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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Issued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg.. 67 Church Street BUBSCRIPTION RATES $8.00 a Year $2.00 Three Months Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Becond Class Mall Matter. STATE REGULATION OF TAXI BUSINESS It surprised no one to learn that |the recent Legislature was of the | opinion that local municipalities | conduct of taxi drivers and were not capable of regulating the | 1 the taxi [business generally. But in the gen- | Toe. « Montn |eral mess of law-making small at- | has been among the most backward | tention was awarded the bill which | gives to the Public Utility Commis- | sion such power of regulation. The | | {1aw goes into effect on July 15, and | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1920. ministration of Obregon and Calles, | to take action along lines which they | found time only for planning | The new regulations, summarized | i by the Associated Press, would put | Mexico among the leaders in labor | supervision, whereas in the past she | virtual These | laws, too, would constitute a consid- of which unknown. nations, one in peonage was not erable step In advance to those poses. As the most costly part of the {and that now the time is propitious | base is still to be built, the inclina- tion of the premier to abandon con- struction as a naval base will help the government materially to re- duce its financial outlay. Nothing more strikingly illustrates the difference in attitude and policy the recent between Conservative government headed by Stanley Bald- | win and the present Labor govern- ment headed by Ramsay MacDonald Send all communications to Fun shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letrer will be forwarded to New York | Our Vacation Suggestion In 1924, when the Labor government | july’s vacation time for furs |sleepin’ in flop foints. Now look it | me. Nice clean clothes, thres | |squares a day. a good bed. How did | 1 get it? Ask me! Playin' the goldarn drum! Spanked! i Roger: “What did you tell your | father when he began to bawl you | |out?2” Henry: “I told him ‘flaming youth.' ’ Roger: “What happened then?” | Henry: “Well, I've got one spot | that burns so 1 can't sit down! —Elmer J. Sands. | Al 1 was tack it at frequent intervals . far down on a floor or some other fi surface, where it can remain und turbed. Sprinkle it generously wit a solution made by soaking and dis solving 1-4 pound of flake glue it 1-2 gallon of water, in a double boil er or a container surrounded by hot water. The rug should be allowed to dry for at least 24 hours. If it is | light weight, care should Sir Ha;-ny - LAUDER - FUNNIER Hae ye heard this one ? WHY HE WASN'T RESCUED Two Scots were mountaineering i Switzerland when one of them slip ped on an ice-bound kit of rock an¢ fell hurtling down into a crevasse The other, peering over the edge saw his companion literally holdiry on by his finger nails be taken not_to put on so much glue that it | penetrates fo the right side. ‘ Q. How long is a “Sabbath’s day | journey 2" | A. The reference in Acts 1:12 to |the Mount of Olives being a Sab- TELEPHONE CALL! | . | bath's day journey from Jerusalem . (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Business Ofice Forbidden) from that date on the taxi business | maintaining the status quo of pros- | was in power also, work on the Sing- | And zeroes on thermometers, “Are ye a' richt, Jock?" anxious’ 25 Editorial Rooms 26 The o:ly profitable advertising medium In the City. Circulation buoks and press room aiways open fo advertirers. Member of the Associnted Press The Amsociated Press is exclusively en: | tited to the use for re-publication e | all news credited to it or not otherwise eredited in this paper end also local news published therein. Member Audit Burean of Circulation The A. B. C. is & nutional organization | which furnishes newspapers and adier- tisers with a etrictly honest abalysis of eirculation. Our elrculation statistics are Based upon this audit This insures pro- tection against fraud ' newspaper di tribution figures to botb national and local advertisers. The Aerald s on sale dally in New York at Hotaling's Newsstand. Times Bguare; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central. 