New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 31, 1929, Page 6

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— New Britain Herald‘ HERALD PUBLIBHING COMPANY Tssued Dally (Sunday Bxcepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street BUBSCRIPTION RATES $1.00 & Year 32.00 Thres Montha . & Month 13 Entered at the Post Office at New Britaln es Becond Class Mail Matter, TELEPHONE CALLS Business Ofce ..... §36 Editorial Rooms .... 926 The only profitable advertising medium in the City, Circulation boois and press room always open to advertisers. Member sf the Assoclated Press The Amsoctated Press is exclusively titled to the use for re-publication all news credited to it or not otherwire credited fn this paper and also local mews published therein. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1929. that the grand jury did not need to | commonwealth. What is wrong in Massachusetts is re ti- | tude prevails in the mentality of too | large a percentage of its drivers. | They know that when they get into & insured and the recognize said ethics. The estimable | | judge probably would think differ- | ently it he had said something “In | confidence” to one of the reporters. | At such times judges think a great { deal of the ethics of the profession, | a state of mind. The don’t m the cars are The reporters, we are certain, will The ultimate result is nearly everyone {e against | everything but disaster; and of course, such mentality includes the widely held belief that if something happens it is bound to be the other llow who gets hurt Connecticut is not ideal in its con- motoring but it ! stick to the ethics. Meanwhile their | igh drivers newspapers and all others will bear teels down a bit upon the learned gentle- stand men who can't unde: suc | | simple thing as honesty. ONTARIO HAS SPOKEN The control ssue in Ontario was liquor | which Premier Howard| trol of the ilis of Ferguson inaugurated after prohibi- | started earlier on didn't work. There might have | iustice and fair dealing into at least ! 95 per cent of its drive n other issues of moment in On- tario, but so long want to attach their as political parties | MONEY FOR THE FARMERS Farm relief scems to be progre efforts to what that | will gain most attention, so long will their leaders consider an issue | ing along established lines. It is now courts arc not unduly harsh on fool- | | | \ ; | | ‘ | | | to install a sense of | | to Mr. Kellogg they say “Herr Kel- logi ot any of them use the Eng- | lish designation. Why, then, should about | [ | | | American newspapers talk “M. Briand” or “Herr Stresemann?” At this moment we feel like stick- ing to “straight English, unadulter- ated and undefiled.” Bhnmu JoDELL Send all communications to Fun Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. Facts and Fancies By Robert Quillen EimoltofLighiiting light our joko-o-lanterns so Not only Hallowe'en will glow But all the nights and days be With mirth that chases away! | Le Petition: An appeal from four in- terested people and 786 who can't | | gay Unconscious! A straight line is the shortest dis- | tance between the dining room and the garage. Also called bee line, Idward: I s | revive ‘Hamlet' | Roger: “What's the matter. “For fifty years liquor and gaso- | he get hold of some bum boo: line have monopolized corners.” Jivi dently a typographical word is “coroners.” » they are trying to did error. | they seize upon prohibition. Thus the indlcated that if the $500,000,000 to Lach individual has his own con- His Talents! Clarke: “How is your son getting along at college?” Jackson: “He's an in-und-outer Clarke: and-oute Jackson: “He goes out for foot- tall and goes in for pettirg!” —Rev. W, Davis, 1929, Reproduction Forbidden) Questi and A ; (Copyright | ons b gloom | QUESTIONS ANSWERED 2 “What do you mean, ‘in- | |18 94,820,015, ‘uu\_ which is about 3 feet long: but |come an American citizen when his | father is naturalized? A. Yes. Q. What percentage of the popu- lation of the United States is white? | A. The 1928 cstimated popula: | tionof the United States is 120,013.