New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1929, Page 6

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i A e 2 e s st A New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tseusd Daily (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg. 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 00 & Year 3$2.00 Three Months 5. a Month Bntered at the Post Ofce at New Britaln as Becond Class Mail Matter. TELEPHONB CALLS Bumness Office ..... ¥2 Editerial Ruoms ... 926 The only profitable advertimog medium # the City. Circulation books and press ‘oom always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press The Amociated Prems {a exclusi titled to the ume for re-puulication All newa credited to it or mot otherwise sdited in this paper end also news publizhed therei Barean of Circalation national oIgamization wapapeis sad adier- hopest apalysis of Member Andit The 4 8. C s 3 which furnishes lisers with = strictly sirculation. ssed upon this andit. Thia fnmures {ection against fraud I newspaper ribution fgures to botb aationl local advertisers. pro- din and in New Times Entrance 1 on eaie daily York at Hotaling's Newsstand. Square; Bchuitz's Newsstands, Grand Central, 42nd Street. The Aeraid — IMPROVEMENTS VS, THE TAX RATE The thoughtful citizen of late must have been sorely perplexed at the variety of advice dispensed regard- ing what should be done to make a better city—one with more charac- ter, which would money— Wwhile other groups subscribed to the cost incentive of the the main shonld that effort notion municipal be Zes duction of the tax rate. We have not found who could explain how the city was yet anyone to attend to only a part of its needs and reduce (né tux rate at the same time, #aid thoughtful citizen, if he i still thinking, must have come to the things cannot He is conclusion that both be done at the same right. time. 1t would be interesting to ascer- tain just how many suggested needs there are in the city's wish box. It would be a long list. And just as impressive, if not mere so, would be the estimated costs. The property owners' struggling for lower taxes may have constitutions, but who are strong collective the estimated costs could be guaran- 1eed to give them a first class con- niption fit. We are of the opinion that the groups which are banded together for political pressure upon the tax rate will do little more than stress the need penditures—and tures, or some of them, will be made for caution in civic ex- then the expendi- st as usual, especially when it is discovered, the case almost every year, that something or other as is needs attention right away. - The anti-high-tax groups who are hooked up for political action or any other kind quartered over of action the tracks. And that causes us to wonder at something, to wit: Suppose the suggestion were made down at City Hall for a first class high grade eivic improvement in the fifth or sixth Say it would $200,000 ward? it cost or so. And suppose there were a widely current belief present that the improvement would raise property expensive district. In such a case, would the hoys he values over quite an against it or would they be willing 1o make an exception in its favor it it did heip rate? even to increase the tax Truth to tell. anybody old enough to vote has heard all about the perils of a hizh tax five Those years. 40 years old have heard about it for 25 vears, more or less. And vote has also heard— what anvhody oid enough to not overlooking the granddads if it s of 40—is that ity growing bigger, better more prozressive, more alert, more modern. more up-to-date and more cverything clse is tnat it must he constantly improved ta keep up with $he needs of the times As tho tul cit ponder while list and the cons th conclude hoth sides are right up 1o A certain point: hut certain improve inents are ssary nece advances and that a fulness of the tax ra And the te the conclusion that t OLD CIRCUS SIGNS Some wecks ago a circus was town and liberally plastered p in empty store windows, fences an other places. The circus is gone, hut many of the signs rem Possibly this could not he blamed wpon the & Mmanagement ty still show not belong to the circus t could very well the property owners who displayed cizns to eliminate local | are head- | ate for at least | the | it husiness of 1oca) | them after the cir- | cus departed. That, however, isn't The owner of & vacant store is de- linquent in nothing so much as in re- ! moving signs of past performances— especially circus signs. Some of the | posters hang in public view until the | often done. | circus comes around again the fol- lowing year. | 1t is no credit to anyone. either to the circus or the property owners who thus defile the appearance of their property. Perhaps City Hall could do something about