42nd Street word. Yeah; it Yo" certal s a good Two girls and a young fellow were Bqueezed in a rumble seat. Nobody sympathized with the guy mental congratulations but there were many nixed with some green envy A gasoline station, a hot dog a couple of big signs tourist 1o stand and cause many an automo seek habitation in the the effects of inn to the near escape from Bcenery. Tt a poor day when the newspape seems to be s don't report “anoth- A corespondent rec referred to President Hoover's attitu tarift and other matters as follows That he is for “heat that chills, for cold that warms, for a dry law that is wet.” If true again proving that originality in Washington has not yet been attained. Some such policy has been in force for years. overgrown trucks. auto- Talking about what the mobile carrying trucks which with a about newfangled trailer and wings from the rear of the trailer transport six A freight train makes no grander impression. projecting automobiles at a time? Somehow get the that King George is not going to do ler in the we impression | as well as John D. Rockef old age marathon. Speaking of healthful exercise and its benefits, there is a strong suspi- cion current in Holland that the ex- kaiser is doing better than if fate had decreed he Potsdam, where he would have .avk- was to remain il ed the time to do his chores of tre cutting and wood-sawirg Another of being ential citizen is when you proof divorce in secret. A man who knows his sun-spots tells us that this is to be a hot and Oh to be where Com- be dry summer. with mander Byrd it's 63 zero all the time. The man who rowed all the way Michigan did aviation the across Lake as to advance as atlantic funerals, By the way, some spell it hers * end ¢ country we use hard- edvantage of ha his headlines. orking telegraph f a letter in writing. you can't figure that out call st paragr torial in the Waterbury ubli relative to the air-rail service to Los it s s s Angeles passenger transported from co; hours; in the second says in 48 hours. a the rea hat yone 1o worry about old cd The law stor holds th ear to gers, automobiles feet to the rear. Not ten i The city is discover flood into rel thousands of o low Brook park but o to be exact when it is not so nice when the various do their Much t cannot as it would Jesira refrain from expressing the opinion that Hoover's views on prohit prohibition question, of the another Connecticut model for other ! state is expected to become | S | if they only will tes to admire- take the Already time to do it. the P. L have issued 17 n C. is said to ew rules and regu- lations One rtaining to the taxi busi- ness of the new rules forbids aximen soliciting passengers at rail- | road stations or other public places | loud outery or “other obnoxious | hods.” This is the | worst blow against the we mise, taxi interests so far inflicted. Railroad stations | will never appear the same again if this law is rigidly enforced. Instead of a horde of taxi drivers howling at the door every passenger moment he or she leaves the of the station, there will be no more noise than that incidental to traffic generally. or the gut- at- s of the locomotives, or tural intonations of the station ter P the ants advising waiting the of press on track 2 assengers | of imminence next ex- That there are other points about P. U have an interest to the taxi industry | the regulations of the C., that can scarcely be overlooked. There is the paragraph in the for that the charged must be in accordance with | law, in- stance, which says those prescribed by the commission, | and that a rate card must be posted We great verbal outc| | no in every cab have heard by the taxi inter- | ests regarding this application of more state government in busine so- i perfectly proper to assuie hat the rates so preseribed haze not | gone down. One's suspicion is arous- | ed that they are eminently satis- tactory to the taxi interests. Off hand one would think that the authorities in New Britain, for in- stance, would be capable of deter- mining how the taxi business should be conducted But | not according to the niw state law. in New Britain. New Britain, from the mayor down. | will have nothing at all to say about | the taxi business in this city, any | more than they have a say in regard | to the trolley and bus business. All this is being looked after by the | all-embracing cily of Connecticut— beg pardon, state of Connecticut Some day the state may take over | | city incinerators, city water supply perity in the United States, although this not saying that Mexicans overnight would become more pros- is perous than workmen above the Rio Grande happen to be in this the Some ohserv- rs indeed, might laws country. term proposed Mexican ‘socialistic,” or “paternalistic,” or “bolshevistic that usually are applied to anything we do not like or do not care to under- stand | even -terms THE PROHIBITION ATTACK BY DR. THAYER Dr. William Thayer, of Baltimore, retiring presi- The address by s dent of the American Medical Asso- ciation, before 10,000 physicians and | surgeons at the Portland convention, was a notable contribution to the | te discussion 1-year-old prohibition Not si the 1Sth amendment was adopted has there been a more di- rect, forceful and convincing espous- al of local and individual liberty by profes- | y a sterling leader of a great sion. To judge by the commenda- | tion