- | 000, and the total white population ! Q. What are the measurements of the largest lions? Why is it called “The King of Beast: A. A lion of large size stands t high and measures about 9 feet from the nose to the tip of the | most specimens fall short of these | The greatest size seems to | be attained in South Africa. The| t rarely reaches 500 pounds. The 1 ne is evidently a sexual or- nament and also a shield which offers some protection to the males in the combats which occur in thisi species mor equently and with fierceness than in the case of any other wild cat. The whole frame is extremely muscular, and | the fore parts in particular are re- markably powerful, so that with its Jarge head and copious mane, it ha figures. wei more | Orangs Denver .. Duluth Hatteras Los Angeles Miami Minneapolis Nantucke shville New Haven New Orleans . New York . Norfolk, Va. .... Northfield, Vt. .. Portland, Me. st. Louis BARBER TARGET I'OR STONES Officer Willlam O'Day received o'clock complaint about 8:50 last night from Joseph prietor of a barbek strete, that a large stone window 1 the place. otuicrr brought a 12 year old boy to the barber shop and he was identified as the stone thrower, but he denied it It was the third time he thre stones at the window, according to the barber, the first two missiles having bounded off the woodworlk Bauceno, shop A pro 115 had a at oy through thrown a noble appearance whch together The probation department is inves- You can get an answer 10 any | ity jts strength and appalling roar, | tigating. question of fact or information by | g led fo its being called “The King | writing to the Question Editor, New | o Beasts.” | | Britain Herald, Washington Bureau.| . Who plaved the part of | | 1322 New York avenue, Washington, | pepita, the companion of the Mar-| Arthur LaPlante, 80, of 77 Park D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps | quessa, in the photoplay, “The|creet Tristol, was arrested by for reply, Medical, legal'and marital | Bridge of San Luis Rey"2 | Motorcycle Officers Strolls and Tan | Liberals of Ontario, sadly depleted | ception of right living. The only | get as much more, The money osten- | POInt of general agreement is that | | tomorrow is the time to begin. sibly is “loaned” to farm orzaniza- 10itimeitopuesin | tions. But as Joseph R. Grundy of | 1 you must be a crook. wait until | Pennsylvania remarked to the lobby | you are so important your doctor | cansmake the courts wait until you | Member Audit Burean of Circulation be available is not enough, they may T A B. is & national organization whiich furn! newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly of circulation. Our circulation & re based upon thls audit. This {nsures pro- tection against fraud !n newspaper dis- tribution figures to both national and | since the days of Sir Wiltred Laurier, thought up a scheme of having the BRISTOL DRIVER ARRESTED liquor question decided by a special on that subject. AsLiber- therefore, would have plebiscit al victory, local advertisera. Herald daily in New Hotaling'a Newsstand, Times Schults's Newsstande, Entraace eptral, ¢2nd Street. 1s on _ While in the United States it ap- pears that Winston Churchill, M. P., chancellor of the British exchequer under Mr. Baldwwin, was subjected o 42 interviews. That m have visited 42 cities. The American ystem of interviewing every visitor | of prominence is not 100 per cent | perfect. It would be an improvement, | ne doubt, if the celebrities had a | good idea for every reporter. 1eans he must | During the past week the stock market very easily competed for in- | terest with the accounts of football | games, even among some of the | most enthusiastic gridiron followers. This must have been due to the fact that some of the gridiron fans got kicks on the shin Over in Berlin, where alert officials abound, a campaign has started to discourage overloaded trucks from | using the highways. Or perhaps the campaign is continuous. Anyway, one truck driver was fined $30 for such an offense, and to our mind that looks like “big business in a amall way." | A FARSIGHTED PURCHASE Purchase by the Board of Educa- | tion of 14 lots nears the Benjamin | ¥ranklin school on Clinton street 18 | creditable to the farsightedness of | the board. It is also a credit to the | Stanley Works that this great in- dustrial organization was willing to part with the land at the low price of $1,700. The Stanley Works could have heid the property—like the or- dinary real estate man probably would have done—and then cashed | fn upon increased value after the | addition of more homes in the vicinity tended to provide the in- | evitable “unearned