New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 11, 1929, Page 6

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s 1 of manu New Britain Herald e HERALD PUBLISUING COMPANY tial importance, to cities of metro- | politan splendors. N Tssued Dally (Sunday Exc ed) Cities more or less the size of New At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street Dritain and known as manufactur- nters include Jackson, Kalama- Pontiac Ashtabula, SUBSCRIPTION RATLS D% #3.00 & Year 3$2.00 T gon, and Bay Dayton, a Month | Lima, Springfield and 2 5 Sandusky, Ohio: Norfolk, Va.; Eantered at the Post Office at New Britaln | ;o 0, i, Mansfield, Middle- s Second Class Mail Matter, boro, Norwood and Stoughton, Mass ; Atchison and Wichita, Kans.; and TELEPHONE CALL others Rusinesa OfMce 325 Editorial Rooms . ployment of city managers Is = not secctional. In Vermont, where The only proftable adsertising medium | '~ U7 Sl In the Uity. Circulation books and piess sound prac- room alwess open to adiertsers e _— in Bollows Falle Member of the Assoctated Iress 010, Ludlow, The Assoclated Press 15 exciusively cn- 4 e titled to the use for re-publication uf all news credited to not_ctherwine | There Maine, including credited {n 1! 3 also local e Anadt taors one in most important mews publ city, Portland. Let it not be said that New Bri is not th Member Audit Bureau of Circulation The A. B. C. s a national organization which furnisies newspap r- tisers with a etrictly hopest analy circuiation, Qur circ based upon this audit. taction sgalnst traud e right size for a city man- ager. Or not of the right type. newspaper d the Property Owners' Association, tribution figures to both national and : 5 local sdvertisers. who had the courage to turn to the — | city manager plan and who is cor Hera on sale daily fn New | \inooq of its virtues, says he will York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Times : Stuare: Schultzs’ Newsstands, Eatrance | travel to Cleveland to study it. He Grand Central. ¢2ud Street. can increase his knowledge of this | important civic development by call- An ideal gove At at last: The |ing at dozens of cities en route or Democrats don't control it and | Mot far off his trail. The record is peither do the Republicans, | that towns and cities possessing the AT s : courage to adopt return to t 1 senators from ¢ old political system of Speaking of comical senators f | trying to operate their municipali- ng importance, cities of residen- Vincent Dobrowolski, president of | managers rarely i NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1929. comr ations uni is cgainst aturally is opposed to a interference wi he potentialities of the busi- J. Hen power ness. So y Rorat PUBLIC SERVICE ON THE AIR It is broadcasting station WCAC at Storrs, Conn., which is doing in a | small wa; what the large broadcast- |ing stations could do in a large way | it they were not held in check by th ever pressing demands of commcr- cialism. WCAC is owned and opcr- the Counecticut Agricuitural Collegr. 5o that indircetly the Storrs ing institution. Conscquently it dance of programs designed to the idiosyncrasies of every set purchas- er regardless of his intellectual taste. The only trouble with the Storrs station is that it does not | broadcast often enough. Its informa- tive and educational talks and dis- in their ficld, appeals to all those than an who regard radio as more { other instrument for mere “enter tainment." Connecticut has an opportunity to z¢ a splendid trail in its handling the statd Storrs transmitter. T a good beginning. Ircady ias made | PLANNING THE NEW MIDDLETOWN BRIDG state to t is apparent that the hi, not inclined way department is fhe West, Senator Moses of New | Hampshire doesn't scem inclined to | M and more places are enrolled as | wait cn indefinite time hefore m let any of them crack two jokes to having scen the new light every |ing an effort to push the construc Shroe year. Some day many already be-{tion of the new Middletown-Port- i = lieve, New Britain will also be 1and bridge. The highway department e &5 among the number, ing unstinted cooperation A D the bridge commission appoini- ppears to cqual that of UKD | cppp=sATING ARMISTICE DAY |eq by the last Legislature, which is e Celcbrations of Armistice Day | to