New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 6, 1929, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Toswed Daily (Sunday Bxoepted) At Horald Big. 67 Church Street — SUBSCRIPTION RATES 50 o Yoer ¢ $3.00 Three Moaths 75c. & Month Batered at the Post Offce at Britain % ‘Socend Ciase Mail Mater. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office 25 Editerial Rooms enly profitable advertising medium u'l.l.i CIZ‘ Circulation books and press toem always open te advertivers. Mombee of the Asseciated Press The Amecisted Press is exclusively en- titled te the use for re-publication of oll mews credited to it or not otherwise eredited 'in this paper sud siso local ‘wewe published therein. Momber Audit Busess of Circulation The A. B. C. 1o & mational ory nnlz:linn adver- tection against frau tribution figures to both national lecal sdvertisers. and The Henald la sale daily in New Tork Hotals Square; Schults's sstands, Entrasce Grand Centrsl, 42nd Street. ———————— Having enjoyed a clean-up week, the eity is now spick and span. No- tice the difference? They say June is to be a fickle month. But this does not refer to the June brides. The addition to the senior high school, “theater” and all, continues to reach the final culmination on or about the time it is hoped to have it completed. DROPPING THE DEBENTURE Elimination of the export deben- ' ture plan from the farm relief measure came as was anticipated. The country has not “progressed” 1o the point where it is prepared to subsidize agriculture to the extent that was demanded by this plan; and there is no inclination among influ- ential administration officials to raise the price of foodstuffs to in- erdinate heights in order to aid agriculture in this manner. There can be little doubt, how- ever, that the debenture plan real- ly would h aided agriculture. ‘That was its main trouble—it would have aided agriculture wholly at the expense of consumers. Congress will pass what remains of the farm relief measure and it will be a bill that President Hoover will sign. The point is, however, that the two radical features of farm re- lief—~the equalization fee of the McNary-Haugen bill, which Mr. Coolidge vetoed, and the debenture plan which has been dropped be- cause of the fear of a veto—will not be in the law. What remains In ail probability will not mean much for the farmer. It is likely that, if the farm industry does not improve by 1932, it once again will be a feature of the presidential political cam- paign. VOTING DISTRICTS It has been said on several occa- sions that the plan to provide addi- jonal voting districts in the city |I| sign of civic progress. No longer is the city able to proceed on election days—that is, important election days—with the same old number of pelling places which were sufficient At 8 time when the city was much smaller. This ment” scheme is an that “improve- deserves to succeed. There are no two sides to the qufln-, tion. Citizens who vote should not be forced to stand in line half a block long, as was the case last No- vember at some of the polling places. The increased expense of adding nere polling places should , be o deterrent. GAMBLING AT TRE DERBY The British derby provides an in- spiring spectacle for anyone who cares for horse racing. But the main thing about the derby to hun- dreds of thousands is that it gives an |« opportunity to do a little betting. Trigo. the winner of yesterday's classic, was what in betting parlance is known us & "33 to 1 shot.” The financial result was 000 changed hands. The British have convenient ideas about personal liberty. They actu- ally think a person can do anything he vanta with his money, place it on a nag which might & race if it runs fast enough that 850,000, ev win Careful students of the repara- tions figures will * have noted that our European associates the Werld War receive from Germany only a little more than their war debts to the United States. case of France she will little more than her debts to this In the receive country and to Great Britain. Still, ' everybody is fairly well satisfied un- der the circumstances; which is due to the changed days ef Wilson, Clemenceau, Lloyd George and Orlando. These are days whieh have seen the Locarno pact the Kellogg pact, the Geneva confer- ences; they are feeling since the Aavs when stafes- again that this «n for the future men realize onc: generation must p and not live in the past, ale Of the many mistakes made di- rectly after the war, none is more selt-evident now than the matter of deliveries in kind from Germany to the allied countries. By accepting reparations from Germany “in trade,” or in goods, it was once be- lieved that the nations receiving the goods would be greatly benefited, Just the opposite has been the case. ‘The nations receiving large assort- ments of goods from Germany, from bird cages to power machinery, have discovered that with each shipment there is just that much less chance for local industry to furnish the goods. France and Belgium, receiv- ing carloads of manufactured