New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 18, 1929, Page 12

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tssued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 a Year 0 Thres Monthe 5c. & Month ‘Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office . 9% Editorial Rooms .... 926 1t something worth while is required, begin agitating early; the first ten years are the most depressing. It is more depressing still, how- turns. Our “mountains,” or hills, pro- vide steep grades aplenty; and roads through the hill country are no place for nervous individuals in the win- | ever, to realize that worthwhile ob- |ter time. | Jects continually go by the board be- ) Removing snow is only part of the ¢ cause the clvic income at or around | work confronting the state; there are | the present tax rate does not permit | days when rain followed by freez-| of thelr procurement. The trouble ' ing temperature makes the roads is, the overhead of running the gov- ; more gerous than after a snow- | ernment 18 too high. Most of the tax ' fall. Either emergency is well met, } b i gool ones and bad ones. The There are two kinds of people lassifying is done by the good ones. Self-made man: A chip that hap- ened to be there when the tide fted things. A boob is one who believes every- | ody. A wise guy is one who doesn't | money goes for operating that which | and the state highway officials are | poiicve anybody except his boot- | we already have, and the costs in- | crease annually in most departments. Tie only profitable advertising medium in the City. Circulation books and press | 1oom always open to advertisers. | Member of the Asseciated Prese | woctated Prems is exclusively en- | use for re-publication of | ited to it or mot otherwise | edited in this paper and also local | s published therein. Member Audit Buresw of Circulation | The A. B. C. is a national organization | ich furnishes mnewspapers and adver- | rs with a strictly honest analvsis of | sirculation. Our circulation statistics are | based upon this audit. This inmures pro- tection against fraud in mewspaper d ution figures to both natlonal and | 1 advertisers, | to the ¢ in_ New York at Hotaling's Newsstand. Times chultz's Newsstands, Entrance | Lirades | _—_————————‘ of the centur at Mr. Stewart? Another battle Will John The firemen, in getting 14 days, cucation instead of seven, will be able to make hetter tours of Canada in the summer. Governor Fuller accepted 1o while an official of Massa- Aling so many automobiles . But this is lary 1setts, = didn’t need the mone: o tip to our mayor. | ments be not finally acted upon by zovernment will spend anoth- 1,000 on the Connecticut river ear, which ought to come under \d of federal sewer improve- | a board of re cre is one committee that no- will scramble to get on. That is the committee the mayor wants to appeint to determine what to do with | the Court of Honor, Another spectes of education that Trying to induce all y owners to clear the side- | is without end prop walks of snow, slush or ice. 94 point a prohibition comm sempt to solve the problems incident to enforcement merely is in con- decision of Mr. Hoover to ap- sion to at- formity with his campaign promises. | The President-elect could not do otherwise if the campaign pledges | were to be taken seriously. The main | point about his plan Is that it will supersede the congressional investi gation of the problem that was to lave been carricd out, and that Mr. | Hoover instead of Congress will ap- point the members of the commis- | sion. Incidentally, the commission- wrship jobs will provide new plums | for gentlemen who may or may not need the money The other day a sank; only one lifecboat wom,' work, | ; | and 300 peopls were drofned. But | Chinese ship | the incident re a asian ship there immediately | extended The | fatalists. They believe | ars inquiries, Chinese inquiries won't bring the dead back | point to sundry | ample proof. | | x a to life, and can Caucasian inquirie The surn relentlessly; once again a fourth offender of the liquor law has been | sent to the penitentiary for life. The | fuhuman nature of this luw, which | makes a felony out of a misdemeanor | grows more | If thé law is not | stutute books shortly have to be | wheels of justice in Michigan in more civilized states, k taken from the thie apparent wee penitentiaries may cularged to accommodate all the life | Yet ther lightened citizens in g 50 rigors of the prisoners, is hops Michigan are | smartir under the medieval | inatical luw that there is @ possibility it will be thrown into | the the fluent let- tor wri junk pile at what ers call an ” rly date HIGHER, AS USUAL 1S TAX OUTLOOK Possibility of a higher tax rate in the city is no shock to the obscrving: shock comes when one observes ers do not on the depart- rate will rise to anee and 0 do its ten pins Years of pruners ex- however, enterprises fairly urgent Every year i the until