have its report ready befort the RS o have been changing. The early | meeting of the next Legislaturc in The chicf function of the week- method was to stage imposing pa- 1931, That in itself means a delay end football games this year is al | rades and turn the day into a milita- | of more than a year before anything they take the minds of people Off fry celebration. During the years im- | {angible can result. But it is pos- the stock market for at least (w0 [inediately following the war this | sible by that time to have a well- days out of every seven | method came most matural to njm.m.h‘,‘ d plan ready and the biue W i populace which still vividly remem- | prints in order; and it is in this The “king of bootleggers™ of South- | hered the days of armed conflict. The will include a paradc ern Illinois died a pauper in a county N aiTonin And he didn't his money in the stock crash, ¢ New Britain . los¢ in the evening her. Prominent of them possibly business men, sor the day ihere were floral tributes at I an ¢ | by the American Legion, and during | tion involved the use connection that the highway depart- ment is lending its hest cfforts 1 ©ne of the routes under consi of Washington street, Middletown, &s the approach former customers, fu X- | the base of the Walnut Hill monu-|to the .bridge from the wsct. This pensive cofiin. Think your owi edi- | et and a cessation of activities at | would include an clevation of tie torial 11 a. m., these following a public | bridge over the railroad stracks and = R meeting the MORE ON CITY MANAGERS I has a city manager, citizens depend supposition {hat, when a city | of the day. wpon one man to administer its af- | Tt must be conf fairs and lose interest in the details of municipal government, is old. We A. ally some of the military flavor ha {been shorn of the are rather surprised that George Quigley brought that up, as he did | over exclusively to a consideration of | of a grade, however. ‘moLny “T; rnhc»arscd.(hut‘:\‘idfl?“y in 800, or more technically, to that at a meeting of property owners, the victory in the World War there The other route would be consid- ‘y‘n m“““ ““R(:g' Hm‘l hies T Empire as revived in 962 by Otho The city already is operated UDOT | is a growing tendency to emphas ‘:,.m;u.‘. to the north of the present S SRS R‘\f'n“h:,(fl'\'?;o e e , cer plan in its departments. | remembrances of the World War's | structure, and would use Wilcox Ts- pYg o ciulien o e i [Tt AL Len oDl 25 the manager plan in its departments. | remembrances of the World War's | structure, and would use | The best thing you can say for|Detter performance in the past,|rorous horse Bucephalus? Because the city engineer is man-|dead and the sacrifices incurred in |jand as a base for one of the piers. 1L}y 0 oneviate manner is that it usu-| 224 Will assuredly once again | ™4 a0 inder the Great ager of his department does ot |its victorious conclusion. There Is would Le more expensive than the | 4iv wears off in the last year O{Ihrm";; 0 no]wn O:a ::mr{omlyL ;:u\”: TR AR S s ar ar (Fa bodyior i | | part when his stage fright leaves . At : mean that citizens are not interest- |also a far greater abundance of | other. high school. i t 8 g \A(ilmlral J])e“ mlo\cd to the Prot- & > | 2 . 3 | estant Episcops “athe ed in how e performs his work. Be- | what a few years ago would have | Tt is said {o be the idea of the e e i it e ave A ther ioaary \\';‘:;\xnmo:h}) zall Cathedral in cause Thomas Linder is manager of | heen termed “peace talk.” Today, | state highway departmentStofmatlitNee il it o hmmmmm,‘mrformamc s the bride. She A. 1925 his department does not SIgnifY |with 50 governments agreeing 1o | prove the trunk line running diagon- | \ho gamoe when you want dance mu- | u:\li(_:‘jd to mdr. Tltavrd «nn_uulxe1 A ST AL Ein e eADilal oriithe popular apathy in how he manages— | outlaw war as a national policy, vet- [ally through the state, cither via | ic. lizong :\\;n e ;:::;u,,:]:l:m“:[: Retibll ot Ertnonian not to hear some of the ! crans of the last struggle join in this | New Haven and Middletown or from | gt S P, e e BB o cafi'd Tan;!nn.rwhmh was n;—mm;ly he lin onal s e e e id- | Brisbane says the hirinz of col- ed by the German name Reval. owners talk! And so down the line. | manifestation of national and