goods as a gift, fairly tottered under the economic impact. Native industrial- ists were quick to discover that such a settlement of war debts was in- juring them in the domestic market. Although the Young agree- ment still calls for payments in kind, there is a clause that they will be regulated, possibly abolished, in the near future. Unleas we judge the mood of the allied nations in- correctly, they care not whether the plan is stopped forthwith. Great Britain, considerable of a sufferer from the process, is to make a mo- tion at the earliest opportunity to abolish these payments, which so effectually undermine the economic structures. Nations, as well as individuals, prosper best when their neighbors are prospering; when their neigh- bora are good consumers and good producers. The financial and eco- nomic experts who fashioned the new reparations agreement did their work under this knowledge. Germany continues to pay a mint of money, fl‘nd much in goods, but it is fortunate for everybody that there has been a moving away from the fantastic figures that fooled people at the close of the war. At that time only the United States experts were sane about those things. and of course we from the start refused to have anything to do with exacting an indemnity. The fly in the ointment, so far as our associates in the war is con- cerned, is the war debt they owe us. We have reduced it by liberal refunding operations, but the fact that the indemnity from Germany will not be vastly higher than the war debts to the United States is to be an irksome feature. to reduce the American debt through what will amoupt to certain Pressure aftd during the coming years. Yet there is hope that, after three year: the the French debt will be ratified by the French parliament On the other hand, it may not he ratified. If it isn’t, bargaining over the war debts will grow more In- tense; and Great Britain, which made the mest liberal refunding ar- rangment, revision. The trouble is that our European associates do not see much logic in paying hard-won money to the rich- est nation in the world. this year, likewise may ask for a THE SATURATION POINT Fully years ago financial writers wrote about the approach- ten ing “saturation point” in connection with automobiles the United States. The writers were more than a decade ahead of their time. Ten years ago it was not supposed that in the time would ever arrive when in some states there would be an auto- mobile to every five persons, or an average all over the country of one to six. Today, however, that point has been reached—but the automo- bile industry continues to hreak pro- duction records. that the saturation point in automo- | bile ownership in the United States has been virtually reached except | for the new cars bought by the hun- | dreds of thousands come of age. ply ' minority of who each year and that increased sup- of the fumilies“possessing two needed to take care ars. Of the 000,000 automobiles and trucks in the country, replace. ments each year total | 100,000—which around 5,- would give the average car a life of five yvears This point arrived at the automo- up a hit were it entirely dependent upon do. | mestic But All the big plants are constantly thel ling ing. industry would slow trade it isn't exports. the automoble industry Even [ automobile This is what is keep- expand- sia 15 being tapped for trade Those who thouzhi the automo- bile Industry would collapse when the famed saturation point were reached they guessed did not points into consideration poorly hecause take two important 1. That with the country blanket- d with antomobiles, replaccments |would go a long way toward keep- the The ing industry humming. enormous increase in ex- | | THE USUAL NEW YORK PROBLEM Those who have visited Now “on York husiness pleasure’ iy e nelow and re- Eighth has blos- And cently | avenus will noted that 42d street somed like the rose all cause the new donations no doubt will be acceler- ' Mellen-Berenger agreement on ', It is said with an air of finality ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 6, 1929. that street has been completed along that portion of the route, ac- companied by an immense boom in the construction of office buildings along the route. Where that part of Eighth avenue once was a street for up-and-coming business houseg to avoid, it now is to vie in importance with some other subway-energized streets, notably Seventh avenue, one block east. It took far-sighted business in New York some years to discover that subways were not a detriment to trade. One remembers quite well the attitude of big and little busi- ness along lower Broadway at the time the first subway was planned. The business men, wise and per- spicacious, announced to a man that they would have none of the thing along their street; it would terribly reduce real estate values, they held, and its construction would be an unmitigated nuisance. Who, for instance, could do busi- ness while the street was dug up to construct a subway? they asked. 