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= New Britain Herald WERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY legued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.90 & Year $2.00 Three Aonths 75c. & Month Bntered at the Post Office at New Britain | a8 Second Class Mail Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office ..... 32§ Editerial Ruoms ... 926 The snly profitable advertising medium is the City. Circulation buoks and press reom slways open to advertisers. omber ot the Associated P'res The Asociated Frems v exclusively en: titled to the use for re-publication of all news crediied to it or not otherwise eredited in thie paper and aiso local mews published therein. Momber Asdit Burean of Circulation The A B. C. is nal organization | which furnishes oo tisers with & atrictly honest apaly circulation. Our circulation statiati Sesed wpon this audit. This Insures pro- tection agaisst fraud in newspaper dis tribution f@gures to both pational and local advertisera. The Fersld ia : York at_Hotalin Times Square; Schults's Newsstands, Entrance Graad Central, 42nd Street. e e (e ue will Wonder it the W. na- tional headquarters Mayor Peonessa’s last anti-prohibi- tion blast. answer The way the mayor got action on repairing the Black Rock bridge leads to the conclusion he still has more pep than the board of works. The days of band concerts in the parks seem to be over. Instead, there gre ten times as many sport events in it than there used to be. The British are going to put more steamers into service between New York and Havana this fall, charging " 35 per cent more than the American lins and getting the the business. Thus the potent influence of liberty-loving Americans is again | exemplitied. cream of steamships, the plying on Talking Canadian-owned vessels the Great Lakes and the St. Law- | rence river are steadily adding to | their fleets. Every piece of literature about the ships pictures the “Amer- ican bar.” of Kansas has been having serious floods this month, a most visitation of nature in a state where | mid-July usually is devoted to fight- | ing & torrid-like sun and a lack of lake breazes to help the sizzling na- | tives. As has been said many times | heretofore, anything is likely to happen unusual however, in Kansas. | Senate and certain | insist | This | one wonders Tt is said the administration upen a middle sounds fair, except whether it will be so reasonable as | to give a square deal to the middle class. leaders will course tariff. | | American tourists penetrating all over Europe leaving enough money to pay the war debts. But the | are canny Europeans want to keep that money after furnishing the fun. Or | * maybe, it they add the debts to the cost of doing they charge the Americans twice as much. Most of them the difference. business, can wouldn’t know Down in Southington five police- men. with drawn revolvers, arrested & one-armed tharge. 1f the ~ Bouthington when it is necessary arrest ten able-bodied men at same time the constabulary will need to be reinforced with the pick of the man on a liquor time ever comes in to the THE FATAT The race across the Atlantic by the Polish and Fren der auspicious circ " was flashed from various weather | - bureaus that the entire Atlantic was | enveloped weather.” The outlook was that fou would succeed in names on the scrol But the weather to have erred. FLIGHT liers began un- stances. News in perte tlying ators writing of fame. their bureaus seemed Instead of “perfect fiying weather” heavy gales greeted the fliers when Azores. Luckily turned back they Fr neared the in f':ers, nearer 1 slands, pelled to make a forced #ulting in the crash of the death of one and the of the other. “It is a hard marked one o after his return across the Atlantic assuredly is that geems no better plane, to Paris. Flying ast to west most The southern route than the northern and all told a non-stop trip has heen accomplished only once The net brave man has an effort doubtful aviation. Before there are more attempts to | fly wait for bigger and better planes. result that anot iced his life in to attain something o value to the cause of | the ocean it will be better to | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 15, 192¢ ANONYMOUS COMMUNICATIONS Recently the city ordered side- Why anyone complaining about | walks constructed in front of the some infraction of the health laws |Benjamin Franklin school, on Clin- look of admiration in his eyes. As he was led toward the jail he re- Dat ge'man sho does talk Facts and Fancies SEVEN IN FAMILY | up under it | and needs to communicate with the board of health without signing the communication with their name and address—as an evidence of good faith—is one of those mysteries that ns unsolved. the of health would not involve any citizen in