New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 14, 1929, Page 6

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HMERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tewwed Daily (Suaday Excepted) At Hera)d Bidg., §7 Church Street X SUBSCRIPTION RATES [ear $99 & TSI Tares Montne T6c. » Month ‘Watered Bt the Post Office at New Britain a8 Secend Class Ma#t Matter. profitable advertising medium l-ft.h.c.t‘n“v. Circulstion books and press Toom slways open to advertisers. ot the Asesciated Prees 4 The Amociated Press is exclusively en- Great Northern certainly would not for re-publication of to it or mot otherwise titled to the use all news credi credited in this paper and also I news published therein. Momber Audit Buress of Circulation | time of freight trains three hours, "tiom about it into public view, and | The A. B. C. is & national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with & strictly homest analysis of railroads. circulation. Our circulation statistice are based upon this audit. This insures pro- tection against fraud in newspaper dis- tribution figures te both mational and local advertisers. n sale daily In New York at Hotaling's Newsstand. Times Square; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central, ¢2md Street. ————————— It half the sport addicts would study the stock market with the same zest they devote to the stand- ings of the ahletes therc would be a huge new crop of millionaires in the country. The Herald 1t is said that Congressman E. Mart Fenn would never have pushed ocal | money to reduce the time of passen- | a reapportionment bill had Connecti- | cut lost instead of gained a congress- man under it. But that is something clse again, and there really is no necessity for bringing it up. Confidence in local builders in- creases when they unanimously favor an additional inspector to check up how structures are erected. Jrre- sponsible builders would not favor thorough inspection. Two restaurants have suffered dif- ficulties; but a new brokerage con- cern has alighted in the city. This does not necessarily inean we are too busy buying stocks to find time to <cat, but it must mean something. RS Conserving the state's natural re- sources, as the governor has sald, 18 absolutely necessary; especially now that the resources along the Housa- | tonic have becn reserved for the power interests. $15,000,000, Its length of 13 1-¢ miles remains unapproached; in ad- dition it is a double tunnel, the two parallel bores being 56 feet apart and each carrying one line of rail- way. Significant enough, two remaining tunnels under the Alps are as long or longer than the greatest American tunnel just completed. 8t. Gothard is 9 1-3 miles long and Mont Cenis is 8 miles. Completion of the Cascades tunnel | is increasing evidence that our rail- roads still have a future in spite of the widespread use of automobiles and the competition of trucks. The the public is concerned, that is no business of the New Haven. This is a matter needing the attention of the Public Utilities Commission. The railroad should be forced to have the time tables of all connecting lines on hand. SELLING THE CHURCH It the First Congregational church edifice were at any other corner than where it happens to be, public interest in its sale would be | Church stregt happens to be what | connoisscurs of real estate say is | the most attractive in the city—cer- |tainly the most attractive site mot have been justified in cxpending now occupied by a business house. | The fact that an ecclesiastical so- hour and the clety owns the site forces its inten- | ger trains only one if there were no future ahead for the :\by this time the entire city is specu- Of course, financially | 1ating about who is due to purchase | materlally less. The site at Main and | step on the Plainville line. F. H. Johnston was reappointed chairman | of the banquet committee, along with M. P. Leghorn and 8. J. Bergstrom. Director E. F. Laubin of the New Britain Choral society announced to- day that rehearsals will be begun immediately on “The Swan and the | which will be produced in | Facts and Fancies In this matter of Bolshevism, a soft job turns away wrath, also. 1t's a mean-hearted hick news- | paper that won’t mention at .lcast one local citizen for the cabinet. | The proper measure of a man is ‘thc size of the thing required to get | his goat. People who don't understand our | toreign relations never had any poor 1 relations. | When jingifng” trotters | of your husband’s iliness. Is he im- saging the nose,” remarked the man in the chair. “Some new New York method ? 