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

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY New Britain, Connecticut Tasued Dally (Sundsy Excepted) At*Herald Bldg., 67 Chburch Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES $3.00 & Year 32.00 Three Months 76c. & Month Entered at the Post Office at New Britain a3 Becond Class Mall Matter, TELEPHONB CALLS Business Office 925 Editorfal Rooms The only profitable advertising med!im in.the City. Circulation books and press Toom always open to advertisers. Member of the Associated Press The Assoctated Press {s exclusively en- titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also local news published therein. Mpmber Audit Bureau of Clrculation The A. B. C. is a national organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly honest analysia of circulation. Our circulation statistics sre based upon this audit. This insures pro- tection against fraud in newspaper di tribution figures to both nationmal and local advertisers. The Herald 1s on mle daily in New York at Hotaling's Newsstand, Times Square; Schultz's Newsstand, Entrance Grand Central, 42nd Btreet. STIMSON'S OPTIMISTIC CONFERENCE APPRAISAL The address of Secretary of Stafe Henry L. Stimson in London, giving | his view of the achievements of the | was the made London Naval Conferen most optmistic statement yet this mile- regarding international stone of naval understanding Had Mr. Stimson not buttressed his remarks with tonnage figures a goodly part of the public would have concluded he was permitting hope to father his thought Stimson made public figures which had only been surmised. limitations the Incidentally Mr. heretofore As and reductions important as the agroed upon, secretary rightly asserted, was the unity of the three nations involved, namely, Great Britain, Japan and the Unitad States. Rivalry has been climinated he savs, and the result cxceeded even the fondest hope of American delegates when the parley started. Such optimism may be extreme, considering the widespread hope that had been held for an all-em- bracing five-power pact. If the secretary correctly reflects what the American delegation had expected at the beginning it would seem it did not anticipate as much as some also, the sectons of our public It large and influential section of our idealistic public that a complete five-power naval pact was out of the question that Mr. Stimson so strons- Iy emphasized the magnitude of the was probably to impress this London achievement KING BASEBALL AGAIN ENTHRONED 1f all goes well today in the na- tional “weather permitting’—President Hoover will throw the first ball as the 1930 base- ball starls there in the American league, Sund members of Congress, instead of “going to see a picture,” will be in the stands. Some of the senators there will envy the President, wishing they were in his place. It has been thought that the American game of baseball develop- capital—meaning season ed from the old English game n[‘ rounders. Somc observers Who have not become aware of the re- searches of the committee of emi- nent baseball authorities which went in {o the history of the nation- al game in 1907, may still think so. But it isn’t so. The national game. researches have proved doubt, developed from the purely (One Old Cat, Two Oid Cats, American games known as Old Cat These broadened known as Town Ba ally became known basebail. ete). into which gradt as the modern zame of One authority, with the report of the research committee i illustrates fows hefore the development as fo The bases o were first i1 square, hut by 1540 the had becoy a diamond ,( drawn up in 154 side to score the ner, and a Dbattr out if hit was caught on the first bo or if he was struck opponent while hetween base first record of a game 1846, The first uniforms 1849, aithough the t umpires' salaries not 1o be paid 1853, Local associations were cd early, and the was pla by amat until after the War. was still no limit the length of only on diameter, and pitcher lowed to ¢ fore deliy the form 5 win- Tis a ball by ar Ti ppeared in were forr me u Civii the bat a number of ering the bal Tho development to this hands of the old Tt w point was cntir ateurs, who town fields or { ot until after the that players he for the were today. howe 100 runs in {of New Hampshire, beyond a | 1he game | [ much Sl & | the first until | on | Gradually it became common to use gloves, and the “catcher” found it advisable to use a mask and breast pad. Somebody discovered, too, that a ball when pitched could be made to curve, and that added zest to the game as an increasing number of batters began to hit at the ball and miss. Many struck out. Amateurs resented the approach of professionalism, and for a time the rivalry between the amateurs and the professionals was intense. But the amalteurs gradually lost their