dif- ficulties for making health matters. rem Certainly board a complaint 1t about this depart- about we know anything at all ment it is that the board is pleased the form of But with any assistance in tips that may be rendered Dr. | Pullen cannot be blamed from shy- ing away from the anonymous com- munications which so frequently only and no fires. result in smoke Any citizen with a complaint the by Anyone should have hardihood to stand giving in his name addr, with a real complaint will be glad to do that much to have the alleged nuisance rectified. THE RESERVOIR ROAD 1t anyone any longer needs to ac- e a personal acquaintance with the condition of the side roads in Connecticut, by of the way comparing them invidiously with excellent condition of the main state high- ways, he need only drive to Ibele's Corner, on the route to Hartford, and from that point on take the road | to the left and continue traveling until he reaches the reservoir. Here is a well traveled highway, mostly of autos containing folk en route to the bathing beach provided the of Hartford. The high- full of holes, however. bathers get half the wind by way is so that the jolted out of them bhefore they ar- rive at the beach. Luckily they 12lly are so happy at the prospect of the bath that they are inclined to overlook the hard road traveled be- fore arriving at the their trip. While main terminus of the state it proud of more frequent pairs on the minor roads would be in place. And come to think”of it, the road from Ibele's Corner to the beach, accommodating hundreds of people every day, can no its highways, re- reservoir | longer be regarded as a minor high- way. SOME DAY BUT NOT SOON As ture “‘authorized" improvement of the Cat Hole road. This was a sterling victory—on paper—for the protagonists good especially those who insist that there is need for an road tween New Britain and Meriden But the “authorization” of the im- evaryone knows, the Legisla- the of highways, alternate be- provement of the Cat Hole road is only one authorization among about a hundred. It is the common method to authorize an and to of the Legislature improved road neglect furnish the funds. An authorization without funds means nothing at all. PROBING THE DOG BUSIN An investigation by a committee of the Common Council regarding the dog warden and dog disposal situ- ation will meet public requirements. For a long time there has been con- siderable disatisfaction among citi- |zens with respect to the method of running the city's dog department The climax was reached recently when charges of inhuman treatment were made; and the temper of the people was reflected in an attempt to burn down the so-called dog house maintained by the city. A civilized community has an op- portunity to show its civilization in in all be made to a matter as well The investigation should such as others. thorough and no effort spare anyone's feelings. HOMESICKNESS This talk we have been hearing out flaming youth, the urge for a and all the been a bit good time by the young. rest of it seems to have exaggerated. Girls when away from home, we learn from no less an authority than Miss Maude E. Traver, directress of nurses at the hospital, still suffer from the human virtue ing homesick We Traver and trust Miss her more d of it in are gla is correct diagnosis. Nothing indicates thoroughly hat youth is not so giddy as it is cracked up to he as the information that homesickness remains ingrained human makeup flaming youth efful- 1s widespread as some- 1 there would be ndividuals suffering kness, They would be away from home and PAYING FOR SIDEWALKS ool board pays ront of school hoard of the ) collect, makes long run he- both boards get the money from the But in same source order to Le husinesslike and ipsetting the budgets of the hoard it is necessary that the school board pay for the sidewalks. refrain from other of becom- | ton street. The demand for the side- | | walks came from the public, which | |saw no reason why private property | owners should put down walks while | front of the | b all communications to Fun Shop Kditor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. they were lacking in school. | Now it is learned that the school the board of | for sidewalks | qy T Take Up Iess Room, Too in front of | [nstead of every place board already owes public works $650 | previously put down schools and will not put down the | new walk in front of the Benjamin | And the | we stay, | dusted all year long, school | (. 