increment.” Until the land is needed for con- struction additions the land will be used for playground purposes, a fact | that should gratify all that vicinity of the city. The Benja- | min Franklin school, the most recent clementary school constructed, is 2 of e city. a few years ago parents in credit to thai section ce its completi additional homes | at section of it has caused m to be constructed in tha the city, indicating once again that mchools draw population as well as already d eatisfying an mand for facilities. elementary educational Y 1S, REPORTERS ARE We sympathize wit per cent of the time docs most of FTHICAL ) reporters 100 So, we imagine, the publ A pu ways for Reporters continually are doir lic serv- of in diverse wh most the time they do cient credit. Or perh care about the credit reporter who £ led Eyanson incident, for instance ite of s to the we 3 ng ng has become won't linger on that that the result rally known, along with Jentity of the newspaper worker ould not nose for who ke W be denied after his er egan smelling fs on our mind at this m ment is the sentence of 45 days cach meted out to three Was porters for sing names of persons purchased liq apeakeasies they were writing about Their object was to expose the extent of liquor-drinking in Washington how the police were not coping with the situation, like g ally. tore a grand jury and and such But they were haul expected to give names, addresses and dates. This to because t exacted they refused do gained admission to he places through promise that their identities and the friends who places visited were nobody. busi- ness. Peyton Gordon evidently has idea of newspaper cthics. In sentencing the three young Judge a queer | edged ais | girdle of | building, according to our report in | existing de- | meant that within a year the citi- zenry would have been called upon to express their opinion on whether they desired the retention of provin- cial control The rural citizens, were more outspoken. Progressives, composed They favored the complete elimina- tion of government control in favor | of a bone-dry province, perhaps “like the United States.” The Progressives no doubt possess many good ideas on farm needs, but the bone-dry plans gets little support in the citie and just a little more in the towns. The people of the province yester- day decided exactly what they want. Despite the propaganda about in- creasing crime, increasing drinking and a more depraved human nature generally, Premier Ferguson and his legislative followers won a resound- ing victory. Ontario will continue to be quite a summer playground for American tourists, WE HOPE THEY KEEP IT 1t is hard to believe that Y. M. T. A. & B. society is consider- ing the sale of its ham@some club quarters. When this building was added to the resources of the city we congratulated the organization upon the its enterprise and its willingness to | provide the city with a large hall | for public gatherings. The value of such a home to the soclety itself is beyond question. But several years of ownership have resulted in the pres- ent distreasing discussion, whether to | keep or to sell. One does not need to be a member of the organization |to sympathize with it in its endeavors to tind a way out of the acknowl- culties. The “Tabs" can rest assured that | every citizen of New Britain, regard- less of creed, will be sorry to see a sale of the building eventuate, It is to be hoped, even now, that a way will be found to avoid such a finale to a brilllant endeavor. son gives it as his opinion that the greater portion of the society's members have not yet belted on the hard work to save the | the news columns. If that is the case | there ought to be a different story when all members become aroused and join In the battle to retain this | attractive home. The wishes go to the Tabs in the endeav= city's best for. GRAPE JUICE AND MUSIC Walter household h in The name of Damro: has become a word fons of homes, ever since hie be- tres on inusic over the at happens to Mr. Dam- is 2 matter of con- pub Thus one reads with dismay t concern two kegs of grape juice. tested by prohibition agents and said to possess a volatile alcohiolic strength of 8.7 per cent, were addressed D Kegs. M, lons « to sch The of h, were found in a St Louis grape juice Mr. Damrosch may « did business with t t he may quietly ignore peachment and privately