standing because they could not de- feat the professionals very often. Four of the carly professional teams had names which have survived o the present: The Red Stockings of Cincinnati, the Athletics of Philadel- phia, the White Stockings of Chica- g0, and the Nationals of Washington. Then came another phase in the pastime, described as follows: From 1870 to 1875, the game be- came corrupted with rowdyism and bribery, and popular interest in it died out. It was to replace it on a firm basis that the National League was formed in 1876, It is of interest to note, in connection with cus- sions today on placing a limit to players’ salaries, that in the eighteen cightics the National League tried ainly to cqualize all players’ salaries, irrespective of their per- sonal abilities and of local condi- tions. The first record of two collegiate teams “zoing to bat” against each other Amherst and Williams, in 1859. The first team to make 65 runs was declared the win- ner. Bascball in those days required good wind! In spite of the increasing popular- ity of golf in recent years, popular baseball has not dimin- was between interest in ished. The baseball parks in the |larger cities are bigger than ever, the attendance larger than ten years ago. But the cost of operating the teams has also vastly increased, and the cities not having the “winning teams” frequently run into the red or go dangerously near the crimson ink. The winners, however, carn more than ever before, and the salaries of the star players have never been as high. The custom of the President throwing the first ball pitched in Washington originated with Presi- dent Taft. Since then no President, it he would woo the fickle public and be known as a good fellow, has dared to break the custom. TOURISTS IN CONNECTICUT The New Haven Register, suffer- ing from optimism about the tourist business in Connecticut, prints a picce to the effect that “the wide- spread the automobile” effecting a much wider distribution of the tfourist business and that “more people come to this state 1o spend their vacations, and that the Boston Post road through Connecti- cut is one of the chief means of access to the rest of New England.” The second part of this sentence is unquestionably 100 per cent cor- The Boston Post road is a leading artery of tourist trade. But the trouble the tourists keep moving to and from “the rest of New England.” Those headed for points in Con- necticut can almost be counted on the fingers of one hand on any day of the summer. The cmbattled tourists head for Cape Cod, for Maine, for the hills for the green mountains of Vermont, and some of them do not overlook the Berk- shires. Some of the more thought- ful even head for the Litchfield hills of Connecticut, but they are in the use of is rect, is, minority. The state has never done anything |in particular to advertise its tourist attractions, and what happens is not | exactly surprising. Neither have the tourist caterers of the state done in an attempt to cater to from afar. Perhaps that has one advantage: trade Our own beauty spots in the north- western part of the lesa crowded than they would state are pereentage of the n those counties are from | ctic Their money = good as any other NEW YORK AND HER CANAL Terhaps the last effort of New York state to induce the federal | Government o become interested in ‘All-American” canal Great L: route b nd the At antic is being taken with the sug- Governor tween the kes a gestion by Roosevelt that the Empirc State al to the Government nment should finali that fact ¥; but it Governr reasingly solicitous about York route, and incidentally Government a 1 oppor \eita instead Also, the Gover o effici be other- | | surrender the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 14 Tn was in 1903 that New York be- gan expending more than $100,000,- 000 to improve the old Erie and Oswego canals, and several others tributary to them. The new system, known as the Barge canal, has a minimum depth of 12 feet and can accommodate boats of 300 feet in length and several thousand tons. Yet, with a practicable capacity of 7,000,000 tons of freight, only 3,- 000,000 passed over the entirc Barge canal system in 1928—which was about the same traffic as in 1910, when still uncompleted, and less than in 1900, Optimism continues to run ram- pantin the canal business, however, Army reported on the feasibility of deepening the Eric and Oswego canal sections of the system to 14 feet, and the report has it that “the increased traffic to engineers have be expected from the improvements would more than meet their cos but that they should be complemen- tary to ownership and operation by the Government. The points to be considered in the competition between the New York route and the $t. Lawrence route for making the Great Lakes avail- able to occan-going steamships