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8 New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tasued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg.. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 & Year $2.00 Thres Months 5. Entered at ths Post Office at New Britaln » Second Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONE CALLS Business Offic Editorial Ruoms s The only profitable advertising mediumn In the City. Circulation buoks and press room always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Pres The Associated Prems is exclusively en titled to the uss for re-publication of all news credited to 1t or not otherwise credited in this paper =nd also local news published therei; 8 Monthfi, New preferred to regard the stalistics as embracing everything in the police departments, this being less hikely |to lead the errors than any other way. Police |the maximum of protection; in an | for instance. Certainly Britain, protection must lnrludc‘ | emergency, should the emer- | | gency arise, all the 40 supernumer- | aries could be added to the regular 12 officials and 74 that in a grand total of 126 men | police force of patrolmen, so there would | reality be forming the city's protection. What Mr. to McGrail evidently wish- es emphasize, and somethinr with which we heartily agree, is that New Britain, compared with its population, is be the 1t the police force of average for other cities. | has been this way for a long time, Member Audit Burean of Circulation The A. B. C. is & national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly honest analysis of circulation. Our eirculation statistics are based upon this audit. This ineures pro- tection against traud In newspaper di tribution figures to botb national and | local advertisers. The flerald 1s on sale dally in New York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Times | Square; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central, 42nd Street. One of the bad features about the Fifth, Fourth is the is About the first thing that played out yesterday was patience. “Do you want to go automobiling | shooting off tirecrackers daddy asked his young hopeful. “Gimme the fire- But the of or spend your time a fond crackers," said the youngster. the daddy had already spent day’s budget full gasoline, so that settled that. for a suply Now that the myth of the barbed wire fence along the Dborder of Canada has been exploded, the of- | ficials of the barbed wire fence factories will have to return to hop- ing that the farm relief law in- duces farmers to buy more of their product. Strawberries are said to be rich in vitamins; but there is no good reason to prefer them as often as possible. An expert says it is harder to eat for the purpose of taking on flesh than to reduce. That reminds us that we always did think fat men were heroes. o From the police department “e‘ have received a letter, signed by the genial clerk of the police hoard.; Joseph A. McGrail, referring to our comparisons the other day regardi- ing the amount of police protection | in New Britain compared with such | protection in other cities. | Our correspondent says the fig- ures are correct—which is no sur- | prise to us considering the cautious | to handle the 40 manner in which we tr | should } i i he thinks policemen statistics—but supernumerary not be included in figuring the actu- the police to wit: 21 protection given by department. His words, “Your statement regarding the| numerical strength of the New Brit- ain police department is correet. but it must be borne in mind (hdti the 40 supernumerary policeme: | are not at all times employed: they | are only employed when vacancies | occur in the regular ranks, caused by gickness, vacations, etc. Consequently you should have used the number of | men in the regular department in your computation, namely, §6 — 12 officials and 74 patrolmen. “Statistics show that in the larger cities the ratio patrolman to 500 inhabitants are far below this quota. We only 74 patrolmen, and rn a basis o 75.000 population the ratio is ap- | proximately 1 to 1,000.” most 1s of one We have wh far as rfectly reason- Indecd All of able as thought of to include the pe goes we whether 1t was proper supernum the rary the tim previous edi- The supernumer- ficers at written decision the was no d torial was to aries because came include efinite information that the aries—under whi be known in other cities — ed McGrail may inclu statistics Mr. given no d this point, he assuming were not in the at hand. himself has finite infor on po- other ¢ lice statistics from luded only those actu the city. W mentioned it ally patrolling coula not make any sumption for purp “police protection ses of editorializing able protection specifically detailed the statistics clerk goes to the The police extreme by not includ the “We on ion 1 100 