New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 30, 1929, Page 6

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‘New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Iseued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bidg. ¢7 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 0 & Year | that'the through trains%o Montreal Iwmch travel over the New Haven in !!chthern New England, go over its | tracks. ! This sterling Vermont carrier now !hm-omos a subsidiary of the Canadian | National, which has been the chief ereditor and the chief owner of its NEW BRITAI career in New Britain. The refer- ence, of course, is to Charles Sumner Ward, who died at the age of T1. Back in 1§84 to 1890 he was secre- | tary of the New Britain Y. M. C. of which he was the founder. Later he became the head of the greatest occurred over scattered portions of th eastern, southern and central portions of the country. Pressure is low over the northern plains states and the Rocky Mountain dis- tricts. Temperatures continue above the normals in nearly all por- tions of the country. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather and not much change | DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1929. Church Supper with her. Mrs. Warren: “Indeed?” Mrs. Hatch: “Yes, and it you don’t watch her pretty closely she is liable to put chicken in the chick- en-ple instead of veal!” —Herbert John Marks (Copyright, 1 Reproduction committees I"orbidden) robins and oridles A. There are federal laws pro- tecting migratory insectivérous birds such as the rebin and the oiriole. Migratory birds may be taken under permit for propagating, scientific or banding purposes, under order of the secretary of ag- cultural or other interests. or| riculture to prevent, injury to agri-| VOLCANOES VALUABLE, CRATER EXPERT SAYS Kilauea Oscrver Clatms Scientists Are Negléctiig Anteresting Phase | of Volcanology | money-raising institution the “orlu[ $2.00 Three Months in Remperatune; 15¢. & Month at the Post OMce at New Rritain tered B Becond Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office 925 Editerial Ruoms 926 The enly profitable advertising medium is the City. Circulation books and press room always open to advertisers. Member of the Awsociated Press The Associated Press 1o exciusively en- titled 1u the use for re-puvlication all news credited o 1t of not othier wise eredited In this paper end also lucal Bews published therein. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation ®he A. B. C. is a natloual orgauization which furnishes npewapapers aud ader- | tisers with & strictly honest snalysis of | ot | shares. This New England railroad. | although retaining its identity and its name, nevertheless is to be a part | of which extends from coast to coast. Had it not been for the fact that the Canadian railroad | already wés the majority holder of its shares it probable that an American railroad, possibly the New Haven or the Doston & Maine, would Under a raiiroad is a bidder. American have becn | cumstances no railroad could have obtained a majority inter- nd as a result the Vermont line | goes to Canadian ownership. All the aged, and be of as great a value to Vermont and New England generally ame, it will be well man- as if it were owned lock, stock and eirculation. Our eirculation statistics are | Based upon this audit. This insures pro- tection against fraud in newspaper dis- tributien figures to both national and local advertisers. s on ssle dally In New York st Hotaling's Newsstand, Times Square; Schultz'e Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central 42nd Street. The Herald By the way, what were the names | of the endurance flight heroes who broke the record in Southern Cali- weeks Thus fornia a few 207 memory fails in the face of fame. As we understand this “con- tributing” which is in the n in the public contributing to the af- fluence of the it, system of race betting ws in Ohio consists fellows who run the races. Painting the stop-and-go signals reminds us that cosmetics have their place, ever in the case of silent po- licemen. Down in Southington there is & movement on foot to have street ‘awnings high enough to permit its tall citizens to navigate beneath them without injury to their These awnings may be out of date, but they come in handy on a hot day and make it easy congregate on the sidewalk and dis- +cuse what is in tha store windows. hats. for customers to The most universal modern ment is worrying where the money for the next from. instaliment is coming What the average father cannot understand is where school teachers | #et enough money to vacation lasting two months. finance a THE NEW BRIAND CABINET With such an astute as M Briand at the premicrship helm of the French government the <ontinues a rose hue, He it is whos ‘Bame and effects are linked with the newly opérative Briand-Kellogg pact; he it was