were thus cited in 1526 by General Jad- win, senior member of ot harbors:— the rivers board engineers for and (1) The St. Lawrence route would allow very large power development the New York would not. (2) The St. Lawrence would give a shorter sailing distance to Europe; the New York, to the New York City area, to Atlantic coastal points in the United States, to Latin America, and to the Orient. (3) Ice and fog conditions would vary somewhat. (4) The New York route would involve a greater number of restricted chan- nels, locks, and bridges. (5) The St. Lawrence route would be across two countries, with its entrance in Canada; the New York route could be wholly American if a canal were built on American territory around Niagara Falls, The main difference between the two routes, it appears, is that the route would permit the creation of a power system in addition to the canal. Morcover, it is planned to deepen the St. Law- rence route to St. Lawrence 27-foot channel, and to be on a par with it in this connection the canal routc would have to be deepened siri- larly. The special board of engineers for the St. Lawrence Commission has placed the maximum cost of deepening the St. Lawrence channel to 27 feet as $650,000,000; and of the so-called All-American route as $500,000,000 or $630,000,000 if the Barge proposed canal Niagara were built around President Hoover pointed out in an address last Octo- ber that the cost of the St. Lawrence improvement, minus its five million I. p. power development, which is expected to pay for itself, would be under two hundred miilion dollars. Viewed from the dispassionate heights of cold reason, therefore, the St. Lawence route has advantages that the other cannot possibly attain. Its only disadvantage is that it would go through Canada, though there is Joubt whether this would be a real disadvantage, Falis, OLD AGE PENSIONS IN NEW YORK That the enactment of an old- age pension law in New York state is regarded as the outstanding piece of legislation at the session just closed can scarcely be denied. Here is the largest statc in the Union go- ing in for what some critics have called radial legislation. Yet, when | ene closely examines the New York [1aw it is found not to be as radical ;a‘s it would appear from the name. In approving the well said: law, Goevrnor “This law nd Roosevelt an extension provement of the old poor law, for | the principal part of its administra tion | essentially is left in officials and the supervision of state i:«u!)vo ties is far from stronz.” The law direction that society is {aking with | increasing vigor. Such are fr | quently amended embrae it | arely repealed, | AMERICAN FACTORIES IN EUROPE; American industries have ‘ Many | branch plants in Europe. These ful- | K | fill the tunction of making it pos- sible to look o after the requiremen Luropecan | Their main tradc effect . close range im- | the hands of local | however, is a step in the | made moro | | | i | concern Americans who have here- tofore zealously upheld the theory that the American market should be for American labor. The Ford tractors enter this coun- try duty tree under a schedule de- signed to favor American farmers. This object is well achieved, but at the expense of the American work- ingman. The rate of wages paid at the Ford plant in Cork is higher than the Irish average, but consider- ably lower than the wages paid at the Dearborn tractor plant when it was in operation. The Ford tractor precedent. idea is a bad Factsand Fancies By Robert Quillen The things learned at mother’s knee no longer include anatomy. church, a school, a bond issuc. Civilization: A bad smells and every- graduate only Quantity production isn't thing. The colleges will thousands this year and score of .300 hitters. “West Point and Annapolis are America’s only training schools for war.” Buddy, did you ever hear of Chicago? Politicians aren’t so slick. Think vhat a grand time they could have with appropriations o eradicate the house fly. At forty, men despise love stories for the vame reason that a rheu- matic leg loses interest in dancing. The only obj on to the mnew Spring suits is that o few men are shaped like a dummy, Hint to the adopt a tariff 1 get rich by charging one too much? glish: Why not ke Uncle Sam's and another And there are many fellows who could improve if the radio would provide set-'em-up excrcises. Americanism: Bragging that we now utilize by-products; daily wasi- ing enough natural gas to turn every wheel in the land. The dentists assurance that it won't hurt teaches vou that teeth aren't the only false equipment in the fece. 11 think out or There i3 good in everything. there were no fool parents, how many jailers would be jobs. A celebrated engineer says the value of speed is relative, For in- stance, fast foot work achiev nothing unless the bunt rolls slowly. Billboard