4 “That? ticing ‘the fingering of the Second | Hungarian Rhapsody.” | Certalaly Should! Townsend: “I have never heard. anything more from that feHow ¥ wrote to in Calcutta.” Coleman: *“Maybe he didn't derstand what you wrote.” Townsend: “How so? I made it a ! point' to use India ink —V. H. Gelber un- will be ferwarded to. New York. Literature is a long word. Litter is much shorter, and cov- s most of the ground! (Copyright, 1929, Reproductien Forbidden) | But There's No Bringing Them | Back! | Those were happy days, we'll say, | When snow was snow and came to stay, felt their | oats And girls wore flannel petticoats! Guarded Reply! Mrs. Thatcher: “8o0 sorry to hear proving?” *Oh, yo. 1°was just prac-| "| War was about 330,000. About 200,- Mr. Hoover? A. As a courtesy fo the preai- dent-elect, . g Q. "How long does it take for the elevator in the Washington Monu- ment atWashington, D, C. to as-} cend? A. The naw elevator installed In the Washington Monument travels from the bottom to the top in one minute and five geconds. Q. Approximately how many negroes served in the army during the World War? Were there any negro officers? A. Including those in the regu- lar arney and the National Guard units the total number of negro soldiers mobilized for the World 000" of these were gent to France. Some 42,000 were kcwibat t.oops. About 1,400 negrocs were cominis- sioned as officers. Observations On Tkc Weather | light of a stalwart booster for flying. speaking, the Great Northern has |it. been the most fortunate of the northwestern railroads, never having | missed a dividend. “Jim Hill's folly" ! certainly has had the laugh at many a more promising line. Obviously, the automobiles and the | cally. The church spire has become | trucks hurt the railroads; but when | the worst has been said it is found | that the net injury consists of hav- | ing retarded their growth rather than eliminated it. The good roads will continue to advance, though | {more slowly than would have been | the case without the automotive | competition. Indeed, improvements arc constantly being announced, and | when no new tunnels are under way |vast shemes of electrification arc discussed. e i LOCAL AIRPLANE BOOSTERS | Postmaster Erwin's address the other day on airplane development showed the genial gentleman in the | Neither Governor Trumbull nor Senator Bingham, both as confident as anyone alive that the future of aviation fs pustry and cream, could | not have delivered a more convinc- ing address. Though we have no air- port in the city, the Btanley Works | | has the name of the city painted in huge letters on some roof, and the ! airmail is being well patronized at the post office; from this one judges that aviation is making progress even | in New Britain. The only trouble is—or was—that a few days after the notable apeech had been made, and an able reporter i | had reported it as full as his flying “pencll permitted, along came a hor- The hubby who lets his wife get | rid news story that eight men had | up early in the morning to tend the | been Killed at one clip when an air. furnace may be a perfect dear when plane didn’t stay up. Stories like the time comes to wash the dishes. |that, altogether too frequent, do, { much to prevent the more cautio When the special session of from becoming airminded over. | Congress is called the farmers will | night. | get help from the tariff ralsersvi We, too, believe in the future of | Those intercsted in a higher and bet- aviation; but we are willing to con- | ter tariff will receive most of the | cede that some contrivances atill | governmental assistance. By the time | need to be invented whereby an air- | the farmers learn a little more about | Plane can take the this cruel world Mr. Borah will be dOWn to carth safely within a more | ready to make some more farm re- | restricted space than now is neces- | lief specches for the next presidential 5ary. Every