who helped engineer the Locarno pact; he it is who has had a leading part in world co- operative efforts for at least a time dating from the Washington confer- ence. Resignation of Poincare had been expected for weeks, It e would prefer (o lay Tesponsibilities of the premiership after he had labored in behalf of the "Mellon-Berenger debt pact. Two im- Portant considerations actuated his wishes: His health, which necessi- tates the taking of a rest from public @duties, and the fact that the next big issue. if such it can be termed. the evacuation of the Rhineland the past M such a st=p prior to the time stipu- lated in the Versailles treaty, with the various mind future was known down the is In Poincare has opposed pacts in force and in the face of an unsympathetic at- | titude in England, it becomes creasingly manifest that the Cham- ber of Deputies has swerved the earlier demands. 1t therefore, that M. Briand will be the premier when the Rhineland is final- ly evacuated. It remarkable that such threc France, Great Britain United States are have heads of foreign relatio of similar namely MacDonald and Hoover lcan President really being head of all affairs pertaining to his is clear. is a coir great nat and the as s such men tastes, Briand, _government. ILLING THE VERMONT CENTRAL There is something dramat the sale of an entire railroad. To t average the right of way, rolling stock and locomotives represent much capital indsed, the Vermont is Commerce 000. Here value individual railroad 533 miles of the Central valued by the Interstate Commission at $23.000 18 a “small officially g1 greater than mast manuf railroad its is en as weturing o tablishments of large caliber The Vermont Central sustuined heavy damage to 250 miles of track during the Vermont flood today a flourishing line. This may geem remarkable in view of the 1 ceivership of but the two s’ standing prosperity started since receivership began. Its importance as | | & carrier is evidenced by the fact ail- | in- | from | barrel by one of the native systems. ATION IN VIRGINIA s civilization, anyway ? Does CIv What | it merely depend upon industry, pro- | | duction, wealth; or does it include a | definable something el One | ful fr is m g e of mind upon d Louis 1. Jaffe, editor Virginian-Pilot, re- in statements of | of the Norfolk | garding the state of civilization Virginia. That wasn't the formal title of his address, Virginia editors, but that was the substanc As several southern states have felt advancement considerably more than the Achilles heel of industrial Virginia, and as Virginia so far has escaped some of the evils of the | transformation evident in these | other southern states, one cannot help concluding that civilization in th like South be something H. L. must Mencken claims for it The | cial mission, according 1 | Jarfe. echo the cry for more industries, press in Virginia, has a so- to itor 1t may larger payrolls, bigger | cities, better roads, | better transportation systems, more traffic and greater wealth. But | “It will not make for a happier Virginia if build here an indus- | trial order founded on pa It will not make for a more civilized Virginia it we crystallize here a so- cial order pyramided on a hope- | abandoned peasantry. It will not make for a sweeter Virginia if we seal here a covenant of convenienc with @ priestly dictatorship. It will not make for a more enlightened Virginia if we allow our pursuit of material aggrandisement to deflect us from the cultivation of the | and sciences, or make us intolefant of social experiment and intellec curiosity | we That sounds like a “voice in | wilderness.” resonant 1t's a loud, voice, one of prophetic distinction. Here are some of the things that have happened in Virginia: | In a siogle biennium it has added trie But the worth of new indus- | state still numbers more | than 70,000 native adult white peo- | ple who can neither read nor w. |and a populs | many times larger. The mitted its public library to perish for want of but has found money in abundance for a new te. ion of Negro illiter proud city of Staunton per- appropriations, | country club, The great city of Norfolk boasts 12,500 pasenger automobiles, with an estimated outlay of $5,000 for gaso- but Norfolk | able, after ten years of effort, line every day: is un- to ac- cumulate a heggarly $200,000 for th the but | construction of first unit of | museum of | The capital of Vi with and locomotive itselr, “all great tobacco, paper industries, inia | asmoke haggling over the cost of protecting a painfully achieved public against being permanently shut away from the sun.” Yo A8 overrun t Virginia is not as “backward," with a new-found com- mercialism It 13 some other southern tes, has refained a distinction of living that North and South Caro- lina and Georgia have begun to lack It b such editors lik for it visable may possihle Jaf with a few the state. itself