8o the route carefully avoided low- Broadway, taking a circuitous route to arrive at the Battery. Less than ten years later the same busi- ness men were clamoring for a subway under lower Broadway, and their desires finally were gratified. They wanted, and got, the increase in realty values due to the presence of the subway, and by now most of the old business structures have given way to skyscrapers. er Sixth avenue is another thorough- fare desiring subway treatment. But the situation is complicated. The old Bixth avenue elevated structure is present, impeding traf- fic, shutting out light, and holding back Sixth avenue from a develop- ment such as that which has come to Seventh avenue and is destined to come to Eighth. A law passed in 1924 allows the city to condemn the elevated line, and it is proposed to proceed after the Eighth avenue subway has started operating. Careful observers poini out that the process is not likely o afleviate {the subway jams, as many thou- sands still use the elevated lines, and if those using the Sixth ave- nue I, are forced to use the new subway, the jam will be quite as pronounced as in the older sub- ways. 5 And as nothing succeeds in New York like the construction of sky- there I8 no likelihood, no matier how many new subways are built, to change conditions. The concentrated in the yscrapers, the greater the jam in the subways when they come and leave work. This 18 a penalty for ying to concentrate such a large slice of the nation's business on Manhattan Island. There is more room elsewhere, but somehow it scrapers, more prople isn't utilized. CANADIAN LIQUOR The Herald-Tribune a few days 4go contained a fairly convincing letter from the New York state superintendent of the Anti-S8aloon lLeugue which purported fo show from Canadian statistics that the liquor trade in Ontario and Quebec, operated under provincial auspices, was rapidly increasing. It was the object of the Canadian ipeople, after having eliminated the {public grogshops under private jurisdiction, to provide government liquor clinics which would meet the demand but not stimulate it. All this | has not been achieved, according to |the Anti-Saloon superintendent, he. cause the figures prove conclusively that the consumption of liquor has vastly increased in Canada—or at least, so it appeared from the sta- {tistics of the brewing and distilling industry Since then the New ‘hhs bhegun an York World inyvestigation of the liquor trade along the Detroit river. The first notable admission obtained {was from customs men, who said {they could not prevent the increas- |ing influx of Canadian into ,the United States. motor boats make sport liguor Swift of the American | increasing city subway under ! enforcement officials. Cargoes are landed day and night. The Canadian government collects an excise tax of |22 & gallon on liquor in instances where the masier of the ship 'l be ‘undlnl. of to return with a ceruncate As the such landing for his cargo. ship master cannot obtain a certificate from an American cus- what toms agent the tax amounts to the Canadian government re- ceives on smuggled liquor to the [United States. Canadian claimed that the officials have has heen making no determined ef- fort to prevent The smuggling from Canada tendency of Canadian United its prohibition law in The, output officials has 1 en to let the s ates enforce its own way result 18 an in- creased in the Canadian (Drewing and distilling tgade, exact- iy in accordance with the figures quoted by the Anti-Saloon League superintendent The point is. this increase in out put in Canada is not entirely for Canadians Thought to he those of a Danich fwarrior Killed 1n one of the fght- ing incursions to Runnymeads lancient skull. thigh and ceently unearthed at Egham, England " | were United States ' arm hones | 4 Facts and Fancies Nothing displeases everybody — except the way a widow spends her insurance money. Considering Philadelphia’s record, it may be that Al Capone was just guilty of threatening competition. The great problem is distribution. There is plenty of the inferiority complex it the right people had it. South Carolina boasts of vegeta- bles that contain jodine. And we al- ways thonght that taste in spinach was sulphur. Crime will end soon after the en- tire population learns to think every criminal a dirty bum. As a last effort to make people stop and look at a railway crossing. they might shape the sign like a Vacation: A short period during which you go broke trying to make strangers believe you couldn‘t. attracts and lit- It's the vacuum that the dirt, both in cleaners erature, When two are made one they are happy. unless there is disagreement about which is the one. Americanism: Thinking a paint- ing ugly and untrue to life; echoing the critic’s praise to impress others who are acting just as silly to im- press you. Nine million American women working for wages. No wonder there are jobless men—and old maids. You can't get a man if you get his job. A Salem sailor is charged having seven wives icluding one in France, one in