5 Why not acquire fun-venirs, | lots of laughs away, And store ’em in our shelves to use when wrong? Franklin school until board pays its old bill There is no reason why the school humor: 14 its old hill with alacrity and not hesitate for a board should not pay Still Papering! Martha: “Women have ch, some in the past 30 years.” Franklin: “Yes, from curl to cigarette papers!” moment in paying for the Benjamin | That a manifestation of business Franklin school sidewalk. would be principles which would make a good impression all around. The sums involved are small. Side- walk construction WHEN BLACK IS READ costs amount little compared with the other costs | Denatured Noblemen: l.ook at the days when lords to get drunk Lords had spun to incident to operating the schools. For instance, in the day the school board considered the sidewalk prob- | lem new contracts for school provements were im- | . years: approved, totalled $13,247. They were contracts for what ap- and these peers! Gertrude PR far as we are aware nobody is find- | Myambtiang Ak g are nobody is find- | 1 ing her daily at my door. ing fault. But the point there | This flaunting, haunting hussy, should be no undue disinclination to A welcome guest in idle hour: A bore when one is fussy Reilly pears to be necessary work, and %o | is, pay for necessary sidewalks, which | are part of the school plants, | She pries and peers, st If the city wishes to agree with | sneers, She has an ear for faftle, She prates of petty pilferings Or tells tall tales of battle. sobs and the school board that sidewalks are not part of the school plants and should be provided by the city, then | let the agreement be made first be- | TOU court her favors and she sulks, fore there is a disinclination by the | ;. 1, 1, °r and she follows, !school board to pay for the i.sm:‘ o -f:»‘;}\: e walks. At present the system is that The lies she always swallows, the sidewalks are part of the school properties, and that the hoard hav- ing jurisdiction pays for I sometimes try But yet, T must confess it grumble with, T pine withont, My newspaper. God bless it! R. Hicks to put her hy, over the schools I the sidewalks——which is similar {o the system facing other property owners. | ' D i | Temperature! “If 32 s the is the squeezing poin Two in the shade!” —Henry J. Bull Until that system is changed—and | {uriel there is no sound reason to change point, wha it—the school department certainly | Ralph: is liable to pay for the : front ewalks in And considering | that the cost of these sidewalks is a | of schools. small item in comparison with other school costs, there need he no further argument with the hoard of public The effect the | public worth it works, inon isn’t THAT NEW SKYSCRAPER Announcing the construction of a new New York ap- pears to have as much news value in | the New York papers as an ordinary murder has in the Chicago papers. | The latest skyscizper in Announcement of the | sort has it that a 58-story building is | to be erected at the northwest cor- | | ner of 42d street and Fifth avenue. | This is gne of the most prominent | corners in the and virtually | city, everyone knows the lay of the land lin that vicinity sufficiently to grasp | the significance of the undertaking. It happens, 0o, that Fifth avenue | and 42d street regarded as the | most congested junction of thorough- | fares in is Tony, the Bootblack, flivver a polish? it is the most | Superfluou cangested corner on earth, seemingly | -J‘O'f“: ‘(" want to get | Rev. Scof license.” Jordan: “But I'm not going hunt fcr a woman. I've got her!” Lot the work-| —Rev. F. D. Scott ers in 58 stories all leave the build- | R THI! CLUB'S PRESIDENT ing at the same time and the vicinity DINES AT HOME is sure to the of in- by Hilda Brandenstein creased population trying to wend its gives his Manhattan. Manhattanites | are fond of saying | married.” taking a pride in such a posse: You HEhavSatoRhay: The ercction of a 58 fon. -story building on the corner will increase the con- gestion enormouly. feel Observed “Weli brunt hoys and girls, here we a! are together, and before on thig dinner which I am sure going to be absolutely the most cessful one we have had moved into our | home, remarks to make, which won't tal a minute, because I know all anxious to ‘fall to," as th goes. | “In the first place. I don't | whether you have noticed it | have an absolutely one per cent attendance of membership around which is something to proud of these days, bul the old Behrens tribe can always ! counted on to get together in old talk-and-eat fest any | as a matter of fact. all | people are saying, ‘Keep your on the Behreas! I tell you, | makes a fellow feel pretty to hear that. “Well, just a matters and then | ‘with a vengeance.' dinners are supposed to be where we can just be ‘jolly fellows,” but I do feel obliged to re | port that the butter and milk bi | this past month was andalous, and 1 want v try 1o ‘pull tozether little reminds me of way to subways or other means of ¥ transportation. That pens is what continually hap- York; and the shout goes up that the transporta- in New vet attractive tion facilities are overcrowded. The you are subway trains are supposed to run frequently enough to the millions take care of of people trying to direction at the Obviously, it cannot be done. The erection of new skyscrap- move in the same same time. the thi be famil tab ers continues many th jumps ahcad of construction of new subways or other means of traffic But New York takes pride in its buildings. 