the phrase the Whict caning of finality is to say it means “neve Ultimately, if the city tax rate continues to go np by half a mill s anyway will take less singular co the cquisition of o« time usually r- civic teader once sald, to this effect Of course, in a growing city this is to be expected. But our trouble lies in the fact that we hope to con- tinue growing yet get along without the concomitants of increased size and importance. This cannot be done Indefinitely. The more we swell with pride the more we must have to | swell about. The ideal method would be one where citizens were inclined to boast more of how perfect the city's needs are met regardless of what the tax rate happened to be; but that millennium in civie virtue has not been reached. thought in city liall just now is to keep the tax rate down. That m, the decapitation of carefully wrought The main plans, it means those who hoped the city would progress in all the essentials of good vic government as well as in only the more pressing essentials. Until the outlook can be changed there ans | heartbreaks for | | entitled to commendation for its The removal ma- out | methods. snow | chines are early, as | knows; but when the problem is one | of combatting an fcy surface on the { highways the methods are equally noteworthy, Sand is scattered along | all the hills, It can be said that the ave safer in the winter than the aver- e hilly street in the cities. is merely by way of uttering, !a word of approval where it self- evidently is due. All drivers having occ agree that the method of keeping them safe during the winter is amazingly efficient. FAVORITE DAUGHTERS One thing that woman suffrage | has done for the nation is to give us favorite daughters as well as favor- ite sons. There 15 the case of Ken- tucky, for instance. Mrs. Alvin T. Hert, vice chairman of the Repub- everyone Connecticut hill highway is | sion to use the country highways | i pational committee, has seen — e a denial that she desired COUNCH. PREFERED It is with amazement that one dis- covers that it is the opinion of some of the party gentlemen in the city that the proposed charter amend- se a post in Mr. Hoover's cabinet, and s an addenta to the ilmloun(‘cmenl! | originated in Kentucky, te, and was not at al stimulated | by herself, It seems to have been merely a way for the K‘»nmcky;'r her home |is the Common Council, but that they be forwarded to the New Britain members of the Legislature. The charter | they thought of their favorite daugh- | amendments finally tor, go to the Legislature, which act ha can handle them. stated that the boom in her behalf | making a plow horse o a man who pened to him. | colonels to let the world know what | ing car. | | bodies, and scorm legger. | | Contrast is what impresses us, and | | the new-rich seldom mention their | | wealth as often as their bath rooms. | | The population of a town can bc | | estimated by the veracity of the | | hotel faucet labeled “hot" The change is more apparent than real. The naughty books now on | the library table used to be under | the mattress., | | Mail pilot: One who risks his| {life to make a circular letter look | | important enough to get a reading. “Definitions are the work of cen-| | turies” says a dictionary ad. Cain | fand Abel for example, began the bloody effort to define morality, If that letter from his mother makes Sandino stop fighting, per- aps we can insure world peace by rlecting diplomats whose mothers Americanism: A clever woman too busy to realize what has hap- | Pullman travel might be worse. here's no cover charge in the din- What a world! ity for erippled | for the poor| | sailles peace tre: (1o D w. It is for the Comi- to accept or reject suggested by the revision commitlec. The mayor is correct in his opposition to the plan to elsewhere, mon Council amendments charter pass the responsibility The Council is clected to attend to certain duties, of which these are a part. Whether the duties are done well or badly is not the question at !issue. SUBM G THE MINORITY Political signposts in the Legis- lature so far indicate that the minority party—which is to say, the Democrats—are not to be permitted to be any more prominent than the majority party can help. Committee appointments indicate that the mi- nority failed to get as much represen- tation as was hoped. The Republi- cans, obviously, will not yicld more places on the committees than they for much of the important work of the Legislature is done in committee, and if the minority on a committee can be kept within ounds many an objectionable bill can be smothered to death in the committees and prevented from re- iving further consideration. All of which, however, is politi must, ived little extended | pure and simple, If the Democrats | notice. If the same thing happens on 1 were in control they would adopt no |y, more tender tactics toward the Re- publicans, It is unfortunate indeed that party politics holds such