New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 8, 1929, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLIBHING COMPANY Issued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg.. §7 Church Btreet SUBSCRIPTION RATES a Year $2.00 Three Aonths 5c. s Month Bntered at the Post Ofce at New Britaln as Becond Class Mall Matter. TELEPHONE CALL Business Office . Kditoria) Ruom 25 26 The only profitable stvertising medium In the City Circuttion buoke and vres® | supreme court of errors unsullicd by | ropm always open to mdvertisers. Member of the Associnted Press The Amuciated Prems Ix exclusively en- tisled to the use for repuulication of all gews credited to It ol not otherwise redited In this paper end ews published thervin, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation The A H. C. 18 a uational orgauization which furnishes Dewspapers &nd adver- tisers with a strictly honest analyeis of clreulation Qur chiculation statiet Mased upon this audit This ‘nsures pro- tection against traud 'n mewspaper dis- totbution figures to both national local advertisers. The FAerald ts on saie dally in New York at iiotaling's Newsstand, Square; Schultz's Newsstands, Entrance Grand Central r old youngster u That four v Boston who tried woman into allowing him to continue his acrobatics before a crowd which to bribe a police was contributing small coins in gen- erous amount sems fo have learned hip stuff early in lite The story goes that he oflcy | ences to the practice, but no politi- | ditions would soon become as the 1ady official “the big one™ ) cents) of > if she cha from a handful would let him go. Probably young America had been béen getting his ic bilities of graft from which he shouldn’t. s of the possi- some source Bet he knows there is prohibition. Although his ideas of values may be somewhat distorted Discovered, another excuse for the |that they take this question to the i | { republican leaders had tried to slide flapper to be out late nest Sunday | night—she was watching the “Te of St. Lawrence.” For the edification of those who do not follow the “Tears of St. newspapers the Lawrence” are mere- Iy the annual meteor showers Which | st case on the “healin otcur this year August 11. The best time to see them is be- tween midnight and dawn. Bo that night, daughters of flam ing youth age, you may diseard the puncture, or the detour, or whatever your ¢onventional excuse is and tell about the tears. Thus you will get credit for being an embryonic scientist According to the State Health De- partment there are brooks along the which it is safe for motor trigyers to drink. few springs or highway .°'m Which shuts off another supply thirst quenching fluid. Getting so a fellow can't drink anywhere. get a MRS. ANNE K. HAGUE AND HER BIRTHDAY Few of us but envy the record |attention to it. A certain amount of in long livety which lf_lhed by .Mrs. Anne K. now lives with her daughter out Shuttle Meadow way and who, in a | year and & day or £o will have at- tained the century mark of existence, If, we might withatand the inroads of age suffiviently to that which goes on around be interested in us and our memories so that we might com- | will phre with youth it would be a desirable thing 10 live a century the experiences and she is to be eqvied for having achieved the re- |that the republicans acknowledged- |y | tention of her ifg 100. - Born faculties while near- in 1830, married in 1858 atill living and enjoying life——what | SUpreme &' romantic statement. While a Zeppelin was crossing the otean through the air in a compar tively few hours, she remembers crossing its broad bosom on a vessel, taking, many days. She has witnessed the growth ©} practically all of the modern ap. pliances in common radio, the telephone undoubtedly use today, the telegraph, elec tric light and wonders almost count- less, wonders which we accept with ha ed age of invention while the in little thought. She has | in the nuity of man has itsel? fullest. Probably in her youth expressed to 10 one even contemplated what we demand as necessities today. A great deal of pleasure it must give ler progress march matched for length in in giant strides of centuries of our measured past Many of us have the she seen, it is true, development hut of the scier has, most of us will lack the thrill of this development as we fail to zo far enough back memory to gain the striking com- parison hetween the times which sh can gain In reading of he being estab- | a barrage { arra also local | | » are | prov Times | democrats were in | | | doubtful if the blame | definitely | party in power would be to marshal | the im: | its forces and correct the si | ing the general assembly together m“mh heels of four ye Hague who | by this test the hundreds | of our | plish a petty purposs | the | watching | un. | situation en | life we can |||“<mllwvum-\ more a ! hopel | sary to shout about what a party has | done ration grows be admini; that here may more than a remote possibility that shall see should we]lhc present older upon what w live to