popul local protec e only patroln have a basis of 75 ratio Which is correct is the cities s approxin certainty which were retual mer list interpre “protection” ferring 1o patrolmen alone Unless there and cities ¢ officials not inch 1s the deta of officers patrolmen for the tioned there no proof regarding what thod of ation used. why, me of compu was one of the ons in we | making comparisons, | proved any morals, and though there has been a slight the ains below the average. | improvement past year, it still SQUELCHING THE FLAME IN FLAMING YOUTH Youthful morals must served and be con- protected; and so there problem. Police and moral welfare organizations in Mas- | is another sachusetts, having them that seen cnough the “overnight which are alleged to dot the highways are a 1o ! convince camps” to the | vouth of the land, want something menace done about a situation that has de- | veloped with the ability of flaming youth to use automobiles to get |away from the restrictions of regu- lated and regimented social customs. The situation in Massachusetts, we discover to our amazement, is now us bad as in the other New England states; and this because, like in the other states mentioned, there is no law to devil at his circumvent the worst, Parties out for a good | said to motor to time are alongside | the highways and there engage ac- commodations for as long as their cabins spare time will allow. No questions are asked. No law applies. This con- dition pertains to New England as a whole, is the complaint, and there |is much agitation here and yon about it. When the legislature meets |again it will be asked to pass a law |to control the situation. It seems to us (hat Boston, where the literary police department sors the books allowed to be in its stores, and troupes are not allowed cen- sola where traveling to carry on as is done elsewhere, should by this time be inclined to do without such immoral amusements as those at present furnishing the agitation. The Watch and Ward society, too, | has operated in Boston for a gener- ation or more, and if it has had any influence at all one would think it long ago succeeded in turning the minds of citizens from badness to light. But on turning to the amusement page ads in the Boston Post one gets an idea that wild life tn Bos- ton is wilder than almost anywhere else. In the issue of July 3 there were ads telling all about all night dancing celebrations, dancing and frolics at places until 4 a. m., at dancing till midnight and then a “frolic” until 4 a. m., or later. The dance ads take up much more space than any other type of amusement ads. All of which leads to the conclu- sion that generations of moral wel- faring around Boston hasn't And that the legislature, if it joins, do good either. There is some- im- won't much ng about the situation {hat is en- tirely beyond control. And maybe it bad the busybodies isn't as as paint it. HUMBUG IN THE AIR Endurance tests for airplancs are one's becoming SO numerous appe- tite for this type of exploit is be- coming a bit passive. When the first bicycle was held years ago public in- Thou- six-day rac was at a high pitch. although thought the participants were fools, to see the grind, or portions of it could in during an evening's visit. terest sands of people, they, paid money such as they m Nowadays nobody embers the names of of the muscular cy- clists who won any of these races a any generation The ago. airplane endurs ts are beginning to wane in the same man- ner. Scarcely is one of them over when another starts; and sometimes was the case this week, they when several are under a to our dovetail the same ators otion. should ont something comy ely nov- Tist ‘Wane. sShfe icommoan 1g. for Insta LP POWER REGULATION Utilities Commis- GOBBLING BEFORE U. That S a sion wi formed by (‘ongress be- taken for superhuman efforts are being made by the large con to ohtain contro before federal congressmen re enough {but moguis plenty of warning about what they have given the power | much, except | triendly | New | dizzy watching the proceedings; | federal NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, JULY 5, 1929. is purposed, warnings which these have not hesitated to accept at their face By the time the pro- posed Federal Utilities Commission is a reality the power resources of the nation will be pretty thoroughly in the hands of the monster con- value. cerns being formed. That also explains the remarkable activity At is being mani- fested in respect to all other issues, the stocks electric time, utility stocks lately. when caution electric e been most active. The knowledge is widespread the market for all the little fellows that that the hig concerns are in can be gobbled up, that action so-called trusts are to gain their mastery be- is imperative it the power fore the federal government begins its proposed regulation, and that