New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 17, 1929, Page 6

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6" New Britain Herald|* HBRALD PUBLISHING OCOMPANY Teswed Dally (Bumdsy Escepted) At Morald Bldg, 61 Church Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES & Year $2.00 Three Moathe Tée o Mooth Eatered &t the Post Ofice at N a8 Secend Clase Mail Matt TELEPNONS CALLS Business Office ..... 924 Editoria) Rooms ... $2¢ The only profitable advert! medi; a the City. Circulstion books and room elwaye opes to edvertissrs Member of the Asseciated Press Amociated Press s esciasively en Ctled to the use for re-publication of ali news credited to it or mot otherwisc credited fn this paper and also local dews publisbed therein. Buress of Circulatien The & B C. 8 @ sational organization which furpishes Bewspapers and acver- tisers with @ etrictly honest analysts of circulation. Our circulation statistice are based upcm this eudit This insures pro- lon agsinst freud in newspaper die- tribution figures to botb Dational local sdvertiserwm Meomber Audit The Hersld fe o Tork Hotaling's Squa! Grand Cemtral, ¢3nd BStrest. e e s Eng- is The Conservative ral P pring; R States. in its ge ples somewhat similar publican United 1t supported lar ry which s party in is maintained Ly the same U supports the grand old p 0 1y of arty on th consistently Democrats wWh » dust of side, can ge were laid upon the ebody b bills sks of House members. Soi s supposed to read those bil will not be the House members. CO-OPERATION IMPERATIVLE Cities and towns in central Con- ticut must in the future depend ipon the central Con- resources of it to insure an adequ: T don We hav hat such disagreements as prevail to all. y smoothed o far New Brit d te develop its future sources along the west bank of ‘armington river. Competent en- ineering opinion seems to give the that t “cessary within a reasonable num- inpression this is all is of years. Hartford, on the other and the Farmington, uge scale as to dwa eks to develop the east bank and on such a v Britain's development on the west bank, T 0 the possibility if in the tuture New Britain water and it would seem necessary to share the resources of the east vank it would Le unable to do so be- ause of the action of Hartford. It may be that Hartford, after its expensive might be willing to share its good fortune with hat runs short of development, all cities and water. At present supplying s#mall communities with water and contracted to supply others. It could assist cities as well as towns in this manner. It is difficult to visual- 1esources and it is needing already ize a condition where one ci beca, of its watersheds ¥, is able to obtain for itself and refusi cities who lack the water simply be- | cause pur he y were not in a position to large tracts of territory. Legisiature, we feel certain, would not permit an unjust appor- | tionnient on a basis of which city first seized If Hartford g0 ahead rmitted to including is to P ¥ its plans the construction of a kb storage then an for a reservoir at Barkhamstead igreement with New Britain re in the water thus impounded ien needed can well be regarde@ as the logical modus operandi Hartford is exercising foresight; it has the wealth to aims. and it is enter- is resourceful; carry out its prising. It Gught also to possess the apirit of fair play. and we believe it has this quality. There shouid be no | dificulty in convincing the capital city that an agreement for other cities and towns to share in the pro- ceeds of its endeavor is a fair method to eliminate their objections. The price of such service to other cities and towns necessarily would have to be regulated by the Legislature or by a body appointed for the purpose. The watersheds morally belong to all communities, regardless of which happens to be in a position to buy them up first. If one community, due to ile size and wealth is able to be more enterprising than its neighbors that is no reason why the others should be deprived of the just divi- sion of such an essential to human lite as the water which has heen placed where it is for the use of all. Schults's Newsstanda ll(nne" towns possessing less | g to assist other | watersheds. | AND OTHER BLOCS President Hoover treading { not permitting tariff raisers to guide his policy. Only the most rabid and | habitual fault-finder would be dis- posed 10 criteize the Chiet Executive. Most of the time in human accom- plishment the golden middle way at- tins its objective with the least | travail and in the long run is most [likely to be Though there n be no with un- emished correct. compromising middle-road in connection with what is in- bad, be opinion; evil no policy ently there