be a hundred in the light of what has the past century. Imagination find it ess fo measure the future we [publicans have long ¢ very own will prove the rock upon it appears happened in will a campaign argument which the Re- laimed as their are sure which the party will come to grief Said rock is nothing else but our old ‘V tariff and the cause for | ACTS state, THE “HEALING" leaders in the TING Democ friend th atic 2 grief is an evident diversity of who are planning & test case to de- - : opinion, even in the Senate Finance the in | should be on various th acts | by R will be performing a vital | - | ing. are said termine whether the action of | Tuesd | committec, over just what the tariff uesday | on | | general assembly T Sien passing six blanket “validating™ | lture or min- the manufacture, agric s legal 5 : republicans of Senate blic service. Providing. of course, | to have failed in an effort |'to write a tariff bill, presumably be- i cause they could not agree upon the of political ballyhoo. they led step | PChedules, each individual, because will be carrying out a needed step of scetional origin or private desires that the republicans, apparently, ard ! e wisl 1ing his pet object dutied so hi endeavoring to When the estep (hat it would be possible to receive | th mere McCook case decixion eater revenue from than an even raised serious doubts as to . e-produced article | hom 1,500 laws, signed protection” warrants validity of some by various governors after the three tl 1 lead time limit that the state law In the background is the doubt day st how much President Hoo- and for in high duties, the tariff element »s, the republican state over | ers realized the serious plight they | ver wil ve in. Here it should he said that leadership of the low . the | | committee, and wisdom of too high be- the Finan The evidences political quibbling in | question of the gan 1o appear on the horizon abe 1o out | “protection.” point | | quite proudly that mnone of their| Politicians in this section were not governors, when Baldwin was finally | slow in promising their workmen cleare had taken in this| petter incomes should the Republi- | can party be kept in power at the part ing bills late. heinous practice of sig Jast clection, holding over the head | of 1abor the threat that a Democratic It sounds like rather small potatoes to bring the point up. The demo- cratic state organization has known | administration would mean a lower te &, but | taritf and less profit to the bench- | quite well what the practice wa BEYS worker who produced our manufac- | be tured trade living con- to our knowlec has raised | very concerted howl about it article. Should there | There have been occasional refer- | hrought about free | are abroad, they said. They ignored been made out of it MeCook cal material ha t case is suddenly |the fact that the Democr were exploded like a bombshell in the | not advocating free trade, they had state they stuck to it and it had | their line, Now th nocrats are taking the [its effect unquestionably forward step, however, and for that It is no state secret that there is | reason may be excused for the ill not too much enthusiasm over the | advised gloating that was evident | (reatment of local concerns in pend- the case arou attention. | ing tariff bills, manufacturer: ml} True, some of their jubilation was | {hat their protection is not high | | even more natural because certain | cnough, or rather does not promis | probably to high enough. They would the blame for starting the practice feel unless the When it that way off on former Gov Saldwin My government disbarred foreign goods was shown that Baldwin had | from entry into this country at all, realized the bills full significance of sign- | thus eliminating competition entire- ing after the statutory to br limit |1y, The Hawley bill, of the House of had expired, it was only ex- | Representatives, might or might not I cratic pected that there would be make a change in the past tariffs for We have not a demo- come-back | manufactured articies. arousing grave | giudied its schedules, or even seen | il But not enough we are Republican picions that they are afraid of a | i for that matter it is acts” by sure. their action—or B that the fault for the situation rest- | yinong the mass ed P lack of action— in | Meanwhile what is happening o | that direction nif it were shown | (he promise th living conditions or workmen, the entirely on the party—and it is 'pench producers, would be bettered can ever he Republican was elected, as he No ‘figures cither, but it takes no stretch of if was? tacked first down 1o any one are available for individual—the duty of the | nis ! ination to see that there are ation, | more men out of work in our im- permanently and effectively, as soon | yediate neihgborhood than there as possible. For this reason the ac- [have been over an average year of tion of the democrats, the party out the last four and we have heard of of power in state politics. is all the [ wage cuts in various departments of If free from |jocal factories as well. 1f anything. political intrigue, a thing almost 100 { iy the aggregate men are worse off, even | it is more significant. good to be expected, it is an not better. All of this is taking place more constructive step than the ac- |in the first year of a Republican ad- tion of Gov. Trumbull in hastily call- | ministration following directly upon | s of the same act on the state’s dilemma. | political tactics. Which goes to prove Probably the democratic party will | that political promises, by any party feel that it is getting little in return | o | for it make a certaifh amount that matter, which has to at- | its effort unless it manages 1o |tempt to manage a country with as | of vote get- | diversified interests ours are ting capltal out of its actlon. Toliti- | worthy of no notice. cal affairs are like {hat—it is neces- | President Hoover is building as best he knows how, and he appears | I tates. to make the publc pay some o know well, for the future of Re- publicanism Not | Kansas and in the United boasting of the good accomplished n Connecjicut, but in California, after it is all over, will four Too of it will stamp the action as a political coup Florida, states not he amiss much [ whose | trying to re-enforce (. O. P. affil 1ims are quite different, is he | tion. The representatives in Congress | Tn other words if the democrats |are trying (o do (he sume thing. | and nothing else. want fo test the validity of the | [iach of the latter is trying to get the | gisture’s action solely for the sake | maximum fariff on goods which will being able to boast abont it. they of compete with the goods manufactur- | be doing a great zood to accom- | ed or raised in their states, and try- ing 10 keep down {he tarift stuft on the And in this connection it scems which their people must buy strang v politicians | as competition is great for the huy- er, and cach is going the 1o bhe disap- have in the stafc t see the | | didn’ leaving pointed whatever outcome loophole they were for the 1t the President Hoover fails to protect one | | article and over protects another he | opposition 1o crawl through he court holds that €iX | is going to make an enemy of the “healing” acts of the general as- | producer of one while he will make sembly are not sufficient 'a validate | a friend of the other. It is a difficuit | the laws put in jeoparay by the | situation for him and for the party THE ZEPPELIN ON HER WAY AGAIN McCook decision, it is obvious that the bu shou republicans have nothing 1 the t stage a t t pic show have been you 7 ast night early morning. as evident to prefer to regard it, the giant G. 0 P leaders (Hab : 162 ) ppelin, already successful in one going hal tr their round trip from Germany to the 1 States started on he urn nerable that it , iedrichshafe fir n and incidentally L t leg of a contemplated rest of the way around world, through the 1an airport and back to the needs is definite 1 ironclad assurance | {*nited States from the west. U'nder that ita 1,50 1t and | Captain Eckener workabie. Tt matters to the | > the | previous (rips, with a passer v list is average citizen how that assurar NEA B Rl b e i ing polit sumably well on her way across the irely, it now seems cer- | acean at the present time. The usual tan that the vitally necessary ruling ta ssary ruling | siowaway incident was rep And re's action is to be 1328210, fore her start, two hoys were ean com- obtained so. out of political political ' {rying 1o hide themselves in b or NONOrs, & | partments of the bi d hasten- stowawa v gzood |ed away from the spot been no FARIFT DISRUPTION WASHINGTON IN As the esidential election even though she ¢ ire and | circles world ) more obs the in record time for | the Atlantic so quick are we to ac- {crew and passengers, pioneers of the | enly | the her type of craft have already engirdled it and we somehow expect that the Zep will have little doing likewise. The edge has been taken off of the c trouble novelty by her previous trips across | scientific venture as an fact and cept a new established will not be as closely watched as it she happens into difficulties at some point along the course she is to follow. her progress was previously unless At any rate Captain Eckener, his | air unguestionably, will receive the | Vest wishes of all of us in his ven- ture and our sincere hope for his | suCCess Facts and Fancies| Ry Robert Quillen The count of ten is “out” hecauss in the old days the referees couldn't count above ten You can’t blame an empty infant for acting that way. It's just a lit tle whine for the stomack's salke. General practician: that points the way to specialist post right A sign the The (hinese-Russian situation Tas its bright side. Uncle Sam won't have to pay for theVwar. A hick town is a man in a dinner co without a napkin over place where u looks his que arm. Russia real war thought and China can't yet. Neither side a slogan to die by. have a has ¥ The gas used in electric refriger- ators is fatal to some, but 1t has put new life in the ice man. How easy it would he fo close New York's speakeasies if they were birth-control clinics Americanism famous Lindy vears he went short rations to lea Yearning to be a.-{ forgetting the rnstorm on t how. as '3 | The | do i stop singing it's applause. sound of sl the She pping hands nale mosquito doubtless thinks | | subscription | make Tint fo magazine agents: Offer women’'s magazines to the unbobbed. The others | read them in the barber shop. bird that fruit tiny caves and thén drunk on it doubtless is the one that tells things to Joan Lowell and Trader Horn. The little ferments in that at rumble The which your seat changes. of opinion or diseretion is a The warden saye life is safer in fing Sing than in New York. It's a great institution that can make life r inside and out. will kilt Souti will rise. ow if blight wheat in Russia and America, the Farm Board credit for another or drouth 50-cent The installment plan to popularized in Englard Of cour: the deferred-payment plan has been used there, but only for the pur- chase of things people nceded Old-age pensions are worth while, if only for the sake of preserving something exclusively masculine. No woman will qualify for one this sald sentence: “T want the new-rich low- | nd I'm willing {o work and study for yvears fo get it.” Correct eulture,’ brow | WHAT Gous Send all communications (0 Fun Shop Fditor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. hat Vacation Urge! “Berry-time,” folks, and the reason is clear Because we will bury ourselves every year | In some jerk-water place, with just | two trains a day there, pay out our own hard-earnea “herries” to stay there! And Must Be Dumb! “Anthony is the serious mah I know. Janet: “Isn't he though. Why, the | poor booh even took our engage-| ment last Winter seriously!” Mary most a THE PO By William P. Lopez I'm an old man, I'm cighty-three, I seldom get away; My work, it keeps home— T have no time for play If it wcre not for the journey back, That so fatigues a soul, I'd take a little trip— T have never seen thie 1 me close al n Pole. 'Tis said that in that famed place There is no heat or drouth; And that, whichever way you turn, You're looking south-by-south. Some say there is a flagstaff there, Some say there is a hole. Think of the years that T have lived And never have seen the Pole. b w My brother has seen Baraboo, t so he speak the truth: wife and son they hoth heen . As far as to Duluth; My cousin cruised 10 Maine, On a ship that carried coal; I've heen as far as Mackirac— Hut T never have Seen the Pole! My have | A ic Eastport D! Come and Love! Marshall: “1 love my enemies.” Isthor hate you! —Celia Markel T al w W How TIME FLIES! | DANGLED THAT GIRL ON MY KNEE WHEN SHE WAS A LITTLE | DANGLED HER ON MY KNEE LAST NIGHT % Y cAnc ANoerSon — ON ABOVE THE IRS OF AN ACRO- BATIC DANCING TEAM! Overheard by Alexander Gaffney He: “Well, here's where 1 give the little girl a lift. Little girl! It she’d only lay off potatoes for a month. There she goes beirg grace- ful.” She: SHOULD! “The more lollups I get in the longer it postpones my leap for life into the arms of that leaning tower. If 1'd only stuck to toe-work I woudn't be the nervous wreck T am now. An old woman at thirty!" He: “Here she comes. She'll mak Copyright, 1929, Publishers v Harny - b Hae ye heard this one ? HI HAD TO A Dundee Bailie presiding iocal police court had to try in which all the evidence was a the a case rainst won.an charged with assauliing a The culprit went witness hox and volubly de- that had *“‘ever liited a Mistress Broon.” Then | hushand to support This he did in a very until the him neighic herself into th | nied | finger @ called evidenee sh inst her she her -hearted retark halt 1y magis- | 1live Wiher | nl Jelinye shand You (Copyright Jolin Dille Co) National Newspaper Service John F. Dille, President Madison Sticet Chicago Koy (ouctes ATTENTION added a her commander on | | \ | | We have to Lending Li- bra our store. All of (he latest of all publishers, Keep abreast of the most popu- lar new hooks by renting theie at a small cost of three cents per day. No deposit required. Special Books for Men JACKAWAY'S GII'T SHOP 58 West Main Strect hooks | [ trying up her mind any minute now. I must look like an idiot, nding her2 with my arm like this. All the nice old ladies out front are saying, ‘Isn’t she lovely?" They don't have to liff her.” She: a T4 the the to “If he should miss me go right on through the wings, wall of the theater and out into street. Gosh, if 1'd only stuck toe-work He: “Why T ever gave up weight- lifting for this dancing rackett, 1 don’t know. With weights at least you don't have to worry about them wiggling when you get them. And to think I left home ‘cause Dat wanted me to help him out on the “Look at the big lummox to keep time to the muste. He thinks he's a dancer. Put a nan in a leopard skin and there's n3 holding him. But holding me's whae | I'm worrying about.” He: “Now there's a little girl down there I'd like to toss around I suppose she's wondering if | Queenie and T are