money is not exactly an object. The hurry toward amalgamation is noticeable in Connecticut as else- where. The Connecticut Electric Service Co., which is linked with powerful Philadelphia power inter- ests and incidentally is one of J. Henry Roraback's pet companies, | took over the Northern Connecticut Power Co. week. The at Windsor Locks this in itself that an power site is included; but it is only one of many such deals be- ing chronicled. deal is not so The wildest scramble in New Eng- land for independent companies is taking place in Massachusetts, where law and sentiment has particularly favorable to been the inde- i pendents. Efforts are under way to | gobble up the smallest concerns as well as the biggest, the stockholders are dizzy contemplating the figures as they hesitate to let go their con- trol. Most of the stock of these in- | dependent concerns is closely held, and opposition to the combines is widespread. big power eventually is expected to talk loud enough to pry loose the stock. The New England Power Co. is said to be offering $130 a share for the At- tleboro Steam and Electric Co., a huge advance over the market price. At the same time the power com- bine is out after the big Edison Co. of Boston, despite spirited opposi- tion by bankers and others who wish to keep control in the home city. Of course, the New Englana Power Co. is linked with a regular chain of power trusts, being among other things a subsidiary of the Tn- ternational Paper and Power (o. Some bankers think the I. P. & P. Co. will eventually be swallowed up by the United Company, great Morgan combine formed, which is expected recently to get control of all the great power com- panies of New York, Eastern England. New Jersey, Pennsylvania and New In addition there is a agreement between England Power Co. and the Koppers Company, a Mellon con- cern, regarding New England activl- the |ties, although for propaganda pur- poses it is claimed that they fighting each other at times for the control of independent concerns, as are was the case when an attempt was made to get control setts Gas. Wall street is said of Massachu- to be getting to keep track of the multifarious com- panies involved in deals, attempted deals and their identification with national power interests would near- ly require a private secretary. The reason is so self-evident, now prevent sentiment in Congress for regulations has apparently failed, that no one any longer is be- ng deceived about the prospects. Before Congress trots out its regu- latory system there will only be a few monster concerns to regulate: | pro- | and the forecasts of certain gressive senators a year or o ago, that the time is rapidly approaching when the power interests of ths country will be joined into one or two huge concerns, will have been realized. What ‘are we going to do about it? Simply nothing. Congress simply | hasn't acted swiftly enough. It will act, without question; by locking the garage door after the automobile is gone. Meanwhile the question naturally presents itself as to who is to pay the inflated prices which the trust companies are offering for the in- | dependent concerns? Our guess is that cventually the public will pay these figures, regardless of the fed- eral regulation to come, MARRIAGE A LA CARTE great mind of Eugene O'Neill idied and has come to certain conclusions has this marriage situation which may or may not jibe with the conclusions of others. America's playwright, rced by his wife in the complacent premier in being di- dlvorce courts of Reno, was stated to have made agreement at an their marriage that whenever elther began to “love another' the mar- could be set aside. This r ot convenience lasted until third pa has hit the shoals of itabls vy came along and then Nevada, as many another has done before | Companionate marriage has noth- & hetter—or worse—to offer than this sort of pre-nuptial agreement. We are not saying it is wrong, or that has been shown in the | a | | wright regards as “life.” They | the attitude of the important | | sect bites and But money | the | |the same experience as an alibi for that | the fight of the power interests to | | H that it is right, for the simple rea- son that it is none of our business what kind of agreement play- wrights and their wives may enter into. But Mr. O'Neill, by virtue of his great attainments as a play- wright, is a specles of educator and teacher combined; the minds of mi lions have been influenced by the actions of the characters in his plays, by their philosophy, and by what the play an Send all communications to Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. their mirroring of | Turn on the Light! ¢an- | 1hough poets sing the moonlight's by praise, to- | And M. D.'s laud the sunlight's rays, Away above them both we prize The funlight dancing in folks' eyes! e No Respite! Gaines: “Just think! At d & rate aviation is advancing it will acts and FANCIES :.:. . 