inter- | Danbury, Waterbury, Meriden, Mid fr22 athictes S0es no. Breat Marm |M8PE @ lttle' more experlenced | o gk o SR B AL PEL L) True, these managers—regardless | national ideallsm and hope as fer- | dletown and thence to Willimantic| 8% BEEE8 SR08 RO, BEEr e Proved a better selection. e at| oo oo Sovl 0 S0t i | af what their actual titles may be— | vently as President Hoover. the gov-and beyond. | 500d prices, helps them, too. fil2ase o 10“‘“(1“1“‘ fl’a“'“ é‘"d‘the Cosmopolitan Magazine? B © the jurisdiction of the | Enalth icials of all othe {0 one ave a sericus objec- i (S RIIECRO RN e s UL A CE I CAN B T = 1o f Wi T(Eon are r th irisdiction ol rnment, and the officials of all other | No one can have a ser | e o e i O S T Bk o ns | SR SR mayor. who since the days governments, that the world may be tion to this plan. But theru is an-| tom _:\,“_ eod et el e it Lot e, 1o Mlz.ou Vhere mmmmn,l rl.oc.nled"‘ e . 2 £ . e arloalied. | charmingly ouldn't he Lave made . i 4 | Missour cnnsylvania 2 ? Quigley @s mayor has had saved another bath i © bl0od of | other that should not v Twerlooked. Bt T, S terior of St. John's church, was| " mpo University of Missouri is power than any other mayor its manhood. That is the imperative need of a| S eaquisitely well done. although the |, “Cojumiia Mo.: and the Univers. state. (We think . Quigley once | Of the issues at stake in the last pridge at Rocky Hill, which would Most children and adulls can be | l'(v](‘::I'Tun;l‘huz?h M]”“;'l the K(;“t”yuy of Pennsylvania is at Philadel- > *|selected by the bride—a white himself said that). But so would & conflict there was one that Was, pe an advantage to New Britain and | influenced by reason © others| 208 £ E J 5 & €| phia. 2 city manager be su 10 the | pighly idealistic, and that was 10 |yicinity and allow a more direct { were u:nmmblr: for the invention o ‘ms‘_‘m\o‘:‘i;d,, aar]l"“s\{i{nc;‘]‘s: Y % : of spanking. | e 3 ay arz govi v oversight of the mayor and Uommon | jpake the world a better place in |route to the castern part of the| X Bt | Balm of Gilead! Rt encien? ! Council. which to live; which in its anal state and to Boston and Providence. | iz spots of a college "”‘""""'i | Pansy: “Wha' fo' you-all wan'| "R pont or Tegency is a A city manager is like any other | neant one bereft of militari This route in a semse would be 2| Coonskin: pigskini sheepskin. I fi;"_”“f::f.z ot b git mah ming | PEFSOR OF group of persons who act manager. 1€ he doesn’t manage |{lie Just of any one mation or Eroup | competitor of the Middletown route, | A — A uslEot e . 1 : Jerly he is brought to book. His | of nations to dangle the sword over |aq traffic now must cither cross the | Don't scoff at the “collcge spirit ,‘zi"rmf:{“““ fo' mah fust hus BIOLEEY 2 2 Ao | Remember your own school daze. 3 5 . . ob depends upon ¢ is | others. This ideal has not been |Connecticut at Middletown or Hart- 3 ekl | —Mrs. €. A. Marin, athetic igures why they are usually succes thoroughly accomplished, as there | ford, resulting in extra mileage in | The trouble about moving 1o a| BUTTONS man would take such a job unless he | are still many men under Aarms | either case. better town is that you fake alom." By M. F. Ié"dc“' Waiew how to run it. In the 311 cities. | throughout a Europe that chnot re- | is said o be probable that| the duaiities PR ST B0 G O S i S ) | i P Er AT S % seem rotten. 4 fijostly small. medinm, and some quish a clinging to old conceptions | neither the state higl depart- | g (And the keeper blotted a tear) tnrge, which had city managers at nt traditions within the | ment or the Legislaturcwvill listen 10 | Americanism :Saying “no” _seven | But don't be afraid—he’s harmles the end of 1928—ther now mor of one generation. But althe tocky Il project until the | times: wondering how to zet rid of | -1he poor fellow you see in here. i nanagers 0§84 start has been made, public opin- | Middictown bridge is cither finished | the man: meekly signing en the dot-| (0 | loy- ion everywlere has been aroused. | o well under way. The Rocky Hitl | ¢4 1 And the world seemed kind and Numerous treaties are within he | project, however, could well be given | rye sight of a broken old man on e gave t apression 1 testifying o | more attention than it is receiving | his way to jail is almost as sad as|AS Ne happily twisted buttons - Brifatn 1e nok the wigh itfusion of a Ly the state highway department. the sight of an honored old man | Off customers’ underwear. i~ : i 5 . eace sentiment and the betraying his country. | a city manager. 