can a suc- cessful compromise with especially when such an opinion is matenalistic s be denied predicated It upon interest, t can scarcely west farmers an tarift proponents alike are actuated solely by self-interest regardless of the e n the country Preside Hoover, in not yield whole. opinion, is justified | all both sides ask of him. He repr ¢ people, not part of 1 origi e immigration act by the down the gauntlet to S Pen | who have been demanding that this Suspension of the nation ns clause of | as ud- vocat President, throws Reed Ivania and his assistants, ator of onistic conception of immigra- tion quotas be allowed to pass into law by proclamation this year. A ilar step forward is enunciated in | sgestion that reapportionment representation be through, which with the sman Fenn of congressional speedily carried would be in accordance plan p y Congre The President's view toward agri- are summarized cured in a day; they ca cured by legislation; they ured by the I gov- alone. But ers and organizations ca sted to onie Every of cter is an experi- i, and we 1 from o fode he ties ort shall way to f rex- ke a start d de by Cong Presiden The to advocate deral his suggestions. went was the creation of farm a board with authority and resources way to rests efers presidential view on what to about the tariff 15¢ plea higher taritf int hey were sincere munds before ion American trade relations with not th kind ‘of tariff ti, foreign coun tries, ring that is popu- the in- r among who favor Pr upon tinkering. The sident is more clined to re ency of & reorganized tariff commission than ipon thic log-rolling method, 1 the salaries in the maks commisgion mane wor of contidenc he would order to command “broades g Unless one expeécts to be a thorough- going scarcely tind fault with such an men attair tar beneficiary one can t The feature of Presi- dent’s SURgEStion main the recommendations a created to was that greal instru- function agriculture. This mentality would be the fede mentality on behalf of in farm d boar which in the President’s esti- mation would do for agr | what the Federal Reservc does for banking and the are Inter Com- merce Commission does for transpor- tation. In a sense it would be a step toward that cratic control which there has been much criticism increase in bureau- in government of of late; yet, if such centralized con- trol is good for banking and trans- portation, the same principle would logically apply with agricultur relation to AL SMITH AS AN AUTHOR Those who what Al I hood following the worried about would do for a liveli- late political un- pleasantness er gained much sympathy from th Happy Warrior Al has given no evidence of being hard up for cash since those hectic and have not exactly cither. Few, he experience days, his expenses been slight however, expected that would turn author. Perhaps of C taught write; author could dictate lvin Coolidge as an Al somet at fluently. Though he is not command- &. He, too, or least, could ing $2 a word, there will be plenty of | !words to his autebiography, for it | a |advantage than | middle of the road policy in regard [more they learn about him the bet- |to farm relief and tariff revision. He |ter they will like him. is not permitting farm bloc sentiment l o color His own opinions; and he is |author, of course. 4 higher | pogsessing the right to vote in Great | | which is in power and anxiously en. | Erievous difficulty for | entirely. Thus tea-drinking homes in { E | will start at or in the vicinity of the | Fulton fish market and end with the The up- East Side boy. his politics, his late campaign. !bringing of the taking to ‘gowrnon tribu- lationg in endeavoring to attain the lprmdency will yield & huge seam of colorful his tuccess as and trisls and EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, ' RPRISING THE FARM BLOC, | literary ore. The people will be- acquainted with Al to better The the Volstead Act is all that is re- | quired to void the prohibition law. The 18th Amendment, according to Darrow, merely Congress to act on prohibition. The action subsequently taken was in the form of the Volstead act, which has | | come ever before. It will be Als first attempt as an The who | delivers presidential speeches emits man them to be read as well as heard, tle doubt that without the Volstead Act prohibition ! existent in theory only. “Repeal the Volstead act,” in ef- |and those which were evolved dur- |ing the recent campaign have been issued in book form, the proceeds help debt of |the Democratic national committee. | Unfortunately most of the debt still remains. Al's political appealing, snappy, ! point; but we imagine that the ac- to reduce the fect says Darrow, “and there will be no law