time we read of experi- candidate. ’menn with contraptions aiming to ’mnke it pomsible for planes to rise No, we will not inject an inquiring | UP without a half mile of room, or | mind into the proposed salary raises | cOme down more or less like a para- | at city hall. sv e are not members of | Chute, we instinctively think of it as the Common Council, which, relish- |/ more important than the most re- ing an argument, has a splendid | cent distance stunt. opportunity to put on another good | Meanwhile boosting Is all right so show. long as it does not overboost. Which leads back to the airport TUNNEL BUILDING question, a live issue locally. The two The considerable to-do about the |Sites the postmaster referred to per- opening of the Cascade mountain |haps proves that the pressure for an tunnel on the Great Northern |#irport remains strong. Its chiet foe rallway Saturday night, in connec- | i municipal economy. tion with with which the Honorable Herbert Hoover was a distinguished | speaker, cmphasized the fact that it‘ TRAFFIC took only three years to construct' On Sunday it is impossible to this longest of our American tun- |travel by railroad—or gasoline coach nels. The technic of tunnel building | ~——from Necw Britain to Middletown INJURING PASSENGER | | certainly has advanced since the days when the Hoosac tunnel in ‘Western Massachusetts was built, for | ment took place it was possible to this bore, five miles in length, was |80 to Middictown of a Sunday short- was twice |1y after noon. Necdless to add, more commenced in 1851, abandoned, and was not completed until 1875. This was a matter of 24 years for five miles. The Cascade tunnel, approximately cight miles in length, and requiring only three years to construct, represents rough- Iy though accurately what marvel- ous advances have been made since the days when the Massachusctts tunnel was the talk of the hour. Dut the miles cost Hoosac tunnel M 000—and legislative of five $15,000,- rings and huge tunnel cost only arc achusetts he testimony filling dozen volumes. The Cascade $14,000,000. Not flicient tunncl builders, but we get we mord niore for our mone One is reminded fat tun: alzo of the Mof- 50 miles west of Denver, the six-mile bore under James Peak completed by the Denver & Salt Lake railroad last year, in conjune- tion with the state of Colorado. This work, begun in 1923, took longer than the Cascades tunnel it included a waterworks tunnel for Denver; but the entire job cost only $12,000,000. because The Simplon tunnel in Switzerland the world's greatest gineering feat of the Kind; bhut we necd 0o doubt that if American en- Rincers were confronted with remains en- imi- tar need they weuld be cqual 1o the task. The construction of the Simplon tunnel took eight years and cost hetween around 10 a. m. and 6 p. m. ! Before the latest time table arrange- | people are desirous make the journcy at than in the morning or late in the afternoon. There being no bus.etween the two | places, thos: who wish to travel be- tween them at convenient must buy an automobile, to that time nmr»s“ The Chamber of Comnmerce local manu and turers have been try- ing for a long time to induce the New Haven railroad to stop the train for * W York, passing through Iicr- lin around 2 p. m. This train, which is apparently in such a hurry to get to its destinu- tion that it lacks the time to stop at Berlin, finds it convenient to stop at Waliingford —whe, there not thre * reports have i are through pa Eors using it in a month. | Anvone wishing to he confronted | that isn't need only try to buy a ti | with a passenger servic bury and return. in the I'rom the looks of things railroad’s cstimation —-nobody is cver expected to want to g0 to Danbury. The “service” is laughible bit hett. Some fravelers try to do a first going to Bridge- port. and service from there isn't very good. An independent bus line Waterbury and Dan- bury, hut the railroad people are not to tell travelers runs between allowed anything about that; it would he assisting the hated independents to get along in the world. So far as accommodating | Everyone knows, too, that the downtown change that will be wrought when the present venerable church edifice makes way for a bus- | iness structure will be