New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1929, Page 8

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HBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Teswed Daily (Sunday Bzocepted) At MHoralé Bidg. 67 Church Street RATES 3590 & Yoar $3.00 Three Monthe 75e. & Month Tatered at the Pest Office st New Britaln Second Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Office ..... Kditerial Ruome ... The enly profitadle advertising medium “fa the City. Circulation buoks and press ""“teom always open to advertisers. “i. Member of the Asecisted Prese The Amociated Press is exclusively en titled to the use for re-publicatiun of all mews credited to it er not otherwise .oredited n this paper end also local Bews published therein. Momber Audit Buress of Circulation The A B. C. is & nationsl organization ‘'which furmishes mewspapers and ad tiesrs with & etrictly honest amalyst i ghuml‘. Our circulation statistics are upom this audit. This insures pro- > fraud tn newspaper tribution figures to both mational local advertissrs. sale dally in New Newsats Times Newsstands, Entrance nd Street. and . The Hersld to York at Hotali Square; Schults’ “Grand Central. ' Te Herman Schmarr congratula- -tions for refusing to do battle for the high school basketball captaincy on Jh technicality. .. Nature remains peculiar. The rains that descended in May brought | forth maledictions against the cli- _mate. The rains that refrain in June make sport of the weather bureau. “* From what we can understand, popular education about the doings on Broadway and its environs now originates in Hollywood, California In this world there is always room for a certain percentage of fools; and it should be each person's am- bition not to be included in the minority who qualify for the nut ‘b, .. The city is discovering, like many ‘a1 individual before it, that to fight the Standard Oil Co. is something of & huge undertaking. The education being forced upon unsuspecting citi- “Usenry may be worth the effort. By “the time the cause celebre is through _overyone will know more about ‘@enuine zoning than they did before the argument started. Given a cholce, we would prefer to meet a rum runner than a pro- hibition agent. The rum runner does not shoot at innocent autoists; he lets them severely alone and mindx his own business. The prohibition Schreiber Is finding that out. The |.¢ of course, s that more than _agent out to find the rum runner, is disadvantages are intensified When ' pai¢ the injured autoists are unable _the fellow who teo frequently mis- -takes the ordinary autoist for his _legal prey. And that is why we greatly prefer to meet the rum run- ner. He keeps his liquor and we keep our lives. Golf provides nice exercise, but let the average tired and fat business “man engage himself in an amateur baseball game and try to run to 4hird on an infield punt and he will @t more exercise in & minute than ‘he gets on the golf field in an hour. ZAnd 1t will take him more days to @et over it. That, in fact, is the chief drawback. . Nobody cares whether that fast- .meving motorcyclist who travels an wverage of 60 miles an hour over any old street gets killed, but the | trouble is he is likely to kill some- body else while he is committing sui- cide. Our daredevil motorcycle cops advocated in these columns that the city would do well by its younge citizenry to provide animals of a harmiess nature in one of the pub- lic parks, with speclal reference to the presence of ducks that provide great joy to the kiddies as they swim about in & pond. We always have been under the impression that ducks in Stanley Quarter pond would greatly popularize the spot throughout the summer months, basing our deductions upon the ex- perience in Meriden and Hartford, | where parks are thus embellished | with the fuzzy-wuzzies of the pond- swimming tribe. It is with satisfaction that one reads, therefore, that something of this kind is projected for a “Japa- nese garden” south of the Stanley street entrance to Stanley Quarter park. Going a step further—or sev- eral steps—the project includes the manufacture of a new artificial pond, which will possess other pretty water animals besides ducks. If this plan is carried through—and there | seems no need for hesitation, con- sidering the slight costs, Stanley Quarter is sure to become a magnet | jfor all families with children. And, ! according to our way of thinking. the parks can be devoted to no bet- ter purpose. | Park Commissioner A. E. Berg, who brought forward the project, Is entitled to much credit, as is Clyde | Ellingwood ,the park superintend- | ent, who has worked out the details, | cause it wouldn't do any good to the dead. DRIVING WITHOUT LICENSE IS FAR TOO EASY ! The amazing discovery in police court that a man living in Hartford, picked up while driving an automo- bile while drunk in New Britain, had not had an operator's license since 1923, naturally leads one to wonder as to how many others are in this class. And also