Florida, one in California. If you must make a hit with women, keep your hits scat- itered. with You can fool all the people part of the time, and part of the people all the time, but you can't fool an older sister any time. It's slill & hick town if friendly pédestrians endeavor to retrieve your hat as it rolls by. Why go o a resort? You can get tanned in the back yard, got mosquito bites on the front porch, and place a few rocks in your own mattress. The Sears-Roebuck plan to mar- ket a cheap car needn't worry Hen- ry. That outfit doesn't ship f. 0. b., though the sound is much the same. An early watermelon lies in the femi-tropical sun a long while and travels a long distance just to give some doctor & joh. ’ ftudying the reports from France teaches us that “financial exports’ are just horse traders who whittle claima instead of sticks. I | Correct this sentence: * truly very humble.” said he, “and 1 never yearn to lick the fellow who |saya T am not.” | Copyright. 1929, Publishers Syndicate i At one of the police courts in Glasgow a man was being tried for wife-beating. The evidence was all againat him and the culprit was sentenced to sixty days imprison- ment. On hearing his fate the man in the dock nodded his head and re- marked, “That settles it, Railie!™ Settlea what?" asked the magis- trate. interested in spite of himself. “Well, it's this way The wife and me were certainly having a bit o' discussion as to whether we would gang to Rothesay or Dunoon for oor holidays. I admit it. But what you've just said to me setties the argument.” Wl (e 25 Vears Ago Today At the present time it appears ,though the Kourth of July celebra- (tion will not be very successful. The | committee in charge has done noth- ing definite towards arranging a progran. | Rev. Peter M. Skelly ithony’s church tive of this city, 25th anmiversary to the priesthood today The New Britain professional | baseball team will clash with Meri- {den at Rentschler's park Saturdas ' A rast game is expected | ¢ A Agard of this city was ap- pointed a member of the committee on permanent organization at the prohibition convention which open- vd in Hartford last evening A committee on bonds was an pointed today by Mayor Bassett. It {will work in connection with the claims committee, pasior of St Litchficld, a n is celeb of his or a ting ination The program is now complete for the 12th annual state saengerf. st the prize singing contest to b held here June 27 and 28, for | R = there w med office | Vortv-four years sngle steel fra ing in America. ot buiid first one was he | Send all communications to Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New Vork. The Best Proof! Those “dear dead days beyond re- call’ Were pretty gloothy after all, No cheer stuff then—if you're in doubt Folks, get the family album out! Must Be Good! Fussy “Are you sure the ham is good? 2 Waiter: “Good? ‘Why, we've been getting ham from same-hog for 20 years! fady, the BLANKET REPLY TO NUMER- OUS CIRCULARS! By G. L. Karr The sellers of de luxe editions Assault my ear with dulcet wail; Their suavely erudite petitions Arrive by every morning’s mail. They tempt my greed with lowered prices, They woo my soul with art's parade, Theirs are a million slick devices Pertaining to the bookman's trade. But 1. WON'T buy anybody's set of “Famous Women," And I DON'T want Maupassant any price at all. T want the little books, ° the books, the old books, Hard-working books from the sec- end-hand stall! at odd They want to send them to me crated, And let me take a year to pay— Defoe complete, unexpurgated, A new translation of Daudet. They flatter me with the assum- tion That I'm a bibliophile of parts, That I'm a man of taste and gump- tion, Alert to patronize the arts. But I WON'T buy Balzac in 37 vol- umies, I DON'T want Kipling ,tooled leather— I want the little books. the cheap bhooks, the shahby books, I and the little bodks can get along together! in hand- 1S THIS YOU WIFEY DEAR? Good Partners! Blake: “Firms in similar are now merging."” Ramsey: “Yes. Our milk company has just combined with our water company! lines —Helene Barker S AND FANC By Roland Senie Those of us who are staying home and saving peach-pits and tinfoll will be interested in two bul- letina from the Dept. of Agriculture. The first of these, called “How to Take Out Spots and Stains” say “Spots and stains on the tongu- can be slayed by bathing them with alcohol and ginger ale. Do not leave lighted matches in the mouth, however, as ginger ale is highly combustible.” The author and his wife, who was a minus sign before she was sol- FAl LH | Rravitation area. dered to him in the bonds of ma- trimony, first became interested in cutworms when they found a pitiful she-cutworm with a tiny white bun- dle In her arms on their doorstep one snowy night. They took the paraih in and as time passed their feeling kindled into love (I mean their feeling for the cutworms: the two principals has always despised each other). Since that day they have never lost their love for cut- worms, Hosmer Gosling, the