New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 14, 1930, Page 8

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" New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connecticut Issued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street BUBSCRIPTION RATES | 3300 & Year | $2.00 Three Month 75¢. 8 Month Entered at the Port OfMce at New Britain | as Second Class Mall Matter. | | B CALLS | . 926 | | The only profitable advertising medim | n the City. Circulation books and press | Toom always open to mdvertise TELEPRO) Busipess Ofc Editorial Rooms | were re Member of the Associated Press The Amociated Press is exclusively en- | fitled to the use for re-publication of ail news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local nmews published ther Member Audit Bureau of Circulation The A. B. C. 18 & Dpational organization which furnishes mewspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly homest circulation. Our circulation stati based upon this audit. This insures pio- tection Against fraud fn newspaper tribution figures to both national local advertisers. The Herald fa on sale daily In New York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Times Square; Schultz’s Newsstand, Entranc Grand Central, 42nd Street. —— M'DONOUGH, WITH DIGNITY, LENDS HIS NAME Patrick ¥. McDonough dignified and telling entry as a may- oralty candidate. The Democrat is fortunate made party in standard bearer possessing of such high qual ties. He indicated a spirit of ence in thought at the v ning, at a moment when individual Democrats were considering putting a full ticket in the field. This, of course, refers {o his recognition that two of the Republican candidates | have been efficient and should, in | his estimation, be reelected. Mr. McDonough his in “has * on other public questions, and | own ideas that they are not tinctured with political viewpoint be as a certainty. Mr. McDonough an 1cCe is a fortunate choice. He has a united party be- hind him, one in which factions arz | conspicuously absent, and he questionably is looked upon with | favor by all elements of the popula- | tion irrespective of party. Should he be elected we believe the will be given a worthy tion of its affairs. un- | city administr: A NINTH PLANE IN SOLAR SYSTE! Suspecting that there is 1 a ninth planet to our solar system and defi- nitely tagging the distant are two entirely different achieve- ments. From this traveler day onward school children and others will ne taught that there are nine instead of eight plane’s coursing around the sun. | Percival predicted” presence of the ninth planet. astronomers ‘“verified pr tion,” or, it might be said, “ve the suspicion.” | ne: Years ago Dr. “mathematically Lowell the | Other the dic- Today the sum total of knowledge is advanced a step fur- ther by the announcement that tele- scopes and cameras, With keen eyes peered through the r fied air of Arizona, “sighted” the traveler. . Neptune, eighth member of the solar system, -was discovered 1846. Since that time astronomical | instruments have been human which | ri- | had defiitely wayward planetary in im- | proved and the heavens have been forced to yield almost an annual | crop of wonders, capped by Dr. Ein- stein’s recent theory what it in view of the relative slowness of light in trav ing through the vastne Bu® right in the k own solar system was ered sphere. Now we have located the vastly that all is not seems to he s of spac door of our an undiscov compar ative stranger, and though is estimated as being a little larger than the earth or bigger than Jupi- its size ter, which is 1,200 times the of the earth, that little detail no doubt size can be worked out in due time its actual si The billion ani nitely determined new planet is more th miles beyond gion that the sun as we Neptune warnith must be nearly non-c Yet d Sol, the power of it felt and the loncly slipped out re knows not know despite its nce ol ion s from s attraet raveler has not into space sefore our astronomers got wind of cnce., It is a fit subject tion, and proved our their met grapplit with a problem during the fied analysis when nothing bat a hunch wa 10 be he planct ongh THLE DU PONT PROHIBITION POLL IN DELAWARE Some timce 0 We W rote an ed torial regarding the conducted Del or prohibition by Pierre du Pont aware. Subsequently of these to advise th: The informatior columng cetved, wlthoug stand whit that result of th in our cstimution. upon dry I'ont tive nun o nd the state. M1 ha { had | state lany scarcely influer:ce private voting any more than it he were a dry, The time has now analyze the result of tl was on whether the s come to poll, which ate should re- tain or abolish the state enforcement act, the locally Klair The of mail voting | shows that $9.4 per cent of all the | law. | result the replies that could be classified fav- | ored repeal of the law, and that only 10.6 per could be cent of the replies that classificd favored