800! lie time, and The subway jam is some- thing to howl about and blame upon transportation system. word on we'll BANKING IN FLORIDA Disines A few years ago the banking busi- ness in Florida and southern Georgia plac was in a parlous state; some of the | banks got into dificulties and the public was inclined to be critical. Now of the it seems, there some more nd see if w along thi A littl intermission same. Six banks closed in can’t retrench a ] which story.” (Ten-minute “Ha, ha, ha! So now I everybody around this shake hands, first with his neigh on the right and then with eight days. “Runs” on some institu- tions indicate lack of public confi- dence, in some cases probably un- wan ustified. In addition, there some )0 ugly charges of violation of the i hi state’s banking lawa There is ®omething wrong with a | there is to be no ‘Mr.-ing’ or ‘Mrs state that fails to learn from a pre- |ing’ or anything, because, after al The dif- upon after- vious experience. former ‘What's the matter with Behrenses? They're all right!’ ha 1 th culty was blamed the effect of the boom period. Of late how many times 1 you that T hate chicke gravy " Joyce do to t siolets in there has been no boom, but a bad situation crops up nevertheless JLYE £ the Impressed! A colored prisoner. for ditry, came 50 a lawyer we know atiesis, was held in bail of $25.000. When statement was made the bench to this effect were gurprised that the undismayed. Rather The litz, one of the vessels in the Ger- man fleet scuttled in Scapa Flow Orkney, during the World war, has | been recovered after being towed upside down 260 miles to Rosyth at | & spead of three miles an hour. L000-ton battle cruiser Sevd a fellow take before a an, ) READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS there was lugging souvenirs from | sticking 'em on mantels to be bring used | Lords without liquor are only near- truth you freezing ‘| oned in Iortress Monroe. to slart is ue- since we! 1 have just a few very brief know it we hundred pretty | good over town eye good ‘g0 to it’| 1929, 1 know these | rood something | a all to neighbor on the left, and remember, | aren't we just one great big family?’ Ha. from attaches | has tamed a number of storks t negro wam in magnificent figures.” What It Stood for! | Madg Howard Pear Townle recks with ex appeal?” o. Stale Alcohol!” | —Mother R. " (Copyright. 1929, Reproduction | Pearl: 4 Forbidden) | - Questions - and “fro things go | nged | papers | ANSW can get an answer to any QUESTIONS CRED You authority, dander, and | question of fact or information by | | writing to the Question Editor, New | Look al 'em now in these liquorless | Britain Heraid, Washington Bureau, 132 D. for reply. Medi-al, legal and martial advise cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. Ali cther questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- vot be answered. All lett confidential.—Editor. ew York avenue, Washington, | @ How long did Prof. Burt play the piano when he made the endur- ance record? September 13, 1926, | G. Burt of Jamestown, N. Y., ed a non-stop record of 60 hours piano playing, ng the former “ | vecord of 52 hours and 15 minutes. He did not cease an instant for food, drink or sleep. He played over 5,000 selections from memor: fingers hit the keys on an average of 72,000 times an hour, a total of 1,320,000 for the whole period. He consumed 200 cigarettes and 50 cigars. ‘'he contest was staged in the window of a garage. 0. How is Melba toast made? A. Slice sandwich bread thin, and cut off the edges. Place th2 in oven and bake until finish- bea bread the brown Q. Where was Jefferson Davis captured and imprisoned during the Civil War? What was the date.of his death? ’ | A, He was cz 3., May 10, 1865, and was impris He was and re- He died admitted to bail in 1867 leased in February, 1869. December 6, 1889, Q. What became of the children of Marie Antoinette? . She had two sons daughter. The older son died June | 4. 1789. The younger son (Louis XVII) became heir to the throne, | but was imprisoned together with the royal famiiy, in the Temple, Au- and one gust 10, 1742, He died from neglect | and abuse June ter married the Duke What was the 95. The daugh- of Angouleme. Smith-HugYes Passed pryided vocational education; tion with the states in tion of such education ture and the trades and and in the preparation of vocational subjects. Q. What is the name berry that is used to stupify tacilitate their capture? A. The fish berry, a fruit native in eastern Indian and Malay States .