prize cut- worm of the family, has spent the {last two years in a baking college where he is learning to create pres |and cup-cakes with his deft hands. In regards to this there was a side- splitting anecdote enacted wnen he was home in April 1rom collegs. Hosmer was iying in the porch swing playing his fife when the shy little girl cutworm from next door came up the steps. “Well, Hosmer, nose you are master baker." “No," said Hosmer, with a morous twinkle in his six eyes, “I am only a Studebaker (student bak- er).” ‘The incident created much laughter amongst the dragoons on the stairway. | Most of the skilful technique which the author and his comport !employ with the cutworms as been learned from a cardboard salesman from next door. This man is never found without his trusty briar pipe and he is always fondling some isort of tobacco. Another of ‘tus whimsical oddities is spraying him- «If with eau de cologne. He 1s at present sclling packages of bluing /1o all the neighbors and hopes to have a magic lanter by Christmas. Next month the cutworm scason zets under way with a smash and we inviie our friends to visit at our booth at the County Fair Besides . our collection of the iovial worm the litfle lady will read | fortunes with (ea leaves and 1 will give imitations of Emil Jannings she said. “T sup- now a full-fledged h us vrected in 1856, and offjer members of the Loman family. The price of admissi will be ten pins and tennis balls will be served. i For the Third Time For the third time that week I saw her standing in the garden. For the third time 1 longed to kiss her. For the third time I vaulted through the window and fell head- long into a prickly hedge below. For the third time James came down the terrace and assisted me to my feet. For the third time my wife appeared at the window and s2id: “Is he drunk again, James?" For the third time James re. plied: “Yes, Madame—trying to kiss that statue again!” Tli-Timed! ‘Warren: “Whe' hit you?"” Bennett: “That ex-fighter who is working in Jaeger's grocery.” Warren: “You must have him.” Bennett: “I simply asked him ‘How's the cauliflower today’ and he thought I was referring to his ear!” riled ~Florence Hoppin . (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 Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and martial advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered All letters are confideutial. —Editor. Q. Can horned toads live place in the United States? kind of food do they ecat? A. Horned toads can over the United States, Th flies and meal worms. Dead motionless food is of little inte to them. Only moving objects, ap- parently, make any impression on them. They refuse no insect. spider, | or snail, which they can swallow. Q. What is the maximum weight of rainhow and speckled trout? A. The largest rainbow trout of | which the bureau of fisheries at Washington, D. CC., has a record was 26 1-2 pounds. and the largest speckled trout was 14 1-2 pounds. Q. How far would an airplane have to fly to get beyond the grava- | tational attraction of the earth? 1 A. A plane requires air to sus-| tain it and on which the airplane | propeller can “bite” in order to pull the’ plane along: and the entire air belt around the earth is as much a| part of the earth, and as much sub- ject to the carth’s gravitation as the occans on the earth’s surface. No plane could fly beyond the earth's A body ceases to feel the pull of the earth's gravity at a distance of about 215.000 miles from the earth and 23,900 miles from the moon. Here it would have no weight, the gravitational at- | tractions o fearth and moon being | at that point equalized. Q. Will the Larkin Tower build- ing in New York city be higher than the Woolworth building” A. The Larkin Tower building on | West 42nd street, New York city will be the tallest structure in the world. Tt is to be 110 stories high, 1,208 feet to the top. any What all eat or live | cloudy, probably showers ithe plea A. It is an old Spanish proverb, found in “Don Quixote” by Cer- vantes. Q. What is the value of a Loncola head penny dated 19092 A. From one to two cents. Q. What is the address of Mayo Brothers, the famous surgeons? A. Rochester, Minnesota. Q. What is the meaning of the name Selma? . A. It is Gaelic and means “fai Q. Why does cream rise to the top of milk? A. Cream is lighter than milk. Milk containing 3 per cent butter fat weighs 8.62 pounds per gallon; 4 per cent butter fat, 8.61 pounds per gallon; 5 per.cent butter fat, 8.60 pounds per gallon; and 40 per cent whipping cream weighs 8.38 pounds per gallon. This explains why cream rises on the top of milk. Q. Are the words ‘“measles”, “mumps” and *“chicken pox” singu- lar or plural? A. Measles is both plural and singular. It is plural of measle, but pathologically, as a disease, it is singular. Mumps is plural. Pox is an irregular spelling of pocks, which is the plural of pock. Q. What is a pitch-back wheel? A. Itisa form of breasted water wheel. Tt has radial floats or buckets upon which the water is ad- mitted at any point from about