5o (s oricr soois trom fan Francisco and get them here | the same day.” The old-timers may have heen| Hardup: “What of it? slow, but they didn’t spend half of | stalment collectors will their time stopping and starting. make the trip equally as fast!" not help being influenced, also, playwright ward marriage in his personal deal- ings with this institution. The in- Tt isn’t so difficult to park parral- lel with the curb if your fenders are the kind that won't show another dent or two. When the airplane driver holds out his hand, up and down | must be included in your effort to | guess what he means. Alas! Tt view. point or | page says nobody depends on the When ‘the society everybody has left town, can notice the difference. Only the rich can visit resorts, but the poorest can afford a few in- blistered in the all get sun. Another good test of blood pres- sure is a caller who brings her three small children. Tt isn't equality that good Amerl- cans desire, but equality with the| right people. Never yet have people scorned the | law in a land that treated stock ex- change gamblers as it treated crap shooters. Pretty Young Lady: “We would jike a table near a window." Head Waiter: “Sorry, 1 am able to grant your request, How wouid one near a mirror do Ballad of Indigestion! (By Thomas Kiefer) I, who have specialized in suds and steak, By way of victualage, since three or four, Gasp when I see a lovely lady Her lunch in some apothecary store, And wonder, evermore, What there can be to tickle Her palate in these items adore: A soda and a cruller and a pickle. A free people is one that elects the law makers it prefers and then obeys the laws it prefers. un- Miss. Americanism: Going somewhere just to be with the crowd; feeling resentful because so many others are nsing the parking space. How strange to resent the enter- taining of Congressman De Priest’s wife in a land where a black race| has turned mulatto. State troops may postpono the and shall unionizing of textile mills, but never yet have bayonets killed an idea. ((oh,mystery!) That the humble can hope to en- ter society in this land of oppor- tunity is proved the experience of Tunney, Lindbergh and liver. The boy who once got licked for being caught in the jam now uses When Henrietta (what a bride she'd make!)) The young enchantress sides next door, Complains of—well, a ach ache, who little stom- being late. About all yon can say for congest- ed traffic is that a thrifty man can | cut the switch and get his motive | power from the ear behind. plore, And tell her how the maids days of yore Unto their constitutions fickle, “0il is obtained in a crude state,”| Eschewing chow that evid record | according to school books. But in | Lorel one way or another control of it is|Like soda and a cruller and a pickle obtained by states that aren't sco| crude. | on, in were less counsel for heed my family's sa Eat, it you must, green apples to the core, | Consume a chicken or breaded veal | take, | Devour leaden | score; | Aye, ever yone of Nature's rulings | floor; | | Mexico will drill through a cathe- | dral floor in quest of oil. It seems a shame to waste a perfectly good atrocity like that in time of peace. — hiscuits by Correct this sentence: ter married a rich man.* said poor girl, “but she's too tactful to show off her fine clothes when 1 visit her.” Copyright 1929, Publishers Syndicate. “M Let moonshine whiskey down your thorax tickle, Do anything you ignore A soda and a cruller and a pickle! please, so you T | 25 Yc;zrs Ago Today The Junior O. U. A. M. and the 2 A. O. H. second division ball teams | . nickel, will play at Rentschler's park on|'or T have downed—and, Saturday afternoon. | days are o'er!— i Clark Edwards has been appoint. | & 50d@ and a cruller and a pickle! E;ia":';z!. ager of the Landlord's asso- ATty Richard Vogel was clected trea.| (QYerheard by Arthur Valentine) surer of the Turner soclety at its| .hc). 1dy yafare.” meeting last evening. i Pommey Caddm‘.nr dressinme wasyou dr. G- Platt of this city has declin- | "W IPTE NI e vatare ed to accept the prohibition nomina- | wyyeiiovalla noive howdastyou ad- Eoniioms sotenior | dressme innat tona verce? Iva _ Corporation Counsel F. L. Hunger- | zo04 minetatake yanummer. ford and wife have gone to Sharon |® wiaremenummer what Wwhere they will spend July and AUS- | gotta takeme nummer?” Constables McCue and Zehrer nx»\,‘,,;::::m]::;;a;f:a” ‘1:::1 pect to finish up their dog catching | youwainta gemmen. Cha business next Monday or Tuesday.