| When made into a paste with flour it is readily eaten by fish and pro- duces a speedy but temporary stupefying effect, during which they float upon the surface of t} water and are easily taken. Q. What is calipash and calipee? | A. Calipash is that part of = turtle which adheres to the upper shield, consisting of a fatty gelatin- ous substance of a dull greenish col- or. Calipee is that which adheres to the lower shield. consisting of a fatly gelatinous sub- stance of light-yellow color. By whom are United States rshals appointed? What is the by the for the 4th Congress promotion of for coopera- the promo- in agricul- industries, of teachers it of the fish to new are appointed by on recommendation the President, 4¥Ing | the attorney-gencral, and confirmed | Salaries range from | by the senate, $4,000 to 86,000 a year. When was the last Civil Ser- amination for railway mail Q. What is the name of !|lection played in the re: | scene in the motion picture Heaven"? A. It is called “Cerenata” (S enade) a composition by Chopin Q. Has the farm population de- t|creased during the last decade? The 19 31,614,269 persons s | in the United States. On January 1 it was estimated that farm population was approximately S |2 11,000 persons. Q. How - |in Scotland? 1| A, Scotland has four canals with combined length of about 185 miles. The Caledonian Canal ¢ | nects the nearb s locks in Glenmore and is devoted e | principally to tourist travel. ) [same is true of the Crinan t|a the se aurant living on Cana and Clyde r| Bowling and <|from 1790. The Union branch of the Ferth and Clyde, ex - | tends from near Falkirk to Edin 1. | burgh. | Q. © | meaning Hauerwas? | A. In olden times drinking wate 1 was peddled about the n skins. The name Hau rived from the German Canal betweer srangemouth What of is the the derivation German nam “haut “What kind of a fellow is o . enclosing to cents in stamps | Prof. B. | His | stured at Trwinville, | part of a turtle| of | eon invitations. | Politics alro makes strange lunch- | | cause nobody knows enough to gossip about him. | Of course lynchings are getting fewer. When a proletarian is full of present- day liquor he can't say. | We still have a little crime as an aftermath of post war orgies, but vyou seldom see a silk shirt more. seem s0 Returning vacationists just 1o feel heiter because they're darned glad to get back home. ample of suffering between the {devil and the sea: A wee husband whose wife sits at the wheel orders him to sa the traffic cop. | More people leave prison leges, and remember the lesson lot longer. | = | The smell of tobacco still fright- ens a burglar. He knows that kind of woman would shoot him just fo | the experience. Russia needn’t despair of recogni- tion. Sooner or later Mr. will want it as part of a chain of some kind. Americanism: morbid and depr | hero doesn't get rich | chapter. Thinking a novel ing because the in the last There isn't much wrong sport page to get a thr You can tell Lngland has a bor govenment. It plans fo reduce navies with tools instead of oratory. | The objection to buying stock and getting rich, as other did |condition along the in the automobile business. is ihat so many of the early cars are for- gotten now. Science can explain almost every- {hing except the peculiar attraction |areas of precipitation were reported | a drug store has for who have nothing to do. People who fecl more each time they cross the must feel great reverence steward. It ali depends. Money really is the most important thing in life if it |is the only thing that can make you feel respectable. people important Atlanti for a A philosopher is one who reflects that the ordinary things hc posses- | ses would seem wonderful if de- scribed by an ad. writer. More and more of the |are learning to read and at you can't help wondering why. Correct this sentence: “I’s an- other rainy Sunday cried the | man happily; “so get to enjoy one another here at home.” Copyright 1929, Publishers Syndicate. we Norway’s Rum King | Captured by Police Stockholm, July 15 (UP)—Nor- | way's king of liquor smugglers, | Marius Maange, a giant in physique. | whose exploits on Norway's “rum |row” have been surrounded with a |halo of the picturesque, has been | arrested by the liquor control po- lice of Gothenburg. | Maange has amassed a huge for- |tune during the past few years which he used freely to develop his | business of smuggling liquor from | Sweden into Norway, mountainous and rocky land on the coast around Gothenburg and con- | structed cunningly hidden harbors from caves blasted away by | dynamite. He is believed to own the great- est part of the many vessels in the | smuggling fleet which used theose specially built harbors. A big city just seems tolerant be- | anybody