the plane of the axle to 45 degrees or more above it. The water is con- fined to the floats by a breasting of planks or masonry, almost touching the periphery of the wheel, and ex- tending from the hottom of the sluice to near the lowest point on the wheel. If the water is admitted to the wheel at a point very near its summit, it is called a pitch-back wheel. Q. How is "0 Sole Mio” trans- lated into English? A, "O My Sun Q. Who is the owner of Rin Tin Tin, the movie dog, and what is his address? A. Lieut. Leland Duncan. War- ner Brothers Ssudios, Hollywood, California. & Q. What is the religious faith of Mayor Walker of New York City? A. He is a Roman Catholic. Q. What is the meaning of the name Bessie? A. It is a nickname for Eliza- beth and means “worshipper™. Observations On The Weather Washington, June 6.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair to- night and Friday; slightly warmer; moderate southerly winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Mostly fair and somewhat warmer, except showers in extreme north portion tonight; Friday partly in north portion; moderate southerly winds. | Deserted Mother Is Freed on Rum Count Chicago, June 6, (P rs. Ce. celia Black, the first Chicagoan ar- rested and indicted under the Jones law, pleaded guilty before Kederal Judge Charles E. Woodward yester. day and given a suspended sentence of one year. Mrs. Black said that when desert- ed by her husband and left to pro- | vide for their three children, she set up a small still and made and sold whiskey. Her attorney entered of guilty and asked for mercy, whereupon Judge Woodward placed her on probation. WHO ARE Our Washington u ture actors and actresscs, alphabe: abhout ot this movia directory, —— == — = I.\ln‘l'lfl.\' PICTURE EDITC 1 w York Avenue, P Q. When did General Sherman's army occupy Atlanta, Georgin? | A September 2, 1864, The city | was evacnated the day hefore by General Hood and the Confederate | army. | Q. Was Chaminade. the com- poser of music, a man or a woman? A. Cecile Chaminade, the Krench composer. woman W a sawn Is’rm:m AND NUMBE | crry has compiled A new Washington Washington, n MOTION WAN AND DOG DEAD INLONELL BLAZES Warebouse Burns—Apartmeat Hon;e Fired by golple Lowell, Mass., June 6 P—A man and a dog lost their lives in one of two fires which early today caused damage estimated at $25,000. The charred bodies of Halmer Linstead, 52, a night watchman, and his dog were found after fire swept through a furniture Wwal house, Linstead had relatives in Chelmsford. Damage to the ware- house was placed at $15,000. Fire, believed of incendiary origin drove 75 persons, clad in night clothing, from a 24-apartment block on Elm street. The loss was estie mated at $10,000. According to the police, one of the tenants overheard two men on the ground floor dis- cussing ignition of the building. This tenant said that shortly after the two men fled in an automobile flames swept through the building. Church Moderator Resigns From School Chicago, June 6 ()—Dr. Ozora 8. Davis, retiring moderator of the National Council of Congregational Churches, has resigned as president of the Chicago Theological Semins ary, which position he has held for 20 years. The resignation was accepted last night and he was clected president emeritus of the seminary for life, The resignation is effective October 1 next. e PAPER IN STORE BURNS Co. No. 1 of the fire department went to the National Paper Co. store in James Lacava's building at 1113 Commercial street at 4:44 yesterday afternoon and extinguished a slight blaze in waste paper. There was considerable smoke. A supply of fireworks handled by the concern was not endangered. Cooperative unions in Sweden are acquiring real estate. Now You Can Banish Pimples In Few Days Costs But a Few Cents to Hav Clean, Clear Skin You'll Be Proud Of. No matter how many things you have tried to rid yourselt of pimples and blackheads or how expensive the treats ments have been you are no vourselt justice until you get a 35 box of Peterson’s Ointment and g . chance to free your skin from all Mlemishes and make it soft. velvety and good to look upon. Mrs. Minnie Jones of Louisville writes: “Peterson’s Ointment sure is fine for blackheads. My face was covered with them, but after using the ointment they are all gone.” And in a letter wbout pimples, Miw Genevieve Linehan of Bradford. Maes., writes: “I had tried most every Kind of ointment for pimples, hut found none a® kood As Patersgn's Ointment. I am on my first box and my face clear. T am very pleased with Druggists everywhere sl Ointment. 1t clears the skin. box, THEV? ditectory of motion pic- lly arranged, and containing brief facts 0 of the principal people of the screen. 1t you would like a copy All out the ccupon below and mail as directed: Bureau D, & New Britain Herald, P COUPON HERE === == e o -] PICTUR uncancelled, TAT s, d enclose stamps I am a readet of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD, X7 1S BEING RUMORED AROUND THAT THE DWARF HAS.....

Other pages from this issue: