Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
° _Yudges, and without & jury, as is UERALD PUBLISNING COMPANTY Teyoed (Bundey Bscepted) nliumfim-nn RATES 800 o Jear $3.99 Three Moeathe T5e 8 Moath he Post Ofice st Now Britata profitable sdvertising medium h’l‘h" ‘&'-’, Circulation books and press Toom always epen to advertisers. Momber of the Assecisted Prese The Amsmciated Press io exciusively ea- titled to the wes for re-publication of sll nws credited to it er mot otherwise oredited in this paper sad aise lucel wows published therein. Asdit Buress of Circslation which fursishes tigere with & sirculation. Our circulstion Sased upem this swdit. This insures pro- tection fravd die- n newspaper tributien figures te both national and | local sdvertisers wle dally ta New 18 1 Hhe Ny e Newsstand, Times York Hetall ' Sqeare; Schults's Newsstanda, Eatrasce *' Grand Cestral ¢3md Street. S Looks as if the West End fire sta- tion will cest more money than was anticipated. Which will mean the an- nual instaliments will be larger. I the Sunday afternoon movie ‘ opening project were an jssue be- tween the theater magnates and the clorgymen there would be sense to postponing the hearing because some of the clergymen will be away dur- ing the summer. We thought it was an issue between the theaters and the public. DI BATTISTA QUICKLY HWEARS HIS DOOM Cennecticut justice showed itself a8 lively & product as the best of Justice in any other state or even in Great Britain in the case of Frank Di Bettita. This youth of 25 killed Samuet Kamaroff, a grocer, on April 1, and today he stands sentenced to die on the gallows on August 15. If there i3 virtue In quick trials and speedy punishment Connecticut in this case has given an example. This case was decided by three | permissible under the Connecticut law when the defendant so elects. ‘Though it is deubtful whether con- viction by & jury would have been quicker, there is scarcely,a doubt that & jury would have come to the same conclusion as the three judges. Di Battista committed murder in ‘cold bleed while in the act of hold- ing up the grocer, and there wers? ho extenuating circumstances. NEED PFOR SWIMMING POOL -IN FIFTH WARD A communication in this news- Daper called attention to the fact that the ehildren in the fifth ward lack 8 swimming poel. We believe the com- Dlsint 15 well founded and that the park beard should lose no time in Ppreviding such a peol. Objectien by the fifth warders to Desutification in Stanley Quarter Park, however, is not well founded. The city can well afford to make that park, and every other park, as beautiful as poasible. The communi- " cation declared a spot known as . Bwanson's pend, with contiguous + land, can be purchased for park pur- Doses at a reapenable price. If 20, why net? The city should let no op- portunity escape to purchase any plet in any section of the city for _ Perk purposes if it can be had at a reasepsble price and if it meets with & public need. City Hall should Bever censider itself too poor to look after fts citisens; and that most | , assuredly includes the children of | Ccitizens in the Afth ward. | picture painted by our con- of children In the fifth ward on the curb stones and hav- | Mo place in which to play ex- | . ©ept the public streets is a well merited reflection upon the city. That is ne way to treat the children | of citisens merely because they are | poor, or because their parents work | in the factories. | et there be mere kicking in the fifth ward until semething is done | about this pressing probdlem. We are | in & mond to assist at every ‘ppor- . tunity. | parks, and such AN AMBASSADOR WHO STICKS TO SIMPLICITY At last, an ambassador to Great Britain who does not think it neces- sary to appear before the king and queen in silk knee breaches and | patent leather shoes with silver buckles. ‘When an American ambassader to the court of the king of Afghanistan ‘wears ordinary raiment the king of Afghanistan i8 well satisfied and @oes not declare war. | The American ambassador to the Court of 8t. James's should not need to be ordcred to dress himself in ancient costumes in order to look presentable. | ‘Whea the British ambassador in Washington is presented to the President and Mra Hoover nobody specifies he should be dressed in | colonial costume. | | hundreds of well learn how. Argument is good for the mind. And for the dessemination of knowledge. ‘The statements made by Alderman Walter R. Falk, following his experi- ence as mayor pro tem. and the re- plies by City Engineer P. A. Merian, waere of the sort to pique curiesity. 