epochral lo- | a landmark of the city, remembered by all visitors as one of i(g most dis- tinguishing features. The myriads of starlings which make their home least part of the time about the building, setting up a remarkable bird racket every afternoon as the shades of night begin to fall, will be forced to find another hospitable place to roost. There will be excite- ment in the bird colony when work- men finally tear down the edifice. All of which, however, will not happen until the building is sold. The | church soclety has had plans pre- ! pared for a beautiful edifice on West Main street. Unfortunately it is not likely that the building will be con- structed until thec present edifice is sold. Citizens are vastly interested and hope for a succesaful terminu- tion of the project at an carly day. THE MECHANIZED AGE Henry Ford's latest thesis that in the course of time the world will be mechanized completely, at which time machinery will do all the ! drudgery, is intriguing. But who is going to make thc machinery, or make the machines that make the | machinery? And will such work come under the heading of drudgery or pleasure? And again, when this mechanized gge comes, how are those not employed in running the machines going to carn enough to buy any machines of their own? And again, who is going to own all the machinery, J. P. Morgan or Henry Ford? Some other wild thoughts trail | along, but these should be sufficient for the hurried rcader. Wi E 1S THE SOUTH? Obviously, everyone knows in a general way where the South I But where does it begin? An article air and come | In this paper the other day had it | | that Baltimore was the metropolis of | woman who sincerely delights in the | the Bouth. An ad in the Saturdaf Evening Post has it that New Or- ‘lean! is the metropolis of the South. | The Post-Dispatch of St. Louls |claims that St. Louis is the biggest S0™M¢ city in the South. Manifestly all of them cannot be correct. There are “ifs" in considering | where the boundaries of the Bouth. | If, for instance, one regards the states south of the venerable Mason and Dixon line as belng the South, then' that includes Maryland—which {nmetlmet is also referred to loosely (to her ma. “but I know you're| |88 & border state. 8t. Louis certainly right.” cannot be consdered in the South proper, though there is no doubt that it is the metropolis of the South- west. As for New Orleans, it is the second shipping center in the United States, but not the metropolis of the {Bouth i Baltimore is considercd as "€ the winter in St. Cloud, I belonging to that section. There is nothing as convenient as !\ the Mason and Dixon line to indi- cate where the where does it start? 25 Yea Vred Bullen was elected assistant Sunday school school treasurer at the annual meet ting of the Plainville Congregational church last night. Dr. C. W. Moody was madc a deacon, Members of the common council are showing a tendency to rchuke the Connecticut Co. for using salt on it« rails. A company represcntative told a street commissioner that sait waes not being used, but the says this is not so. as he dence that the sand which is put on the raile. The objection fo salt it that it mel the snow and spoils the sleighing. A petition is being prepared asking that the company be prosecuted. rs Ago Today The Underwriters association held | its annuul meeting y noon and clected the ficers: President, W, 1. president, J. M. Brady sterday after- following of- Haftch: vice Mins M. D. McNary; treasurer, E, W, Schultz. Failure to clean out the gutter tas led the merchants to profest to the city. They say that a fall o rain would make conditions very dis tressing. The New Rritain Rusiness Men' sssociation, at its meeting st night 1ed to work for a five-cont fare fo Plainville. The cured a reduction of the fare to R lin street from ten to five cents the fraffic an doubled. making the change neatfiteble to the trolley com- pany. W. L. Hatch. A. I Sloper. and John B. Minor were appointed a committer fo work for a similar West begins, Just | supcrintendent and | latter | has evi- | alt is being mixed with | association se- | “He's feeling bet- you mean!” Mrs. Powers: ter, if that’s wh; | | Fort: A little eruption on the sur- | face caused by frights HARMONICS! By