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PAGE TWO -AQDGERS BALKS AT TAKING POST TN WASHINGTON Prefers to Remain on Sea Duty With Air Force, He Says. : VASHIN( pt. 14.—(Asso ciated Press)—C r John Rod- IS cers of the PN19 2 pointed assistant chief of t of advised y Wil prefer- with nes mmander Rodgers added, how- : he would accept the posi- 1 the opinion of the Secre- services will be more val- the department The message was sent by Rodgers by ra- aio ‘f Honolulu. It conveyed the <s of the crew of the PN-9-1 and position of the undaunted seaplane PN-9 No. 1 was a leading subj of discussion by persons visiting Pearl Harbor navy yard to view one of the most famous ciated I in the history of the United States na ; Although Commander John Rod@- : s is still being rded by physt- clan nd friends against inquiries, eit un ood that he believes the ‘F seaplane on which he made his ght by air and by sea could be re or 1 trip from the ‘ f coa Hawaii This was ° need by his desire er being i up by the submarine R-4 being towed in Nawi to effect repairs then 1Harbor from Kauai tion of the plane shows defect. The only © to the lower wings the fabric was cut to ull and catch rain s fre w h wood provide fuel to run a furnished water to and saved the lives of the avi y that these repairs routine and that the ship is in perfect shape. merely the 1otors which functioned per- until the lastvdrop of gasoline exhausted were undamaged ex- arting: r was re. enerator was r the anchor liwili bay. One ‘ t was rem e it remained in the plane. dy ofall these is. re nt the vital parts of the FARM BUYING POWER USED IN BAILARGUMENT a y Carriers Claim Enor- ‘mous Increase Has 1 Been Effected. C es CHICAGO, 8 . 14 {Ass + = Ire )}—Testimon that the average — We ern farm has a purchasing power ing non-agricultural products per cent above the 1 war was given by H, W oreh ic, merly direc- t ee mic research for the Ame n Farm Bureau Federation n th Interstate Commerce hearing t Y n of western raiirc t freight rate antry farm n At house ‘la! now «head. afvthe re h division f a ommerclal “From 192 to tl present time," r nt, € i ct r at rer r = 6 rer e ended A, STIRRED SS ie °UMMER COLDS lingering and annoying, The very first night apply ; V Vv oO. i 17 K rt BEST PLACE TO BUY Cc BEST PLACE TO SAVE Casper’s Used Car Market C | Cars Sold On I Terms at = sed Car Market 36 West Yellowstone “s N to Royce’s Filling Station Max Pam, Noted Lawyer, Dies At Age of 60 Years NEW Press) YORK, Max Sept. 14.—(Ass: noted law clat er, ea Pam, organizer with vice president Charles Dawes of the Central Trust com pany of Illinois and founder of the Dame school of journalism, died a heart Mr. his home here today from attack, He was 60 years Pam had been {ll for two F He died in his home at 36 West 65th street. His main office was in Chicago. Mr. Pam conducted the legal part of the consolidation of the United States Steel corporation in 1919-20. He was associated with the late E. H. Harriman in the organization of the Kansas City, Pittsburgh and yulf and allied compantes into the Kansas City Southern Railroad, of which he was general counsel and director until 1905, He also parti- clpated as counsel with John W. Gates and others in the organization of the American Steel Wire com- pany. Born in Bohemia in 1865, Mr. Pam came to the United States with his parents in 1868 and settled in Chi- cago. After receiving a high school education, he studied law at Chicago law office. During his career as a lawyer he also was oclate coun- sel in the o nization of the Inter- onal Natio Harvester company al Packing company. RADIO SHOW AT GOTHAM HOLDS MUCH INTEREST Apparatus for Planes Greatly Improved, Models Show. BY J. (Copyright 192 NEW YOR of re and ROYLE he Casper Tribune) K, Sept. 14.