1Is or is the city not wasting money in hiring equipment for street work? It may be easy to come to a sup- posed conclusion predicated upon political preferences. But that is no worthy conclusion, being merely one of those things related to a party label. Our belief is Mr. Merian had the best of the discussion, and for this reasen: It is cheaper for the city to hire equipment it only needs a amall part of the time from contractors who use it all the time. It is like a firm which buys sev- eral hundred dollars worth of print- ing a year. It would be considered wasteful if it installed its own print. ing shop. But the terms of hiring trucks must be reasonable. On this poeint there remains a doubt. WE TAKE PRIDE IN = THE CITY HALL How many residents of New Brit- ain knew that the City Hall—for. merly the Russwin hotel, is one of the best proportioned buildings in country? Not many. Of course, al- most all of us have considered it a there is something about its structural lines handsome building, that that separate it from the average building. Now we know, from an article in Scribner’s, that it was the masterpiece of Joseph M. Wells, a coadjutor of the famous architectur- al firm of McKim, Mead and White —the latter no other than Stanford White, whose life was ended by a bullet from a gun held by Harry Thaw. ‘We are not all architects; and worse still, too many of us cannot even surmise what is perfect archi- tecture, depending upon the opinions of experts as a guide. But there are few of us who cannot sense, at least in some small measure, whether a building is worthy of be- ing classed as architecturally ott. standing. Some of us have felt this way about the Russwin building, not- ing the exquisite proportion of its lines and the beauty of its defails; but it was only a feeling, a faint emotien, and not based upon expert knoewledge. Now we know what others of note think about the build- ing, and that can have no other effect than to cause us to appreciate the distinguished old structure a lit- tle more than we have been doing. PLAYING UP THE WRONG LURE FOR VACATIONISTS It was about a month ago that the New England Council, endeavoring to discover what tourists and va- cationists liked about New England. sent out a questionnaire and learned that the preponderating joy hinged upon New England's “scenery.” Beme of the New England railroad vacation guides need to find this out. One of these guide-books which came inte our hands the other day had €0 or more pages. Most of it was devoted to pictures of hotels instead of acenery. ‘Which is good as far as it goes, but doesn’t include much of the very thing that people come to New Eng- land to experience. Living in a hotel is no doubt a happy experience, but one does not need to go far from the old heme town in order to do that. ‘What tourists visit New England for see the scenery they about; the mountains, the lakes, the rock- bound seashore. They don't come to New England because there are hotels mentioned and pictured in some railroad folder. We do not hesitate to refer the New England railroads the folders issued by the interests operating the vacation industry in is to have read the great and far west. The book- | lets are filled with pictures of things to enjoy, mountain scenery, trails, mountain roads, great natural like. The pictures and the descriptions of this offer the chief lure. not pictures of hotels. 1t New England is going in for the | vacation lure industry it might as The New England Council gave suggestions after its questionnaire. Some of the booklets in circulation do not contain a singte picture or a paragraph of descrip- tion about the New England. natural scenery of AUST A LITTLE DELAY IN PROBING WATERBURY The finances of Waterbury, which give the impression sailors on shore leave are having a good time with the captain’s moncy. are to be in- vestigated by a special commission appointed by the governor, pursuant |0 an act passed by the recent Leg- isluture, The Waterbury Republican scems to think there was too much delay in appointing the commission. and that considerable political see-saw- ing must have been going on since the Legislature authorized the com. mission. The paper points out, too, that among the commissioners is NEW BRITATN DATLY RERALD. THURSDAY, JUNE 71, Attorney Frank P. McEvey, whe i Mayer Guilfeile’s brother-in-law, “Friends of the administratién will welcome this inclusion of ene who can be depended upon to watch out carefully for the interests of the mayor and an administration in which he has taken a friendly fam- ily interest,” says the paper. The delay in appointing the com- mission, & the editer, naturally will delay its final report. As a con. sequence ne report will be available at a time when it would do the most good—in time to be of use as a guide in the pelitical campaign which will soon take shape in Waterbury to determine who will manage its muncipal affairs for the next two years. Meanwhile it is now definitely known—and a fact brought out while the governor hesitated about who to appoint on the commission— that the actual deficit of Waterbury is between $1,500,000 and $2,000,000. The mayor's forces no doubt will claim this is more in the nature of an estimate and that the deficit isn't as large as the lesser of the two figures mentioned. The governor's commission doubt- less will be able to discover the true state of the deficit to the last penny. and then, three years from new, there can be an election about it— i nothing else pops up in the politi- cal arena in Waterbury. WHEN HIGRWAY COSTS BEGIN TO ALARM In the belief that anything having to do with new highways, road costs and gasoline taxes is of wide popular interest, T. R. Agg. profese sor of highway engineering in the Towa State College, has written a piece for the Engineering News- Record. Our hair having stood on end at the engineering and financial fore- casts, we take the trouble to pass a whift of it along for general con- sumption, 3 In the future, according to the professor, the country will have to spend on an average twice as much for road improvements every year as pent during 1 egardless of the widely current belief that with new highways being constantly bullt the saturation point will seén have been reached. According to the pro- fessor, there will be need for many times as many thousands of miles of new highways as the most sanguine autoist thinks necessary—at least, thal the impression one gets from his thesis. The funds fér this saturnalia of new highways, he opines, must come frem the following sources: Increased federal wid. Increased taxes on hicles. Increase in the gas tax with § cents per gallon as the maximum, this money to be used entirely for state and inter-state roads. State taxes to supplement taxes for local roads. Increase in the use of bonds, these to be retired after the highway sys- tems have reached the stage where new construction will decline. Use of special assessments and excess condemnation where marked in- creases in property values will result from improvement projécts. heavier ve. local different sources for highway funds. In the last analysis, however, all the money comes from the same source: From the pockets of the people. It matters little whether it is paid out through state, federal or gasoline tax sources—it springs from what the people earn to pay. It will surprise the pay-as-you. goers in Nutmegia that the profes- sor believes bond issues will be of growing importance in the manufac- ture of new highways. 8entiment in various states, he says, is veering to | bonds. “Headed by a proposed issue {of 225 milllon dollars in Texas." he says. “bond issues to be voted on in i 1929 probably will total one-half bil- | lion dollars.” | to some ol[ | A COUNTY LEADER IN GOOD HIGHWAYS It is said of Westchester county, New York, that it is determined to | maintain its lead as the model for | good road construction threughout | the United States; and likewise be a model of foresightedness and | method. Tts most recent effert in | road building will be the expenditure |‘ol $35,000,000—not necessarily on the “pay as you go" principle. As this vast program is unfolded 1—anhau'h it is merely an addition {to an already magnificent county road systcem—one learns that the Connecticut system of widening roads by destroying magnificent old eims and even removing houses {where a little readjustment would | have made this unnecessary, will net be followed. !fails to appeal ! authorities | Grade crossings will be avoided wherever possible, which is natural in the construction of modern high- ways; but when ore discovers that i this alse includes the avoidance of ' grade crossings with other highway one comes to a realization that this is something that could be adopted i to the profit of traffic almost every- | where. An example of how this I8 done is already in existence along the Bronx River Parkway, wherd ]there are overhead crossings where | | Such & crude system toe Westchester All of which sounds as if there are | ) two lines of trafic méet but de net join. Tt ls necessary, of courss, in most instances to provide for access from ene highway to the other, but that is still possible without permit- ting the main lines of traffic to cross at grade. This is something that needs more diligent study in Connecticut. Another plan in Westchester is to provide for parking eff, not on, the main highways. Parked cars or trucks along a main highway lead to accidents, even when the roads are wide. The Westchester plan does away with such hazards. Thousands of Conecticut motorists are familiar with the main highways of Westchester, passing over them en route to New York. They can note for themselves how road construce tion in this county is being done on the most lavish, foresighted and most efficient acale. It has become & laboratory for advanced road technic. Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN The success of the talkies proves that a hungry man will eat tough meat if you deny him the other Kind. The secret of success? Well, a home run is just a pop-fly with a little more energy behind it. “The successful farmer rafses everything he needs.” Including plow hands. Chase adorns the new $10,000 Lills. But as a rule, people who get money of that size get it with- out a chase. Pyorrhea isn't a specific disease. It's just whatcver you have that necessitates $185 worth of work. It's still a hick town if you can recognize Saturday by the number of cars on the street. The cross-word puzzle is about gone, but anyway it wasn't as much fun as trying t6 guess what the talkie is saying. All the supreme court need do to make its embargo against pacifists absolute is to extend Jurisdiction to the stork, War will end sometime. Dactors quit bleeding patients to cure ty- phoid when they found out it didn't work, Americanism: Denouncing an un. tidy neighbor; cleaning your own rremises with great enthusiasm and sweeping the dirt béhind the door. As we understand the Hearst prize winner, it won't hurt to pe run over by a fool driver if he ‘s drunk on mcrc wine, Uncle S8am isn’t really a Shylock. The three balls that reveail his oc- cupation are base, tennis and golf Lalls. If metropolitans are o superior, why is the most popular colyum the one that sounds like a sewing clrcle? You don’t need lessons by mail to develop will power. Just practice passing a crowd without stopping to investigate. Mr. Coolidge while fishing. while telling. sprained Ueually it s arm is doue Men fivers have beatcn homer pigeons in a race, but pigcons still lead in the relative number® of landings mace on purpose. Feru and Chile can cement their fricndship by means of competition sports if they can rrronze some way to have the same number of winners. Mr. Blease is determined to make foreign diplomats dry, so evidently there is somebody else there who jcan be counted on for free drinks. Correct this sentence: “If that was my teath,” said dad to daugh. fer, “I wouldn't neglect it another day."” ‘Comri:hf 1924, Publishers 8yrdicate 25 Years ;go Today P. F. McDonough, George E. Mix, | Stuart W. Parsons and Hagope Koo- |jumjian of this city were awarded |degrees at Yale college yesterday. The police department met with disaster yesterday in its attempt te | get horses for the parade. The horse selected for Officer Lampher was so small that the policeman's feet xl- most touched the ground when he mounted the animal. Justus A. Traut was clected presi- ident of the New Britain General hospital association yesterday. 8. P. Thresher. former secretasy |of the State Law and Order league, |i8 visiting friends in this city. A meeting of the selectmen will be held today to consider the ap- | propriation of $7.000 for the new Osgood Hill school. The A, O. H. will hold a picnic |and field day at Rentchler's park | Saturday. Ladies will be admitted free. | Frederick G. Platt of this eity {was appointed a member of the na- |tional committee from Connecticut |at the prohibition convention in In- dianapolis yesterday. John Sullivan fell from Tom |Dunn’s cherry tree this morning an 1 was$ unconscious for half an heur. The boy's cempanions hecame scar- ed and thinking that he was dyingz, summoned Father Fay. fa el = R e A RS ML, NO DULL SUMMER DAYS i for Ethel “She has @ busk!” from the BEACON Book and Gift Shop Lending Vibrary 5 West Matn St. Some people like ‘a ferry boat, But when we've leisure hours to while We always take the merry boat From Care to Humer's happy isle! Safety Measure! Uncle Ezra: “Benn Hoskins tells me he's off tobaccy. Wonder if he got the reform bug after all these years?” Uncle Fred: “Nope. He'd got to makin' his jaws go so fast that the friction was igniting his whiskers)” THE DOCTOR! By Robert N. Fischer | Nowadays there's little meaning For a person to be gleaning When a man attaches “Doctor” to his name— He may be a chiropractor Or a painless tooth extractor— He's entitled to the title’ just same. the Or perhaps he is a preacher Or a lecturer or teacher, Or an expert who cures chickens of the pip; He may keep & home for rummies, Or massage fat people’s tummies, Or apecislize in ailments of the hip. Everybody is a “doctor,” From the backwoods herb-con- cocter (or) To the man who takes the bunions from your toes; From the frowning dieticlan To the snappy electrician Who shocks yon loose from all the body's woss. . So there's very little meaning For a sufferer to be gleaning When a man attaches “Doctor” to his name, He may pound you, he may starve you, He may cut your hair or carve you, You have got to call him Doctor all the same! BOTH PG DOGS — “1 WONDER WHAT'S WOLDING ME BACK ! " Ne Disturbance? ‘Was it a quiet wedding “Yes. Her father satis- creditors just before the cercmony!™ —DMother R. THOUGHTS— While Minding a slecping Infant Belonging to Someone FElse By Walter Willlam Wolr Well, this isn't bad, just sitting here in the next room. Wondcr if it is going to wake up. Its mother didn’t say anything about that. Wonder what I'd better do if it does wake up. Maybe I could make it stop crying by making faces at it. Wonder what that noise i8? Sounds like a baby, but any newse would sound like a baby to me now, the condition I'm in. Cats make noises like babiss — wonder if it is a cat. Guess 1 will have to throw = shoe. Funny vou throw shoes at cats, but not at babies. Maybe it isn't a cat. Maybe I better open baby's door softly and peek in. Yes, and maybe 1 better not, too! Well, why did they ‘'cave me here, any- way, as long as 1 wouldn't Kknow what to do even if it did wake up? I think I'll go in the bathroom and shave. Might take my mind off babies. Wonder why they leave its ghees on the washbowl. Not a bad place, though, at that. Bables certainly have tiny feet. Wonder if it is really asleep. Wonder if it tiny dreams, too. Suppose it's any fun being a baby? I wish this baby's father used the same kind of safety razor that 1 do. Different shaving cream, toe! Funny taste some babies’ fathers have. Wonder if the noise of run. ning water wakes babies. Suppose just when T get lathered up the apartment catches fire! Worth the chance to get this beard off. Wonder if I'll ever have a baby? Now, what an idea! Men don’t have bahics, exactly. I think T would like 2 baby. So many unmarried women have told me they loved babies. I always discount it heavily. Why is a bathroom such a norsy place? Wonder if it heard me drop that woap dish. My Geod, it did! Now what'll I do? TOPSY TURVY! Hughes: “Things are just the op- posite of what they used to be years ago." Blair: “You're right. We've got | a fircless cooker and an icelees re- | frigerator:" —Mildred Pels. ORANGE JUICE! Our sympathy was appropriately expressed on last Saturday to one 1of our most corpulent acquaintances who had gone to a doetor about his | weight and had been ordered upon a four-day fast. A glass of orange Juice twice a day-—nothing more. On the evening of the third the gentieman awoke from a nap fn Which he had dreamed that a thick, medium-rare beéfsteak haa been set before him. Restiessly he went for a stroll in the park, cast ing hungry, covetous glances at every youth with a peanut and every babe with a nursing bettle. Suddenly he was accosted by an in- dividual who said: “Say boss, you ceuldn't give a poor felldw asdime, could you? 1 haven't had anything to eat sinca this moraing." BOTH LOADED! Mrs. Kress: “My husband arrived home last night just as a burglar was carrying away a lead.” Mrs. Harvin: “Did your husband stop him?" Mrs. Kress: * lead, too!™ , George had a —C. T. Lee. (Copyright 1929. Reproduction Forbidden.) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer (o 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 recejve per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be unswered. All letters are confideutial, —Editor. Q. When were the first quarter dollars coined? A, 1796, Q. What was the official de- cision in the Dempsey-Willard fight at Toledo, Ohio, July ¢, 1919? A. That Dempsey was the win. ner by a knockout in three rounds. Willard finished out the third round, but was unable to answer the. bell for the fourth round, and the referee declared Dempsey the win- ner. Q. How can rust be removed from a hot water system in a pri- vate dwelling? A, The most practical material for removing rust is soda ash (anhydrous sodium carbonate). The system should be filled with a solu- tion of this material containing about 4 pounds per 100 gallon A very light fire and only enough pressure should be maintained to keep the water iIn circulation. Usually 24 hours heating is suffi- cient. The system should then be emptied and rinsed out with clean water. Where the piping is severe- ly clogged with rust it may be necessary to resort to the use of acid. Q. Who played the title role in the French fillm, “Napeleon?” A. Albert Dieungnne. Q. What te the names Elsa and Frederick mean? A. Elsa means “mirthful” Frederick, “peaceful ruler.” Q. On what days of the week did March 30 and April 15, 1909, fall? A. Tuesday and Thursday, re- spectively. Q. On what date Sunday fall in 1923? A April 1. Q. Where is the copyright office of the United States? ~A. At the Library of Congress, Washington, D. C. Q. How many apples can a man pick In one day? A. The Rural New Yorker says that “the quantity picked per day will depend largely on the character of the tree, whether high or low headed; how hcavily the tree may be loaded; the kird of apples, small or large; how well the job is done. We have heard of men picking 50 barrels, but both fruit and trees are sure to be damaged by such slam- bang work. One of the best com- mercial growers we know of insists that an average of 10 or 12 barrels per day per man is enough: It is not a matter of clawing off the and did Easter Pathetic Figures ($Pomane Por. 1029 Sunday? A. Rutherford B. Hayes is the only president who took th Sunday, March ¢, 1877, cases where the fourth of Marel foll on Sunday the oath was taken on Monday, namely, the secend in- augural of James Monros, March §, 1821; Zachary Taylor, March §, 1917, Q. What'is a good cement for marble? A. An excellent cement consists of 4 parts of gypsum and 1 part of finely powdered gum arabic. Mix intimately. Then with a celd solu- tien of borax make into a mortar like mass. Smear on each face of the parts to be joined, and fasten the marble together. In mending colored marbles the cement may be gliven the hue of the marble by addinx the coler to the borax solu- lon. " Q. Has Russia had any capitals except 8t. Petersburg and Moscow since the world war? A. No. The name St. Peters- burg, however, was changed to Petrograd at the beginning of the war—and it is now called Lenin. grad. Q. What is the theme song of the motion picture “Outcast A. ‘“Another Kiss" by Victer Schertzinger. Q. Who is president of the Re- public of Liberia ? A, Charles D. B. King. a native born Liberian negro. . Who “coined the phrase “America the Melting Pot?” A. Israel Zangwill in his book bearing that title. Q. What does the phrase “Pro Bono Publice” mean? A. For the good of the public. Q. Can iodine stains be removed from upholstery? A. If the stain is old it will be very difficult, perhaps impossible, to remove it. 'The best chance is to try sponging repeatedly with dilute ammonia. He is Observations On The Weather Washington, June 27.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair tonight and Friday; warmer Fri- day; gentle northwest winds shift- ing to southerly. Forecast for Eastern New York: Iair tonight; Friday increasing cloudineas followed by showers in afternoon or night; slightly warmer in north and west portions tonight; gentle variable winds. Conditions: Pressure is high over the middle and south Atlantic states. Showery areas prevall in portions of the southern states and over scat- tered areas of the central and nerthern Plains states but continue without much change elsewhere. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with moderate tem- perature and pleasant humidity. Temperatures yesterday: High Low 68 64 62 54 62 62 58 46 Atlanta Atlantic City Boston . Buffalo Chicago . Cincinnati Denver . Duluth . In a village in the south o church elder was admonishing & female member of nis “district” for indulging in strong drink, He was not getting & kindly reception frem the lady, who was known to have * very ready and bitmug tongue. “¥ou know, Barah, fly from temptation,” elder. “Ach, flee yersel’, womct. “But, my dear Sarah, all the village knows that I have flown,” meekly replied the elder. “Aweel, Jawmie Broon,” came back the answer, “by the look o ye' ye auld carl, ye wad be ngne ;:u w:om o' glen yer wings anithep you should urged the grunted the Two Light Cruisers Offered for Sale Washington, June 27 (M—Two de- commissioned light cruisers, the New Orleans and the Albany, no longer it for naval service, are to be offere ed for sale by the navy. The ships were purchased during the Spanish-American war from the Brazillan government, The New Or- leans participated in the engage. ment oft Santiago, Cuba, against Cervera’s squadron. The Albany saw service in several expeditions to Cen- tral America during the first decade of the century. They were used to escort convoys out of New York dur- ing the World war, and were de. commissioned in 1922. AUTO BUMPER RIPPED OFF Officer Delbert Veley received & complaint at 2:50 yesterday afters noon from K. Miller of 201 Dixwell avenue, New Haven, that his auto- mobile was struck while parked in front of a store 2t 405 Main street and one end of the front bumper was snapped off. The ofticer learned from a clerk in a nearby store that a man inquired for the owner of the automobile, but his identity was not learned. POPULAR WOMEN Who is your favorite star amoeng the women of the screan? slie get in the pictures? Are her ey brunette? Where c formatiol you write to lier? You wil in_the mew bulletin that bington Hureau entitied *‘Popular aphies of twenty-feur of the most You will find it interesting. 19 she married or single? W OF TAE SCREEN How did really hlue? 1Is she a blende or t are some of her best pictu Il find this and other interesting has bheen prepared for you by our Women of the Screen. popular women on t| - = = = = = (LIP COUPON HERS == == o= -—--] | MOVIE EDITOR. Washington Burea 1322 New York Avenue, I cnclose herewith five cents in coin, | stamps, to cover postage and hand NAME I STREET AND NUMBER ST Washington, 1 want a copy of the bulletin “Popular Women of the Screen™ u, New Britain Herald, D C and or loose, uncancelled U. 8. posage ling costs ATE I am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. R