against liquor, and the !amendment will have no force Everything points to the outlook speeches were to the be the first interesting | prohibitionists. The state referen- idun\s 80 far held, and those which count of his carly lifs b and his strug- objective of the anti- | gles will far more n campaign speeches. are contemplated, have this object in |view—the gradual crystallization of A BID FOR VOTLS 10,000 additional women |Sentiment against the enforcement act. ritain for the first time, the pres-| The Mr. Darrow that | congressmen are more interested in With claim of ent political campaign revolves itsclf round an attempt to impress these ‘OL€S than they are in prohibition is new voters with the advantages of |ON¢ Of those happy thoughts that the three parties making a bid for | d¢fy denial. But so far as the Sen- is concerned that still leaves a the wets to their votes. The Conservative party, |16 deavoring to be returned to power, |contend with: The numerous slight- has played what it thinks is a trump | /¥ Populated dry states are as well the women by | FePresented in the Senate as the well-populated wet states, card in influencing anouncing, through Winston Church- ill, chancellor of the exchequer, that | Facts and Fancies Great Britain will save $30,000,000 | | 1 | | consumes ery | the tax on tea would be eliminated would last much longer re inflated more and steering wheel les: a year in taxes; as virtually home a it the a Cars tire ©go at tr every tea, ev we woman is supposed to be vastly pleased. N The ohjection to birth control [the difficulty of burning the tares without burning the wheat, s which has been in ex- Queen thus The tea tax istence since the reign of zabeth, which ended in 16 Hard times have their faults, | its elimination as | nol.ody takes you six a bid for votes. It is as if the govern- | cow pasture to sell you a lot. ded the upport. s utilized throug ment voters o | A fanatic is one who thinks Mr Hoover shouldn't waste encrgy try- politics all the laws, for their In conside tax of the Revolutionary lot of d over Amer there. W IN NEW YORK She years of I aid until flatters herselt with the belief that who notices her out of is making insulting aavances, Mayor Walker's adininistration every man mayor's Pk ity ork frequently A p garage 1s fair. Tt leaves enough grease on the steering wheel |to pay for the pliers it appropriates. h sud sights as hii disgorged themselves g hours tended to | man can't get a start without capital.” Rats! He can whittls )1 from a pine hoerd and col- it with shoe blacking. mayor held N wor n diss AOIIS A pis or with their lot. Men who went to work early in the mo elevated by of 1ing were not tells hin it he he ¢ the he thinks everybody truth, he’s thinks everybodys 4 Croo! seeing merry-makers in a state Itra-merriment wending their w mewhere to obtain day- Y The much of toil t begin should toil slecp. sons might ating cold supper n at home; dining taurant and scolding wuse your platc is cold nk too y m American wondering they o I re ter be while others spend their substance they might in- | they got t It would 1 but expedate crossings bun traflic, Equip pedes an artificial shell ux Governt + for aliens to be for it. enforce: becomes nk to clutter up th appencd to ! 1f he ering mill roof with gold leaf to avoid the tax on profits, h 1 you he just can't afford is oy the f las. Whal ¢ of going without | nissioner 3 will has a w to r of a man's di- who could make upon th enforce. womun g00d pumipkin pic. as so to well done with driving the snob is a s stul cheated because nt citizen. orld elsew smashing 100 | man who sies anid { feels L v wasn't an import 4 giving | out statements hetween efforts, he |on his new spring suit; and dad, as | usual, is planning to take off his vest. merchants = concluded tha curtew law next thing need ',"Ar.lion.‘ <0; dons elge will Man's orth to public { muscle; prow wvorki|PEoRE GOt youth. paucity | y the | to be tro In a 1 scar but doubtless Columbus w say: “Gosh! Will I | parking place that ne L ling how customs originate, irst to find a fixing commissioner. s never NEW ROADS HEREABOUTS elief that Correct t gue,” wife, politely that e never need wait un- til the children Jeave the room.” is less | Copyright, 1429, Publishers e print the | ndicat ¥ highway im- < sontence its within 20 miles of New s W srituin is good reading for local toists, to whom 20 mils than an hour's driv g w Meriden Journal 25 Yéa;: Ago ioday of from t ate that the going will be a New Brit- | er to the south of A fire in t ¥ 1urberg’s hou Ha T last evening called out I o i chemical apparatus extinguished the with tr damage. The Hig will open sgainst t game with cancelled by Suffield. F. & Chamberlain