cuss the vspapers for lie. W grape making such things P atever he does of all lovers juice—not necessarily strong ju Bt souree this conie is happenir are some other ust as good a brand MOTORING IN MASSACHUSETTS According to what the Bay State something is radically wrong with automobiling in Massa- busetts, That state has been regis- 1l g death rate from automobiles week after orit seeking to public from its own folly have become well-nigh frantic . atest effort 10 decrease the siaugh- a thorough-going police is in & mooc itening r | Massachuseits to have of | Perhaps | | | there is still hope. President Huma- | lations. | | provers yesterday, it they don't pay | |it back—if they get into difficulties | and are unable to “meet thelr mar- | gins" to use a more familiar term | lately, * |let them keep it.” That coincides withwhat we guess- ed at thé very beginning. This farm | reliet business is likely to be in the nature of a subsidy. And by the way, in spite of the | | Anancing, graln prices haven't been Edmng s0 well lately. | | | that he didn’t think it | “backward” states THE SENATORIAL SYSTEM right that had the same | representation in the Scnate as the | more populous and important states | le probably thought of qualifying as | | constitutional subjects. It was not his | fault that astonished senators re- | | Barded him with that sympathetic | attitude which betokens superior knowledge. Mr. Grundy, like many | another good and prosperous gentle- ! man, s quite an expert in his line— { lobbying—but doesn't seem to have aroused enthusiasm about his learn- | ing in American history. It is scarcely necessary, so long {after the event, to rehearse the inci- ;dems that brought about the adop- | tion of the present Constiution and its admirable system of checks and balances, Without the method of senatorial representation there would have been no Constitu- | tion at all, It was a point that in- duced ratification. The system has worked satis- factorily, and it only occasionally ‘!hal someone bobs up to attack it. These are usually shown, ‘Grumly could be shown if there were any possibility of success in the | | | | venture, that certain small states are gainers and they don't happen to be backward or inconsequential. For in- stance, there are two senators from | Rhode Tsland, and they represent manufacturing interests because the |state 13 predominantly industrial. There are two senators from each New England state, and that forms la bloc of twelve, all but & few of | whom are ardent advocates of what | Mr. Grundy thinks §mportant in e senator, Taken by large, the eastern section of the country, hav- and ing smaller states than those com- monly found in the far West, have a remarkably potent voiee in the up- per house; and before the days when the Democrats and Insurgent Re- publicans combined they usually con- trolled it. | 1t is, of course, a p rather than ident system one the system of checks and balances laid down in the Constitution exists. It prevents majority rule of an ob- noxious kind gives to minorities their rights, and when unquestionably an issue is right it And nothing, it would seem, should be made into law °ss there is no reasonable doubt of its permanent value. In eve evolves into law. ything that counts most in £00d government, it can be said that the Senate is more the responsive to times than the | House, which happens to be well | under control. the needs of The thanks of the newspapers and the public generally the Louisville Courier-Journal for bring- ing up a failing that is almost uni- versal in this country in referring to | famous is due | foreigners. The Courier- | Journal specifically takes the New | Tork World to task for its mongrel- ization of English recently, all in one But the eritici applies to 45 per cent of other pub- sentence lications as well, including ourselves Here is what the World said re- cently M. Briand Stresemann.” The know whether the and the late Herr Courier-Journa! wants sentence is Eng- | lish, French or German. When Mr. MacDonald was visiting | us he {r. Briand.” | When the Trench newspapers refer us referred to men he declaimed that ethics had | officers of the law stationed at every | {o Mr. Kellogg they say M. Kellogs. Bo bearing on the case, or at least | intersection, hill and bad turn in thnlwhen the German newspapers refer everybody seems willing to | prospects of large-scale government | hen Joseph R. Grundy of Penn- | sylvania told senators the other day | a profound thinker upon American | present | like Mr. | of injustice that | usually | m probably | Mr. MacDonald, Mr. Hoover, | 1o | teel right. —_— | And some people real the sport page just to see the clever new alibi | for the home team's regular dcfem.