sway over the so-called ideals of the legis- lative barons. HISTORY AND PICTU When President Coolidge signed the Kellogg multilateral treaty the historie event was duly engraved on the tablets time through the medium of photographic plates, mov- ing picture ma rily, and of chines clicked mer- “blinding lights" panied the barrage of camera work. Of all the treatics that were ever signed in the history of the world not even the the Ver- as more accom- signing ty oughly photographed, this assuming that the of technic of things has increased somewhat 1919, And it will have | our doing such heen noticed Mr, senators own junior senator, Bin ham, was among thos: grouped behind the wiclded the President It bei am to dodge gold pen. hard for Bing nator the limelight, he is to be congr. lated for getting into the thick n the ator who carricd around the 50 often. After having bee sen- round White tre robin and was called to 1 House bus| to stop obist he acting the did wonders to get the 3 But to return to 1k on It big ft, doings so promincntl and nothing els:, treaty: Opin- ons a8 to its amicable relations of vided, We ) cons quite value in ure di nations is pros diligently and urs to refrain from adding to t slon; except as to say that ir the treaty will pessimisti pretations little is an optimist they e Hope all thi To b attains its mean in this as in guide for optimism. that the ho treaty ide ends com s natural KEEPING ROADS SAl One of Connecticut’s major pron- P puld he @ lems in the nt u ch 1t easier ta time is to kee an k than it hapne it there were no hills or Lad thor- | Mrs, Hert, left a widow and in- heriting a large industry, has man- aged the industry in a most efficient | manner. Chivalrous Kentue well as her They know a fine woman when they see one. They favor as much promi- nence daughte according to the colonels, than to have her be the first woman to attain a cabinet position. 1f other states ob- jected, that was their privilege, but such opposition could not deter the | determined Kentuckians along the good to se of Mrs. Hert. Being business woman, Mrs, Hert evidently thinks it better to attend to her own business than to a the time to sitting in the pres ident’s eabinet. Nothing less than be- ing drafted into the positlon could her to go to Washington wity. move in this ca 1t the nation's leading business wom- en should live in the South. Tt is an indication that southern industry fs not all masculine. Since bossing her industry, Mrs. Hert has more than doubled its income. No northern busi- ness woman has ever done more. SANDY General ANDINO Augustino Sandino, who s been nearly captured by Amer- ican marines in caragua on sev- eral occasions, nd wants none. and if the nceds no sympathy He is on his own enterprising Americans can come and get him they are wel- come. Airplanes, stink bombs, long- range rifles, an abundance of men, warships and machine by the Nicaragua, and the war department guns have been used Americanos in at first sent out cheerful communi- | ques that the outlaw would be cap- tured pronto made to the cd the province, Iut the science of warfare and an end s0-ca revolution in somehow doesn’t work well down in the tropic jungles and by this time the marines think this guy Sandino Maybe they skill as warriors {is a slippery cuss. se- cretly admire his in eluding frequently a the capture forced to admire other fellow ien it proves difficult to get the stoof him. sandino is willing if the 1 All the { to stop the war feels disposed to do so. wants, however, is for him to lay down his arms while re- taining its own abundance of equip- ment. This doesn’t suit the stalwart sandino, and orms the U, that the only peace pact cares s on hoth s lay nerve of the vears may be After all, Sandino can't cr and somelow we got the impression his revolution will pass on when Sindy dies and not before lares War 12 Million Ra ) 1iubonic roken out in parts of and the Phili hav starte priv Manila De on | s 18 1a 1s one islands, chief @ warn- re- 1 in the Th s number is dar ctors are acting as of Cobu spi and L READ HERALD CLASS ) ADS ians are | proud of her industrial acumen ns; political attainments. | as possible for their favorite | , and there is no better way, | help | is significant, 100, that one of | ipal | | creatures crippled in the head. Easy Street just across that way. | It isn't easy for the hill collectors. | It is safer to give a full half of | | the road—unless the other fellow is driving a shiny new car. | There will be four more painful | | partings in 1929, There are four | cxtra pay days, | i The ideal arrangement would be | | to make the installments last no| longer than our interest in the new | | toy. | | A new high-brow publication in Paris had a cireulation of 200,000 in | | three weeks, which shows what you | can do in an intelligent city where | | circulation isn’t audited. | There ure two reasons why con- | gress doesn’t give the people what | they