reports that he gave $5 to the town commmittee, Mr. and Mrs. Aifred }i. Stanley P clom n Co. Many of our people are highly pleased over the $5 improve- ment to be made by the state to the Wallingford-Northford road. | This will become an important the Boston Post the Middletown-New Haven It is to be a trunk highway will not be an expense to the towns tk will be greatly | benefited, Just why the Meriden- Cheshire road couldn’t he a trunk route instead of a state-aid propo- | and Mr. and Mrs. Murray L. Stanley sition is something for Meriden and have returned to their Washington Cheshire to worry about. sircet home af*er spending the win There is interest here in the new |ter in the South. Terryville road and in improvements | O. F. Curtls has received the gen- to the Naugatuck-Prospect and other | #ral contract for the ercction of six roANK 1% haE LerHIEory: more government buildings on Plum All these additions 1o the highway |and Gull islands. A. B. Griswold will system will make for great motoring |40 the stone work. convenience and plensant drives, | An observing person today called As a whole, city street in the 'he aftention of a Herald reporter state are in poor condition but the !0 the unsightly condition of the ol e | monument. due to the roosting of ities do not have the handy gasoline |, "He said the selectmen should tax and other large revenue from ¥ Y |tarn a home on it once in a while. motonens th ot witl, Julla Graham won a half dozen 5 | cabinet photos at the Forester's fair OF DARROW in Plainville last night. rash man indeed | It was learned today on reliable principies of | 8uthority that the state reformatory commission is of the opinion that |the best site for the reformatory is probably will be some who prefer to | in Kensington. Land owned by Ed- permit thetr hopes to substitute for | ward Cowles, Frederick Elton. Con- | necticut Valley Orchard Co.. Norria | Punham estate. and Myria Dunham § flames ling eball team its season this Saturday ew Haven team. The iffield last week was linking oud ay, with > s we THE VIE! Tt would be a who attempted to argue law with Clarence Darrow. Yet there legal logic who will end-avor to up- ‘nfl Darrow's claim that repeal ol‘h" been inspected for the purpose. authorized | |functioned as the enforcement act | |of the amendment. There can be lit- | would have been | that repeal of the Volstead act is to i dad | trying to decide | WEDNESDAY, APRIL Send all communications 0 Fuu Shop Editor, care of the New Gritain Herald, and your lettes will be forwarded to New Vork. | Here's Our Test! | To the amateur gardener we'd say If it didn’t come up, it's a seed. But if it took root right away And shot up with leaves, it's a weed! ' Good Reason To! Haley: “Why did the man who |stumbled upon a secret petting party in the living room afterwards change his brand of cigarettes?” | Allen: “Well, why? | Haley: “It was so embarrassing— he coughed!” niles out to a | “April Showers” s Dangerous! “How did vou pick out such ever small Jones * happen to a en, Socrates. T'd hazed by 50 sophs ——Ming Toy Cohen UNCLE BENN'S NO-WASTE GAMES By Paul Dexter come, boys girls, ! Play-time! Play-time! all w its s play- First of at play in must " s a waste of time, And who remembers what we learn- [now subject to deportation it W Time who w time, or just as naughty as for, after | ng, isn't it? And | for the sake of play, ling time which belongs right- fully to our parcnts, our teachers or our country. An we don't want to known as thieves, dor we? | So the games which Uncle Benn | is going to teach us are games which will do us good in one way or an- other. And play must | keep thinking: “Is this helping me? | Or am T wasting time which 1 ought | to he voting to my lessons or my work or my country i The first that we are going to 1 is called | ed yesterday ab ted The bos or Kir anything clse, boy or girl who st is s iy, just is s we we EY | T st lots s 'and good for your ¢ | hoys line up on on girls on the other will stand over here the Loayd a lot of Mte teeny-weeny | problems in percer and which can read them off er the problems the boys or the girls. Con rou don’t want the you do you? All right get set . gO! ve are going to play a dan. 1e called ; is ir and lots of fu <, too. The nd the Benn | > on ve I sec ind a1 —the girls to DRY, Tom, DRY We niust remember in playing this {game not 1o get all hot and too excited, for it game 1o train our hands. Three girls come over here to the sink, and three Loys stand in a line from the !sink to the table. Now each boy gets a brand new towel and each girl a little tuh of hot water and dirty dishes. Now the game is to see which girl and her hoy-partner can wash |and ary her dishes first. As each dish