this in the | ¢ way of an ordfnance. We are sure | restrictive legislation against this nuisance would meet with universal tavor. THE MOTORCYCLE COPS The corps of motorcycle cops em- ployed by the city, largely to keep an who forget all they ever knew about the motoring upon motorists vate service Scarcely a day passes that the | motoreycle copa do mot figure in the laws, aie doing fust Our circulation statiatica #re | news as having made arresta As everyone knows. hoth trom theé statistics and the onservation of only five per autoists are automobile automotive experts. | cent the active bad | temperamentally drivers. That percentage.is sufficient, of however, to cause a nuisance for the | | other 95 per cent | It is the business of the motorcycle | cops to spot the five per cent and | put them in the learning | | their lessons. This they are doing in pretty thorough fashion. way of THE POLICE AND YOUTH From time to time the police of with adoles- this city are bothered cenls who gather in groups and make nuisances of themselves. Such action invariably is the beginning of | criminal One is forced to | wondear what the parents of such vyr‘wnulflvn aré doing, or wnethar | thoy intend to oare ‘until the time | comes to appear betore the judge | land in tearful voice proclaim that | “willie had always heen such a good careers little hoy Maybe he was. but he got no good when he began loitering around the | street corners with worthiess com- | panions, and when he was allowed 'to come back into the house at any hour of the night with no questions asked and nothing in particular done about it. THE PRISON OUTBREARS Two serious prison riots within a week in New York state will lead ! many citizens to conclude that the prison system is not all it is reputed to be in that commonwealth. When prisoners, as happened in Auburn. | can seize the prison arsenal and arm themselves, there is no other conclu- sion possible than that the methods are faulty. This does not | there is mot enough repression of probably necessarily mean prisoners. There is too much. Tn the majority of prison out- breaks the smouldering resentment and determination for revenge is | | caused by authorities to handle the failure- of the prison men in a manner to engender confidence and respect The underworld story of Charles Francis Coe, the Hartford dealt with this problem at ad Coe's serial last writer, lengih. Those who r story will understand fairly well what was wrong in the Auburn and Clinton prison at Dannemora AN INDUSTRIAL CRISIS The tabor government of Great Britain today is faced with its firat crisis. The industrial upheaval cau ed hy the close of 1,600 textile plants | over a wage disagreement provides serious disturb- the This major disturbance will affect 500,000 the most economic ance since general strike. workers in Manchester It nomic problem alone. this brougnt the seems curious that co- was ahout | just at the beginning of Mac- Donald ministry. The textile trade has been bad in Engiand for many years. and throughout the Baldwin ministry employers and employes they government worried With the new along as best might Labor in is brought about, effort the office this turmoil leaving the impression an is heing made to embarrass ROV- the earliest opportunity. | to dispatches ernment at According four from England fifths of lLancashire's output is for export. the export of cotton forming one-fifth of Britain's xportable products. But of late vears foreign competion and tariffs have had a serious effect upon the industry, and as serious as any thing is the overcapitalization of the British nethods of mills and the out-of-date That the an overhauling is agreed Mae business. in on hoth sides. Mavhe Premier Donald is the man 1o start it FARMING IN NEW ENGLAND sorrowful picture Clifford £, Huck “onnecticut which general manager of the ( Milk Producers’ Association, painted of Connecticnt farms. Average Nutmeg farmers, he said, are not doing more than paying the interest, taxes. in | surance and When the part of the repairs buildings rot and fall down to rebuild, he and and the farmer has no money 20es 10 work in a fac- tory inother farm becomes nas-once | happen i S The reason? Increasing costs of operation, including the costs of grain needed by cows, and the un- certainties of the weather. The result: New England, with a thickly settled population the towns is supporting fewer New Eng- in land farms Wisconsin dairymen are eager to send their milk into New England. They can afford to pay the freight | in some cases, and say they would be able to do so to a much larger ex- tent it the tariff excluded Canadian | competition for New England trade. Rather startling, isn't it? The seek reason is not so very far to Wisconsin—and Minnesota— dairy interests need not for cows at high prices; it