‘ Man thinks his logic superior Ool woman's intuition, but is the man who must add two and two superior | to the one who knows the answer? The modern, proud of his kitchen- ette and cellarette and things ke that, should have seen the big old- fashioned kitchen where the Iamll)‘i et. But just what have we gained | when the taricf war establishes ail | European manufacturers over here and all American manufacturers | over there? Americanism: IFeeling superior to | illiterates who can't appreciate the finer things of life”; chusing dol- | !1ars so eagerly we never have time to live. They used to say universal educa- tion would dethrone kings. And now it has dethroned baseball as the na- | tional game. Funny man! Paying too much rent to live in a “good neighbor- | hood” where he wouldn't know the | difference if all of his neighbors | were bad. The king of Jugoslavia has some | throat ailment. Uneasy feels the | | throat that yells orders at dissatis- | tied minorities. Mere size isn't everything, per- haps, but the motorist who meets a | cow doesn’t hold his speed and look back to see if feathers flew. Old-fashioned girls capture men like Tunney and' Lindbergh, so it| pays to be like that—though just at present there is no demand for a { third. The objection to being a college hero is that cheering larts only a few minutes and a bum knee lasts | forty years. Kissing would spread disease | | germs, as the sclentists believe; but germs can't live in sunshine and sunshine is spread by kicsing. Correct this sentence: “Her wed- ding was postponed three months,” said the gossip, “‘but non: of her | friends made catty remarks about 1t Copyright, 1929, Publishers Syndlcate | 25 Years Ago Today | The Shandanana, a Swedish p |per printed at Worcester. Mass., | contains a lengthy article this week | on the political feud in this city between the Swedes and the Ger- | mans, The democrats will hold a large rally Friday evening at the Russ-| |win Lyceum. ~Many prominent| | speakers will be present. | It was announced today that the Hebrews will open a school in con- nection with their synagogue on Elm street. The children will be | trained in their own tongue. Charles F. Smith has returncd from § Louis and the west. He | has resumed his duties at the Lan- | ders’ factory. Milk Inspector Crowley has plac- | ed license numbers on 42 wagons. | | Tt is estimated that there is at least 100 milk dealers in this city. Dr. E. L. Styles has purchased a | fine driving horse in Vermont. Principal Marcus White of the| Normal school made an address be- | fore the Eroebel clb of Hartford | | this afternoon. | | Up-to-date the total number of| bullding permits lssued by Bulild-| |ing Inspector Andrew Turnbull is| 200, which is 23 less than last year H. D. Humphrey has sold ex- Mayor M. (. Webster's residence in ,Lenox place to Clarence A. Earle, | secretary of the Corbin Screw cor- poration. New Britain democrats will play | an important part in the rally to b2 held this evening in Hartford in | honor of Judge Parker, democratic| | nominee for president. [Yale Student Evades | Bachelorship Ruling Haven, Oct. 31.—(UP)— university authorities said to- forethought of Lester | Farber, EI Paso, Tex., senior, who eloped last Saturday with a Simmons | college girl, had prevented his dis- | missal under a rule forbidding un- | dergraduate marriages. Farber learned of a fechnicality which provides a student ejected | for marrying may be reinstated at | the discretion of the college dean. So | | he went to Dean Clarence Mendel | | and confided his plan of eloping to New Hampshire with Miss Bessita Levinson of Boston. Tarber was suspended, but rein- ‘s(a(ed Immediately. | Yale | day that the | Mine | But my | used to call on | finally—1 | about me as ycould be, | tell them how happy I am to hear | dear. | er battered condition. The owner of | the car was on his knees, endeavor- | number of merchant ships? A man after lis own heart! A LONGING! By Carol van Wezel music-loving nature, my very heartstrings thrill the song of thrush or mavis— nightingale or whippoorwil unfulfilled ambi‘ion is to hear the haunting croon. Of the apteryx a-singing in the ilex on the dune. and To |16 foot I have wandered in the tropics, 1, have rambled in the glades. 