1 a e it must | ) iment and t —_— —— g | But alas, the sky was clouded, of rule to place the FICE G S AS Cf K& | | a rift a 5 be ¢ OERELLSES nE e R A S A% taxm Jourall declares there i3 [ A0 (b sppeared it tiite, vided this re ate tions in the lap of agree- | About a generation ago gloowy | some element of risk in raising any- ;‘en :\“c-arllcss manufacturer et able lerstanding rather than to | pictures were painted by the old |thing. This is especially true of rought out a buttonless suit. Ifig city or town managers at the end | ¢ once again upon the doubtful | folks as to what would happen when | checks. | At first e bore up bravely A 25 0 s of secrct diplomacy. |ail the girly worked in offices and | o Tees | Under the awful strain, Wor ) discloscs that the [palances of power, and an armed |other places. They would not Know | cping is Chow Au-ham. “Chow,” | But no laundry works could stand major! of s 0 wns thus | pe th 1s only the flash {rom | how to cook when they got married, | we assume, is Chinese for cggs. i ”1’ £ A blessed ar ler in size than New | the pistol of sor tted repro- | it was said. The nation would go | S 4 "h’m”‘:""“‘““"‘f burst in _his ¢ Pritain. All thre nicipalities ate 10 pl 12 to blind | ypon the rocks, the oldsters said, be- | A White cross mcans a fatal ac-| ain. 2 : R MR e fk e Sy ° | cident duc to somebody's stupidity.” | . s Conneeticu = 8 galized murder causc when the average man marries | 0 S o” they cover many | Violent? No: in the kitchen London, ord t \ consideration of these | the average woman he expects to | gores & He smiles as he shells the pea: ford—arc smaller \ - 1 is o have a fe who o cook a ,:.,,,‘;‘ P l’corm:llrl;:]l; he thinks they are > r o ¢ i P meal. The discussion of this topic | Bankers “saved the situation” in | S A ' : : . ¢ 5 e RS Wall Street. To save a situation you | From customers’ beeveedees! : Salide | give a scared man a niclicl for the | ace in t t o There has been at least one gen- | gt B 0K 0 ing. What They Say Ahout Birthdays e to : 1 cration of office girls and others A | Mrs. A “My husband sends me a manager but f spent their carly years carning their | The Comptroller-Gencral ‘Dm"’{lo‘“l”': on 'm\'b lnlrthdn\'. I wish e . f s plains that Shipping Board vess he'd change to bonbon: ains much cred : s livelihood, and to the best of any- | Plains that PP | 0 " e f ons wo c e eI T RD N s ol lare S1d oo Heap i ocan e e (I Mra U S husband i sends its personally i confirms that i one’s knowledge the nal a8 MO 4ne market quotation on white ele- | me candy, wnen he knows I like wish nooma T of W y 1 these instruments | gone on the rocks as had been antici- | ppantg, flowers.” Hartford is Benjamin 1. M I good will pated. The girls have continued to | Sl Mrs. C.: "My husband sends me inquired of a citizen of W t get marricd, and in some astonishing | “The unemployment situation has ]flozor»?_‘d‘;”‘lfl \'fmd.‘}; M"" ought to 2 = cd.” Whaich means a lot of | know I'd prefer a check ord just how things were go COWER INVESTIGATION manner they, or most of them have | improved ko . ford just ¥ AREDWVER SNV il ! G S |tittle fellows have quit watching | Mrs. D "My husband never der the manager system. T zocs on the Senate turned into good cooks. Some of the | 14 ACTERE BITE ek 1o work. | remembers my birthday, so I go Lyverybod E =i o not co concoctions scen at the family tables | o o fout and buy what 1 want and| B Tai < . o 28 | are superior to the siyie of edibics “The witomobile,” a mother | charge it | e s Suld g offered by Seil- | gerved a generation ago. writes, “has taken the place of the | = 1 tat When a girl who has nover cooked | €ragle.” Though of cours: the little Impossible? ighudlneszs Ll : ; ; et Bl @ “ hings didn't try to drive the eradle. | s, Blake: “The cook has given | work 18 keen. All politl elin t ing i « meal in her life marrics she sec notica ated. That is what we wanted, no | gatic nount of clectricity |abl to learn quickly. She may make | . Corcect this sentence: “Helen's| ake: “What's the mafter with politics and more cffic r L «ates, with ala few mistakes at first, but usually | little Russian friend is a countess,” | e : e : 3 # during the | said the gossip, “but she never tells| Mry. Blake: “She's says she won ry t f esente ‘ gorvernmental regula- | hubby is not too exacting during the | said the gossip Yivery type o ! ! 168 SubRyas L "~ | anybody that.” stay unless we improve con- ainonz tHose which o adopted the | tio ¢ t estigation com- | first few months of tridl and error. | P00, { aitions.” eIty BanaEer form crnment— | plete in Jetails, interstate frans- | The grocery stores, too, are a great | ConyeiEnt 10280 Punliahacs Elelie: W e a0t Any thing from small rural trading cc rs. iuns:.u:z of radio, telegraph, tele rh‘):‘."“as.\funwfi to the new housewives ‘ Syndicate l,u keep her here. What anugml Armistice Day | at Washington. The celebration. Tnstead of a day given |approach would involve conside evening Defore. This | he high cnough to permit much of program is a marked change from |the viver traffic to pass under it e o) | those of some previous anniversaries | without a draw the ogening of bridge. There must be a draw any- sed that gradu- |how, however, in order to meet the requirements of the war department Middletown ap- able | bu innumeral he can nu: , cans and bl £ things | s: indeed cartor she can + meal by doing nothing more di icult than opening the recey | containing the prepared food Hubby, as a matter of f a 1y, prepare ma m bt- ny sh ould do as well himself if driven to Send all communications o Fun it Frequently, when Friend Wite || Shop Editor, care of the New £00s 1o see her folks or to the shorc, | | Britain Herald, and your letter . - || witt ve forwarded to New Yorkl he does succeed in providing him- | s the essentials of life with- | e | Wel hy Not? | out making many extra irips t0 the | gy yyrn 4o our Bradstreet's fo find e | a man's worth, Downtown cating also has helped | [f his assets are great or the process. It the ofiec girl newly | srhall, SS ints Lo} Serve lihel &b called | But why mot¥alGlagstrectsilo ERUb R Sl him i mirth ncag ofy s iolseno thiasspnens nee the world nceds good cheer | ring the week-end, what easier s ety plan thian 1o 30 to any of the plac | that lways open o serve the That Nauseating Pasion? with food? ISrcquently the | Tilli “Does you love me Hen | TR IR, Henry: “Love yer! My Gawd.| n important featu of cve Tillie. T loves yer so much it H\m‘\fs; outing. Without this »cies of mily | me sick ter my stummick ter look trade many an inn would go bank- [at yer.” % I 1upt | = We only mention these things to | | prove that the gloomy forebodings of | cussions, frequently by notable men | those on in years regarding the ri ing generation usually turn out bas less. There are gloomy forebodings 1 | torial writers of the vear 19 b 29, too; and.we presume S refer to them with t degree complacency over a vanished that we today extend to the of 1920 or thereabouts. ool {0 hi The New ball team rds Britain High s defeated Bridgeport o locals Saturday game 380 ew Haven next ficld in the fi championship. me Electric the stat new town home w b inn home is said the state A liquor license h to the Hotel Russwin by commissioners & H. Wood is visiting $h fair grounds. He will also Boulder, Col., to inspect the property of the ‘American | Gotd Mining company Superintendent of appeared Ahefore the day and requested rtificates be given completed to be onc ates n of t in s been grant the coun St g0 mini Que chools school that wor have the sever | grade. The tickets for the Yale-Harvard | €ven a semblance game arrived in town today. in the edi- i of fear gloom 25 Years Ago Today | ot - gh vill at for ed nty Louis to ng cn Stuart hoard to children rth Bother FPailin'; Don's My “Women Candy's THE DRAMATIC CRITIC 1 REPORTS A WEDDING “ Found by Julia Wesser ) ! Reatrice | came. the bride | dull | Smith, yesterday of Joim Brown in dding cere- scason has thus as W mony as this far produced Nothing went | wrong to bring | of drama to the | Poorly constructed drab affair. The mails in and out of the local fand badly staged. the nuptials fail- } nost office have been very heavy of [ed to iold the interest of the spec- | late. One of the local factories sent |tators beyond the first few min- | out a ton of printed matter. [utes. We' Tave