advertising is annoying, but you aren’t forced to stop and read it before you can go on Wit the program. No man can think of everything, and we'll bet Mr. Ford's collection of ancient Americana doesn't in- clude one of those post office lobby pens. There's one consolation. ~ When further reform requires near-tobac- co, all of us can smoke those cork- tip smelly ones. France is building a school = {o honor the originator of algebra, and that will complete the list except for the inventor of the thumb screw., If they really mean to humanize warfare. why not permit a poor buck private fo touch his nose in- stead of his cap brim? Correct this sentence: “And T can drive much better,” said the brave little husband, *if you'll keep your carned mouth shut. Copyright, 1930, Publishers Syndicate Questions and fo QUESTIONS ANSWLERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1322 New York avenue, Washing- ton, D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and | marital advice cannot be given, nor 18| can extended research be under- taken. All other questions will re- upon American |ceive a personal reply. Unsigned re- labor is that they subtract from {ne |aUests cannot be answered. All let- export totals of w [ this country. is produced in When an American plant abroad, | M:caning of the however, manufactures machinery ind a goodly percentaze is shipped United States, the different. Manifestly t | | situation | | dered produces considerable Ford's tractor plant i case in point. The most re report of this plant shows tr he first two months of th cent of ters are confidential.—Editor. What is the name ATt Dutch from Koppen, me What is “de Alcohol whi unfit for but which is not impa dustrial uses, Q. What is riladelphia, Pa The ecstimat 00. Who was re 11 Conference nationality and Copen? name derived aning, a merchans. stured” alcohol? h has been ren- beverage, red for in- Q. is is a A the ¢ population of r population is nonsible for th held 2 London? A T e owas 1ed pon iny Ma- Denald of b Prasid vas (o secure a fiv United Hoove PLrpose power aty between the 1 Japan, Tranc for a reduction in aval vessels in the than battleships States, Iy, oth- nd tor the catagori which em one ’v"ifh:\l!. with at the Washington Con ference in 1921- Q. How many machinists there in the United States? A. According to the last censis there were §10,901. Q. Who were the governors of the Northwest Territory and who was the first governor of Ohio? A. The governors of the North- est Territory were Arthur St. Clair, 1788-1802, and C. W. Byrd (acting) from 1802 to 1803. The tirst governor of Ohio was Edward Tiffin, 1803-1807. Q. Who was Aencas? Acneas, ton of Anchises, was a Trojan hero, legendary defender of Troy against the ~ks, who, after the fall of the city, under- went many strange adventures and beeame at last, according to one version, the founder of the Roman race. Virgil's Acneid = the best known account of Aeneas. Q. Who took the lcading fe- male role in the motion picture “Under Two Flags"? A. Priscilla Dean. Q. From what book or play was the talking picture “Cameo Kirby adapted? A. From a play with title, by Booth Tarkington Harry Leon Wilson. Q. Ts the United States Naval Observatory in Washington the only one of its kind in the United States, and is the standard time sent from any other place in this country? A. It is the only one if its kind, and is the only source from which standard time is sent out in th» United States. Many other countries have national observatories, per- forming similar functions. Q. How long does it take a let- ter to go from New York to Al- geria, Africa? A. From 9 to 12 days. Q. How long after the Census is taken will it take to finish and publish complete tabulations? A. About 3 years. Q. Is it unlucky to have a bird fly into the house? A. There is a superstition that a bird, flying into a house, brings il luck, and presages death. Some superstitious people carry this to the extent of excluding all birds from the house, Q. How old was Cardinal Wol- sey when he died? A. He died in 1530, in the 60th year of his age. Q. What did the political slogan “Fifty-four fourty or fight” refer to? A. To the Northwest Boundary pispute with England. Fifty-four degrees forty seconds was the lati- tude claimed by the United States ax the northern boundary of the territor) Q. What is mullet? A. A mugiloid fish, greenish or copper colored, siivery sides. It is found on most warm coas ascends rivers, and feeds mostly on organic matter in mud. Q. are the same anl usually with What docs Bonfiglio mean? A. "My good son.” Q. What are the names of the American governors of the Philip- pines since Civil Government was established there? A. William H. Wright, Henry C Smith, Cameron Forbes, IFrances Burton Harrison, Leonard Wood, Henry Lewis, and Dwight F. Davis, the present incumbent. Tuke