the in ncomitants of materialistic a stick of when it in South West, generating evils and North, the East or the influences which the Norfolk editor valia an The social equation e he most im try and ha although it | FATHER O ‘DRIVES" many tes that the mer v iy other (¢ originate gn drives” for | the raising of moncy for organiz tions believing the ould make goo the cir- | stimulated into a thought- | sting the | given before fellow | more airports. | per wages, | rts | the | . still | library | has ever known. Common belief is that the “drive” ess began only with the World | War. As a matter of fact, Mr. Ward thorough-going campaign manager long before the war, but the opportunities were less than after the war started. After the war had bu; was a shown how easy it was for the peo- | ple to be emotionalized into a com- mon purpose, the Ward The raising of $100,- for the Red Cross in 1917 ystem went | into full flower 000,000 | pointed the way to large things and | kfor institutions that had nothing* in | common with late unpleasant- ‘m»ss. Before Mr. Ward was near 70 | his firm had | the participated in the more than $500,000,000 !smrp the close of the conflict. This | half a billion raised during | peace times; and it was only possible 1h(‘ruuse the former raising of was New etary had solved the m ritain ery of mass production in campaigning for | tunds. | sec The secret of snccess lay nization and the pledge s | was a species of application of the | installment system of making pay- ments. Its only weakness was that occasionally the came delinquent pledge-makers be- making their | pledges good as the years passed. Some of the campaigns allowed pay ments over a period of years. Some- | times, toward the end of the third {or fourth years, the enthusiasm incident of the r grew dim, and then there was trouble. But the Ward whole worked until | the public in some cities seemed to come to the conclusion it had had cnough of drives. The of that had been an | first usually i | system on the drive tem promotion. was essentially The Ward con- | cern would furnish the organization, | the brains, the experience and the | enthusiasm it someone else furnish- ed the Something like the promoter who would one cause. furnish the ocean if someone else furnished the ship. The avalanche of drives that | i.uwm the country during the years mmediately following the war show- | ed clearly that there were a multi- | tude of “causes” for the drive pro- | motors to exercise their skill upon. | Although in the passing years it be- came increasingly difficult to arouse early enthusiasm that was coupled with the business, there was | the | always some cause somewhere need- ing aid and g organized effort. Thus the campaign-for-money industry be- came firmly established, and the name of Ward goes down in com- | mermercial history as the daddy of | | them all When Mr. A. |an office here he doubtless speculat- Ward was the Y, M. « | €d on ways to make a large income | | possible—like hundreds of others in |the organization ‘-lwinz at the same time. When he | left the city he perhaps had some |ideas under his hat, | time | lars. which in due sprouted into millions of HEAT AND DROUGHT Although the | hot spell hereabouts %\\us temporarily broken, there is no }(-vnmg what may happen before this | sees print, of A few difference hours make a | world when the weather seems hent upon being what {it has been for the most of the sum | mer. But it isn’t the heat that wor- ries weather obscrvers so much as [the drought. The lack of rain seems 1o be so widespread that in numer- ous states | L springs and ponds are | drying up, lakes and reservoirs are |at a low ebb, and forest fires are | raging. As conditior the throughout the entire country | Canada, it appears that the best part | are about same and =ecretary in his cubby hole of | undoubtedly were | dol- | ! Temperatures yesterday: | High 88 S0 88, 74 86 86 86 88 8 s8 Atlanta ... Atlantic City Boston Buftalo Chicago Cincinnati Denver .. Duluth Hatteras ... los Angeles | Miami Minneapolis Nantucket shville New Haven w Orleans New York Norfolk, Va Northfield, Vt. | Pittsburgh | Portland, Me. | St. Louis Washington Facts and Fancies 78 92 ss 84 92 90 84 86 2 90 a6 l BY ROBERT QUILLEN Blaming prohibition for everything | isn't new. The ancient Hebrews hal | & scapegoat to pile their sins on. There’s nothing in nature like the rear-end bumping of sunday traffic except a Dachshund 1unning around 1 tree, \ Mr. Dawes exercise pecret. * Probably a further indica- tion of his aversion to short pants in public. Using a dam o develop power raves coal. In other the trouble of acquiring an expres sive vocabulary. {or must have an aw- ful time in IFrance, where any ef- | fort to make a man pay back what he borrows is an effort to enslave him. A Dbill collec 1t is the land of the free until you become a success, and then you are doomed