time in the dim future when the planct has outgrown these backbone American continent. !growing puins. GOVERNORS IN CONNECTICU Governor Trumbull won something of a victory in inducing the govern- ors Orleans re- cently to Connecticut for their nest jovial gathering. They de- cided to hearken to the lurc of the flying governor and in of New London with talk having something in com- meeting in - New to come vicinity W will mon with state problems, But there aviation exceutive Will e more than talk promis Brethren much he-man am Professing to have the figures a hattleship might some influence with navy department, he de the governors from the hinte chance 10 sed ot thes i submarines one & mon- ters from he The inside as well as the outside are near, and vernors can take they fow i them, if have 1 [ courage. Airplanes also will on land, and riding through the onght to appeal 1o the boys. Then there will be beach hathing, elam owder, sea food, and what'll you- Bave. Prohibition if the however, will e forced, ROVETnor can enfor Obcemalmn: Cn The Weather W Thee Vorecs New B I and possibly coider Tn ashington Southern iy the st morn- 1 portion: ine southe wind of nd it region nmorning nsity and Tt Ohio valley o this s in the il th valley, Rains r Lake regior r o the nppe nortl st distri M orer m rt- Pres- Maritime are strong area of southeastward | from attended by Much 1 sero. the North mueh the Ca Tiacky 10 degrees sonthward to or temperatir Nort mountaing is Lelo ove zern fine Colorado folion or this vie 4 b erday High 5% nity clond r CInperatires Low Atlanta have ever been found so far | south before. Maybe they were 100k- | ing for a s\«'i n in what is now Long ' | 1sland Sound. and we hope they were but unfortun- | “richest scientific , July the | teem ' London to give | cther v Lake high | of | and 47 | charged oston Butfale Chicugo Cineinnati Los Angeles . Miami Minneapolis ew Haven New Orleans .. {New York Norfolk, 5 Northfield. Vt. | Pittsburgh . Portland, Me. St. Lonis sts and Fancies By ROBERT QUILI Wearing socks made of wood may {not make ends meet, but at "makes them similar. You are dbfinitely midile-aged if {¥ou 1o longer are ashamed to count vour change It isn't polite to point, clse but what | Irench? There isn't any veal difference be- [tween the partics now. The repub- licans have learned to shoot craps and the democrats have learned to play golf. One good fuature about prohibi- tion is that the people ruined by liquor are the ones who can afford it. - Man is naturally conservative, and it he hug three hairs on top he will |say it is geiting a little thin. An alien doesn't become a “darn- «d furriner” until he quits wearing {overalls and begins to, make as much money as you do. In a land where people act pious to escape censure for their sins, it scems unfair to criticise the hit and run driver. There can't be anything seriously |wrong in 4 Jand where the chict jconcern of everybody is to protect lthe morals of a mythical “other class.”" one city Df‘ {40,000 was completely destroyed; the | Americanism: Despising the sweet-and-helpful success magazine: buying it for the sake of the fam- ily. ¢ Glad thought. 1f the cotton mills can just survive another decade, maybe the men will be wearing | petticoats, Eleetions change few fundamen- tals, The south split, but the same people are taking in washing. Progressives will find it difficult to form a liberal party. They haven't much to be liberal with, Communism will come when pub- yll\: service employes leap to serve a patron as the boys do at a filling station. The little king of Itumania goes to school with ordinary Loys to lcarn democracy, and the hero who |can spit through his teeth can now make himself solid for a future at court. Evangcline Booth no flop houses whe jin just to slecp. Sh the great suays there women should American home. drop visit | How chicye Kids - then and in the world by a of x5 wonders wild? was suceess i who gives his vding moncy and v they get sassy consery the ive tha the more, ty in will Nica- enable nal rou ma Y ane Unele Sam to take withoui using any rines. Correet this that seene.” “the to pleas senfence: “We sl e humeor mu divector; enongh ple movie subtle pro- isn't intelligent Copyright 1925 ubiisher i Don’t Think Smith Will Run for Mayor.of