and approval bestowed upon the speaker by his fellow practitioners. | be no doubt at all where | there | can stand on this prohibition question They are in a position to note at close range just how it works. | Th to this na- tion's “rather sad example of reck- Dr. r's reference less and intemperate lawmaking'” re- fers to a difficulty of long standing There ideal held by fanatical reformers in this country that is and always has been an every il or imagined ill can be cured by appro- priate legislation, especially if it is sumptuary legislaton. If reformers | of ths stripe really disliked the iaw | of gravitation they tion without hesita- would organize to browbeat Congress into passing with the law That may sound h a law doing | away of :ra\na\\on.‘ foolish, but they ve done other things just as fool- | h. | “When in a country like ours," re- marked Dr. Thayer, “the national government attempts to legislate for | the whole country as to what we may or may not eat or drink, as to how we may dress. as to our religi- | ous beliefs or as to what we may or ! may not read—this is to interfere | apore base was ordered the re- was returned to power work on ordered is to be base was immediately sumed. Now it again dered stopped The Baldwin government was perialistic in its attitude. It was un- ment with American naval authori- ties at the Geneva conference be- its imperialistic attitude the domination of British big There be doubt that an agreement on naval ters betwen the cause of and navy men. can be no two Anglo-Saxon nations today will be much easier. The Singapore naval base would be a purely offensive weapon, and against Japan on the one hand and the United States on the other. With both these is the n addition to the offensive character of nations Great Britain on most friendly of terms. such a base under the circumstances, [the job is one bound up with gov- ernmental patronage to the builders. | It must be remembered that the ing docks and other concomitants of | naval power, was to be the greafest | rates | the leading physicians of the country |of its kind, taking approximately ten vears to build The why and where- fore of such an cxpensive under- taking naturally was one of the first ‘ It 1s R things to come under the scrutiny of | MacDonald minist which agai has concluded it has no money lol throw away on unnecessary Asiatic enterprises. Facts and Fancies (By Robert Quillen) All a diploma needs to make useful is a ing what © possessor can do. had a little wouldn't sit If only a closed car seat for a bee. so he down on the driver. T:xample of foresight ing where Vaccinat- the appendix scar The good old days were when a man could obey all the laws just by being decent. Uncle Sam’s foreign policy, 1in brief: You can get away with mur- storm sewers, the construction and | With rights which are sacred to every |der if you are too big to lick. maintenance of schools, and some other things; and then the weather would be that politicians | have left to argue about. This mil- | lennium may be reached wi all local n the |lifetime of us all THE PATHVINDER DUPLICATES YELLOW BIRD FLIGHT It anyone ntu a few days ago had the Path- to land v red the guess that finder would be forced northern Spain at a in spot close to ! Bird month ago, he would have where the Yellow landed a told that kind of lightning doesn’t strike twice in the same place. the splendid plished by Aside from | flying exploit and Williams— accom- Yancey .400 miles in 31 1-2 hours through bad weather conditions is nothing to | underestimate—the point that yields discussion is the remarkable dupli- | cation of the Yellow Bird flight Although supply. it was impossible to pro- | directly flight a success from Decause of an exhausted ed over to Rome, the the ocean was every other standpoint SPEAREASIES IN NAUG! Local correspondence from N UCK 1ga- tuck the other day included the fol- lowing illuminating item Naugatuck speakeasies a h of chariti hoard is simply 5 s should be notifi to ir state their existe man, full ndent d by the police of lared Pierce Free- f the charities board, held in evening. Johnson's ared of super: memi Mr someone in keasics and r. Freeman they should prohibition, he on Sunday was but now it is | in the bag' said that he peakeasies and had on City lisgrace all right to get h He me at sf Main heard that ever day street he ired its MEXICAN 10 BI LABOR LAWS MODERNEZE D to moder really has al of his He trator admits. that he on arrying out the ultimate pol cies that were embodied in the ad | English speaking man. This is no longer republican government—it is tyranny. In the long run we Eng- lish-speaking people will not endure tyrann Ida M. Tarbell wrote an article in which had as its thesis that civil war was not impos- sible a Liberty magazine a result of prohibition. The week Clarence True Wilson, political