to address luncheon clubs for the remainder of your life. If there's a family skeleton in the closet now, it's because a makes a good sweat by and moves*another pound or two. A Papers say the Balkans are ing again. It is an old folk cus- fom, children being taught to seethe | before they are weaned. Perhaps we shouldn't change any policy that has made the country | rich, but so many new companics are forming it may be necessary to {1imit each to seven vice presidents. Americanism: ‘Frying to frame an immigration law that will keep out all Iuropeans cxcept Nordics; leay- ng the gate open for Mexicins. | Foreign polic program | fair dealing, modified to keep voters lined up at home. may be all ot the Birth control i but if people old enough to | can't pick the best ones, how | you expect a stork to do it? vote of the them problem is to make The great vroducer natural in affected 1n sound America. | 1f insects can’t think, haw does a |y know when you reach for a | swatter instead of a sweet? So they want & name for the gla- cier that is coming south at the rate of 50 feet a year? How about 0. P Alaska’s memorial t0® the mule wili be tnique. Al cquine statues rear at the other pack othes end hope to he Sam until makes some | Russia can't «d by Uncle | clean and recogniz she comes formal ar- and pants in cases it saves | close | seeth- | right- | can | “62 | For hone: | | | | talkie | gland without sounding | G.| | | | | rangement to avoid paying her debts. | Scientists say mortals | will have great minds and very | little body. Present efforts along | these lines indicate that the two 1o- | sults will be achieved by two di tinct groups, | eventuaily Correct this sentence: * my 16-year-old son's | £he, “shows the lcast {of the mirror.” "he rug in room." saia wear in front | Copyright 1926, Publishers Syndicate of the North American continent is | helng subiect to a be gruelling season that can Plamed upon nothing but sun spots The farmers, the West ously. especially those are being helped marvel- Although the world's wheat crop will 1 ran be less than in any year since the souring price gives @ of financial prosperity. To st of us it wikebe an expensive drought Observations On The Weather Washington, Southern New England tonight ind - Wednesday cooler tonight; moderate hifting to northeast or cast winds IForccast for Eastern New York iir tonight and Wednesday; slight cooler in southeast portion to night: somewhat warmer Wednes in northwest pertion: moderate north shifting to northeast vinds, New Haven ar and shightly cooley day inereasing cloudine Conditions Iy low over the and relatively high over region and southward to ind south Atlantic states of maximum pre at July 30 Forecast for slightly north lay a4 vicinity ht 1 Wednes i ton y Pressure Maritime is relativ J provinces the the Gul with cres i Miami sure ige of increased income began ms‘ Light to heavy thunder ,\lmwp.-;i in Hae ye heard this one ? MODERN YOUTH Little Tommy had been very rude to his mother. She gave him | ere talking to and later in the when father came home, the inci- dent was reported to him. The pun- | ishment was decided there and then | =—off to hed without any supper | L sev 1air An hour or so later mother pstairs astonished Tommy sitting up in bed and thump- and was to sec writer Al mother little dar said his S0 you are sending a 1o father ier to ry for mummy,” looking. divor heing bad said vou “No, without od to the che writing rui, “U'm from Lake f t| | | | { that's Send all communications to F Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. Those “Thirty-Ounce” Sum- mer Costumes! Those thirty-ounce costumes stylists predicted. The Summer-Girl'd wear have been | further restricted, ly, Folks, most we have seen the ‘irty-ounce to scanty sixteen: the of those | { Cut weight down Covers It “Money ant | isn't Warmouth: every- | thing. * Carruth: “No, hut thing that it isn't!" 1t gets every- CALL IT CONCEIT IF YOU WILL! Says ‘Paul Glore To all you critics who come to chill And to smirch the work of the blessed few, Who feed on the fancy they try to kill, 1 snap my fingers — the sapless crew! What do I care if the mew? This in the teeth of the mouths that whine What have you wrought you can sav this to: “By Jove, I made it, and it is mine bark ani Never & book thaf was writ so il Never a picture so false of hue, Never a song with so little thrill, That it had not something I'm glad was true! What if I fail? I can still pursue Joy of Creation, the gift divine! And he who creates has at this view: By Jove, I made it, and it is mine!” nvoy Critie, your parasite life renew! Drink my conceit, for it - flows like wine; Here is my poem, cue: “By Jove, mine least and here is 1 I made it, and it 1s Straws Are in Full Season! The Sequence! Newlywed. “Charlie 1s 80 o me. He's a wondertul hus- Mrs good band Mrs. Oldwed: vear they giv the second y “Certainly. The first you diamond chips, ar chocolate chips, and -{after that soap-chips! irl Goldschmidt Y'OU DON'T MIND IF I DO TALK, DO YOU?” Overheard by Ruth Carol Halper Janet: “You don't mind if I don't talk, do you? I sort of feel I know you well enough so you'll under. stand if T don't talk and T think talking all the time spoils the rhythm of dancing, sort of, don't you really think it does®® Larry: “Yeah, 1 guess right.” Janet: “But 1f you don’t talk so many people think it's rude. Y mean why I simply adore to dance with you because 1 sort of feel 1 don’t have to talk to be polite ana all, do you know what 1 mean?" Larry: ““Abs'lutel Janet: “It's terribly sweet of you | he nice about it. I mean 1 you're to so | really think it takes away an awful | they're danding | ing, do you know day, | ‘m kecp talking all the entire tim when yeu ar went | | Ing way viciously at his toy type- | ind me to say how sor- | hair lot from the pleasure of dancing ‘n have to keep talking all the entire time lon’t you really think 1 does? Larry: i Janet: “T mean 1 think simply heaps of girls just talk on ana on about simply anything at all just because they are afraid the man with will think rude if they don't keep talk- what I mean?” Larry: “Yeah, that's a hot one.” Janet: “But it's un absolute fact, my dear, becasse 1 mean they are simply scared stiff to keep still for a minute, but 1 honestly think it is perfectly ridiculous to feel you have “Yeah, I guess thats i they with some one who sort of. which is why adore duncing, with yoa I mean you really don't 1 don't talk, do you understands, 1 simply becan mind if A Bargain! Caller: “Can you deliver a lectur | on whiskey?" | ] give ecturer (ahsently) you one on “Say, T can two heers!™ Arthur C just | | : | Decision! mules? Questions 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, enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medlcal, legal and marital advise cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. not be answered. All confidential.—Editor. letters are Q. Where can T get a two cent réd, commemorative postage stamp, bearing the reproduction of the first incindescent lamp? A. These stamps were placed on sale at the post office at Menlo Park, N. J., June 5, 1929 and there- after were miade available at other | post offices throughout the United States. If the stamp cannot be pur- | chased at the post office nearest you n be obtained from the Phila- | it telic Agency, Post Office Depart- | ment, Washington, D. C. Q. How can ru be removed from radiator? A. One method is to fill the ra- dlator with hot water, in which a small+amount of ordinary washing or baking soda (about one teacup full to each two gallons) has been dissolved. Run the engine with the spark retarded for 15 or 20 minutes, until the solution hecomes hot and has circulated through the entire system. Drain out the radiator and flush out the system with clean water, using & hose for the purpose. Do not permit the soda solution to remain in the ra- diator for more than an hour. Be careful not to spill any of the soda solution on any painted or var- nished surface. Q. How far away . from the earth would an observer have to he to sce the earth as a disc? A, About 600 miles. Q. How long after obtaining first citizenship papers must an alien wait hefore applying for second papers? A, Two years, Q What is the meaning of the name Perey? A. “Piercing Eve'". Q. Which state raises the most and sediment an automobile A, Q Texas. Which state is called “The | Sunflower State?” A, Kansas. Q. Ts Radium used in the manu- facture of radio vacuum tubes? A. No. Q. What is a “wadi?” A. A valley containing the bed ofa watercourse, generally dry in the dry season. Q. Who were the three fates in Roman mythology? A. The Parcae. Q. What is a “nef? A. A medieval hoat, particula a commercial or trading vessel. Q. How much mail is carried monthly by air mail in the United States? plane carry? In June 1929 the U. 8 air | carried 19 pounds. Some planes are capable of carrying a load of two thousand pounds, and others carry only a few hundred pounds. Q. in the motion plcture I'rom Hell 2" A, Jean Jagger. Q. Are there any laws protecting ly “The Woman a! | | [ Z 7 | | If he asks me I'll say’ “Yes." ll'; doesn’'t make much difference. He's | clever and good-looking. His hanas are gentle, 1 like to feel them in my I think he would treat me ail If he doesn't ask me, never but if he does I'll say “Yes.