leads to the assump. | tion that, under present conditions, | it is comparatively easy to drive an automobile without a license. All‘ that is necessary is to be exceeding- ly careful not to be involved in an accident and not to overload with quor. i What the state oficials need to mull over is some way to discover licenseless drivers before they be- come identified with an accident or get intoxicated. The present system is full of loopholes. THE FOOLHARDY STOWAWAY i NEEDS NO ATTENTION | Being a stowaway on an airplane has its disadvantages. Arthur coupled with too much pride in the accomplishment and the desire to cash-in on the exploit. A friend has | |already come forward with the claim that if Schreiber makes contracts for public appearances when he returns to this country he is entitled to half [the proceeds as the author of the ' idea of stowawaying. 1If this thing | keeps up Stowaway Schreiber may leven find himself confronted with a lawsuit. It appears that the French sce nothing praiseworthy in Schreiber's performance. There can be little doubt that they are right. Schreiber | on board the Yellow Bird was a | menace to the lives of the three French aviators, and it was only a | I matter of supreme good’ luck that ' |they reached the coast of Spain be- ifore being forced to descend. Schreiber's weight had considerable (to do with that. Had he not been aboard the aviators in all probability 'examples in this business of getting NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1929 century and that unnecessary cruelty has no place in it. The situation is worse when an entire community is tarred with the same paint through the negligence. The Common Council should lose no time in looking into the dog sit- uation. ‘Perhaps it is a “small mat- ter” compared with some of the weighty subjects inordinately dis- cussed, but more people acquire a poor opinion of the city from such details than they do from a contem- plation of some of the things upon which time and effort are expended. THE HOSPITALS AS EASY MARKS When an automobile accident oc- curs and somebody is taken to a hos- pital, it comes under the heading of an emergency case. No hospital un- der such circumstances, of course, could refuse admission and none do so. Public opinion would be devas- tating in its effect if such a pro- cedure were attempted on the score that those entering the hospitals first must show a willingness to pay for treatment. g i | But according to statistics pre. | sented to’a convention of hospital officials it was shown that more than half the emergency automobile ac- cident cases throughout the country turn out to be of no financial bene- fit to the hospitals; indeed, the re- | ports had it, 56 per cent of the cases come under the heading of charity. | and American hospitals are estimat- ed to be contributing more than $6,- 000,000 in services to indigent auto- mobilists who never pay. | The reason, according to the re-i port, is that there is no way of col- lecting from irresponsible autoists who may be injured, who lack finan- cial resources, and who lack accident insurance. The cost of such free service is “steadily mounting” in proportion to the increasing acci- | dents, it was announced, and would somebody kindly bring forward a solution of the difficulty Nearly as irritating from a finan- cial standpoint is the practice of us- ing hospitals as charity institutions for workmen's compensation casen. It is astovtshing how rich inuru.ce companies haggle aboul wuepital costs, read the report. endeavoring by every means to induce hospitals to serve their customers at a cost or less than cost rate. There was no indication at the hospital executives' convention as to what states offer the most terrible | something for nothing; and we hope that in this matter Connecticut is not near the top. What is surpris- or unwliling to pay for their keep when brought back upon their feet., Does all their spare cash go into operating the precious family car, or are hospitals considered fair game : for dead beats? BETTER TO NULLIFY THE LAW ' THAN MURDER INNOCENTS | Appealing to the public to assist | the government in combatting the activities of international rumrun- ners may be one way of helping a precarious situation to right itself, but it cannot be said to solve the difficulty. Where there are high profits in bringing liquor into a pro- | hibition country from a country across an imaginary boundary line it | 15 uselens to suppose that profit-eager adventurers will fail to take the risk. President Hoover's most recent ap- t peal asked the public to assist in this ' effort to stem the activities of *in- ternational criminals.” and the ap- | i - . éan catch the automoblle speeders, COUld have reached Paris Without |eq) may fall on some willing ears. and indeed do catch some of them. Let them go after this motorcyclist. | The manner in which wealthy ‘itisens of Cleveland came to the aid of the Cleveland Clinic in its re- building plans denoted the high esteem in which it was held. The report of the Cleveland coroner in eonnection with the disaster which cost 123 lives indicates, however. that on one point there is not much cause for pride. That is that the clinic was warned more than a month previous to the disaster that ‘its X-ray films and the manner in which they were stored was a con- stant danger. It is evident that the management of the clinic paid no at- iention whatever to the warning. No- B9dy will be punished, of course. EVen the coroner carefully avoids suggesting such a thing, probably be- Remember the good old days when a girl's waist looked like the mid- section of a wasp? When they wore corsets that were hooked up so tightly that the doctors devoted half their spare time in warning the na- tion that the future of the race was in danger if the thing kept up? ¢ These days are no more. but it was not due to the doctors that better days arrived. Nowadays the waist- line is a generous slice of territory that looks no more like a valley than the other lines. Tt isn't stbilized or standardized, vithe something to provide parking spa merely being for the partner's the dance. burly arm during ENHANCING ST WITH A DUCK . v For several scasons it has been |the preliminary descent. Only an abounding lack of res- | ponsibility and a plenteous supply of [ despcrate foolishness could have in- | duced the stowaway to do his deed. | 1f the American public. on his return |to this country, takes the view that | he is a species of hero and is worthy | of attention it will be an exemplifi- |cation of foolhardiness quite the !equal of the stowaway's original in- | fraction of sanity. | | FORSAKEN DOGS ENTITLED | TO BETTER TREATMENT | To say that the oven treatment for ‘ dogs in the city's so-called dog pound is unfortunate would be us- ing the wrong word. It is disreput. able. By now. it is to be hoped, there is an improvement; or perhaps all or nearly all the dogs tortured before ' being exterminated have met their fate. But that does not eradicate the | memory of the leplorable manner in | which the city and such officials that have had the matter in charge | considered the | dumb beasts. welfare of these It is a matter for the investigation of the Connecticut Humane Society, | and it is to be hoped that this or- Ranization goes further than merely calling attention to the need for bet. ter treatment for unfortunate dogs. The city itself =hould hasten to pro vide deceat quarters for the animals “re are species of individuals, regular church tend- ants, who are kind to their families, but think dumh have no feelings and thercfore are not en- iitled to that kindly consideration which civilization would dictate. They forget that this is the twentieth i sometime animals Most citizens, especially on the | border, are not inclined to be mixed ' in such brawls. The appeal, however, does not ap- ply to the main problem that has been agitating the public mind, the | problem of the dangers to which in- | nocent citizens are put by the war on ‘ liquor. Citizens have a right to motor ' along the highways in safety; they r have a right to be unmolested by prohibition agents with guns and the tendency to use them upon the slightest provocation or no provoca- tion at all. Some of them have been sent into eternity when held up by these overzealous minions of the law. Indignant declarations by sur- viving citizens have put the govern- |‘ ment the defensive, and no amount of appealing for law en- forcement assistance solves the dif- ficulty of protecting the lives of in- nocent citizens. Tt is better that the war against rum runners along the border be abandoned altogether than that (he‘ lives of innocent citizens and their families be placed in constant jeopardy. It is better to nullify a law to this extent than to run the risk of shooting citizens who are not identified with those who make a business of rum running. on Visitors to the Towa state fair in future r¢ will see a reproduc- tion of the West Branch birthplace of President Hoover. Wedding Rings Himbaro & Horn Est. 21 Years 10 R. R. Arcade 392 Main St. | there is hope. The | direction of the Facts and Fancies | BY ROBERT QUILLEN Most any modern man is libera) enough not to care if women smoke, just so his own don't. You never see a monument erect- ed to a man who answered all re. marks by saying: “Yeah, that's right.” What is more, a civilization can- not endure half dry and half wet, Now let's have one more mara- thon and see who can tend to his own business the longest. Starvation in China; a great wheat surplus in America. Im some particulars, however, civilization seems sane. He hasn't the true reformer complex unless he gets mad when somebody suggests being reason- able. If the evolutionists are right, woman mean enough to marry for alimony has no progeny. If speed is like war, and neces- sity knows no law, why bother even to call a coroner's jury? But some day you'll be planted \nd then the business will struggle ulong without you. all right. i Americanism: Stepping on the %as to get there quicky being bored for want of something to do when you get there. What a worid! The kid who ones got licked for reading detective stories now reads them to relax his great mind. When two planes run into one an- other, it is pretty awful: but at least the flver's can't hear one an- other say: “It's a small world, after all.” Maybe Lindy took his honeymoon at sea hecause vou needn’'t wait for a corner to dodge on the watei, How odd it seems to call him an efficiency expert when it takes him two hours to eat lunch. When the roll is called up yon der, it won't be the kind of roli that gets you by down here. | i Rum runners across the river at Detroit unmolested. Elsewhere dry agents kill offenders. Apparently | the tariff isn’t t only local lasue. Mr. Heflin has made 97 speeches in the last year Take a rest. Mr Hefiin. You m st be tired, too. 1t you would judge moderns fair- Iy, think how this country would have turned out if the ploneers had been like them. Coriect this sentence: “It will bfe a great comfort to you, mother, said the young man, “and I'm glad you have learnxl to smoke.” Copyright 1929, Publishers Syndicate E;Yr Ha Hae yo heard this one P A grocer in Peebles(one of thz loveliest towns in Scotland by the way, and a great resort of Amer- ican tourists in the summer-time) was known to all the commerciil travelers that called upon him as a very ernicketty” man. One day an English traveller hal found hi min an unusually cheery mood and after thel~ business had been completed the “drummer” thought it would be a good time to broach a little charitable matter. “Look here, Mr. MacTavish,” the ! Englishman proceeded. “One of our Association members has just di-d and left his poor widow in poor cii- cumstances. Would you mind giving me a small subscription to the fund we are raising?"” Without saying a word the grocer handed over a pound. “But this is far too much” ex- claimed the astonished traveller. “If every grocer in the Kingdom gives half a crown there will be an ample fund: Let me give you seventeen | and sixpence change!” “Oh, no, don’t bother, yerself.” replied the grocer. “Just bury anith- er seven o yer English members!™ Flawny (ot 25 Vears Ago Today A class of 65 was graduated from the high school this afternoon. Principal W. C. Akers made the presentation of diplomas. Daniel C. Norton is a member of the graduating class at Dartmouth college. A boom for Congressman E. J. Hill for senator was started at the banquet of the state bankers hefd here yesterday. Citizens of the city have donated | towards the fourth of July celebration which will be under the New Britain Bus- iness Men's association this year. It is planned to open the new theater on the site of the old New Britain opera house by September. There will be no burlesque shows in | the new playhouse. The republicans in this city are elated over the choice of Theodore Roosevelt as the republican candi- Good Lord, deliver us. | From dialect literature, from minor iend all communications to Fun Shop Fditor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be ferwarded to New Vork. A Hint to Housekeepers! In laying in the year's supply Of moth-balls, Folks, let's you and 1 Not pack away our humor, too, We'll need it e'er the summer's through! When She Changes! Harvin: “When does a dream be- come a nightmare?” Bradley: “As soon as you marry her!" WHEN BLACK 1S READ Rhyme to Be Carried in Helene’s Vanity Case When the skies are blue above you, Lady, recollect I love you; When the littl: raindrops wet you, Never think that I'll forget you; Be the weather cool or torrid, Be it fine or be it horrid, ‘Mid the breezes or unruly, I am s&till yours very truly. Clip this vers-, my lady fair, Take it with you everywhere As ubiquitous assurance Of my passion's warm endurancc; Then what I neglect to say (On some very busy day) Will be spoken anyway! —Charles Roger Ciner. ¢« s 0 Shight Mcditation on Natural History! The little birdie in the tree Js just as happy.as can be. The little insect on the flower Improves each gay and shining hour. The silent clam beneath the sand Enjoys himself to beat the band. The alligator in the slime Is having a delightful time. So why should T repine at fate? Be glad, you cry, and emulate The clam, the insect, and the bird! me what T said. You heard! —Alfred Janker Don't ask No Drink Buyer! . “What does Jim Gregg “He's a buyer, except when it comes to drin| W. Handel CTHRRES A MUBICAL NOTE. TWERE, EDDE, THAT WE MIGHT WBE N OUR JAZZ. ORCHESTRA. Among women, loos- ens the tongue. Among men, it loosens the teeth! argument ALMOST ANYBODY'S LITANY By Herbert Clauders From legal holidays coinciding with week-ends, from unexpected visitors, and from persons who think that we ought to take exer- cise, Good Lord, deliver us ¥From hard lead pencils, from neigh- bors, radios, and from the averagc night club crowd, Good Lord, deliver us. From prize-fight talk, from thick sandwiches, and from out-of-town Ruests who want to go to church, poets, and from playing bridge without stakes, Good Lord, deliver us. From amateur Hollandaise sauce. from twice-told tales, and from too much musical criticism, Good Lord. deiiver us. From soiled playing cards, from women on diets, and from persons looking for literary jobs, Good Lord, deliver us. From the servant question, from books with uncut leaves, and from advice for our own good, Good Lord, deliver us. I'rom weak mno-trump bids, from long, pointed finger-naile, and from persons who escaped from Paris in 1914, Good Lord, deliver us. From interpr-tive dancing. from novels about the younger genera- tions, and from too many effusions !of this charac’er, Good Lord. deliver us! They Fall Hard’ Taylor: “You girls seem to (& more out of fat men than thin men. How do you account for it?” Dorothy: “Well, you know the old saying. ‘The bigger they are the harder they fall!" ™ —Henry J. 8wain The Last Straw! A patient landlord who had just attended to a broken drain pipe for one occupant then examined = cracked ceiling for another, and lis- tened to a third's tirade about a cheerless radiator, was called from his chilled supper by a fourth com- plaint This was a flushed woman of nervous temperament who was ob- viously the victim of some heinous mismanagement. The landlord was prepared for the news that a wall had collapsed when the tenant burst date for president. out with her grievance: “I wanted you to know,” ahe said “that 1 was kept awake last night by a cricket!" ! Chorus-Man: One whose fathe: and mother had prayed for a bo; Lost dmatour Standing! Hamilton: “How did Kennedy happen to turn professional ath- lete?” Warner: “The A. A. U. discover- ed that he used to be a sexton.” Hamilton: “What of it?" Warn, “They ruled he was a ‘ringer’ —Ray T. Graham (Copyright 1929. Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer (o any question of fact or informnation by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau. 1422 New York avenue, Washington. D. C., enclosing two cents in stampe for reply. Medical. legal and martial advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sona!l reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are confideutial. —Editor. Q. 1Is it proper to speak of a | setting hen, meaning one that is| hatching eggs? The correct term is “sitting” | hen. What is the largest attend- ance at a baseball and football game? A. The largest attendance at a major league baseball game was 85,265 at a double header, played at the Yankee Stadium in New York City between the New York Yankees and the Philadelphia Athleti 8ep- tember 9, 1928, The largest at- tendance at a football game was 117,000 at the contest between Notre Dame and the United States Naval Academy, at Chicago, October 13, 1928, Q. Would a bullet shot straight up in the air from an ordinary pistol or rifle have force on its downward flight to kill a person? A. Yes. Q. Where are the Alps? A. The mountain chain extends in the form of a crescent from the | Gulf of Genoa westward to the French frontier, northward on the borders of France and Italy, and northeast through Switzerland and western Austria. It is about 850 miles long and varies in width from 30 miles to 160 miles. Q. On what date during the world war did General Allenby en- ter Jernsalem? A. December 11, 1917, Q. 1Is Korea a part of Japan? A. By an imperial Rescript of 1919, Korea is to be treated as in all respects as an integral part of Japan and Koreans are on the same footing as Japanese. Q. What do the names Roberta and Vernon mean? A Roberta means “wise in council”. Vernon means “flourish- ing". Q. What §s a “philomath”? A. One who loves learning. es- pecially mathematics. It is from the Greek. Q. Was the question of social status of the negro one the cauces of the Civil war? A. The two great issues of the Civil war were over the economic questisn of slavery. and the politi- | cal question of the right of a state to mecede from the Union. Both issues were settled by the outcome | of the war. Q. What was the seating capacity | of the hall in Houston, Texaa where | the last democratic convention was held? A, Q the hours numhered from one the of | Detween 15.000 and 20.000. | Are clocks made that have to |y twenty-four? A. Suvch clocks are common on the continent of Europe. Q. How canl wash a chamois Jacket? A. Wash in warm suds to which household ammonia has been added —about 1 teaspoon to a quart of water. Do not rinse - too much. Stretch it to shape while it is damp. Q. Did Germany lose all her colonial possemions as the result of the world war? A. Yes Q. What is the population of the world and of the United States? A. The population of the world is estimated at 1,906,000,000. The 1928 estimated population of the United States is 120,013,000, Q. What is the average daily birth and death rate in the United States? A. Taking the latest birth and death figures and dividing them by 365 shows an average of 5,085 births a day and 2,995 deaths. Q. What is the origin and mean- ing of the