is cleaned it is handed to the boy with the towel and when ke has dried it he it on the table, You n careful in pa [ing t s not to drop them. | Here here the excitement | comes in. For if you drop and break a plate, Uncle Benn will lick the cut of you! Now, no Walter Pearson! You don't Benun gigeling, do you? All Then—play! that we have had must scamper back to as Uncle Denn said be- | fore, time for plays as wel + time for work, and. =o long as yon do was'e time when play- irg. you will be able to work all the tter for your parents, your schools, your country, THE FAIR JANET! By Mack Dell {Janet's learning to use the | writer Her skill is but limited now, The exercises scem to delight her Thouzh a frown sometimes dark- brow, where slender, plodding through Still expecting that sentence so ten- der, The sweetly confessed “I love you.” is really s very a is stuf giggl sce Unole 1 And play, work, now our there and type- | | | As her hands, fair the alphabet A fond heart is one of the prizes Whose blessings are swiftly re- vealed, . In vain Cupid seeks for disguises: His presence can ne'er be con- cealed, And I wait for no key to decipher The message that dawns on my view As T lean o'er the girl I would dle for .|tended research be undertaken. than | member 3-SPY. \' nd sweaty | 17, 1929 To read whila she writes: “I |gve y-9.” Inside Information! Newspaper - ownership involves constant worry and annoyance which affect the strongest nerves. A big newspaper owner-has never a min- ute he can rightly call his own. On this subject I am well quali- | fied to speak, as I am one of the |largest newspaper owners in this country. And the wife has just served notice on me that this is the last time she intends to tell me to set out on the back porch and tie them up in bundles 8o the old rag man can pick them up! —J. B. Noonan Narrow Escape! First Office Boy: “Did you get to the opening game? Second Office Boy: bess I had to go to mother's funeral.” First Office Boy: “Yes" Second Office Boy nd it came darn near being my own. The boss had a seat right next to. me!" —Eulalie Candless. (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Forbldden) Questions and > i Yep; told the my Grand- oo o QUESTIONS ANSWLRED You can get an answer to any |question of fact or information by | writing to the Question Editor, New | Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, {1322 New York avenue, Washington. 'D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps {advice cannot be given, nor can ex- other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are {confidential. —Editor. ane, “and rat- now of Q. to this country at the age | his father has never been lized in the United States, is b American citizen by reason long residence here? No. Dor United St taking the oath o A. Noj he lays h Q It an this country It an abien now over 21, of the when of bl President the 1 office? b the s Kiss nd on it. an ente rs ago, is 1 he alien five A. No. Q. Where | Gilbert born? A. 1n Log Q. Whe ites dime nt mark? A. Dealers offer $50 to $100 for a dime of this description. Q. What is the highest moun- {tain peak in the world? A, Mount rest in an altitude of 20,141 fect Q. What makes the sky blue Te blue color, which scems to give the sky substance, is due to dust and water vapor in the earth's atmosphere, which breaks the rays of white light. Q. Can an alien he or in any of the sta A. No. Q. Is the tion of prize public exhibition and when was John 10, 1895 of a Unite with n, Utd is the v dated ;T 1804 h Asia with elected 8OV~ inter-state transporta- fight films for purposes of prohibited by law? ¢ Act of Congress of ‘) 4 Q. _How old was John L. Sullivan when he died? How long did he hold the world's heavyweight cham- pionship? He was born October 15, 1858 and died at Abington, Mass, on Feb- ruar 1918, He held the world avyweight championship from bruary 7, 1852 to September Q. Can Tndians leave | vations without pern United States governm R Q. What statuc the reser- n from the it does New Jersey { “THRowW ;ror reply. Medical, legal ard marital | Al have in Statuary hall at the capitol in Washington, D. A. Philip Kearney (1815-1862), an officer in the Mexican war, and major-general of volunteers in the Civil war, who was Kkilled in the battle of Chantilly, and Richard Stockton (1730-1781), a member of the Continental Congress and signer of the Declaration of Independence. He was imprisoned by the British and subjected to hardships which eventually caused his death. Both | statues are the work of H. K. Brown. Q. Where do red or bush dogs come from? | A, These animals are native in | the dense swamps of interior Brazil. | Their existence has been considered legendary, and even the swamp