wan! (1) Tt doesn’t know | | what they want and (2) the people | don’t know what they want. | Correct this sentence: “My own | | vices,” said he, “seem just as hide- | ous to me as the other fellos | (Copyright, 1 Publigpers Syndicate) iZS Years Ago Today | he unbeaten champions of the | Eastern basketball league, hailing |from New London, played the New | Britains here last night and merely | ! furnished sport for the home team. | New Britain won by 24 to 5 in spite | of a substitute lineup. Moore, Hart- |man. Lockhart, Giersch, Spegl and Lawton made up the team. | | C. M. Barton and H. H. Wessels | captained teams which tied with points in the Y, M. C. A, rifle shoot during the past month and {wound up joint winners. Captain | | Barton chose W. E, Becrs as his { representative and Captain Wessels | |sclected H. J. Pfeiffer. These men | then shot it off and Mr. Beers won. Senator Sloper has written to | Washington asking for a reassign {ment of the date on the hearing or the bill for a new post office in this | city. He says his request, it g «d, would allow the mayor and resent of the Business Men's| | association to appear and speak for | the building Thicves went through the Me- | Cabe block on Main street yesterday | | forenoon and stole all the edibles they could tind. Some of the fami- | lies had to content themselves with | picked-up dinners, | The Berlin grand list fotals $1.-| 14, nong the assessments are | Walter ( tKkin merican Paper Goods Berlin Con- struction Co, R. O. Clark 39, nd J. C. Lincoln $6.400, Forty pupils of the Bartlett school | went on a sleigh ride to the reforin | school in Meriden last night. On | the return trip the sleigh tipped over wid two of the children received | emporarily ful injuries. Dan Anderson was pilot of the party. We regret that we were to disappoint some of the people | who our closing out sale yesterday. We had to lock the doors at tunes and turn people away. Come now. There is plenty left and we have men—¢, J. Whit Co.—advt Three plum during the tives came to ers have been 5o busy recent cold speil that at was not until last night that they | were able fo appear and renew | their license today 15 m. mperatures according to police, below zero. Vine strect at 2 a (name of person who took the ree- | ord suppressed for family reasons) | helow. Report from Plainville, | 26 helow | . 1% McDonough of this city was last evening elected president of the Kent club at Yale. This is the larg- | est debating society the univer- | sity. He sneceeded George E. Mix, | iso of New Britain. Both students | members of the ook and Gavel ! ternity ' Main str | tions, | the growing hideousness of wedding | estate obliged | ! arart Facts and Fancies Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. POOR DUMB HUMANS? Always something to regret! And now that winter's here, you bet We wish we'd flown with wild geese, Or dug in as the woodchuck do! DROWNING HIS SORROWS Carlton: *“Gosh, whata girl! was intoxicated with her!" Henry: “And when she threw you over?” Carlto “I got intoxicated with- out her!! \ 1 A Sl}C(‘li‘SFL’L THROW. Rastus won his 10-pound chicken with a pair of fives! WITH PUNCH Kingsley: ‘Your wife impresses me as being a woman of violent temperament.” Hedges: “That's the way she strikes me! —Jumes Holden. ABOUT WEDDIN( By P. G. Woidehoy Fashionable weddings tures, what memories conjure up! The bride, with her set, deter- mined face. The bridegroom wish- ing he could run, not walk, to the nearest exit. The ushers slightly pickled, endeavoring to persuade the distance connection, with the ticket marked Z-19, that she is not en- titled to a ringside seat. Many changes have taken place of late in the procedure of smart weddings. It is not the fashion nowadayss to have detectives the words It was a pretty custom but presents has made the detective inevitable. No sane bride or bridegroom would deliber- | ately put obstacles in the way eof | the removal of the ghastly thin, | which have been given them by friends who had not the presence of mind to leave the country before the wedding invitations reached them. Curiously enough, the rejected suitor has ceased, almost as com- pletely as the detective, to be a fea- ture of the best weddings. A few years ago a bride thought very | poorly of herself if she could not | muster among her wedding guests | half a dozen or more dist suitors. Occasionally, this lead to a pretty and spontaneous ef- fect, as when young Clarence de Puyst blew his brains out with one hand while shaking the bride’s hand with the other at the Bootle- Bartholomew wedding reception. The incident was the talk of the town for quite a time, and undoubt- edly did much to establish the new- Iy married pair in the secure social position which they now enjoy. Of recent y the popularity of the home wedding has grown until it now threatens to make the church wedding a thing of the past. 1. personally, am a strong advocate of the wedding in the home, Tt has numerous advantages — principally, of course, the fact that you are closer to the refreshments, 1t is not. however, without its drawbacks. 