retention of the law. The vote was 39,424 for| repeal and 4,683 against repeal. | A total of 106,450 questionnaires | ' Leen sent out, of which 45,640 irned. Only 1,333 votes wer. so qualified that they could not be lassified as “ves"—or ‘no” an- Delaware legislature th amendment and enforcement act those who think mental editorial ONE-WAY TRAFFIC | AROUND TRI i One s to have no vivid imagi- | ation to oners living at or sympathize with the near the west- | ern end of Broad strect who have | sked the flic Kosciusko and city to desig tr around th Pulaski, in that cinit The petitioners undoubtedly have | noted the satisfactory nature of one- t around | way Tic Central park, | and as Kosciusko and Pulaski parks somewhat are similar in nature, | they believe the idea would work | well there 0. Their opinien un- questionably will have weight in the thou the pla hiful consideration that merits. IAIN CHARRY g0 NGLEMENTS” United States created wi or The Dawes plan the but there Government was no of- ficial entanglement with the The Young plan irs of Lurope. United States created remain th but “iso- lated” from Lurope. We created th Bank, which is part International of the Younz | plan, but Secretary of announced that the Government ‘does not desire to have any Ameri- | can official participate directly or indirectly in collecting German reparations, through the proposed | International Bank or otherwise.” no officials of the I'ederal em would be permitted to sery as members of the Bank. They may not even select the unofficial Ame Reserve can members of it. "he dele Dawes plan and | enjoyed only the Any American helped to frame the the Young plan status of private citizens Americans chosen as directors of the International Bank will the same status. We continue to run true to form. | right or wrong. The reason for tech- nical isolation but practical partic pation in need the Luropean affairs is the for appeasing Senate and outside against entanglement political measures. Our latest contribution to this at- titude was a refusal to participate in consultative pact in Europe, which would have had an influence with to reduce France her naval figures at the London conference. Joining in wold have been But the Administ against a consultative pact mere gesture. olidly termed the | ion was it. France American f ttitude nk,” and equally frankly sets a high mint nium of naval needs in the name of “security R i not likely to fulfill expeciations, sult: London Conference is YOUNG PLAN VICTORY IN “DAS REICHY losing tine IHI In no whatever in signing the Young tie had pa majorit ter 5l b Pre German Jicichstag v a re- Hin- republic of- sident denburg of the gave evidence responsible ficials of r the ac in sound cord with the terms of this Ameri- cthod of tions Ly e I us the Had work rned the Na- opposition to th itification resulting - complicati would videspread United z plan and th L substit suns two ounts 1 oc- 1pation 10,000 1 private of the Government American citizens Grermany i receivin L24.000,000 ¢ Ihies i1 claims usted R plan 1 216 and | easily understandible. and its methods to be willing to go | conservative | most | 12 American private claims, but re. duces the costs of the American army of occupation ten per cent. France and Great Britain have con- sented to the same cut in the costs of their armies of occupation. Under the Young plan schedules, the gov- ernment will not be reimbursed for its claims Germany untit after the claimants have against private been paid. A separate treaty h#d to be ne- | gotiated with Germany | ten cent off on taking the costa of the American Army of Occupation. This | per . BRITAIN DAILY AERALD. RIDAY, MARCH 14, showed that the city in the world,” as Harlem is called, is far from being the “free the writing investigator that the place is desperately poor for the most part, that its inhabitants re. ceive pitifully low wages, that they‘ pay astonishingly high rents for | their livirg quarters, and that the | resulting social comditions are a menace. | How th= high cost of living is circumven'ed under such condi- | y has been signed, and it Senate for ratification. is before the ¥ IN appears R OF DE FIFTH DISTRICY 1 that the state throu Republican machine gentiemen have been reac some of the editorials out the state regarding the | probability of a Democratic victory | in the riedly fitth district and have hur- cided to postpone the elec- tion of a successor to Congressman who died recently, to No- The sudden turnabout of Trumbull, i Glynn, | | | | | vembe; Governor therefore, | At first the governor was strong- in of | to | s0 as to help favor a special election provide a successor, his | uphold the tarift bloc in the House. | | argument, of course, had itz has as yet thought the House was in danger of losing its grip on the high tariff, even with Congressman Glynn sub- tracted from the ranks of tariff ad- voca It there is one place in the Government where the Republican majority is in complete control it is the weak points, s no one | tes. House. Having had sufficient time | thoroughly into the thinks to gc situation the | vernor al now the sp ction is ta not necessary and tha ff is not in danger in the | House. Even more important, by not having a clection the or- | be special sanization of would running crashing defeat, such the less risk a to Republicans in second Massachusetts district. A certain degree ship, however, would as | came the of sportsman- | compel the holding of the special election. The Republican machine should hay enough confidence in its strengti to the mat with the Democrats in the fifth district. It would provide a good and exciting political show. The idea that necessary elections can be postponed at the will of the Governor or the party managera doesn’t appeal to Nutmeggers. At | | | least, there should be no satisfaction | |of a horn has been used for years present. When a vacaney in Congress | occurs there should be a successor | at the earliest possible moment. | That time is now, not in November. | | ME. WHALEN GIVEN | CRITICAL ATTENTION appears that the newspapers of York City regard Police Whalen 1t even most N on- 1 eyes. His recent announcement that he would furnish employers er with eritics | with thc] the | that the men be discharg- ed, s a case in point. Editors who | Communists and | crack-brained agitators seem inclined to think Mr. Whalen is mis- taking his duties, names of Communists, with suggestio desy regard them to say the least; ind 15 Columbia university law pro- fessors think the Whalen idea to liber and contrary |0’ They do not like the idea of | police occupying their time in menace playing the role of secret censoring | bodies As the H emphasiscs | rald-Tribune caustically | there are uncaught criminals in the who not 5 | ts. Not only that Dbut the | Herald-Tribunc that on | Mr. city are Commun points out the day Whalen made his an- nouncement about his new cspionage stem a crook who had been sought | for a year walked into a police sta- | tion h 1 gave himself up, declaring | 1 in New York all that| and was surprised that no po- been time liceman or detective even once bothered him as he walked the bumping into a biue coat on ¢ corner “There of a is a lot of law the end nightstick.” morsel | is a choice Whalen's The trouble under his system is that the Commu- credited to tongue. innocent bystanders ge t nightsticks, a few alleged d crooks, in the ir 1ght and formally win in nists get arrested a nd glory publicity the thev vish to get their cases against the police trouble per- to court. have to go to the of oing to the police stations in son ana (hus calling atte, tion liiv presence in towi Whalen sight. also L during eight his police cd Thursday” he ont e Tagent did not see one instance where his men hit anyboedy with a nightstick. Or perhaps he merely hus poor memory, liks somie 1esses, UNSOCIAL CONDITIONS OF NEGRO LIFE Many thousands of Negroes hay migrated from the South to the within with then: 1 problems which [ are just heginning to understood by in- N« York Harlem ently v trating upon | instead o ! hive | similar conditions | gates. Facts and Fancies | bumps you from behind. it's strange | Ino car is named Nemesis. | got vou in the end. | cthers dread having anything sticky ans who have never been even shot | teceut years, bringing | tions is easy to understand. A house, | harboring one or two families, is filled with human be- ings, all paying rent for a few square pace. Like bees in a men and women the day and feet of living they live, thiroughout : children to take care of themselves as best they can Auring their absence. The result is reflected in the delinquency and crime statistics of the region, working leaving disease, But conditions are peculiar to Harlem. Even in the Negro settlement in Hartford quite have been un- | such not | earthed, greatly to the surprise of a smug city that did not suspect anything of the kind amid its proud These people were “better off” in the rural South, where they at least had enough room and fresh air. Why they leave the South to clutter up the already overcrowded th)()‘ sections in various northern citics is gifficult to comprehend. BY ROBERT QUILLEN The size of the floating population addicts those outboard motor or floating checks. harnessed for But that's | “The tide must be work,” says Brisbane. get unticd. | Russia thinks she can abolish all gods, but how is she going to work | crossword puzzles with “Ra” Considering how often one Nemesis | Fundamentals change little. | talls, but they had fleas. i | Some women love children, and smeared on their clothes. Using sound waves to start ma- chinery isn't a new idea. The sound to start leg machinery. Men will approve the suggestion | that women put their feet on the desk. The new woman has been putting her foot down long enough. Enforcing the law is much like singing the notes of the national anthem. The whole thing is a flop if you can't reach the high ones, Americanism: Thinking our- | selves efficient because we make | needless haste to keep pace with the man who lopes as foolishly to keep pace with us. stories there News doubtle: o are and | cago- | aggerate. many Ch at. | Statues of Justice show her lold- | ing an evenly balanced pair of scales, and the thought is further emphasized by the nicely parted whiskers of Mr. Hughes. Why not divide each city block into four sections, thus providing | extra streets for traffic and twelve more corners for filling stations? Remote control may be new to gincers, but wives away on a visit ticed the art ages ago. e T When they stop speeding by limit- | feated by Ch ing the speed of motors. they can stop crime hy with money, perhaps doing away How bitter your heart. as vou read modern Looks, to reflect that | you once got licked for reading dime novels, A magazine writer foolishly de- matrimony as a school. There’s no school in which the oncs who try re first to graduate The plete job, relicve the relieving government is doing a com- 1ivst it loancd money to fary and it is them of their this ntence s studied English for | said the typical Ameri- and now she speaks it s now rms, Correct daughter I { three years, can mother, perfectly.” (Copyright 193 Syndic s “Our Publishy t2) 25 Yea bl ated a hearing at the state that 2 in rs Ago Today the legis automobile ture today this state. Local people wto | Twenty-five young men and wom- | en were presented with diplomas | {last evening, marking the end of | their evening school work | Due to the improved equipment lled by the New Haven rail- | road. freight is being moved faster. | Local manutacturers will lenefit | areatly, having lost considerable | money through delays in shipments Another public meeting will 1 held this evening in the city count 10om on the new city charter The members of the Muple olf club have subscribed tunds to pay off the Hhe club | The Ve, i Hil sufficient indebtedness links cove Leres The hoy i gir can [ then day. ‘greatest Negro | school are planning to m display of green on St. e a great Patrick’s % The railroad committee yesterday and easy” paradise of galety that it | voted to report unfavorably on the has been pictared. It was shown by | proposed legislation directed against the third rail system. The building oper Britain for the y tions i n New ar which ends this month will aggregate about half a mi Th their ning. liion dollars. Knights of St. Patr th annual banquet last eve- Over 230 were present, held Questions QUE TIONS ANSWEI You can get an answer fo any i question of tact or information by | stairs dancing academies. writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washington. D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical. legal and marital advise cannot be given, ;lended research be undertaken. All | other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. not be answered. confidenti Q. Bow in A. Q. Who appeared Ladies of the Richard Do the s points? A, all, cause from carth jup by impurities in the air, so that | | the image of the star dos to us perfectly, idepends on whether you mean the |stead on a shimmerir cms to have points of light. Q. powe 0 A, the The them light nor can ex- Unsigned reqnests can- Arler ars stars are They scem to have points be which passes mosphe Which consimes 50 watt Mazda lamp or a | arbon rosted lamp furnish as much light | [just What ‘sends them to Reno 9 |as a clear onc? t but la Al —Editor. with Mob] i have fiv not poi come: through nd s it appe bod the amp? letters Docs are Clara . ¢ or six nted at s to u the broken | not come | in- that ars = most a All 50 watt lamps consume 50 watts an hour. but the M gives more illumination | with a carbon filament. | bulb does not give as much light as tha A @ lamp i one frosted clear one because the light is more Q. A Q. A Q. { chapte Q. A, A founder America, an I | diffused. Does Alabama pay |to Confederate Army Vete | their widows? Primitives didn't try to swat golf |vears in the state is required prior | they to filin but resi application. of Ts the th as John Jacob Astor glishr | He was born in ( came to this country as a boy. Moham denco man ? rma nmedan Astor, family pensions ns and oL five the in ny, and Koran divided into hooks like the Bible? It is divided into 114 suras or What does | meteorology embrace? It is the science of the at-|stor he scie mosphere, and embraces the zation of all the properties, ments the teria the carth Q. A, Q ber Is a A What “The Careless Age Melody Divine, Is there any limit to the num- | Any one to import Bermu; to the Plant Qv ministration, Department | culture, Washington, 1. C. is the theme nee of invest move- | and appearances oceurring in | envelope which surrounds | song of | upholstered Sermuda lilies that a person import into the U permit nece 1 i sary ited to lies by a of is placed upon the quantity. a permit is issued for mnpur(u(ion.‘ the holder may llies 1 from Berr - s e talking pictur He hg next film, Q. Did William Randolph H im wishes lily bulbs muda. Ton Chaney been in any | Major of the community yet? played in talking pic- | burned a path to the editor’s office port were as Last s import may obtain a permit pplying intine Control Ad- | Agri- No limit Once many year < ot yet appeared in a He will talk in his | speaking role. arst ever run for governor of New Yorl « b 1929, Q. He W John he Rascob, it to T3 articlc .adics Home Journal,” f N in rles 1906 and w Evans Hughes, gazine had an article a What position New York? A, He is Professor entitled Rich"? red ot ppe does of in the August, | Michacl Eleetro- Mechanies, and has held the position ince Q. bl Al 1 901, The in 1661-1663, Is drowning always the result | Q of water A the Q flap of the ts into the pressure What does the “third a A minutes of | present to hear the discussion of the | Sions crime, Q. A m « way T A It from What are cations of 1ish, mimals, 15 the ainmen American ederation of No. printed first [ America was a translation into In- 1 lan missionary printed 1o the thro: 3 cars have been registered | ture of prisoner. were | by police offic is 1he and by 1l in populs whom Ameri e prin tion of wirs the ca? ited in by John Eliot, famous Ir Cambri e u the At of Iy mean is physical or to n, e the reptil Tiroth affili 1 It eithe water Usuall polic mer obtain s suspe neral nimal Jife s, Din erhood ated W Lal Tt was in getting into the lungs? may water in the lun r from or suffocation by on the v, water ¢ term Mal tor. sometimes applied confes. cted of classifi- ds of ith o1 the SISTER OF MBS, TAIFT DIES Washington Taft Helen chief the death of her sister, Anderson 1 nstice at M Wi has Paris, The death occur sulti Mrs gram from ft receiv w sudden heart infor d last I low e 14 of ceived Mers, »d vester med by night .28 My the la’ word nf Charles rday. T attacl a cable New York, March 14,—Thoughts|and a horse-whip in the other. A | while strolling: A drug store offers | retraction was immediate promised tins of imported caviar. Chauffeurs | but the cditor left town when it ap- | togged up like Russian moujiks. | peared. It mollified thusly: “The | Dollar spot cleaners. At least 20 | Major's record on the field of honor fes in town named Peter's. A big|is so well known that it is doubtless ¢ hotel with a built in movie the- | superfluous to explain that what w later. Regina Wallace. meant to call him was a Will B | * veteran of the Civil War i don't you rhapsodi ladies smiling through tight lips writes Mrs. T, of Riverside 1d Hill, the reportorial fashion | Prive, “about the shimmering love- ¥ A sandwich parlor with a|liness of the rippling Hudson? lack marble front. Not a bay win. | Washington Irving found —its dow left in mid town. Peggy Joyce | Quisitc charm a perpetual fount of Spol el ot ritivns, inspiration. The Hudson is a scenic Lemo DBufano, the marionette | heaven.” man. The thick gloom in those up-| Tt is also a_swell place to water And the | mules! 0 loud shirted sheiks in hour glass| (Copyright, 1930, McNaught suits at the door. Giving every p: Syndicate, Inc.) ing girl a slithering, insinuating | glance. Pajamas with Persian lamb collars. Yoo hoo! And rattle snake | bow ties from a push cart. { The tobacco shop window decor- | | ator who is paid $20,000 a year. Tea | room sign: “Wanted—Colored cu.- sijere.”” Moss and Fontana the dance The modernistic automat. | Sidewalk vendors selling air inflat- | | ed hula hula girls that dance on a string. Shops that steal great French names. Jersualem b Johnstone, a Chicago, T1l.. made good in the city. more,” Observations On The Weather Washington, March - Southern New En ightly colder in northeastern chusetts tonight; Saturd; ing cloudiness with slowly rising temperature, probably fol- lowed by rain Saturday night; fresh to strong northwest winds diminish- ing and shifting to northeast. Forecast for Iastern New York fair and continued cold tonight; wturday increasing cloudiness with slowly rising temperature, probably followed by rain in south and rain | or snow in north portign Saturday night; fresh north and northeast winds. Jorecast for New HMaven and | vicinity: ¥air tonight; Saturday in- creasing clondiness and warmer, Conditions: Pressure is low over the Guif of St. Lawrence. N area of high pressure of great magnitude | covers the castern half the coun- try with center at Sault Sainte Marie. Tt has been at lower temperature White Riv Ontario, reporting 28 degrees below ero. A disturbance of considerable intensity is central near San Fran- cisco. Rains were quict zenerally in the Gulf states and California. and pottery. And | Damascus jewelry. A 400-day clock. Round playing cards. A reading glass with a tiny electric light. Nursery rugs. Toy trap drummer outfits. The store called The Thre | New Yorkers. The fun a country have window shopping! And reading restaurant names. izz Mr. and Mrs. Baxter, Col. ¥'s Wa Den, The Pig-in- \c-Poke, The Toodery and Sally's Kitehen. Louis Wiley of the Times Beatrice i.illic stops to peer into a bally carriage. Willlam Williams | the “musical comedy tenor. And rvard man. | The best natured | the world may be York. Also the ie chop suc Flo Ziegfeld's ¥lea Circus | 6th year. And year rent. jake can . |1 policeman in found in New most overbearing. that cuts off ical display. The . Now in its paying $50,000 a | nded by much | Familiar night owl lunch wagons have disappeared from congested centers but in the outlying district lourish. A firm in New Ro- | chelle manufactures most of them | to be shipped all over the country. { Uptown New York has more than [ 800 and there are as many more fringing Greenwich Village and the lower tip of the island. The lunch wagon in many sece- { tions has supplanted the old {ime saloon as a rendezvous for neigh- Dborhood idlers. Each is filled after dinner with a tooth-picking crowd | | cracking wise and providing a | metropolitan replica of the general out yonder. ome of the de luxe wagons fair wea in temperature. Temperatures vesterday: High Atlanta 3 Atlantic City | Boston Buffalo . . | Chicago ClIncinn I Denver .. Duluth ..... Hatteras . | Los Angeles Miami the ‘battle- Conditions favor for this vielnity | her and not much change | neapolis Nantucket . vashville . New Haven . New Orleans New York Norfolk, Va. Northfield, Vt. Pittsburgh .. | st. Louis . | Washington . SHOT RUM RUNNER ESCAPES HOSPITAL Two Serious Wounds in Back Fail fo Hinder Flight o Torain, Ohio, March 14 (P—Fred Hentrie, 42, Detroit, alleged rum | runner supposedly bed-ridden from wounds received when coast guards- men shelled his armor-plated tug, escaped from a hospital here last night. Despite two serious bullet wounds in his back which lulled his guard into a feeling of security. Hentrie |arose from his cot and leaped through a ground floor window. An automobile was standing outside with the engine running, police learned. It was traced to a Clevi land gangster by the license num- ber. Hentrie's condition as critical and . was regarded federal authorities were awaiting hi% recovery to re- move him to Cleveland for arraign- ment on charges of smuggling and violating the prohibition laws. Frank Smith, Hentric's companion on the Sambo G.. captured March 6 § with Canadian liquor and beer val- ued at more than 375,000 aboard, $s being held in the county Jail at | Cleveland under $7,500 bond. President Rubio Pl;ns Unemployment Relief Mexico City, March 1: (A —Pres ident Pascqual Ortiz Rubio in a pub- lished statement tod said the government had taken in hand the | unemployment situation and would scek to create new sources of work to relieve temporarily the situation among the country’s more than 200,000 unemployed. He urged cooperation of capital and labor in relieving the situation and said that the departments of industry and agriculture had been | instructed to study plans fo aid the situation. ~ ~ A TINANCIAL SERVICE FOR THE INDIVIDUAL WHO NEEDS 0 OR LESS NEED MONEY? Come ‘to ta We can help you. Twenty Months to repay if desired. Only eharza is : Tnterest on unpaid balance. CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE CALL—WRITE—PHONE 0699 Nassau Finance Carp. | 5TIL FLOOR 300 MAIN ST. finest is at 183d street and T nd is called Al's Dine row of private tables along the | wall opposite the counter, richly and offering dec wirs. - On New Year ¢ often taken over by | partics, fhe feathere Dremise for tha birds tions given in casy for the ama ave included in it, built from tliese bulletin cushioned | they ove pri hington Burea uter, to fol Kinds of Pill o directions. Nothing tickles Tiroadway so [ much as a typographical “buil” in | & newspaper especiaily when it of- s a touch of the risque. Some a tabloid had a want y other line of which form- | | ed a shocking sentence. 1t was “kill- ed” in later editions but for several | s copies that contained the smut > bootlegged for as high as $5. | — | BIRDS — e a— — (LIl COU LDITOR, Yo Washi New, Avenue, T herewith want a cops of five cents to cover BII posta le Lulletin Woellcott tells Alexander of a ANL NUMBER | imported | samil town editor who referred 10 & | | somewhat Dibulous and doughty | a® '0\-i 1 Aajor | s he am a reader of the New Brit | tle-scarred veteran.” waving a six shooter in one hand i irls too). as e i BIRD HOUSE: You can attract it vou will make wall as gre bulletin, beautiful members of conditions attractis n-ups Wil find the dir UILDING BI HOUS) low. Diagrams as well as easurenients bird houses for all sorts of birds can ut the coupon below and send for this u PON IERE == = om o New Britain n £ KD 1IOUSE BUILDING sc and handling costs: Iterald, and ain erald, - The Toorerville Trolley That Meets All the Trains. A BAD LEAK SUDPPENLY DEVELOPEP ; RIGHT ABOVE THE | Pupin hold at Columbia University, | and | Rail- By Fontaine Fox, IN THE ROOF |

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