In- dians seldom see one of them. This animal is almost entirely nocturnal and inhablts only the denser tangles of the jungle swamps. Nobody goes into the swamps at night, so it escapes all cbntact with men. It probably spends a good deal of time in the water. The only specimen in captivity died at the National Zoological Park in Washington, | D. €., February 18, 1929, Q. On what day does begin? A, The time varics, it begins on March times on March 21, hours. A, The first Monday in Septem- ber in each year, known as Labor Day, was made a legal holiday by an Act of Congress on June 28, 1894. Q. Where is the passage in the | Bible that speaks of a bird of the iair carrying the human voice? A, The passage is Lcclesiastes |1 It reads “Curse not the King, no not in thy thought; and curse not the rich in thy bede | ber; for a bird of the air shall |thy voice and that which hath wings shall tell of the matter.” | Q. What is the population of the | United States? | A, The estimatted population for 1925 s 120,018,000, spring SBmetimes and some- at different Observations On The Weather April 17.—Forecast r Southern New England: Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday, with rain or snow in north and east por- tions tonight; slightly warmer in Connecticut and western Massachu- setts Thursday; strong north and northwest winds Forecast for Eastern New York: Mostly cloudy tonight and Thursday with rain or snow tonight in north and central portions and in extreme north portion Thursday; slightly warmer in sough portion Thursda strong northwest winds, diminishing. Conditions: The stol that moved northwestward along the coust yesterday centered this morning near Nantucket with a barometer reading of 2504 inches. It caused high winds and gales with rain throughout the north Atlantic states and the upper Ohio valle The maximum veloeity reported cighty miles per hour from the northeast at Atlantic City. Portions of upper New York state districts and northern New England reporte keven inches of snow, mingled with rain. Unsettled conditions continue this morning in much of the middle Atlantic and New England states with snow falling in portions of Vermont, New Hampshire and upper New and rains northeastward Washington to the Gulf of 8t. Lawrgmce. Weather conditions are genemily fair in the central and western lpor- tions of the country and a | low pressure trough forming over' the Rocky mountains and high pr re over the Lake Superior district and the Pacific Northwest. Conditions faver for this viclpity cloudy followed by clearing @nd slightly warmer, i} Temperatures yesterday: i High 54 46 42 40 48 Low 42 38 n 36 Atlanta ....... Atlantic City .. Boston Bufialo . Chicago - Cincinnati .. Denver . Duluth Hatteras : Los Angeles | Miami .. .. Minneapolis | Nashville New Haven . New Orleans . New York Norfolk, Va., . Northfleld, Vt. Pittsburgh | Portland, Me. . St. Louis . Waushington $r Harny - m Hae yo hoard this one P’ CAULD? The word which heads this story | of mine is the Scottish pronunciation of the word cold and this has to be borne in mind if the point of the {little yarn is to get home. Two very keen theologians in & | little Stirlingshire town are the lo- }‘-! banker and the schoolmaster. The other morning the latter went into the Clydesdale bank to cash his cheque. a verra Jeems,” said the greeting his broth. “Ave, it is that, Tammas,” agreed {the banker. Then he smiled and added facetiously. “Many are cabled but n, dominic “Di joke on sucred subjects, Jeems!™ wurged the solemn-faced | schoolmaster. “But if ye maun hae | yer jok he added, with a twinkle of his cye, [ tell ye that them that are no chosen will not be cauld | tong: cauld mornin’, dominie after r elder. few are na che CAPITOL STARTS SUNDAY THE FIRST OUTDOOR ALL TALKING PICTURE “IN OLD ARIZON! | WAX CRAFT wax. It nds of ut sically into medium and attract n Bures preprrod Wax Flowers which will coupon below aud send for - — — = = = CLF COoUl that ‘Are. commg hijouteric nents hildren to use v has an_infor T EDITOF Aver W ALIN 1322. WAX New . Wb 0 tin it to cover it NAME STREET AND NUMBER | cry 1 am a reader of the NEW B LS e o e 'Advice to Back Yard Gardn ers ONE oF THE MoST IMPORTANT QUALIFICATIONS oF 1 THE SUCCESSFUL GARPENER 18 THE ABILITY To AND THRoW STRAIGHT. cannot sent be made with the and enamel to de household, or it can be molded flowers. and it is almo an ex- tive modeling, since it has a be obtained w lay. Our W mative bulletin on Sealing Wax Craft to any reader on request. out s can nint of weal- srate various ¥ PON HERB= = == o= o Washington Bureau, New Britain D, e CRAFT AND WAX neancelled, U. 8 WAX ¥ RITAIN HERALD. By Fontaine Fox

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