marrfed. Gosh, It |1 were married to her I'd——" “Thank Goodness, I'm “Thank Goodness, up that's What Ho! “What did fiddling while of city 20 h the you thir issiug: “Not 5o ho! Ye Wyse Cracker (An Old Fragment) yt did come to thot vt wis ye turne of ye wiffe of a trav- | ellynge salesmanne, a heartie wu- | man, full yfleshed, to telle a tayle {10 ve brave compagnie Ynde didde shee fhenn felle of [ Paite ynde Mique, ynde howe one [ night theye come to a lonlie farm- A broade tayle ynde fonnie, rotte one to he sette down to muke ye maydes fo hlush | en and ye old subscribers to writen in indignaunte lettyres. Wheene was throe, vt was ye clerk. that | sely fellowe, vt hespake herre fatrg. “Moddom." quot he, “I will saye thot thou knowest thy grosseries S0 passe 0 | house, by her €oncis Reporter Do you about that fight ‘)puuc ks and his wife?"” (c: want a hetween he through the window. mice | various kinds are found throughout the United States, ca. the there are many snakes without rattles there. lel with some Sphagnum be slits, of over to the right side. ing Maswachusetts, lina, Georgia and larger female populations. it southern grandeur, by Niagara the Yokemite valley. formed by a ridge of hard rock un- covered by the wearing away of snu- perimposed lava beds. exceeds Niagara, cataract the City Editor: “Yes, but condense 1 as much as possible Cub: “All right. Here it is.” Editor: “You're a Read it." Cub: the flat-iron: ‘She threw —Joseph Todd (Copyright. 1929, Reproduction Forbidden) Questions and Answer: fo hington 2 == QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any uestion of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 322 New York avenue, Washington, D, C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advise cannot be given, tended research “: undertaken. other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. nor can eY. Al Unsigned requests can- ot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Iditor. Q. Where ernate? A. They inhabit do rattlesnakes hi- rocky country and in wintetr will be found hiber- nating in “dens” under ledges. and go to the pasture the rocky In the spring they emerge lands and ooded areas, where they prey upon and birds. Ruttlesnakes of Mexico, Central merica and northern South Amer- No true rattlesnakes occur in castern hemisphere, —although related poisonous Q. How can a rubber plant be ropagated? A. Make slits in the bark paral- its length and there tie moss, which must the roots form. lit pots can be bought to tie round the branch. Tl the pot ith soil so that it covers the fresh After two or three months, a good system of roots has kept wet until hen formed in the soil, the branch may be cut off be capabe of individual existénce. and the new plant will Q. Who founded the University of Virginia? A, Q. "homas Jefferson. Is the human heart entirely on the left side of the body” A. the It is mainly on the left side chest, but part of it passes Q. A, What does Aloha mean? 1t is a Hawalian word mean- “farewell”, Q. What states have the female populations larger than male? A. According to the last census, Rhode Island, New ork, North Carolina .South Caro- Alabama, have Q. Who wrote “A Connecticut ankee in Kihg Arthur's Court?"” A, Samuel L. Clemens, (Mark in) Q. How old A. He was is Nils Asther? born January 17, 1902, Q. How does Shoshone Falls compare with Niagara Falls? A, Bhoshone Ialls, a magnifi- cataract of the Snake river in Tdalo, is exceeded id in the United States only Talls and the falls in The height and during the ring floods the volume of the is not far short of that of more celebrated falls. Is there a list of all Q. new: papers and magazines published in the United States? A. Ayers American Newspaper Annual and Directory which can be consulted at any public fibrary con- tains the list Q. What will 2" A. Proof, meant by “probating before an officer au- thorized by law, that an instrument Tomboy Taylor (SFontame Fox. 1929 fast writer. The falls are | offered to be proved and registered is the last will and testament of the deceased whose testamentary act it is alleged to be. | Q. Can red lights be seen further than yellow? | A. Yes. The wave length of the central portion of the region (red and yellow) of the spectrum fs roughly—red .000088 cm and yellow 1000058 cm. Q. Is there a city called Brisbane? A. Yes. Q. Trom what is the place name | “Secaucus” derived? A. It is thought to be derived from the Indian word “sekakas"” meaning “snake: Q. Can the distance of a light- ning flash be estimated simply? A’ Tt can be done by timing the subsequent sound of thunder. Sound travels in air of medium tempera~ |tures at the rate of approximately 1,126 .feet per second. By using a stop watch and counting the time between observing a flash and hearing the thunder, you can esti mate the distance. 