weli | e T | ered DROWN IN CREEK Ha h Al ? bl Cioudburst Sweeps Auto and A FAIR DEAL Two Scottish workmen, by .0 means regular church goers, attend- ed the funeral of a companion whos | Occupants Down Stream friendship they both valued. As the | body of their old friend was low. | Moselle, Mo, July 15 (P—DMrs. into the grave, the minister |Marie Beckman, 28, her four chil- 5 e |dren, ages 15 months to four years, any | every [Sandy, they can say what they like year than graduate from our col-|aboot reelgion but naething could be a |fairer than | Morgan | | | in a| country whers you must turn to the |Fair tonight and Tuesday; | warmer Tuesda aviation | pressure which caused the showery | He bought for cash large tracts of | natural | | read and ' Lord giveth and the Lord | east winds becoming variable. La- | |her mother and her brother were * |drowned in Pinoak creek, southwest |of here yesterday when a flve-foot wall of water from a cloudburst | overturned an antomobile and swept them to their deaths. List of Dead The dead: Mrs. Marie Beckman, 28, |nut Park. St. Louls county. | Mrs., Mary Tigges, 51, mother Mrs. Beckman. Lawrence Tigges, Mrs, Beckman. Virgil Beckman, Marie Beckman, § Irene Beckman, Bernice Beckman, 15 months. Clarence Stahl, 15, of De Soto. | William F. Beckman, husband and father, was the only survivor of the | family outing yestercay and he owed | his life to the fact he had gone for {assistance to get the automobile |started when the swirling torrent !poured down on the hapless group. Goes to Obtain Aid Beckman had parked the car on the edge of the creek. Rain an honr |or so before the cloudburst mad: the bank slippery and the machine slid into the creek. Beckman pre- | vailed on a farmer to tow him out |but with the machine again on the |bank Beckman found the car's dis- tributor was wet. He left his fam- |ily to get aid only to return to see {the machine overturned and d molished. The farmer's car likewis was destroyed by the water. The farmer couldn’t say how he escapei the torrent. To celebrate his $2nd birthday in August the Marquis of Aberdeen, of of Wai- the “The taketh awa, Turing to his mate, one of the Scots remarked audibly “Weel, well-known words af . 15, brother of that!" Klassy fotln On The Weather Washington, July 15.—Forecast for Southern New England: Fair tonight and slightly warmer. North- west winds becoming variable._ Forecast for Iastern New York: slightly moderate north- New Haven and tonight; Tuesday fair warmer. Conditions: vicinity: Fair and slightly | The area of low| Atlantic L‘Oflsl} ;‘;‘sh’l’;i“e?rc"":“:_‘: £ large '“'h“ Aberdeen, Scotland. has just made S Gy Rt ORI O [ et O o i “Drink to M Only Vi Mhine the country with highest pressure | ... 2 Ly th fhin 4 % ves” and “Will Ye No' Come Back over the Great Lakes region. Small | (g \je 2", accompanied by his private ; : fanist, in the lower Mississippi valley. & Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with cool nights and | warm sunny days. Temperatures yesterday: High 50 £0 82 Low 70 Eyesight Examinations Appointments For Examination At Your Convenience Henry F. Reddell Optometrist 99 W. Main St. Phone 1183 Atlanta Atlantic Cit Boston Buffalo ... Chicago Cincinnati Denver Duluth Hatteras L.os Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucket ashville ew Haven New Orleans New York Norfolk, Va. Northfleld, Vt. Pittsburgh Portland, Me. St. Louis Washington 84 a0 86 88 68 52 52 a0 88 CORAL RUG GIVEN AWAY MERCHANTS' GIFT NIGHT THURSDAY NIGHT ) CAPITOL THEATER READ H WHO'S YOUR FAVORITE?® Richard Barthelmess, John Barrymore, bard Dix. John Gilbert, Conrad Nagel, Nils Asthe ‘Gary Cooper who? Our Washington Bureau interesting facts about twenty It tells the facts you want te know about out the coupon below and send for it = = = == — =(LIP COUPON HERE =— =— — — - Tonald Colman, Ramon Novarro, or lias prepared a comprehensive bulletin giving of the monst popular male stars of the screen the best known male actors. Fill 1 and | U. S. postage 'MO\[F. EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington. D. C. T want a copy of the bulletin POPULAR MEN OF THE SCREEN, enclors herewith five cents in coin, or loose, uncancelled, stamps to cover postage and handling cosis NAME ]srnm-:r AND NUMBER | ary 1 am a reader of the NEW BRITAIN HERALD. e s e This Is 0 Census enumesated | farms | the many canals are there con- continuous line of The 1 | across the peninsula of Kintyre. The | table to | Forth | dates Canal, a and o ci n was is de- wasser,” meaning a skin or hide in| which water w originated s carried. The fam n | ily name as a nicliname. udge, | ’ - d| Airmen of Europe are laughin over the report from Germany tha tow him through the air on an en a | gineless soaring machine, ol Al an experimenter in motorless flight 0 Mickey (Himself) McGuire