Rodney Ralph Bancel Not long ago the statement was de that cvery spoken word, every se ever spoken or made, was still traveling upon the harmonics time. 1t was stated that “he first word cver spoken by mortal man | | was still traveling around the earth | {and could be heard if only we knew Another good intelligence test is|)ow to trap it from the ether. the effort to keep your kid in the| (un you imagine it? seventh grade from discovering how | At the time 1 read the statement | | dumb you are. T thought that it was a safe stale- | ment for any one to make, because | Burope can tell when we have a it was impossible to disprove. Now, new Becretary of State, It gets a new | however, T am not so sure that it is | peace plan. not the truth. T am no longer ®o | {cortain that the idea fs a radical | Still. when a perfect man appears dream of a publicity seeker. !and urges people to be like him, | Three years ago I made a whole | | they will listen respectfully. [1ot of sweet love chatter to g high- | | — | stepping senor of the Sierras, and | | But how do they account for the | three years later her husband heard | fact there were no doctors to about it and has been hounding the | | keep away until the first apple was | life out of me ever since. eaten? | (In fact, he offered me —_— | grand to take the scnora off | Americanism: Buying an $800 hands!!) dining room suite: eating a peanut | e butter sandwich at the drug store. The Strange Interlude? | — | Colonel: “Well, Rastus, have the | The “cost of living” was lower yeurs dealt kindly with you while | when the young couple began with 2 | [ was away?” cow and a dozen hens instead of #| Rastus: “Not so bad, Kunnel, not | fivver and a radio. | 50 had, but dey done put moah sil = ver on my haid d®n in my pocket The theory of wets doesn’t hold | —A. 1. Roekler together. Murder increases. and yet | veports fhat gun metal the law hasn’t irritated liberty-loy- | e popular in Chicago! | ing people by trying to prevent ft. Have you an electric cook stove or heater? Well. the “humane” elee- | tric chair is just a stove that uses| more current to do its cooking. fifty his Ity y W. Thoss How dear to my heart was the old- fashioned feeding Before dietetics bhecame Those days long ago when without reading The menus that science spreads on the page. “th boy! When my napkin ‘round my neck fast | | all the we at now 1 tied = recklessness gay } While stuiffng myself with the old- fashioned breakfast, The bounteous brealkfast started the day The old-fashioned hreakiast, glorious breakfast, The heavyweight b started the day A five-room house is more con- thal venient. There arc only five rooms 10 search in the morning for Willic's school books, the | that | | rakfast | Tt is casy to tell the countries we | never have kicked in the pants. | They get no good-will envoys. 1 1 used to sit down to a table so loaded | 1t creaked and it groancd and it bowed in the legs, | And eat, till T almost completely | exploded, | The home-fricd potatocs, the ham and the eggs. | The tall stack of hot tackle and wreck f . And sausage and gravy I'd soon put away, ery community has at least onc | possession of books and intends to | read all of them if she ever gets| time. | kes "¢ Some men fight for cmplres and e 10 fight to keep relatives from | getting 40 acres. It all depends on | the size of the man. A cynic is onc who laughs 8t peo- | mpo pounteous breakfast ple who denounce Durwin without tortod Ahe ey reading him, while the cynie mere-{ . 5T i {1y denounces religion without any | > . marvelo! experience of it. | The towering started the day! that | “I don't get d the flapper Correct this s your point of vi Gone, gone is that hreakfast, anc with it has vanished kcen youthful hunger relished it so. Toast, grapefruit and coffee — these 1 have banished ‘The mountains of food that T ate long ago. the tainly trek fa To any old place where they hae on display The gorgeons fashioned bres hommteons 3! rted the day 4 | The red-hiooded bres {fuan hr ne rack, and many {other gifts. Mrs. Kinney was| TNC Old-fashioned Dreakfast | formerly Miss Elizabeth A, Andrews | {01 1454 Stanley strect. Mr. and M Kinney were married by Rex. Henry | N. Maicr, former pastor of the First Congregational church of this eity. i