* nampoo, madam?" | right mind Little Bit Crooked! Warren: “Misa Heller like a very fine woman.” Mrs. Hatch: “Yes, but she's just little bit tricky. I've worked on Mrs, seems Unsigned requests can- | How much does a single | Who played the part of Jim | “Spunky” Edwards’ THE MYSTERY OF WHY NOBOPY HAS BEEN ABLE To EEP ANY SORT OF A MUZZLE oN A pog. Q. Where was Janet Gaynor, the movie actress born? A. Philadelphia, Pa Q. 1Is Victor Varconi still acting in pictures in the U. A. No. He is one of a number of foreign actors who have returned to their native lands on account of the “talkies”. Q. Can bats be poisoned? A. The only satisfactory way to eliminate bats is by driving them out and closing their means of entry. They take their food on the wing and cannot be poisoned. Q. To what general classification of birds does the robin belong? A. The American robin is the largest and most numerous of American thrushes, and is closely 1t is 10 inches long, olive gray, the top and sides of the head black, the chin and throat white with black streaks and the under parts orange. The female is of duller hue. Q. What is Eosin? A. A reddish coloring matter de- rived from coal tar, Q. Where is the Sea of Azov? It is & northern arm of the Black Sea to which it is connected I |nearly enclosed by Russian territory that forms the peninsula of the Crimea. 25 Years Ago Today The Connecticut valley branch of the Grant family association held its third re-nnion today. The Grants took the Madeline from State street dock at 9 o'clock and sailed down the Connecticut river to Glen Grove where a ousket dinner was servea about noon. After dinner the sail was continued to Goodspecd’s. A. L. Thonpson and a dozen oth- er members of Washington camp, [P. 0. of A., attended the state con- vention at New Haven today. Col Thompson is vice president of the order, Frfed Goodrich and Arthur F. | Gaodecli are spending the week at Stony Creek. The Postal Telegraph company has removed its office from the lit- tle building near the railroad cross- ing to the D). C. Judd building oa Main street. The policemen have arranged to hold a clam bake and outing at Schuetzen's park tomorrow after. noon. All the officers except the two day men will be in on the sport. The T. A. B. building committes met last night and examinea sketches submitted by Cadwell and abtree. They show the buflding extended about twenty feet on the south side, a broad veranda in front, |a parlor, card, reading, pool, batn | and coat room on the first floor and {an enlarged hall on the second. The fire commissioners will hota a meeting Friday night at which the vacaney in Engine Co. No. 2 wii | e filled. The substitutes in tho company are William Bollman cna Adolph Wagner. = The Tuxedo ball team defeatel] the Y. M. C. A. ball team by a score of 10 to § at Hart's field yes- terday afternoon. |related to the European blackbird. | by the Strait of Yenikale or Kertch; | Honolulu, July 30, (#—Dr. T. A Jaggar, world famous voleanologist at the Kilayea observatory on the island of Hawaii, believes that an active volcano is a rare and - alu- able possession, In a report to the Hawaiian Vol- cano Research association, he ex- plains its value and tells what »l- canologists look for. “An active volcano when it is quiet,” he says, “is just as record- able, just as strategically impor- tant for its tremors, tlts, tempera- tures and chemical emanations as when it is erupting. It is like a train steaming through mountain tunnels, seen from an airplane. Sometimes it shows, sometimes not. But the train i8 not dead because it does not show. Yet many men of science still think volcano 1t of no interest unless it erupting. “Change of position or appear- |ance at different timés is of firat | importance in astronomy. But careful measurement of change of position or appearance of objects on the earth is an activity of sci- ence that has not yet taken root i the scientist mentality.” MAURETANIA CROSSES FAST Plymouth, England, July 30 (A The Cunard liner Mauretania arriv ed her this morning after a cross ing from New York in five dayy one hour and one minute, her fast est crossing this year. The averag: speed was 25.58 miles un nour. Her officers said she made no at. tempt to beat the recently establish ed record of the Bremen. | | } © 1929, 1. Cs., lnc. A new deliciousness in corn flakes POST’S Corn Flakes | | | | | COMING on July 1, TO AMERICA the mew National Origine immigration law went into eftect In addition, (ha last Congress passed several amendments to the immigration luws and deportation laws of interest United States, aliens in the United States and their Washington Bureau has prepared & neéw bulletin summary of the tm- to all who contemplate coming to the friends and relatives. migration laws of the United States which will prove of \alue to svervbody in the United States end send for it: [ == = == = =CLIP COU ITOR, W York Avenud | | IMMIGRATION 1322 New | cents in coin, or loose, postage and handling costs NAME |S‘|‘REET AND NUMBER I cITY I am a reader of the NEW nterested in Immigration Ington Bureau, Washington I want a copy of the bulletin IMMIGRATION and euciose herewith Ava uncancelled, Fill out the coupon below Lo L L e N S O i New Britain Herald D U. 8. postags stamps, to cover BRITAIN, HERALD. e Monkey By Fontaine Fox (SFontaine ¥ox, 1929

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