I3 James F. Taft, Ide, Fellowship of Prayer Daily Holy Week Devotion Prepared by Rev. Jay T. Stock- ing, D. D. for Commission on Evangelism of Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. Copyright 1950. “COMING TO TERMS WITH ULTIMATE THINGS” Monday “The Treasure of Darkness” SCRIPTURE Memory Verse: “I thee the treasures of (Isaiah 45:3) Isaiah ATION treasures of darkness!” a wonderful phrasc to mind. To believe that has its treasures, is to rob darkness of its gloom. The author of the 139th Psalm had no fear of darkn ven the darkness hideth not from Thee." The night has its gifts to the pro- ducing earth. Some discoveries may be made only in darkness. “Blessed are they that mourn,” for they shall scc things hidden from the joyous. A dear friend who has recently passed through at sorrow sent this message Tell him that now I know meaning of George Mathe- son's lines, 'O love that wilt not let me go.' " Who makes that dis- covery never will let go. PRAYER Thou hast promis Lord, a crown of life to him that over- cometh. Give us hearts to welcome Thy severer blessings and in them find the clasp of Thy strong hand. In darkness as wecll as in light hast Thou hidden {reasures for our spirits. Amen. will give darkness"” 45:1-7. in s to me: the COMMUNIC A QUESTION ANSWERED Lditor New Britain Herald: Why was the East Street school not named after somc prominent person? C. J. ANDERSON, 28 Church St. The name of the school situated at the corner of Iast and Dwight streets and popularly referred to ac the t eet” school is the Val- entine B. Chamberlin school. It wae named in honor of distinguished citizen who served as judge of po- lice court for —Ld. many years [ POLT ENDS LIFE April 14 (P —Viadimir Mayakovsky, regarded by many as Soviet Russia’s greatest poet, com- mitted suicide today. Mayakovsky visited the United States in Decem- ber, 1925, and on his return fo Rus- sia pictured the United States as SOVIL Moscow money mad. New York, April 14.—Diary of a modern Pepys: Awake beforc day- light and out with my wife to walk through the glistening dew of the park, the earliest up since days on the farm. And ¢n Columbus avenue two typsy girls in a taxi called to me: “Good morning, old high pock- et!” at which my spousc laughed unroariously. Passing the where we first lived in New Yort, | we stopped for breakfast but fel| perfect strangers, there being not | a familiar face. And I wondered if | others are touzhed by a melancholy in visiting old scenes, it being disturbing I have not visited home town in 20 years. Home to labour and came I Steinmetz and Otis Ralston and lai- cr {o the Chatham to Charles and Kathleen Norris' tea and an out- pouring of the literati there. Then on to a play, an expensive produc- tion that was booed and hissed, and so affected me I slept fitfu through the night. Hotel Hargrave, s0 | my il ¢ My moments at the radio recitals | have furnished nothing memorable | but there is an exception whicn | offers hope. A pugilist at the Gar- | den was knocking his opponent | goofy and finally put over a hay- maker to the chin. Rushing to tio microphone the victor gurgled: 1| be right home, mama dear.” A prosperous Wall street is re flected in generous tipping and vics | versa. Doormen, waiters, hat check- | ers and others whose incomes con- sist largely of tips have found gratuities cut in half since tho market bust. A go-getler hat checker—he has often garnered $100 a week wiia | his concession in a speak-easy—tells | me of a trick to bring customers back, especially in winter. Whe:e overcoats are tailor made, the name of the owner is inside th: rocket. He pecks at names, mer izes them and when an owner de- parts calls out cheerfully: “Comio again Mr. Soandso.” And the ol soandso does. A number of wealthy men refus: to tip coat room attendants. Among the hold-outs are a theatrical mas nate, a bank president, a famous inventor, an ex-judge of a suprem court and, O, yes almost forgot — One Eye Connelly Frank Case, proprictor of the Al- gonquin, was the first hotel man to display a coat room sign: “Please do not tip attendants.” He was also first to abolish the bar in his hotsl, long before prohibition. It is no- ticed, too, that despite the newar hotels about him, his continues to prosper. While motoring upstate, Harey Hirshfield inquired of an old gen- tleman along the highway if might take a certain road to Al- bany. “Yes” was the reply. “but bring it back. We had a heck of a| time getting it.” 1e What many consider finished dramatic review season was dashed off in minutes to catch an edition. And there is no good reason for mot | blurting out the name of Gilbert riel as the critic who did it and “Green Pastures” the name of the show he reviewed. the most of th: twenty Personal nomination for the most obliging sales clerk in town—Dave | Levy at Nat Lewis's on Broadway. | even get around to you.” | Southern New England There are few newcomers to Ne York who do not spend the first year wondering why they came and the next five wondering why they didn’t come sooner. Nobody comes to the metropolis, however, without head waggers warning them they are making a grave mistake. Anl sometimes they are right “Biographies,” writes Tim D. of Dallas, “are now being writtea about everybody. Maybe they will scon begin immortalizing column- ists. Indeed, cheer up, they may writing | No- Bruce Barton mine. The title body Reads.” (Copyright, 1930, Syndicate, is already The Man McNaught Inc.) Observations On The Weather Washington, JApril 14.