1 cannot impress too strongly upon young people who are thinking of getting married in the acestral apartment, the advisability of dis- connecting the telephone before the ceremony Nothing worse than to have the bridegroom, just when the ene is coming for his big line, called away to clinch a deal in Peanuts Preferred! TOVGH LUCK! When my small daughter and 1 were visiting a friend who has an in da she was much in- terested in - watching the gardeners at work After most careful arded w rhing she sta not onc: “Why ked “T spit and spit and can't spit brown like those men,” she hut many time are you doing that?* 1 an- €. Harris PESSIMI OF HATH Hoory! Likewise hunk Things is on the bum A darned " they are, The worst is yet to come S HYMN and blah! =i than wha and liars, Continuons thoy come rabbing with their slimy hooks, The worst i3 yet to come. rafters, crooks, Hokum: Sec it all around Worse than bootleg rum Vise is rampant, virtue hound The worst is yet to come What In heck we'n, Dumbest of the T'd shoot mysel living for, dumb, hut — The worst is yet to come!!! A, Nearty two years. A single Late | young one is produced at birth. shoppers everywhere—women and| Q. What is the relationship be- children— tween the wives of brothers? One department store is &iving| A, They are sisters-in-law. HOMEWARD BOUND It was last Christmas Eve. later on there is a mad rushfor the street cars, kids with balloons, more kida with ballons, and still more kids and balloons! The conductor on §ie crowded car gasped for alr. “Good Gosh!™ he cried. “If any more kids wit’ | balloons gets on this here car we'll} go to Heaven instead of to Maple Hil!" abbreviation “ib." tion of the Latin word meaning—*"in the same place”. *“The President's Daughter” A. No. Q. What is the origin of the word “electricity”, and who first laid the foundation of electrical science? A. The foundations of electrical —B. D. Johnson. A diplomat is one who takes the tricks when the other fellow holds | Willlam Gilbert of Colchester, Eng- Temperatures yesterday: High out free balleons to the kiddies—| Q. What is the meaning of the A. It stands for ibed, a contrac- ibidem, Q. Was the book by Nan Bfitton sup- Atlanta . 60 Boston Buffalo Chicago . Cincinnati Denver . Detroit .. Hatteras Jacksonville ... Kansas City ... science were laid adout 1600 by Dr. | Los Angeles Miami .. Nantucket . iNew Haven .. New Orleans New York . the trumps! (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Forbidden.) QUESTIONS 'ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New land, who, with the knowledge of the magnetic propert of amber when rubbed, pointed out that glass and other substances could be made to exhibit similar phenomena, and coined the word “electrica” (from the Greek for amber) to describe these substances. Q. Are eggs classified as a fruit, a meat or a vegetable? A. Eggs are classified as eggs. They are not classed as a frult a meat or a vegetable. Q. How much did the United | States government pay for the ground occupied by Arlington Na- tional cemetery and from® whom was it purchased? A. Non-payment of taxes on the estate of “Arlington” was made a pretext for its sale to the United States government for $23,000, for the establishment of a military cemetery in 1864. When, several years after the Civil war, George Washington Custis Lee inherited the estate, he succussfully disputed the legality of the tax-sale, taking the matter to the supreme court. He Norfolk Va. Northfleld, Vt. Pittsburgh ... Portland, Me. St. Louis .. ‘Washington | Associated Press Operator Succumbs Bridgeport, Jan. 18 UP—J. Frank Maloney, for 31 years a telegraph operator for the Associated Press, died at his home early today of bronchial pneumonia arfil influenza. He was in his 68th year. During the pi year he worked as Associated Press telegraph oper- ator on the Post and Telegram, com+ |ing here from Bangor, Maine, where he was an operator on the Bangor Commercial, Besides his widow he is surviveld by three daughters, a brother and his mother. 'Report King George as ‘What pic- | at wedding recep- | the passing ok|words paratpe, holotpe would | looks overal | ted to expectorate on the ground | one thing Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questigns will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not he answered. All letters are con- | fidential.—Editor. Q. How hot docs it get in Fair-| banks, Alaska? A. At the end of 1921 the U. 8. weather bureau worked up a report | covering the temperature in Fair- ybanks Alaska, for seventeen yn:r;. {The highest temperature recorde: o n W h | | uring that time was during the n e eather | month of July, 99 degrees. The | average temperature for the summer | | months in Fairbanks is from 55 to| Washington, Jan. 18.