1 have heard the scarlet tangerine trill forth from coppice shades; | But its song Is unimportant, color- less its rhythmic rune To the apteryx a-singing in the ilex | on the dune. | | exposed to the air I have heard the cockie-leekle on the lonely Scottish moor; I have heard the rauccus goara, | with its piping dank and dour; | I have heard the trocadero, but I| still beg Fortune's boon. | Of the apteryx a-singing in ‘the ilex | of the dune. | 8o I wait in simple silence, possess my soul and mind In what patience I can muster and what courage I can find. And T trust I yet shall listen, November, say, or June—— | To an apteryx a-singing in the ilex | on the dune! | I in Sl Ae It! Jenkins: “Whatever bccame of | the fellow who used to make up the names for the Pullman cars Evans: “Why, since he quit in-| venting names for automobiles | models he's been picking names for | road-houses!™ | —M. H. Williams. | MAKING LIFE EASIER di By Frances W. Capps “Hello! Rose? Well, T just heard | the wonderfud news about Mabel. 1| think it's just too wonderful to be true and 1 want to congratulate you | both. | “Yes, Tom is a dear and I'm su he'll make Mabel a good husband “Of course, I met him when he| my Eleanor before | marri=d. He's a perfect and I'm so glad Mabel mean it's just lovely that ited for someone so well sulted to her. Isn't it funny the way you plan and plan and noth- ing comes of it and just as you're ready to give it all up as a—What I mean to say is, 1 was always a| fatalist you know. Rose. Sooner or later the right fellow is sure to come along. Now you take me and | Phil. Mother was just as worried and then J have any she got darling Mabel w: met Phil. He didn't money either, Rose, bui I always say, money isn't everything. Just as I said to Mabel the other day, it’s family that counts, and I un- derstand that Tom's father comes of perfectly lovely people.” “Why 1'd just love to. twenty-third you say. In the after- noon? That's just lovely. Now do remember me to them both and On the it. Why, you know, read the announcement that little Mabel was erfgaged it took the longest time for me to realize that it was your ‘Mabel “Now that that’ ought to go away for a little rest, Well, I'll see twenty-third By the they decided yet when ing to be married? “They haven't? Well. Rose, wouldn't have them wait too long, I really, wouldn't. Bye bye, Rose.” Rose, when I way, have they're go- Tiked Them! “Do you like Helen: patties?” Laurence: “Sure, I've patted many rthur Wanvie. Enough A big. powerful motor car slowed up as the occupants perceived a car of very modest proportiors standing by the roadside in a rath- ing to straighten out some of the parts. “Have an accident, my asked the man in the big car. “No, thank you,” grimly returned man?” | creed by the Vatic: { means Myrrh, over vou really | you on the| i chicken- | ivise cannot e given, nor can ex- | tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are| contidential.—Editor. Q. the | What | What nation leads in is their gross tonnage | A. Great Britain leads with 7,386 | amers having 18,217,353 grass 424 motor ships, gross tonnage 1,536,648, and 894 sailing vess gross tonnage 121,349 Q. What is the difference tween a toreador and a matador? A. Toreador is the name usually given to bull-righters who fight on horseback. The man who kills the bull by stabhing him between the shoulder-blades with his sword is called the matador. | Q. What kind of skins are used for snare drum heads? | Shecp skin or tanned in the ordinary way, except | that they are ly treated The treatment varies with the ity of the skin. Q. 1f a feather and a pound of lead are dropped from the top of & vacuum tube, which will reach the bottom first? A. DBoth will fall at the same d, because there is no air re- stance in the tube and the pull of | gravity is the same on all sub-| calf skin, specii qual- | stances. Q. What will restore the luster | to golf-leaf letters on signs that are | A. Tf the letters are laid with pure gold-leaf and are merely cov- | ered with soot or dirt, a sponge moistened with alcohol, or spirits of turpentine will cleanse them, and | the gilt may be wiped dry or allowed