thar | (Copyright i | 1 Publishers Syndi- for | ) ¢ | TERTAIN IN FLORIDA nd M A. K. Kinney Misquamicut and Westerly, 1. | formerly of this city, who are sp | EN Mr. nee and 1'd cer- {ertained at that place with an ot | fashioned dance at the Tourist club, s Eve, in honor of therr | ding announversary. Aboun resent. Mr. sented with splendiferous, ola- | Lfast, Th breakfast (hat kfast, Gargan- Kinney were | handsome ma that ciier trem QGas Stomach Pains Dizzin=ss The doctors tell us thal 90 per cent of all sickni is du2 to stom- h and bowel troubl You can’t well if yo igesiion is bad; are likely to get sick unless you food and digest it properly. Tanl2e has a wonderful record as a relief from digestive troubles, even those of years’ s ing. r xis Caya, 546 Hunt St., Vi t, R. L. says: “I was in vuch bad health I couldn’t work for a vear. I decided to try Tanlac. | Now I've zained 0 1bs.. my yellow | skin has cle K ipation over- come and appetite rcturaed.” If you suffer from g ins in i | | 50¢ Washington, Jan. 14.—Forecast for Southern New England: i th slowly rising temperature to- night; Tuesday cloudy and warmer, probably followed by snow; gentle variable winds, becoming southeast | and increasing. | | Torecast for Eastern New Yol Increasing cloudiness with - slowly rising temperature, probably fol- |lowed by snow in west portion late |tonight and Tuesday and in east portion Tuesday; increasing cast and southeast wind®. : Conditions: The eastern portions known as “Oi1 | ©f the country is overspread by a called “Quin- |14T80 arca of high pressurc with e | center over the middle Atlantic coast sections, Washington, D, C. and At- lantic City, N. J, 30.60 inches. 1t | is attended by the most severe cold spell of the season. The minimum | temperatu at New Haven this morning was 5 above zero. White | River, Ont, was 50 below and Doucet, Que., 64 below. The storm that passed over this section yester | day is now over the Grand Banks A disturbance of considerable energy of the | 1§ Ueveloping over the central and | ascend | Southern Rocky mountain distreits, | Denver, Colo., 29.68 inches. Conditions ‘favor for this vicinity con o | fair and continued cold followed on Mar. | Tuesday by increasing cloudiness (hrone | With rising temperature. | Temperatures yesterd High is the area of the Unit- A. It is 8,026,789 square miles. Q. What is used to color gaso- lina red and g ? iz Q. How many automobile fatali- | ties werc there in the United States in 19272 Q. Is Good Friday a legal holi- day generally throughout the Unit- od States? A. Only in Conne ware, Florida, Louisiana Minnesota, New J and Tennessec. Q. Who were the parents King of Italy? When did he the throne? A. The présent King, Emanuele 111 is the only King Umberto 1 and Que herita, He snecceded to the July 29, 1900, Q the Governor of New York receive the same saldry vor of New Ybrk city? b receives $25,000 Dela- Maryland, Pennsylva- cul, Vittoria Docs Stute Atlanta . | Alantic City | Boston Chicago Cincinnati Duluth | Hatte Do the names Ada and Adah the same meaning Ada is from the Saxon and means " Adah is from the Hehr Q. A. .05 Angeles . Miami .. Minneapolis Nantucket New Haven . New Orleans New York . Norfolk, V: Northfield, sburgh liow old is Tom Mix? Fifty years old Q. How many railroads are there in the Tnited States and Pow wany employees have they? In 1 e were 1,619 rafl- of all classes in the United 24913540 miles Vt. signed by the chief of the depart- ment and the chairman of the board and will take the place of previously issued. > LA SONE WOMEN ALWAYS ATTRACT You want to be beautiful. You: want the tireless energy, fresh com- plexion and pep of youth. Then let Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets keep your system free from the poisons caused by clogged bowels and torpid livery % For 20 years, men and women suffering from stomach troubles, pimples, listlessness and headaches have taken Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tab- lets, a successful substitute for caloe mel, a compound of vegetable in- gredients, mixed with olive oil, known by their olive color. They act easily upon the bowels without griping. They cleanse the system and tone up the liver. _ Keep youth and its many gifts.; Take Dr. Kdwards' Olive Tabletai nightly. How much better you will-: ! 