is raised right on the farms. The same holds true of Quebec. The average western dairy farm is a much bigger business than in New England. The most efficient methods | are employed. Farming and dairy- ing on & big acale has been their specialty for years New England's farms as a general thing are comparatively small. Costs | are relatively higher. cannot compete with a big farm. A smail farm Some say there should be no rea- son why a Connecticut . farm, well | managed, should not be able to de- liver produce in cheaper than where from 800 (0 1200 miles away. Where the trouble lies is one of the the New England, be the duty the nearest city a farm situated any- things agricultural experts of they on farms or in agricultural colleges, are bound to find ont in Others say land in New England is 100 poor to compete with the West. What business has happened should not in in the meat e allowed 1o the oase of all farm producta. ! Oncs New England produced vir- | tually all its own mear. Meat pack- | ing was a fairly important New Eng- | industry. There | slaughter houses and land still are some meat | packers, but there is no denying that most of the meat consumed in New England comes from Chicago. And once upon a time there aiso were flour mills in New England. needs without Today which served local great difficulty. virtually all our flour comes from Minneapolis. And what grains we eat in the Michi- western points, the nearest eastern cereal center seem- ing to be Buffalo and Niagara Falls. 1s comparativly the same thing to occur in everything from the farm? form of cereals comes from gan or other Will the day come when there will be NO farms at all in New England | ~except small truck farms? and poultry | 1t Mr. Huck savs is true— | and we have no doubt of that—the | what situation is one worthy of the most | painstaking study by every economist | in New England | 1f New England’s remaining farms are to be gradually decimated by the relentless force of economics, then the food bill of those living in the | towns will go up and up until the cost of living in New England will be too high for industry tq bear ew England without farms at all would be a devastating blow at New England industry. THE TUNNEL AGE of the Holland New York has been so Success vehicular tunnel in well established that the metropolis. eager 1o cause its transportation fa- cilities catch up with its traffic, has wisely concluded to constrict 1wo vehicular tunnels $200,000.900. One 35th strect fo Queens and while the new at a cost of of these will extend from Brooklyn, other will connect South Brooklyn with Staten the Narrows. Island, under The latter route was discussed for years as one offering possibilities 1o a new subway line. the one for tricks and automobiles. This change the Instead of the subway, however tunnel will be in aim. and projected construction of the East river ve- hicular tunnel, are significant re- minders of how tire ftraffic has grown in importance within the city the One hears quite as much need for bridges and abont more fraffic arteries tunnels as on does regarding the need for r subways Facts and Fancies When a woman 25 says Aecided and give comfort omance, tn make Areams of The world has its fanits, hut monument he 10 never see a erected a4 man wha thought the with ladios T Mr a limit to everything except a Einstein 18 right. there is confidence in nis own virtn A new another man the dealer £120 for his oid two-rar Earaze ot st means mad ha- canse offered to allow only Perhaps the President lighten his labors by appointing buy grain | Secretary of Righteousness. You can't tell whether the man or his wife i3 boss unless you ob- isrr\'e Which one sits on the aisle. | The chief objection to a divorce suit is that it exposes the parts you have heen covering up. The reason some marriages are happy is because wives keep still on dreary days when their husbands re- mind them of something the cat| dragged in. One good thing about an endur- | ance flight. It affords opportunity to get 2 mustache far enough along | to escage amused glances. Americanism: Feeling extravagant when you pay $225 for a coat of | feeling satisfied when you spend 3800 to get a coat of tan. How easy it would be to love our neighbors if they were as far away as the heathen. Sull. vou can live vears in Amerioan city and see no sign of | wickedness except in the headlines. | “Graphic description.of the sex life,” says a‘'publisher's ad. Evident- ly a typographical error. The word is pornographic. | anv You don't see much vulgar osten- tation now except strawberry staing on the shirt front. There's so much good in the worst of us, and so much bad in the best of ws that it scarcely becomes any of us to try reforming the rest of us, You can't stic up much hatred for capitalism in a land where your hootblack expects to buy a limon- sine if the market goes right. | What a world! Trained seals | aren't seals; the hloodhounds in a | “Tom” show are Great Danes; and | a hot dog is neither hot nor dog. | Meat-eating animals seldom eat | one another. Only the vegetarians | taste good. Meat-eaters like human flesh. Frgo, Nature made man & vegetarian, | | Correct thia sentence: "Ha waa a leading reformer,” sald the reporter, “but when our papers exposed his connection with a gambling house, his followers turned their backs on | him." Copyright. 1929, Publishers Syndicate $1r Harny - LAUDER -~ FUNNIER Hae ye heard this one ? CAN YOU BEAT THIS ONE? | A traveller for a Dundee firm had ruck Kirkell the capital of the Orkpey lslands during a dreadfnl winter week ‘of gales. Business was | rotten but after picking up all the orders nie could get the traveller was disgusted to find that his luck was | algo out in other directions—on ac- | count of the weather all steamer | sailings were cancelled Yo ‘ o | : X | vum-cleaner Send all communications to Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. ALL-YEAR ROUND FRUITS! The cherry crop and plum crop are harvested, it's true, The season's short for both of 'em but, Folks, the whole year through The cheery crop and fun with us all the while, quite within our means because they only cost a smile! DOUBLE FLOW! Hanley: “They say Senator Fraw- ley was deeply affected when he got back to this country from Europe. Clarke: “Yes indeed: his eves and liis suit-case were filled to over-flow- ing! crop is And RETORT! By T. 8. Ravenel Fascinated always by the sight of a worm about to turn I paused the other afternoon to watch a meek little gentleman who was using oue of the telephone booths in our lead- ing hotel. He stood there a long time, obvi- cusly having slipped the operator's mind. Seated at her station she way busily engaged in pushing in plugs, pulling them out ,reciting numbers, making change for patrons and de- claring at intervals, “The liyen is hizeh.” Such an example of organ- ized efficiency was she that the meek gentleman palpably lacked deter- inination enough to recall himse.f to her attention. 1 had about given up hope that he would take his own part when she caught sight of him over the switchboard. “Are you waiting for a number?”, she demanded. “Oh no, ma'am.” said the little man, I just stepped in here to de- velop a picture!"” £ TUD ELL A Cai May Look At a King! THE REASON! the old days women's trains that swept the MAYBE Kohl: *“In dresses had floor.” Harvin: *Then you think the vac- is responsible for the | short skivt? = Polly A. Beroes. 1, WELL! had been w Little Roger knocked | down by a truck, but was, fortunate- So he wired to his firm explaining the situation and added the question, “What shall 1 do?" Rack came the answer: “Sta vour summer holidays as from yes- terday!” Observations On The Weather Washington, July 29 for Southern New England: Local | thunder showers this afternoon; | generally fair tonight and Tuesday; | not quite so warm fonight; moder- | ate southwest and west winds. 1 Iorecast for Fastern New York: Generally fair tonight and Tuesday preceded by local thunder showers this afternoon in extreme south por- | tion; not quite so warm tonight in extreme south portion: 'moderate southwest and west winds New Haven and vicinity: Thun- der showers followed by fair and slightly cooler tonight; Tuesday fair. | Conditions The low pressure area over the Canadian districts 1s passing out to sea near the Gulf of St. Tawrence and a long trough ex- {tends southwestward over the North Atlantic states, thence westward and southwestward over the Ohio valley and into Arkansas and Okla homa Thunder storms Te- ported from the lower Lake region upper New York state and the southern Plains states. Areas of high pressure overlie Florida and astern Nebra A Maximum temperature ranged well ahove 60 degrees in portions of the middle Atlantic sfates yesterday. | highest heing 98 degrees af | ditimore, Alhany and Washington Conditions favor for this vicinity showers followed by fair and slight- ~Forecast were Ten peratires yesterday High 6 Low [ Atlanta Atlantic Roston Buffalo Chicag x B Cincinnati SR ity 78 a4 80 Denver Duluth 80 Hatteras Jacksonville 1.08 Angeles Memphis Miam Minn Nantucket Nashville Haven Orloans New 74 ly, quite unhurt His mother, much more frightened han he, was trying to impress on nim the seriousness of the situation. “Why, just think, dear,” she said, “you might have been cut in two.’ hen you would have had to buy snits for me,” Roger giggled. -~ Mrs. 8. J. Roelker. GRANDMOTHER'S BOOK By Harold Morice windows are gay with novels that shine In bindings of wenderful hue: They are wondrously fair as they siand there in line To tempt any cne view There are books about