to dry of its own accord. When was the doctrine the infallibility of the Pope n? A. The infallibility of the Pope, when speaking from the chair was decreed by the Vatical Council In | 1870. Q. What do the Myron | and Helvia mean | A. Myron is from the Greek and | Helvia is from the | Latin and means “of Switzerland.” Q. How m: miles of railroad are there in the United States? A. Counting all sidings, yards, and multiple tracks, there are ap- | proximately 375,000 miles. Q. Who was the Iron Chancellor? A. Yrince Otto Leopold von Bismarck. | Q. What president of the United | States was called “The Hero of New Orleans”? | A. Andrew Jackson. | Q. Where is lafayette National | Park and when was it established? | A. The park, formerly calied | Sieur de Monts National Monument, on the coast of Maine, was estab- lished February 26, 1919. Tt con- tains a group of granite mountains | on Mount Desert Islands, and is the only national park where sea and | mountains meet. | Does a ¢ of | & | names hild of sixteen hc-} | for Southern Ne pressure | the | morning was 42, | Texas it was | guay this forenoon on charges of A. Raquel Torres. Q. Where is the expression “An | griving a truck without a reflector nd a certificate of registration. La oye for an eye, and a tooth for a| tooth” found? | Plante is employed by Kred Helm- A, Leviticu |ing of 60 Pleasant street, Bristol CATARRH Is Sinus Trouble 24:20: Duet. 19:21 8 in the Bible. Observations On The Weather Oct. —TForecast v England: Cloudy, | fresh northedst and east winds. Forecast for Eastern New York: | Cloudy, probably occasional rains| onight and Friday; slowly rising | {emperature Friday, and in central | and north portions tonight; fresh | east winds. Conditions: over with Washington, probably occasional rain tonight and Friday; rising temperatures Friday; high | states Nova | The the center arca of Atlantic persists over Scoti Rainy conditions prevail stern Plains states eastward the Southern England \d the St. Lawrence valley and | from ecastern Texas northward to| Canadian border. Tempera- | tures are rising abnormally high for | the season in most of the districts | east of the Mississippi river but are | falling over the Plains states. | The temperature at Duluth this| while at Abilee, | from the | to t | Ea That stuffy feeling in the head —that discharge of mucus into the throat—symptoms of catarrh. you call them. Your doctor knows better! They mean Sinus Trouble, of which catarrh itself is only a symptom. The right treatment is drainage. Help the nasal sinuses free them- selves of toxic secretions, by washing the nasal cavities with SinaSiptec. Cive the sinuses a chance. The relief is wonderfull Get SinaSiptec at any drug store. 38. Conditions favor for this vicinity | unsettled weather and not much | change in temperature. { Temperatures yesterday: | High Low | 54| 55| 43 48 54 60| A Tan b Atlantic City Boston Buffalo Chicago Cincinnati S4 TPOMMERLY mhown a2 sewmgevea’ —_—n—m STORY OF THE ZEPFPELINS that is the stretch of years between the time Cou his first airship on paper until the proud accomplis ment of the Graf Zeppelin in sailing around tho world. The story of the Zeppeling s a fascinating one. Our Washington Bureau has one of fts in- teresting and authoritative Lulleting covering the history of Zeppelin airship bullding from the first down to the latest monster of the alr. It contains blographical information about Count von Zeppelin, and Dr. Hugo Eckener, tells of the early failures and successes, the Zeppelins in war, and the sub- cequent history, including & complete log of the Graf Zeppelin's trans-oceantc and round-the-world flights. You will want a copy of this bulletin. Fill out the coupon Lelow and send for it: From 1873 to 1 von Zeppelin design = == == == == =CLIP COUPON HERE == =— = =— = ll\}:nr\x,\rnx‘s EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Herald, 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, 1. C. I want a copy of the bulletin STORY close herewith five cents in or slampy to cover postage and handling costs oF jin_or loose, NAME l STREET AND NUMBER | ciry 1 am a reader of the New Britain Herald. e e e (¥Fontaine Fosx, 1929 the other, “just had one ) Mickey~ (Him;elg ) McGuire By Fontaine Fox MuUdH A% HE LOVES To SERAP, MEGUIRE HATES To JUST 308K A QUY FoR No REASON AT ALbL.

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