society. navy £hould be that law same head of a vhurch said the army and used to first enforce prohibition, the sacred should be sent to jail, and that buy- offenders of ers, drinkers and smellers are | equally guilty with those who trans- port and sell the drink. The Liberty article seemed far-fetched until one also noted the article of Dr. Wilson | in Colliers. This sort of thing cannot £0 on indcfinitely. As Dr. Th | it, yer put English-speaking people will not endure i tyranny.” As a matter of history, they never have. | SUBMARINE SAFETY | NOT YET COMPLETE n article appeared in onc York Sunday of the 4 papers recently showing how recent inventions had made submarines safe even when they were forced to stay under the surface through accident. It only re- mained to be seen whether the in- ventions would work under *practi- cal conditions,” ran article The disaster which sank a British submarine after it had collided with another the evidently y proves need for such inventions on every under- M the sca boat the world over diver b festly. the British lacked appli- ances which been developed 1 nt months in the nited States. Iivery nation has heen experi- It experiments conducted menting with ideas of its own ap- cars from ently that the American methods f life-caving under such conditions are A somewhat in advance of others. willingness to save brave men m torty preceding death willingness to ha sug- gests a ol the experiments recently A uesoms ers henefit conducted submarine disaster is su reading that of humanity impel us to help all na- tions eradicate their terro CONSTRUCTION SINGAPORE Ma STOPPING AT Donald ol 1 have heen e X- no differently the construction than he in. relation to great Dispatches say he thinks base unnecessary and that it will d to commercial uses instead being exclusively for naval dictates | pur- | Tf daughter is interested in plant- ing a vine to shield the front porch she is old enough to be called “Miss.” How can a mere tariff keep out Canadian goods if armed guards can't do it? Short and snappy kisses are safer. The car doesn't have time to got off the highway. Happy thought! People would he satisfied {o keep their cars two years longer if the fenders were given a stopped. | When the Conservative government | or- | im- | mat- | ‘Sm.zapors» base, with its huge float- | it | short paragraph explain- | will | nice crumpled effect at the factory. | Amricanism: equality” of the races: making the black race a little lighter with cach generation. Every famous flag-pole sitter probably started out in an humble | way by being a foreman, While teaching children to obey the laws, it might be a good idea to teach them to make good ones. “We won't advertise if you won't | give us free publicity” is like say- ing: “I won't buy a car unless you | zive me two for the price of one." | A boy is old enough to be trusted | with the car if he has tact enough to keep out of the way when sistor's | young man calls. Ah, well; one boy goes to college for a degree and another quits at the cighth grade and gets rich enough to endow some school for an honorary L. L. D. = originated by bachelors.” But sure- lv it was a bachelor who originatad | the lunacy. belief that the moon Tt may be all right to give officials courtesy of the “the road.” so they can break courtesy in 0ing too far. What profit a country to prolong man's life by taking liquor from him and then shoot him because he is mistaken for a does a a rum runner? Correct It al details of my life were made pub- lic,” said he, “I'd feel no shame. (Copyright 1 Publishers' Syndicate) WHEAT POOI, N. 8 W endation that amonz the this sentence DISCUSSED Svdne sen whe i on the que b wheat pool wa today understood banks a ire amount of t are of ussed later certain formation government I be dis in pool. guar- estimated population 14 is 1.849,500,000. Of this num- 1.013,000,000 are said to in ,000,000 in Europe, of the Asia and 47 Denouncing “social | } The New Age: Mrs. Col. Lindbergh: “—and in | the future, Charlie, when I ask vou a question, please remember that the old gag ‘I have nothing to say.' causes | are speed laws, but a similar | the | Ning | Let's make the list complete, Folks, do, And add | grouchs, “for cranks and too! A Flyer! Tramp: “Is that a bird-dog. ma'am?" Mrs. Schuyler: “You bet, and you ght to how he'll fly at a o see | able to come to a satisfactory agree- tramp | | | | @ M.pIUDELL eported That Bobby Got Up Early on the Fourth! JE HATE! By Sydney D. Bissell T hate parties: They bring out the worst in me There is the Day in the Country; | 1t seems more like a week. All the contestants are wedged into automobiles, And you are allotted between two ladies | Who close in on you. The party gets a nice early start, | Because cverypody wants to wmake a long day of it,— They get their wish. | Everyone contributes lunch; Each person has