|(ammee lika gemmen?" It is expected that more dog licenses | «yqoy speaktame lika lady will be issued this year than in|speak tayou likea gemmen.” ICVIL... At e “Iyaint making no boggins withno rofessor Timothy Drake will pre- | hus cadductors. You leamy alone sent the passion play of Ober Am-|yow orl'll takeya nummer.” mergau at the White Oak theater| “Awright take menummer. Thin- Sunday evening. The presentation | nonis bus fafour years andInevva includes over 100 brilliant views | had notrubbil. T gotta waw rekkid with powerful calcium light. | swattagot a waw rekkid. AnnI'm The large list of local fraternal | gonna ast fawitnessis. Gemmen wi- societies will be enlarged next week | you hea witness? when a court of the Independent | witness? Order of Foresters will he instituted. [ ness? Yahoid whattasaid wenshe About 70 charter members have al- | comein. Isez lady yafare pleeze ready been secured “Yanevva says Plecze.” It was learned today that Charles| “Ididtoo Tyawlwaze sez plecze. Morrill, assistant prinicpal at| “Yadid not Thaminnit T steps the high school, expecs to accept a [ onnabus yahollers fare amme lika position in a normal school in Mas- | bighorse asumpin.” sachusetts next year. “Donchoo go callin me abighorse. At a meeting of the Retail Clerks' | Youwaint gonno call {o go callin me union held last evening, it was vot- | abighorse, Iyasta fayafdare diddin ed to extend a vote of thanks to the “Soitinly swattI'm abjectin to.” Businessmen’s association for their| “Wellady yacant abject tamme decision in regard to Friday after- | astin farafare. Smee bizness astin noon closing. ferri innat tona verce.” “Lady ayou gonna femme howta rumme bizniss? Maybe yadlike to- gowup andrivabus fatha drava.” “Nowlissen Idawannomorea [h~ddanuff now stoppit.” “Wellidwannamore ovvit meself. Sowell callit quits see. Ttsquits. “Awritetits =auits, Rutl wutthing more L'Envol cast me on your darksome isle_ashore, | Life on_this planet Prince | isn't worth a oh, my wasyou ad- callayou takeya yaverce. speak andIll TRUCK WHEE Although the front : passed MISS GIRL part of an ex- over her body Boneek, of 131 Oak sevious injury Wed- | after being knocked hy radiator of driven south on Oak street | ouis Conti of Acorn had been knocked down as she | crossed the street in front of the ma- and fell at such an angle that | front wheels missed her by a few inc Conti was not blamed by police. The child had slight injur- ies and abrasions about her body. S press truck Ilor this nee 9, street, escaped evening pavement nesday the jus- wanna cadduc- tir.” “Whattisit lady "Yon dontwant nevvata use atin- solint tona verce tame again!" say 0 street. chine the R Avocation! Calhoun: “Ts running a stereopti- con your regular business?" hes the | be able to | ke | wonder | re- | All solemnly the knowledge I de- | transcontinental the | Wheeler: de- line! s just a si —M. E. Hanks. he went to a dentist named Calla han because, he suid, his tteeth are of Irish extraction! Spurred Them On! Mrs. Jamieson: “I wonder what makes the hens lay so well lately? Farmer Jamicson: I reckon they heard me say as how I was thinkin’ about raising egg-plants!” —“ilson Roddey. (Copyright 1929 Reproduction IForbidden) 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 ayenue, Washington, | D. C.. enctosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical. legal and martial | advice cannot be given, nor can ex- | tended research be undertaken. All other questio will receive a per- | sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are | confidential. —Editor. How long does it | eges to hatch? A, IFrom 30 to Q. What “Malomori A. 1 would guilty of crime Q. s the Q take goOs¢ days. the Latin foedari™ does quam phr: mean rather die than K wor 1 such a word as A. It is an archaic Scot meaning “same." Q. What is another “parson hird"? A Tal «. How gallons of and liquor: consumed United States in 19207 A. The estimate for | was $25,573,229 gallons. Q. Is a nautical mile the sam¢ as a knot, and how does it compare with a statute mile? | A. One nautical mile is a |and equals 1.15 statute miles. Q. What radio stations has call number W AG? A. It is assigned to an experi- | mental station owned and operated | by the General Electric Company, Schenectady, New York. Q. What verse by James Russell Lowell contains the line “What is | so rare as a day in June’ A “And what is so rare as a day in (S yrine Then, i ever, come perfect days Then heaven tries earth if it be in tune, And over it softly her warm ear lays.” | | name for the | many wines we in the that year knot the Q. Who the scope?, A. The earliest one was probably a refracting telescope, invented in 1608 by Hans Lippershey, a spec- tacle maker in Middleburg, Holland. 