—Forccast for Southern New England: Partly cloudy and colder tonight except on southeast coast; Tuesday cloudy and colder; moderate to fresh north-| winds. Forecast for Eastern “loudy tonight and Tuesday; cooler | tonight and in southwest portion | Tuesday, moderate north and north- | New York: | | east winds. Forecast for New Haven and | vicinity: Partly cloudy and slightly | colder tonight and Tuesday. | Conditions: A trough of low pressure extends southwestward from the Gulf of St. Lawrence to Te: , and thence northwestward to the North Pacific coast. A strong area of high pressure is advancing southcastward over the | Canadian northwest. Showers were reported from the coast, the We have purchased from the Middle Atlantic states and the Ohio Valley. Temperatures _are higher in Southern New England but are falling in the Ohio valley, the Lake region and the upper Mississippl valley. Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather and not much change in temperature. High . 82 56 64 60 60 54 72 62 78 66 76 74 54 52 5 80 Low 60 48 50 34 42 54 48 34 62 b4 kel 40 42 60 48 62 50 Atlanta ... Atlantic City Boston r. Buffalo . Denver . Duluth . Hatteras . . Los Angeles . Miami . Minneapolis Nantucket -... Nashville . New Haven ...... New Orleans .... New York Norfolk, Va. . Northfield, Vt. » Pittsburgh . ... Portland, Me. . St. Louis . Washington . 66 68 50 4 82 . 68 25 Years Ago— Today The Woman's Council of Iduca- tion held its annual meeting Satur- day at the State Normal school. The cider mill located near White Oak was broken into over the weel- end and a quantity of the beverage stolen. 1t is thought to have been the work of tramps. At a caucus of the republican members of the common council to- morrow evening, a new prosecuting attorney will be appointed. Mr. Guss- man is the favorite candidate. A camera club is heing organized among members of the Y. M. C. A, Mayor Samuel Basseft is expected home from Florida in time to at- [ west shifting to north and northwest | tend the annual city meeting Thurs- day evening. Acting Mayor Ernest N. Humphrey signed the call today for the meeting. A meeting of the trustees of St. Mary's church will be called this week {o arrange the preliminaries for beginning work on the upper part of the new church While,nearly all the streets of the city will be torn open this summer, Church street will particularly be in a state of upheaval. In addition to the sewer and water mains, an eignt inch gas main will be laid through the street. The quality of Easter lilies this year are much better than they have been previously and the supply is very large. J. C. McAdams Company all their office equipment, including typewriter desks, flat top desks, check writer, cardex adding machine, Standard registers, and safe. one addressegraph complete, file, letter file, typewriters, three “Look these over if you want to save money” EW BRITAIN TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE Herbert W, Peterson, Prop. 96 WEST MAIN ST. PHONE 612 D —E——— RAISING Lens? profit Tio you raize chi poultry farm for subject of poultr a comprehensive that gives the fundamentals of about poultry houses and fixtures, fattening _poultry, killing, dressing cases, and other facts, including a are interestec. in chicken raising fill this “bulletin: o Ever get If you d raising that you and at the same you want all the can time condensed chicken hatching and and Tist CHICKENS the urge to start a small or largs information on the Our Washington Bureau has bulletin on the subject and egg production. All brooding, chicken feeding, packing, marketing, poultry dis- of literature on the subject. If you out the coupon below and send for get raising - = S == =(LIP COUPON HERE == == e o—— .1 POULTRY' JITOR, ew York Avenue, ] I want a copy of the bullefin POULTRY FARMING, and en ISTREEI‘ ANL NUMBER | cITyY Wachington Bureau, Washington, New Britain Herald, nitd close here- to cover return postage and handling costs: STATB ... I am a reader of the New Britaln Herald, N i i LS 1) Toonerville Folks ©Fontaine Fox, 1930 YoUNG &Y WORTLE UPHOLDS HIS REPUTATION FOR ALWAYS 66 dOMING ouT oN ToP.“

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