it all figured out That no one else will think of bringing out hard-boiled eggs. the space a basket of There is intensive picking of dog- wood, no one is quite sure poisoning 18 like They find out by the next day. Things start off with a rush. Everybody joins in the old songs, And points out cloud effects, And puts in a good word for th: color of the grass. But after the first fifty miles, Nature doesn't go over so big. And singing belongs to the lost arte. There is a slight spurt over the| homestretch, { everyone exclaims over how beautiful the lights of the cify | look,— T'll say they do. I hate parties: They bring out the worst in me!! | And what And Probably Foreign! Miss Heller: “My brother has an inferior complex.” Mrs, Wasserman: “Is it a good red Behrens, Jr. lis out! IT'S AWFULLY SWEET OF YOU TO SAY SO! Ty Joyce Rubin Carles You're diff'rent most girls.” Doris: “How do you mean I'm dif- frent s Carlos: |int'rest in serious things just heing frivolous.” Doris: “Well, ought to take an int'rest in serious “Well, you sort of take an instead of | things, don’t you Carlos: “Absolutely; any girls do.” Doris: “Well, they are prob'ly afraid men won't like them if they are int'rested in serious things, do | you know what T mean?" | carlos: “But most girls but hardly are too v of the world’s beliefs were | dumb to have an intelligent int'rest in things like that." Doris: “Yes, T suppose they really aren't they Carlos: “But you're diff'ren | Doris: “Well. T just think being frivolous gets awfully tiresome.” Carlos: “Yon bet." Doris: “I mean if vou have any the matter of hooch is| brain at all you simply can't be just all the “Well, | frivolous } Carlos are Doris: “Do you honestly? What a simply killing ideal Carlos: “But you're diff'rent. mean you really have a mind."” Doris: “Oh, no, T haven't at all really. But it's awfully sweet of you to say so!" time, can you 1 think most girls You Must Use Wet | Batteries, Too | Gordon: I understand the ager of that new natatorium is go- | ing to give lessons in surf hathing over the radio. fawyer: “What man- wave length Anita Martin Success! | Grubbing around downtown | paused long enough to overhear a | conversation about life. A wizened little man in a brand-new Salva- | tion Army uniform was talking to a we | vamp, 1 really think you | | | | Questions QUESTIONS ANSWERED an answer to any | or information by | writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Heraid. Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps | for reply. Medi- al. legal and martial adviss cannot be given, nor can ¢ tended research be undertaken. Al cther questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters ar confidential.—Editor. You can get question of fact ). What is the legal definition of | “vagrant?” | A. In American law the term |vagrant is variously defined . by statute, but the general meaning is that of an able-bodied person hav- | ling no visible means of support, and who lives idly without sceking work, or who is a professional hegzar, or roams about from place to place | without regular employment or | fixed residence Q. On what are the houses | built? Piles What and “FEquinox? | A Solstice is a point on the eclip- Itic, midway between the equinoxe where the sun reversing its motion in declination, seems to stand still The summer solstice passed June 21 or coincides with the longest | day. the sun then attaining its maxi- | mum distance of 23 1-2 degrees from the equator; the winter solstice, | passed about December 22, when the {sun is farthest south, coincides with |the shortest day. Equinox is either of the two opposite points at which |the ecliptic and equinoctial inter- sect. The word signifies the equality of day and night which prevails over the globe when the sun crosses from |south to north of the equator at the | vernal equinox, on or about March 21 and again at its passage from north to south of the same line, |about September 21, Q. What is the oldest newspaper in the United States? A. The Annapolis (Maryland) | Gazette, established in 1727, is said to be the oldest newspaper in the United States. Q. What actress played the part of Clementina, the Spanish harem in the picture “The Desert kind of foundations in Venice, Italy, is “Solstice” meant | hy Song A. Marie Wells playea the part Her address is Warner Brothers Studios, Hollywood. California Q. Is grapefruit natural or a hybrid? A. Tt is a natural fruit Q. Can you tell me the name of the comet in the fall of 185% or 18592 A. You probably comet of Donati which ered June 2, 1858 and ble to the naked eye tember of that year. Q. Are the words post and autopsy synonymous? A. Yes. They means the examin- ation of a body by dissection after | death to ascertain the cause of death. Q. How can a re-sized? A. Stretch it seen refer to the was discov- became visi- | | | | early in Sep- mortem