1t was employed from 1609 in celes- tial observations by Galileo, Simon made first tele- | Marius and Thomas Harriott. Q. What was the first highway across the United States? The Lincoln Highway, namec as a memorial to Abraham Q. Did the United States chase Alaska from Great A. Great Britain Alaska. It formerly | Russia, from whom States bought it for $ 1867. Q. How much did Jack Johnson land Jim Jeffries for fight at Reno, July 19102 A. Johnson received “bonus of $10.000 and | picture privileges. Jeffries ceived $40,400, a bonus of $10,000 land $66,666 for picture privileges. | great built pur- Britain? never owned belonged to the United 00,000 in receive Nevada, 260,600, $50,000 for ve | Lincoln. | Q. What is the value of th- English walnut and pecan crops in United States? In 1928 the English | the | A walnuf When Jerry wanted a tooth pulled | crop wus valued at $11,660,000; and | the pecan crop at $7,980,000. Q. How many new | total value? A and The number was the value was §$2,820,720,000. | Q. 1s the Nile the longest river |in the world? | A. Yes. Q. { made round? A. Because a 20 round opening | easiest to make watertight, also it waves | resists the beating of the better. Q United States pay his salary? A. No. Q. 1Is pure water ta A. All water has taste, purest. Q. How often New York city A Q. the Does the President of th an income tax ox even does mail leave for Egypt? Once a weck. What is the United States? According to the figures it is $32 The per capita wealth What is the last ten by S. S Van Dine? A. “The Bishop's Murder Case.’ Q. Where is “Old Baldy"? A. It is a mountain of near Virginia City. of a high wall of limestone head of Alder Gule 7 feet total wealth last able ’ is K boo! at | | ; | | UDER »- % FUNNIER } Hae ye heard this one ? THI. ROAD TO SUCCESS It is absolutely untrue that no Jew | has ever been able to live in deen. This is a fiction duously spread by the Aberdonians them- selves to ward off possible and dan- as gerous competition within their own | two As 4 mattcr cairied the | borders! a Jeyw | bu of fact successful I'ne. Their once on esses in san & | d [N [shops were situated at an angle where {wo important thoroughfarcs met and there was only the corner shop between them. Dozens of peo- ple have tried to make this corncr shop pay but they all failed until a wily Aberdonian came along, leased |it, and instead of putting his own | | name above the door, simply had MAIN ENTRANCE written there. | e promptly made a fortune and the two Jews went bankiupt. Florny (ol MUST CUT WEIGHT Hoosick Falls, N. Y., July 5 (UP) Tommy Loughran, light heavy- weight champion of the world, must cut his weight eight pounds in the next two weeks to enter the ring for his title bout in New York with POPULAR Who s your favo she get in the te star among pictures? Are her brunette? s she married or single? Where can you writs to ler? f tion in the new bulletin that Washington Bureau entitled “Popula bingraphies of twenty-four of the mo: You will find interesting. —_——_——— 1322 New York Avenue, Wash lose a copy of herewith five cents in the bulletin coin, | i en I(!amp«, to cover postage and handling costs: NAME l STREE] | CITY ND NUMBER I am a reader of the NEW automobiles were sold in 1928 and what was the 3,220,000 Why are port holes in vessels is the of avail- Montana, the highest point the Its altitude is Aber- WOMEN You will P COU ‘ MOVIE EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, iE STATE BRITAIN | James J. Draddock under pound limit, lLoughiran welnh- yesterday after siy 19 several rounds of I a strenuous asiring vp Akl L training camp hers t he United State: upplies dne- fourth of the world trade in chemi- cals. Observations On The Weather Washington, July Southern New England Probhably showers tomight or Salurday; not much change in (emperatice; mod- erate winds, mostly southwesl. Forecast for Eastvrn New York Mostly cloudy tonight and Salurda showers Saturday and probably south portion tonight; not much ,| change in temperature; fresh south- | west winds. | Conditions: Showery conditions prevail over the Ohio valley and western Pennsylvania this morning.’ Pressure is relatively low from the lower St. Lawrence Valley south- westward to the far southwest. It is high over the southern states and the south Atlantic ocean. Tempera- .| tures range between 50 and §0 vver the upper Lake region and aiong the northern border westward to the Rocky mountains and from £0 to 70 southward to the central Mississippi valley, where above 70 prevails Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather followed by scattered | showers, “Temperatures vesterda —TForecast for Atlanta | Atlantic City . 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Is she a blonde or What are some of her best pictur find this and other interesting in- has heen prepared for you by our Women of the Screen” It contains popular women on the screen today. 1 [ r st PON HERE ington, D. C. Popular Women or loose, of the Secreen and uncancelled U. S. postage HERALD, B e et I i o e g | | | Lady wiyou bea | Gemmen wiyou bea wit- | | | | i | N Jort 4l \% A e QG The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. By Fontaine Fox. Vge- // ¥ 0 “THE SERVICE 1S CURTAILED To A GREATER EXTENT oN THE “4TH' THAN oN.ANY OTHER HoLIPAY .. ®Fontaine Fox, 1929 (’