1f the flash is| so far away that no sound of thun. der reached you. you cannot esti- mate the distance. Of course, in a heavy thunder storm where light- ning flashes are continuous or near- ly, so, the rolls of thunder overlap, or occur almost simultaneously, and it is practically impossible to esti- mate any particular flash. Q. How much canned pineapple is imported into the United States from Singapore and what is its value? What duty is paid‘on it? In 1928 imports 6f canned pineapple from Singapore amounted | to approximately 1,288,000 pounds. The approximate value was $87,000. The duty is 2 cents per pound. 25 Years Ago Today The Herald, permission of Chief W. J. Rawlings, had the chimney in the Bosworth's gambling rooms opened today to see whether the murderer had dropped any weapon in it. Nothing was found by the reporters. The delegates of the Connecticut Saengerbund will meet in this city on September 26. Eugene J. Porter will make tour to San IFrancisco Washington Comman Templar, party. The A. O. H. baschall team will clash against the American Silver Co. nine in Forestville Saturday: At a meeting held in the Y. M. C. A, yvesterday, an athletic _pro- gram was prepared for the Berlin Fair. There were 34 marriages and 8§ births in this city during the past month. About 150 people from- this city made the excursion to Boston today. | Many more wanted tickets but were | unable to obtain them. A dozen of the Stanley post vet- erans who will attend the nationai encampment in Boston plan to make the entire trip by trolley. The Philharmoenic band will give a free concert at the Central par tomorrow evening. . Lynch will bhe the director. in Australia with the the with the y, Knights | Miami Observations On The Weather Washington, Aug. 8.—Forecast for Southern New Kngland: In- creasing cloudiness followed by showers Fridgy and possibly on the southeast coast tonight. Not much change in temperature. ~Moderate east winds. Torecast for ILastern New York: Partly cloudy, with showers in e: treme south and extreme north por- tions tonight; Friday partly cloud Not much change in temperatu moderate east winds. Forecast for New Haven and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness to- ! night; Friday local showers. of high Atlantic near Conditions: ~ The pressure over the states centers this Northfield, Vermont. Tt continues to produce pleasant, sunny days and cool nights with temperatures near or slightly below the normals. There is no well de- fined storm area east of the Plains states. A showeny area prevails in the upper lake Tegion and scattered thunder showers reported from por- tions of the interior and southern Conditions favor for this fair leather and not much areq north morning | change in temperature~ followed by showers. Hemperatures yesterday: High 58 T4 Low 64 58 80 58 62 60 38 66 82 62 a8 68 Atlanta . Atlantic City .. Boston 3uftalo Denver ... Chicago Cincinnati Duluth Hatteras Los Angeles Minneapolis Nantucket Nashville One Skinny Man _ Gained 28 Pounds That's just what one man wrate from Atlantic City and theusands of men and women know by experi- ence that McCoy's Tablets, known the world over as the great flesh producer do put on flesh where flesh is most needed. It doesn't take but a for hollows In choeks, neck and chest to fill out and what a chang» for the better this will make in your personal appearance, And besides looking better you'll feel better for in McCoy's Tablets is a combination of health building agents that increase strength and bring vigorous health to weak run- down nevous men and women. McCoy takes all the risk—Real this ironclad guarantee. If after tak- ing 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy's Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any thin, underweight man or woman doesn’t gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satisfied with tho marked improvement in health your druggist is authorized to re turn the purchase price. few weeks 2 The lifeblood of human ex: Uncle Sam las cianged people are ashing Our Wahington ange | the | years, and many function preliensive of 3 it the money gete into circulation, of the United how of money and informative | the time when ehells a oney from an various tells about metallic money of t at marks, descrites | what is money States in detail; curreney, mutilated currency ma facts, out the coupon below and | IITOR, New York Washington 1332 Avenue, cents in postage an enclose herewith five stathps, to cover and ostage NAME ... i STREET AND NUMBER cITy I am a reader of the NEW size and themselves Bureau bulleting on the legal tender,' =CLIP COUPON HERE — — — — Rureau Washington, T want a copy of the bulletin THE MONEY OF THE U STATE BRITAIN (R A BT SN Yy, —_— MONE: is money. For the first time in designs of its duestions about many paper currency the history and has prepared one of abject its com the It covers the evolution nd &king of animals served as maney he United it various kinde of coinage, is coined tells and describes the States, where [ reduced-size U 1 tells about the new be redeémed this ¥ and bulle other interesting il e | | B send for New . Britain Herald, CITE] uncancelled, ) STATES coin, or loose, v, s, nd handling HERALD.

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