ceen marches fo Shuttle Meadow has been yery low | the altar before, but never one| the light of a benedictign neaven. Storc gns and wind and rain storm yesterday. plate glass win- | hoth Gows were broken during the heavy | pled their answers so that none be- Facts and Fancies s rain was regarded in | that dragged as this did. s“nh} from | had direction is inexcusable. Even the casting was disappointng, and | the bride and groom mum- {yond the first few rows could | hear a word. | There is no doubt but the cere- | advise cannot bs given, | tended research be undertaken. other questions will receive a per- | | sonal reply. | horse her cond —Paul Zeller. (Copyright. Reproduction Yorbidden) 1929, QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get answer 1o any question of tact or information by writing to the Question Kditor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau. New York avenue, Washington, D. C, enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital nor can ex- Al an Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are confidential. —Editor. Q. Mow much docs a good | horse cost? A. The average price of horses | in the United States is zbout $70. | A good work horse may be hought for about §! an excellent saddle costs from $330 and upward. horoughbred ycarlings sometimes | sell for $30,000 and breeding stal- | lons often sell for §139,000. At a recent auction in Kentucky 115 | well-broken saddle horses sold for an average price of $£300 cach There is probibly no other sold at such a wide range of prices, which are governed by the merits of the individual horse. Q. Is fish classed as meat? A. Iish is sea food. It is not classed as meat Who was the first colored by President of Haiti? A. Toussaint L'Ouverture. Q. When does the spring train- ing son of the major baseball league begin ? A. About the first of March. Q. What are the meinings the word “cop”? It is a slang name for police- of n head of a thing; the tuft of hair on the head of certain birds: the con- ical* roll of thread formed on the spindle of a spinning machine. As a verb it means to over-top, cxcel, to remove the top of. to pile in a heap Tt is aleo a slang word 1.caning to cateh, arrest and take in custody. Q. Do the laws of Maryland and Delaware still allow whipping as a punishment for wife beating? A. Yes Q. What was the "“Holy Roman Empire”? | A. The name was given to the Empire erected in we n Europe Charles the Great, King of the Franks, usually dated fron: his cor- onation at Rome by Pope Leo III animal | As a noun it means the top or | | as head ‘ot a monarchy when the |Cincinnati ... | ruling monarch is an infant or in-|Denver o {capable of ruling or when from any |Duluth ....... | cause there 18 no monarck on the |Hattera throne. There are two staies which L.os Ange have regencies at present. Hungary, | Miami ........ ; where there is no monarch due to|Minncapolis . : the overthrow of the Hapsburghs as Nantucket 93 a result of the World War, and Ad- | Nashville o miral Horthy is the Regent: and|New Haven . AL | Roumanta, where the boy King, |NeW Orleans o | Michael, s too young to excrcise the | N oW York duties of a monarch. and a com- |~orfolk. Va. .. mittee’ exercises a regency in his | orthfield, V... name until he comes of age. :"’”S"‘”f" % | Q. What is the real name of Al gO"HaN Simmons, the baseball player, and ““:J._‘,'“ngw'" g | what is his home address” s ot — A. His rcal mame is Albert £ A Harry Sehmanski. His home address Prohibited Book List is 772 American avenue, Milw | Published by Vatican Wisconsin tcaniC il o DR Q. Who played the ! tween four and five thousand works role in the motion pictu | are listed on the new “index of pro- men of the Press?” hibited hooks” published by order of A. Walter Husten the pope Q. Who wrote “Three Weeks™? | The index contains 563 pages and A. Llinor Glyn | for the first time in history is print- Q. What is the population of | ed in Italian instead of Latin. | China? | After the preface comes the gen- [ A, The latest estimatcd popula- | cral prescriptions of the Canon law, | lation is 439,750,580, | code, oltowed by a warning of pro- | Q. Where is Angel” Island an\l‘l\ihilion of reading the condemned how did the name origin:te? | volumes. which is binding on Catho- A. It is in San Francisco Bay.