New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 9, 1930, Page 12

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NEW BRITAIN DATLY HERALD, THURSDAY, JANUARY 9, 1930. of HONOR | [E Bl b oo T e R by Ruth Cross ol Ry A e ” l,, ; “ B ~* Vistors Find Difficulty in Get- * fing Pass to See Gems | " Madrid City Officials A To Arrange Funerals g USE HERALD CLASSIF(ED ADS . Ends Stomach Gasin1Min.— or No Cost Schooner in Difficulty Off Coast of Florida E k! Get Gasetts Ask at any drug] ¢ menacing, scowling Burkhalter | Oj Course. .. vou can serve it hot Most people want a hot breakfast dish for a cold day. Shredded Wheat is de- liciously warming when eaten with hot milk. Crisp the biscuits in the oven and st milk over them. The flavory tain enoudh crispness to en- h chewing —that's od for children. u with fresh or WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT THE SHNMNEDDED WHEAT COUMPANY the Year Big Rich Charles Brackett “4 HE big "boss” and his financial secretary, former college roommates, fall in love with the same girl. In business they have always pulled together—but now all’s fair. Who wins her?—You'll never guess until the last para- araph. The first exciting chapters begin in the Post you can buy TODAY. Everything Was All Tied Up William Hazlett Upson HEY couldn’t fix the tractor because there was no Merrillite, because they couldn’t fix the tractor to get the ore that made the Merrillite that made the steel that made the bearing. With things all tied up like that, only Joe Mullin could get them started again. But how?—That’s part of the fun. THE SATURDAY EVENING POST “AN AMERICAN INSTITUTION” The Big Fellow in Wall Street Edwin Lefevre HEN the bottom re- cently dropped out of the stock market, what hap- pened to the professional speculator? Did he come out smiling or was he hard hit? According to Mr. Lefévre, penetrating writer on finance, the big fellow’s millions of paper profits vanished right along with the hard-earned savings of the little fellow. Find out how and why. War on the Street of the Peace Eleanor Kinsella McDonnell HE French couturiers are fighting to retain their position as dictators of fash- ion, and to substitute for the simple styles of recent years complex models that cannot easily be imitated. Will American women sub- mit to long skirts and the pinched-in waist after years of comfortable clothes? Read what a Paris correspondent says about it. : te h D 9. MARY ROBERTS Coming-"The Door”»" ixie More baflling than “The Bat,” more exciting than “The Circular Staircase,” is this new and unguessable mystery novel. Watch for it in an early issue. One year, 825 2 years, $3.50; 3 vears, $5, through any newsdealer or authorized agent, or by mail direct to The Saturday Evening Post, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

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