fairies And big dictionaries And histories grave and the rest— Yet of all the wise prints, Tales and practical hints, My grandmother’s cook hook seems best, COOK The new who may When stone bruises came to my fu- venile heel 1t told how to conquer the pain, how te make soap or apply lemon peel Tc remove sore insidious stain, What ot do, it portrayed, For a drowning man’s aid, And how to make blackberry wine; And how {o clean paint And cure people who faint— grandmother’s cook book was fine. And No frivolons poem! No fiction to Al Our lives wath a vague discon- tent! No long, prosy essays: "Twas written with skill; The author meant! Of cooking, ‘tis trus What my grandmother Knew, I'was bevond any voiume {o state, Rut for hot drops and such, When we'd ealen too much, grandmother's cook hook great! inst said what he VE ES! Muriel: much alixe 28 two peas.” Irank: “Yes, but there's a difference 1n their heans! —Louis Baur 'ABLE QUALI lot been hit drug store aid treat A man who had uek was carried into a na after receiving first NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. MONDAY, JULY 29, 1929. Norhis: “Yes, I'm on my way to see the veterinary now!” Willlars: “The veterinary?” Norris: “Sare; I'm a little hoarse and there’s something wrong with my dogs!” -~Madge Neilson (Copyright 1929. Reproduction Forbiader ) | o | m— | QUESTIONS ANSWERED | You can get an answer to 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 stam for reply. Medical, legal and marital advise cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be-undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requesis can- not be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor Q. To what church organization does Westminster Abbey in London belong? A. The Church of England, which corresponds to the Protestant Episcopal church in the United States. Q. Who on his death bed, said “Now I am about to fake my last voyage: a great leap in the dark?” A. Thomas Hobbes, an English author who died in 1679. Q. Why is kerosene not anti-freezing solution for automo- biles? A. Because of the odor and because kerosene evap- | orates when heated and is also a | considerable fire risk. It rots the rubber tubing and will glso depost & greasy mist over the tar. Gas is liable to form and causs expansion and bulging of the radiator, The boiling peint of herosene ts much higher than alcohol. Q. How old was Fitzsimmons when he fought Jeffries at Coney | 1sland in June 1899? What did each | weigh? | A. Fitzsimmons weighed 165 pounds and Jeffries | about 220 pounds. Fifzsimmons was 37 years old and Jetfries was 24. | Q. What does the name Gladys about It is from means “lame.” Q. What is an “Ant?” A. A Stamese coin Q. What is the correct name of | the “butter tree” of India? A. The Fulwa. How many square feef could | be allotted to each person If the whole population of the world was | concentrated in Texas? A. Fach person could have 4184.5 square feet or about one- tenth of an acre. The land area of Texas is 265,896 square miles. The estimated population of the world is 1,784.000,000. Q. What is elasticity? | A, It is that general property of | matter in virtue of which, if it is | strained in any way by means of |a force. it returns to its former L!‘nndninr\ more or less perfectly when the force is removed. Q. 1sa dromedary a camel? | 4. The name is sometimes ap plied to the Arabian or one-humped the Welsh and to a variety of that species, dis- tinguished by slenderness of limhs and symmetry of form. and by ex- traordinary flestness, hearing much the same relation to the ordinery camel as a race horse does lo a cart horse. Q. Where does the common American fresh water eel spawn? A. In the desp sea, in the region of Bermuda. Young eels, after they hatch, travel back to fresh water. | By the time they reach the Amer- ican coast they are nearly a year old and enter fresh water as small glass eels. These amall transparent | cels grow 1o adult size in fresh wa- a good | disagreeable | weighed | camel, but properly it belongs only | ter. Q. Who were Job? A. They are not named in the scriptures. Job dwelt in the land of Uz, but even the location of that country is not clearly defined. Q. What is the living expense of the average college student residing on the campus. A. Minimum expense for i college year of 36 weeks in dence averages 3547 at the 4-year colleges and universities. This is a faic estimate, obtained in 1928, of the entire expenses of an economical student, but does not include items | of travel, clothes or orr-cAmpus amusements. For coeducation insti- tutions the average is $497 and in the exclusive men's colleges and wo- |men’s colleges it is more, but less in the teachers' colleges. | Q. What is the cradle in which |an Indian woman carries her pa- poose called ? A. Some of the Indian names the parents of | one Tesi- are Gaagosa, Timigan and Urhasta. | Q What is the longest prize | fight of which there is a record? | | A Jack Jones heat Patsy Tun-| ney, Cheshire, England, 1825, after) a batile of 276 rounds, lasting 4| hours and 30 minutes. £ Q. What is the name of a of the Pacific Islands bearing fruit from whizh a red stain 1s ob- |tained? A.