|lies of the oriental ritc as well as Marin County, California £nd was | the western rite. named for a miner why seltled| The index is arranged in alphabet- 1849, | ical order by the names of authors, | there in Q. What was the principal cause of the Trojan War? | A. The abduction of Melen of | Troy, famed for her transcendent | i lovcliness, was the principal cause. | candy NOt Forbldden All the heroes of ancient Greee: flew to arms to avenge the wrong. | TO THE | Twelve hundred galleys bore the gathered clans from Aulis across |the Aegean Sea to the Trojan | shores. For ten years the Greeks | and their allies held in close siege | the city of Priam. Nn need to deny vourself all good things_because you overweigh. Modern physicians do not advise starvation. They know the dangers of it. They know that people who are over-fat_have generally an under-active gland. So they supply the factor, for lack of which too much food goes to fat. | _ This modern method is the basis of Qbservations .On The Weather Washington. No for Southern New E cloudy tonight and 11. \gland: Jrorccast Mostly Tuesday; rain M. et Y eloudy tanighy deaday; Marmola prescription tablets. These tab- Tuesday afternoon or night; mnot | lets were perfected, and are prepared, by much change in temperature; | e much? chanso, | PeratiTe: | 5 famous medical laboratory. A book in toderate winds, mostly south and | each box states the formula and explains ZoL0e RS the reasons for restlts, or Bastern New York: | ' s | For 22 years Marmola has held the top Generally fatr tonight, followed by | 1. c'{s 3 feld. Millons of boes have rain Tuesday; slightly colder in ¢x-| feon'ysed in fighting fat. The people who treme north portion; moderate to gained new youth and beauty, new health and vigor, have told others. Now the re- sults are seen everywhere. Excess fat has largely disappeared. There is usually no excuse for an zb- normal figure and the dangers which go with it, I the cause is an under-active | tresh west. | Conaitions: disturbance passing over the Lake region this morning. It is producing rains from the Plains statets to the middle At- winds, mostly southwest and Hiic states and from - the north | glond, Marmola is the right way to com- Misstssippl north over the Ohio| by ir. For 22 years, countless people have valley and the Lake region. Pres-| beon Jearning what it does. sure s high over the Maritime | " Go try Marmola and learn what they | have learncd, Read the book in the box, | then do as dirccted. Take four tablets a | day. When you sce that results are com- ; ing, go on and complete them. You owe Provinces and over the north Pacific states. Temperatures range above forty over the northern districts cast of the Mississippi river. Conditions favor for this vicinity unsettled weather and not much change in temperature. Temperatures yesterda: that to your future. Start today. Marmola prescription tablets are sold by all druggists at $1 a box. Any druggist who is out will gladly order for you. MARMOLA PRESCRIPTION TABLETS The Right Way to Reduce Low L ABanta 5 s 5 | Atlantic City . Bostont:ui o se: Buffalo ...... | Chicago -1 .11 | YOUR CANARY ¢ pet cage birds is the canary has hiad one or more canarlee. You want to your bird, how to feed him, what kind clean, wel! and happy; about his bath, his moit- shows signs of being sick. Our Washingion Bureau has one of its comprehensive bulletins ready for you; it fs CANARIES, THETR CARE AND MANAGEMENT. 1f you want a copy of this bulletin, fill out the coupon below and send for it: One of the most satis family at some time or oth know how to take care of is best, liow to keep I ing, and what to do it h Most every | ———— - =CLIP COUPON HERE I(‘\.\'\nu;s EDITOR, Washington Bureau, Daily New Britain Herald, ] 1322 New York Avenie, Washington, | I want of brlletin CANARIF | a copy enclose herew cents in coin. or ucancelled, U. stampe, or postage and handling costs | | NAME 3 | streer asp svwpre STATE Britain Herald, I am a reader of the New ! [ [ | (BLEE e e e THE YOUNG MAN WHO HAS JUST HEARD HIS FATHER SAY THAT SAaNTA CLAUS WAS KiLLED IN THE BiG CRASH® (PFontaine Fox, 1929 T e s B e — U R | : B | | ! ] 1} / r ] | ¢ e ’,“ | = ot He i [ | »! : = X1 By l'i, ’,:1'1 l‘é) L }\\

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