15c, 30c, 60c. AN} Don’t Fuss With Mustard Plasters Don't mix a mess of mustard, flour’ and water when you can relieve pain,’ soreness or sfffness with a little | white Musterolc. Musterole is made of oil of muss tard and other helpful ingredients, and takes the place of mustardj plasters. \ Musterole “uswally gives prompt. relief from sorc throat, bronehitis, tonsilitis, croup, stiff neck, asthmug} neuralgia, headache v;onx@»liun;.: pleuri; rheumatism, lumbago,!! pains and aches of the back oy joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it may prevent pneumonia.) Jars & Tubes M:Coy's Puts Weight On Weak Skinny Men Hollows in checks—hollows in the sides of neck——flatness in chest— why den't you do something to make yoursclf look like a real mar Mctoy's Tablets put on weight— ¢ only that but they build up'your Al liealth and you grow stronge and more cnergetic, And plunged at the food with a | and Printing, of employces 0. | annual payroll of the United Statec Stecl Corpora- tion ? A, Tn 1927 (he corporation 549 omplogees ning wage of $430,727 What does the word mean? | It is a French word meaning crap of paper or a doll. Tt has adopted into the lLinglish as the namq of a textile, | T A e when. a human body is cre- a A, The heart burns with the rest of the hod Q. Wh paper currer A the had | 1 total | annal | “chif- been langus r is the Un printed? Burean of avirg Washington, D. C, Q. In what play did Adolphe Menjou take the part of head waiter? cd States At “The Grand Duchess and | * with Florenee Vidor. ) played the leading role in Head Waiter” which w 1s “Serviee for Ladi Do tuna fish have They heve scales which are | embedded in the skin and not read- ily detected? Q. Why is the presidential salute of twenty-one guns being given to Portland, Me. . risk—Read louis McCoy takes all the this ironclad guarantee. hnigton taking 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy's giges g Ny Tablets or 2 One Dollar hoxes Identification Cards ; underweizht man or woman At doesn’t gain at Jeast 5 pounds and For Local Newspapermen recl completely satisficd in‘health—- Is adinitting the holders within [ your moncy will be returned. the fire lines were issued foday to| Just ask for McCoy's Tablets at newspapermen and others who ha Fair Drug Dept. or any drug store business within the lines set up in!in America, ey e —_—mmmmm—m—m—e,————————— GETTING RID OF BEDBUGS The prescuce of bodbugs in a liouse is not necessarily an indication of neglect or carele for, litUe as the fdea may be rellshed, this insect may gain access in spite of the adoption of all reasomable precautions, it ie apt to get into trunks and satchels of travelers, or into baskets of laundry and thus be Introduced into houses; and It is also. unfortunately, quite capable of migrating from qge house to another. In theso and other ways, anyoue’s premiscs may be invaced. Our Washington Bureau has prepared from government sources. a com- prehensive bulletin on the characteristics, habits and methods of eradicate ing becbugs. If you have these pests, or want to bo prepared against them, Al out the coupon below and tend for this bulletin IUPON HERE = == o e o EEPING EDITOR, on Bureau, New Britain Herald, New York Avenuo, Washington, D. C. T helieve in 3 And want a copy f the Lulletin BEDBUGS. and enclose ewith five cents in loose, uncancelled U. S. postage stamps, or coin to cover postage und handling costs NaM s 3 STREET AND NUMBER | crry STATE ‘0 T am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. — o —— —— o —— — — - — — =l | West Téfinerfille News Item ‘ By Fontaine Fox EPH WORTLE'S IDEA OF DRIVING A SKIFF 1 HAS CAUGHT oN LIKE WILDFIRE | the stomach or bowels, dizziness, zea, constipation, or torpid liver; if you hzve no appetite, can't | sleep and are nervous and all run down, you need Tani It is good, f 10 na “Boys of 767 Road To—— did A thict 1 a lithi Mrs On Warden Tearn to bicom Burglar: “Oh little here, Tarnlac . o “Ho s you hoibs o1 our . ( if it doesn't help you. ; st ther - Paul N, Tt living aging 4 patro peculiar miis BUGGY oN THOSE TERRIBLE ROADS SOoUTH oF TowN NSTEAD OF A (*Fontaine Fox. 1929, The Bell Syndicate. fnc )

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