name Blanca? A. It is Ttafian from the Teu- tonic, meaning “white". Q. Where and when was Cor- inne Griftith born? A. At Texarkana, Texas, Novem- ber 25, 1897, Observations On The Weather Washington, June 20. ‘orecast for Bouthern New England: Partly cloudy tonight and Friday; xt much change in temperature, Geh- tle variable winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: Mostly fair tonight; Friday increas- ing cloudiness, followed by showers; cooler in late afternoon; moderate variable winds. Condition Pressure is relative- low this morning near the Southern New England coast. It has diminished somewhat through- out the remaining district east of the Mississippi valley, but is increas- ing over the Plains states. Scattered showers and thunder storms were reported over the cen- tral and northern plains states, the uppeér Mississippi valley and upper Ohio valley and in portions of the north, middle and south Atlantic states. Temperatures are slightly cooler this morning in the New England coast sections but continue abnormally high westward to the western portions of the plains states. It is considerably cooler over the Rocky mountains and frost was re- ported from B8heridan, Wyoming. with a minimum temperature of 34 degrees. The highest tetmperature reported yesterday was 108 at Phoenix, Ariz. Conditions favor for this vicinity possibly thunder showers this af- ternoon, followed by partly cloudy weather tonight and Frida; Temperatures yesterday: High ., 90 492 86 4 . T4 . 86 90 82 82 98 82 82 .. 84 . 88 Low 70 70 62 62 68 66 50 52 72 T2 6 56 76 2 Atlanta Atlantic City Boston ..... Buffalo ... Chicago Cincinnati .. Denver Duluth .. Hatteras los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucket .. Nashville Norfolk, Va. . Washington TUNNEY'S FRIEND DIES Confidential Adviser to Retired Heavyweight Champion Passes Away At Poughkeepsie. Poughkeepsie, N. Y., June 20 (LP) —William A. McCabe, confidential adviser to Gene Tunney when Tun. ney was boxing champion of tl world, died at a sanatorium here lete yesterday. McCabe, who was (9 years old, was a close friend of Tun- ney, their acquaintance dating back to the World war. McCabe was also a close friend of John L. Sullivan and was in Sulll. van's corner the night the Boston strong boy fought Jake Kilrain. He was appointed chief of police of Poughkeepsie 20 years ago and was recently named a police come missioner. May McAvoy’'s Wedding Plans Are Discovered Los Angeles, June 20 UP—Wed- ding plans of May McAvoy, film star, were no longer a secret today. The actress and the prospective groom, Maurice G. Cleary, Beverly Hillg broker, were confronted with a bat« tery of newspaper cameras yesterday when they went to the county licen: bureau. Miss McAvoy expressed surprise, then smilingly obliged reporters by removing her disguise of dark glasses. She registered as 25 years old while Cleary gave his age as 31. ‘With the secret out, the couple announced that the wedding would take place June 26 in a Beverly Hills church. Lois Wilson, film actress, is to be maid of honor, and ' Arnold Hangar, Richmond, Ky., best man, Summer Months Hard on Stomach Sufferers Natural Relief from Herbal Compound How much suffering a weak stom- ach can cause! - Painful Pl. ‘bloat- T, enough af but when exlmu‘:fn; ummer heat is added, strength is drained from the sturdiest body. But here is one of many thou- sands who found & way to relief: Mrs. Dora Robillard, of Bellingha Mass., R.F. D, 1, Box 17, says: "I ha no digestion nor appetite, Sick head- aches laid me up in bed three dnz- ata time. I couldn’t even do light house- work, Now I do all our cooking and washing in addition to the other work.” It's never too late to try Tanlae. So go to your druggist now and get a bottle, No al drugs— only Nature’s own medicinal herbs, but its efficacy is so apparent that often only one bottle is needed to bring desired relief. Money back if it doesn’t help. Tanlac 52 MILLION BOTILES USED' YOUR BABY IN SUMMERTINE Summertime is here. The hot days are ahead. Summer is the hardest time for young bubies. It is then that mothers ought to know how to pro- tect their little ones from the illa that come in the hot months. Our Wash- ivgton Bureau has ready for you an authoritative bulletin, compiled from U. S. Government wources, the coupon below and send for it on the Care of Infants in SBummertime. Fill out It may save your baby from serious iliness. = = = wm e= =CLIP COUPON HERE == == o= o= = | ma (s s 1322 New York Avenue. NAME STREET AND NUMBER Ty BIES EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, Washington, D. C. 1 want a copy of the bulletin CARE OF INFANTS IN SUMMERTIME five cents in coin for postage and handling costs: or louse, uncancelied, U. 8. STATE I am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. West Toonerville News Item By Fontaine Fox THE DWARF ESCORTED THE POWERFUL KATRINKA HOME FROM THE MOVIES HOLDING HIS UMBRELLA OVER HER ALL THE WAY

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