N. \ N York, Iw P (P - Gov L. Smith would pe to run mayer of N York even if he drafted by Tammany, close riends said foday moreply to con- His friends 4 hhelthood that draft, the in fhse o 1o thiere Tarmm; or clection Smith said post statement that he piblic Judee sted @i office Otto 8 Tosalsky has been S an available e or the republican nomi mayor. It was reported his name has heen recciving consideration in Linfluential “quarters “l\mdcl‘xar!en Bandlts Nabbed in Worcester . Ma P Two 1 by 1o Le the 0 obandite” songht for v arrested last Jing to police con foseed fo 4 holdup on Nov. 23 in vhich 3 was faken from a corner P Potice the Waor the Kinderzart i than a meors ok night ani. accor sy aling the anfomatic 1 in the holdup. They Dzingaviteh, 15, and 15, They pair con- exsed .pym—u 1 v ard st Dziosky the pistol. | He read the Bible. He preferred n you do if the menu is in | Sign« That Neve Christmas is coming and how do we know ? Well, the “lifts" that were once so infernally slow Just fly up and down so we don't have to wait. And the office boy's ceased to be careless or late! millar Soun Teacher: “What is the meaning of st i the word ‘helie’?" Pupil: the stomach-ache, “It means where, you get teacher!™ HIS CHOICE! By I.. B. Kempton 1ts tales to any other word. leing a marriad man, he chose To read of other mortals' woes. He read the story and believed How Jather Adam was deceived. He read of Abraham and Sairy— A tale the most extradordinary. He read of Jacob—how for years He lahored for those lovely dears. He read of Lot—Mhis wife a wreck— The true original rubberneck. He read of Samson—how love ruled him, And how the base him, Delilah fooled He learned of David and the strife Kicked up by Uriah's wife. He learned of Job, that sorry wight, Whose sad cxperience was a fright. He learned of Solomon, who had there ain't no Santa Claus!" Mrs. Balley: “—unless you send her the railroad fare.” Bailey: “Ah! There's the Santa clause.’ ~—Mildred Freedman (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESNTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Questicz kditor, New Hritain Herald, Washington Burean 1323 New York avenue, Washington. D. C., encioring two cents in stampe for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can es- temied research be undertaken. Al other questiour will recelve a ner- sonal reply. linsigned requeats can- not be anawered. All letters are con- Adential.—"ditor. Q. Where and when was Ruth born A, Baltimore, Maryland, Febru- ary 7, 1894, Q. Are laws prescribing {he number of working hours for wo- men and children in different oc cypations made by the federal or the | state governments A, ch state wakes its own | laws rcgulating the number of | working hours for women and chil- | dren in different occupations, the' minimum age.at which children may | be employed, laws cffecting working v.omen, eic. The federul laws on the subject apply only to the fed- Babe | tains her married name, she may continue to wear it. Q. Does American confer the right to yote? A. American citizenship in it- self does not constitute the right to vote, Voting is a function of State citizenship and not citizenship of the United States. The right to vote ‘Il determined by the lawg of the |State in which the voter resides. Only citizens of the states have voting rights. They have such righta |if. and only if they have complied with the state law on the subjeet; that is to say they must have resid- ed in the state the length of time specifiecd by law; they must have resided in the county, district or precinet the length of time required: they must have complied with all other provision, which vary in the | different states: In some a poll tax | must be paid, in others decla-ation | of intention to register must have | been made; and registration must have been accomplished within the specified time. Q. How many clergymen denominations are there United States? A1 . Q. What is the origin name, Neetzke? A. It is one of the many forms of a family name derived from the Teutonic *neid” meaning envy or Jealousy. 25 Years Ago Today At a meeting of clergymen and delegates in Trinity M. E. chureh last evening steps were | taken to form a social union to em- brace the churches in this part of the state. The club will he lik the Congregational club or the Epis- | copal group known as the Church club, . State President 1. C. Brown of the Postal Clerks' association has received a letter from the national president, saying he hoped to be present at the annual meeting in rtford next Decoration Da When Attorney Malone of Rristol stood up in court this morning to @itizenship of all in the of the the Methodist cral government cmiployecs. What is Tex Rickard's ad- A thousand wives, (They drove him mad.) He lcarned of Ananias, who Was stricken dead. (His wife was, t00.) % Being u marricd man, he rose Refreshed from other people’s wocs! Inference! Dr. Pearson: “Your are getling hardening of the arteries.” Paticnt: “Great! They ought to last much longer!” —John B. Galos We have observed that a baby stops trying to put his foot in his mouth about the time he learns to talk. « After that. as often as he opens his mouth, he can put his foot in it without trying! ROMANCE COMES TO THE TAXI By Herbert K. Thursby Talk about your good-looking vt throbs—you ought to sece zie! Man, she is one of those swe; stepping babies that .can make a redheaded blind man sce green! You may think that | am high-shooting, but let me tell you, this baby or mine is no iceberg. No, no. indecdy. Say. kid, one of her torrid glances would melt an Eskimo's igloo and turn the North Pole into a Sahara Descrt. Mazie is her name. Her father is a big gutter and keg man out in Milwaukee, That is, her old man I Ma Madison Squarc Garden, New York City. 4 i Q. What is the value of a United States large copper cent dated 17957 A, Irom 20 cents to $2.00, Q. What is meant by “overhicad Expenditures not dircetly chargeable to labor and materials | used in production. For example, in | a fuctory, the overhead usually in- | cludes the cost of repairs, the cost of producing or buying power. light | and heat, cost of rent, the cost of supplics used for gencral purp the cost of labor that cannot charged to dircet production, addition the depreciation, nance and gencral factory adminis- tration and supervision. Q. _1s Florence Vidor, pictute actress, marricd? A. She is ‘the wife Heifetz, the violinis Q. Is there any differene meaning between the words and “terro Horror is defined as excessive | fear accompunied by shuddering: ex- treme dread: great disgust. “Ter ror” is defined as extreme fear: fright. The two words arc more o less synonymous. Q. Did New York ratify the Eighteenth Amendment to the Con- stitution? If so. when? A. New York was the 44th state to ratify the amendment. The Sen- ate ratified it January 29, 1919, and the House on January 1919, Q. What is the derivation meaning of the name Ault? A. Itisan English name from | the Anglo-Baxon meaning “old.” the motion of Jascha in “hor- A. ana will sell you a kig of circus per- formances that will lay you out in the gutter. but iet's leave her old man out of this. He is just a strut- ter while Mazie is the whole strut- ing encycloped Mazie Janded in the big hoig with one foot on a platinum platter and a form that makes gold look like a counterfeit lead slug. She helon ed to the order of the fast and curious. The idea T am trying to convey is that shie is the knee pl ultra, espe- cinlly the latter. And a face --say. child, she has a face that could out- draw a double-strongth mustard plaster. T mean it could just draw your old heart out and make it go pittypat like a milk wagon going up the street at 3 a. m. No wapder T fell for her. T fell auicker than a draft doedger could throw a fit hefore the draft hoard in the late war. And that's not all. Wgosh, she knew class when she wet it The kid walked right up to me, rked me out of the whale crowa. s, sir, she walked over and said, Taxi. aquit your gaping and me fo the Astorvelt!™ P ¥ “Hey, drive are with robbery and larceny of Httle | would would be a candidate for | ndidate | ation for | Lest We Forget! 1L Dors Work That Way! Madden: “Cheer up. old top. you're brave, disappointment make you a higger man.” Craig: “Yes, Uve already an increase in my sighs!" Sidney H. Reaper | will notited Yule Tiginge! Mrs. Railey: “Mother says in her letter sha won't be able to spend Christmas with us—" Bailey (interrupting): “Who said Q. Who appoints the members of the Federal Radio Commission and how much salary do they reccive? A. The appointed hy the President with the consent of the Senate. Kach one reccives $10,000 4 year. Q. What is pumpernickel? A. Should widow wear her wedding ring? A. A widow usually wears her wedding ping until she marries again, when the old one is replaced by a new one. A divorcee who as- sumes her maiden name does not wear a wedding ri but if she re- or divorces ! corroborated :umhrvll:l window todu {opened | noon with a | from Danbury the s | th |it ° the plea for his client, Clerk Mitchell told him to take his hands out of his pockets. This caused an | altercation, and it finally developed that Mitchell had mistaken Malope for the defendant. There was & seneral langh when Chief Rawlings this, but the clerk aid: “Langh, it's your turn‘. he Russwin Lyceum theater has been engaged for Sunday afternoon for frec gospel mass meetings, | Among those interested in the move- ment are Rev. Lyman S. Johnson and Rev. M. S. Anderson. Look at 8. H. Wood's watch and time 1 read For a short Zingarra’s your life Your hand 73 \rl.h street, op- | andry. | High school basketball team its season yesterday after- very one-sided win orc being 40 to read. 15 cents. posite Union I The 13 Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Nelson ha turned from a visit to Brooklyn, | Y. ! wo weeks ago New ‘Britain won $500 receipts of the vide the bLalance with Meriden, net turning any money over to the league. The Philharmonic band of New Britain and the Wesleyan university glee and mandolin club will aid in the big celebration next Wednesday night in connection with the open- ing of the new modern factory of the Sessions Clock Co. in Korest- ville. A. G. Hammond camp, Spanish War Veterans, has elected the fol- lowing officers: Captain. 8. E. Magson; first lieutenant 8. M. Leou. ard: second lieutenant, W, J. Ra lings; chaplain, W. W. Bullen; ser- geant of the guard, W. J. Clarke; quartermaster, C. E. Thorngren, INo Motor Accident Deaths in Connecticut New Haven, Dec. 3 UP—For the first time in several months. no motor accidents involving loss of life wera reported during the week-end in the state. Of the dezen or more collisions incurring injury the most serious may result in the death of two men in Putnam. They are Ser- mond Retuis, 26, and Walter Bar- rows, who received fractured legs and Retuis internal injuries when struck while watking along the Danielson turnpike. A balloon to carry four or fi passengers requires about $100 worth of coal gas. END IN A DAY "THERES no better way to end a cold than A-w-l ax. Now science has found & way to combine the purest aspirin with a gentle liver tonic and bowel stimulant. It gives the amazing relief of aspirin and cleanses the entire system of the cause. Relief almost instantly. And in six hours or less the cold is gone. Knowing methers use 10 other semedy. Everybody knows about sepirias Now itis made three-fold effect Use Asper-Lax for every p pose for which you have used common wwpi Vou will be amazed. It does mot affect the heart, Safe even for children snd the world's best remedy for any cold, grip o “fu.”" Every dreggist has Asper-Lax for only25 Trinity football leugue cup, but has not reccived the cup. If it is not forthcoming shortly the: local | hool will buy ihe cup from the ARE YOU A WA don't you §o 1o dances because you cau't 4an or enough? abcad. that fundamental Why miss the fuu? ‘he e Qur Washington Bureau has attempis o cover lu a smple steps and variations in dance, or want to improve your danc FLOWER? or can't dance weil eason of partier and dances liea uxt & new bulletin on HOW TO DANCE | way and ry simple instructions, the AN the latest dances. (f you don't ing. tiis bulletln will help you. Fill out the coupon below and send for it. ~--- | paxd SDITOR, New York Washington Rutea Avenue, hai five conts in ostage and unean ling costs: | srreEr AND NUMBER vevinens jorr - I am a reader of the New Britas (e Mickey (Himself) McGuire M¢ GUIRE’S IS A NAME -To ¢oNJURE WITH SORTS ©F WAYS. — '1 - (CPorntaine Por. 1928, The Bell Syndicor. Inc) CLIP COCPON HERE Washington, U, 1 want a copy of the bulletin HOW TO lled U. 8. postage stampm or coin, B en u. New Britain Herald, and encloss herewith tafcsiary . STATB —— - — — — — ] D Herald, By Fontaine Fox IN Al J /

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