- Hea. Q. When and how Stratton Porter die? A. December 6, fractured her skull cident. tree | 2l did Jean 1924, in an auto | 25 Years Ago Today Commissioner Wilcox, at a hearing | held today before the railroad com- missioners, inquired many !grade crossings are protected within how {the city limits, and Mr. Bassett pro- ceeded to enumerate them. Su- | perintendent Warner said that the | number was eleven. A baseball team picked up among (he members of Engine Co. No. 1 played the Corbin Cabinet lock nine at Walnut Hill park Saturday | afternoon and won, 18 10 1§ | The police made 92 arrests last month. W. B, Hall and family are Russell cottage, Indian Neck {two weeks. | Councilman Halloran will leave this evening for a two weeks stay at Block Island. The increase in the rates for town patients at the hospital went into effect today, and from now on the [town will be obliged to pay $6 al week. The Maple Hill golf team played the strong Springfield team at ! Agawam Saturday and was defeated by a score of 9 to 4. A special prize was awarded to Motorman Houselle Saturday even- ing at the trolley car barn. The prize was a Standard graphophone. at tor Murdern hyVPoison Is Sidney Case Verdict | T.ondon, July 29 (®—A verdict of murder by arsenic, administered by a person or persons unknown, was returned by a coroner's jury today at the conclusion of a protracted in- {auest over the body of Miss Vera Sidney, one of three members of the same family whose deaths are con- nected with England's great poison- | |ing mystery COMING Tuly 1 on the new National Origing immigration ‘DUCHESS' DEMANDS ESTATE OF CZAR Woman Insists She Is Anastasia —Plans Legal Battle New York, July 28.—(@—A pre- liminary step in an effort to obtain the fortune of the murdered Czar Nicholas I of Russia was taken to- day by Tschaikowsky, who calls herself the Grand Duchess Anastasia and insists she is his only Mme. | surviving child. The Romanoff for- | tune is reported to amount to more than $100,000,000, scattered among various countries. An advertised legal notice de- manded that all banks, corporations and individuals report the existence of any funds they may hold that belong to the Czar's estate. The or- der was issued at the instance of Mme. Tschaikowsky's attorney. Mme. Tschailowsky is residing with Miss Ahnie Burr Jennings, whose Long Island estate adjoins that of Mrs. William B, l.eeds, the former Princess Xenia of Russia, who brought Mme. Tschaikowsky from abroad 1t was denied that Mrs. Leeds had repudiated the Grand Duchess, but scores of other relatives of the Czar are prepared to resist the plea that Anastasia is next of kin of Nicholas or any kin at all. TS folly to suffer long from neu- is, neuralgia, or headaches when relief is swift and sure, with Bayer Aspirin. For 28 years the medical profession has recommended it. Tt does not affect the heart, Take it for colds, rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago. Gargle it for a sore throat or tonsilitis. Proven directions for its many uses, in every package, All drug stores have genuine Bayer Aspirin which is readily identified by the name on the box and the Bayer cross on every tablet, Aspirin {s the trade mark of Baver Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid AMERICA Jaw went intn effect In addition, the last Congress passed several amendments to the immigration Jaws and deportation laws of interest to all who contemplate coming to the the has pro I'nited States, aliens in Our Washington Burean pared United States and friends and summary of relatives the im their a new bulletin migration laws of the United States which will prove of value fo everybady States interested in the United in ond send for — 1322 New York Avenue, T want a copy of the bullatin vents in coin. or uncancelled, postage and handling cosis: NAME |S]‘KH\.T AND NUMBER | e e iy I am a reader of the NEW RF Immigration. == == == — =CLIP COUPON HERE —— —— =— — sT Fill out the coupon below Bl e V. S postage ATE AIN HERALD. | i 4 | _——— e = o = - =) The Toonerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. By Fontaine Fox. was he Berkley twins are as of | by a ment still showed signs of being in rain The driver of the frnck inquired whether he should call mbulance or it tor cean sufferer 0000." demanded h-N1 1 want Main Doctor, HORSE AND DOG Williams: “Ycu look sick.” (rare soul) an victim's own doc- the my

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