carpet or rug be I it tight and true anfl | | Yellen, | Bufralo makes the distance about five or six furlongs. According to the tradition of the rabbis, a person was pro- hibited on the Sabbath day from traveling further than 2,000 ells, sometimes given at 2,800 ells. Q. What is a Bashi-bazouk? A. An irregular volunteer in the Turkish army, noted for his ferocity Q. How much will a 50 mile gale retard an airplane having a speed of 100 miles an hour? A, Iifty miles per hour. Q. What is the theme song of the motion picture “The Glad Rag Doll” and by whom was it written? A. It bears the sanie title as the picture, and was written by Jack Dan Dougherty and Milton Ager. Q. How tall vie actress? A. Five feet. two inches. Q. How many pawn shops there in the United States? A. The last census enumerated 1,058, Q. If an electric bell is rung in | a vacuum is there any sound? A. Sound can be transmitted when there is air. In a vacuum where there is no air, sound can not be transmitted Observations On The Weather Southern New England—TFair and omewhat cooler tonight and Thurs- day moderate west or northwest is Anita Page, the m are | winds. stern New York—TFair tonight and Thursday, cooler tonight: gentle to moderate west and northwest winds becoming variable Thursday. New Haven and vicinity—JFair to- night and Thursday; slightly cooler Thursday. The low pressuré area that moved over the lake region last night is passing out the St. Lawrence valley with a trough ex- tending southward over New Eng- land. It produced showers over the Ohio valley yesterday and over cen- tral and western Pennslyvania and upper New York state last night. A ridge of high pressure prevails from the upper Mississippi valle southeastward to the south Atlantic | coast districts with center over northern Illinois, southern Wiscon- sin and castern Towa. Temperatures remain about the same as yesterday morning. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather and not much change | in temperature. Atlantic City Boston w0 58 66 64 50 64 71| sS4 74| 74‘ Chicago Duluth lLos Angeles New Haven . New Orleans New York Washington WHO'S YOUR Barthelmess, John Gi Richard Sary Cocp ard Dix who? our Was) esting facts tells the gton F has about enty o know e e e | sovie mritor, R wa POPL n Washington Avenue the bulletin five cents in postage and | xases |.=ry:|:m‘ AND NUMBER I ITY of the NEW I am a reader LS i L ert, prepared of the most popular about = CLIP COUPON eau, hington, handling BRITAIN called down the man in safety “No just exactly that, Jamie," saiy the other. “But if you run down tg the village an’ get a rope I'll try an, Lang on here till ye come back. Hur. 1y up, for God's sake!” Thus adjured his companion dis, appeared and was gone for the bets ter part of an hour. Suddenly hig | face again appeared over the edge of the cliff. He was surprised and de- lighted to find Jock still hanging on. “Are ye still there, Jock?" he call: ed down. “Aye," in Have ye got the rope “No, indeed.” cried Jamie. “The dirty dogs in the village wanted twa pounds for it!" a low, weary tone, 25 Years Ago Today Owing to the strike at cago stockyards, there will be & meat famine here within a few days. Prices are jumping skyward daily. Rev. Lucyan Bojnowski has pur- chased property on Orange street and will open a Polish orphan asy« lum there, having received permise sion from Bishop Tierney. More than on® “half of the New Britain school teachers have thug far failed to notify the superintend. ent of their acceptance of the poy sitions offered them by the school board for the coming school term, H. H. Pease of this city qualified for further honors at the state golt. matches held in Hartford yesterday, Lack of interest is given as the the Chi- | reason for the absence of factory league baseball this season. W. W. Hanna and John J. White will accompany the Connecticut; Elks on their trip to Cincinnati, leaving on Saturday. Stephen Sautter, a hoseman in Co. No. was appointed to the stokership by the fire commission- ers at their meeting last evening, Ansonia has joined with New Ha- ven in protesting against the award- ing of prizes to Martford and Wa- terbury at the recent saengerfest held in this city. A Newington farmer came up to Officer Johnson yesterday and ask- ed for aid in sccuring men to work on his farm. The officer hunted around Main street and found a number of idle men who were will- ing to work. FAVORITE? John Conrad Barrymore. Nagel Ronald Colman. Ramon Novarro, or a comprehensive bulletin giving male stars of the screen known male actors. Fill New MEN OF THE SCREEN, and uncancelled, U. S. postage the bext HERE — =— =— — Britain Herald, LA STATE HERALD. | | ] | | thin-lipped derelict, unshaven, dirty. | ve wecks ago.” the Army inan was saving. “I was nothin’ but a bum. Not a stitch to me back, l The Little Scorpions’ Club = (Fomame Pox, 1528