—Rain to- | 60 degrees. night and Saturday; warmer to- | Q. Who is the commander of|night; colder Saturday afternoon | the U. 8. 8. Idaho? and night; increasing southwest A. Captain W. C. Asserson. winds, becoming strong and shifting Q. Where is “No Man's Land”? |to northwest Saturday afternoon. A, The name has been applicd to | Forecast for Eastern New York: a region 170 miles in length and | Rain with warmer in south and cen- {about 25 in width, north of Texas, | tral portions tonight; Saturday rain ceded to the United States in 1850 |and colder, probably changing to {and made a part of Oklahoma in|snow flurries in north and central |1590. Between these years the dis- | portions; increasing southwest winds | | trict was under no form of govern- | becoming strong und shifting to ment and became a resort for out- | northwest Saturday. | |laws. It has also been applied to | Conditions: ~ Most of the country | strip of land between Delaware and | continues under the moderating in- | Pennsylvania. _Although this is held | fluence of a widespread area of low | to belong to Pennsylvania, some of | pressure, the principal center of | the fnhabitants perform their legal| which is over the lower Missouri | obligations in Delaware ,while others | valley and the southern plains states, | do not recognize their citizenship in | Kansas City, Missouri, 29.32 inches. | either state. The name was also| Light amounts of rain were re- | used during the world war to indi- | ported quite generally east of the |cate the land between the two op- | Mississippi river and snows over the posing lines of trenches over which |central and north plains states. | at attack was to be made. Fog prevails along the coast from | Q. What are the meanings of the | northern Florida to Nantucket. and geno- | Temperatures are abnormally high | type as used in biology?” | cast of the Mississippi river, except A. A paratype is a specimen|over the upper Lake region, An gathered at the same time and place | increase in pressure, attended by | as a type and its equivalent; a holo- | lower temperatures, is reported from | to the government for $150,00 which was paid In 1884. Q. When was the river ,and how lost? A. The steamer burned July 2' 1852. Seventy lives were lost. Q. WIill heated copper when plunged into cold water? A, Yes. many Observations then transferred his restored rights steamboat | Henry Clay burned on the Hudson lives were soften Having Mych Sleep London, Jan. 18 (PM—The Daily |Mail said today that King George |had enjoyed long periods of sleep during the last few days and his interest in palace affairs had re- awakened. He was not allowed to read, however, since the effort at concéntration ~might prove too great. The king was having much long- er talks with members of the royal family, especially Queen Mary. Hor |visits to his bedside are more fre- quent, although they are limited to ten minutes each time, lest the 0, T, type is a complete special indi- the Canadlan northwest. vidual or aggregate from which a| | species is described; a genotype is| |:the typlcal specimen from which | |the genus is described. Q. What is a “debt of honor"? | e A. Any debt that depends for its [} tuings to eat-—runl payment solely upon the honor of || sweet the debtor. A gambling debt isi| HOW {such a debt because it is not en- | forcible by law. Q. What is the value of a grim half dollar dated 19207 A. About 65 cents. . Q. What was the margin in Mas- | |'sachusetts and Rhode Island, of the | | vote of Smith over Hoover? A, Massachusetts 792,758 votes and Heover | Rhode Island gave Smith | votes and Hoover 117.5 Q. What is the period of gesta- tion in an elephant? About This Time mend for it: Pil- 1822 cover postage and handling costs: NAME g STREET AND NUMBER Crry P Sk I am & reader of the | | | | 8 FoLLOWING THE CHRI | I | ‘ ‘ directions and recipes for scores things are contained in our Washington Bureau's new, revised bulletin TO MAKE PIES AND PASTRIES, prepared by our cookery expert. You'll find lots of good suggestions in it. king's strength be overtaxed. . meplu all gone . Skin clear again Pimples and blackhéads cleared away quickly, easily and at small cost by Resinol Soap and Ointe ment. The particularly cleanse ing properties of the soap gently free the pores of clogging ime purities. The ointment relieves the soreness and heals the erupe tion, this treat: by m‘l is treatment youre v Resinol OOH! GOODY! tarts, custard pies, fancy pastries—lots of good t deliclous, tempting, Fill out the coupon below and ' (| /~ = = = = —cuP COUPON HERE = == == — —q COOKERY EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, New York Avenue, Washington, D. 1 want a copy of the bulletin PIES 'AND PASTRIES, and enclose here- with five cents in coin, or loose, uncancelled U. 8. postage stamps, m' v... STATE W BRITAIN HERALD. — e ——— —— — — — - — — —f 5 STMAS S”SASBN WE HAVE THE PERIOP OF ‘Bia DEALS" AND “ACTIVE TRAPING °

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