—Attention lio engineer jentists and ra- dio manufacturers gathered here for the New York rafio show which opened Saturday was directed sharp ly toward improvement of radio ap- paratus for aeroplanes and airships. The finding of the crew of the PN-9 number 1 after they had been adrift nine days in the Pacific determined r thet an improved port- ab) nd simple radio broadcasting apparatus for aeroplanes, which will men function even when the éngine Is disabled must be perfected and it is likely that models for such a purpose will be displayed before the close of the show. Radio men pointed out today that the first practical use of the radio had been to summon succor at sea and that there was no reason why navigation of the air could not be made more safe and convenient by means of communication over ether waves. Recent disasters have failed entirely to check the trend toward commercial air transportation or freight, mail and passengers, but much anxiety, expense and suffer- ing might have been avoided if the crew of the PN-9 No, 1, for example had munfeated the location of the drifting ship effectively. The Ford company is planning to put L second plane daily in its erviee hetween Chicago and Detroit Thjs {s taken by alr men as a move to’ provi additional capacity to support a bid from the Ford com- pany for a contract to carry United States mails Unless the plans of the post office department are al- tered, Detroit, at least, will be a Port of call in the new air mail line cross the continent. Airplane man- ufacturers already are designing and building planes with sleeping accom- modation long passenger runs und European routes are now serv: Ing hot meals enroute When records are bel Indicate the safe Airplane tr ANSspC accidents mentioned produced to reliability of For ex: located) here rd a result of epower plane r weeks nd Saratoga 1e total d iD and plane w ours tion nir service with 100 aptain Henrt aviation expert At postal matter Is und lucrative form or an air transportation to start with howe most of bu compar Radio Sales Increasing Manufacturers of radio apparatus port that a sharp increase in ¢ tlrendy- has started and they are lined up in preparation for the g est season the industry has ever known, a season which will be for mally opened with the radio show Saturday, Total sales so far this month are t & markedly higher rate than those for Aug nd further in creases are expected in the last three months of the year. Gains in earn {Ings by manufacturers, however, probabl ules be not increase so fast as level of prices has the summer slump and quotations are not an ti 1 surplus stocks have been liq uldated to a large extent and orders big makers in the last few weeks ve justified capacity production at thelr plants, In many. Instances prices now listed are 50 per cent ower than for the corresponding sets at this time last year. Two of the larger companies are planning an ate full prod n of 600,- 000 sets and it 18 estimated the in dustry as a whole will turn out be- tween 1,500,000 and 2,000,000 during |the fall, Many makers feel this {s | too heavy an output for the public |to absorb and are fssuing warnings that unless production {s held closer to consumption burdensome stocks vill again be piled u ——————__— the saw It #Mivertiver—" eibun in| marine posts ar Che Casper Daily Cribune WEALTHY YOUTHFUL SLAYER ONLY LUNATIC | DROUGHT ENDS PRAYER BRIN Hundreds of lunatics like Noel, “thrill slayer” of little girl, at large in country, warning cry. By MARGERY PICKARD (Central Press Correspondent.) MONTCLAIR, N. J., Sept. 14.— “Ilundreds, perhaps thousand of such. lunatics aro at large in the United States!” is the warning cry of of investigating the case of Harrison Noel, 20, former Dart- mouth College student and scion of wealth, who confessed that it was he who kidnapped and murdered Mary Daly, six, slew Raymond Pierce, taxicab driver, and wounded John Sandin, a’chauffeur who pur- sued Noel after the kidnaping. ‘As early as 1922 Noel was found to be afflicted with what is known as cantatonid dementia praecox, which means that he was totally lacking in certain of the qualities necessary to a well-balanced brain. This state of mind is shown by his present indifference to the pen- alty he must pay for his crimes. Attacked Father With Hatchet. Noel, though his murderous ten- dencies were known, was allowed to remain at large after he escaped from the Essex county hospital for the mentally afflicted at Overbrook, N. J., on June 28, Back in 1922, he tried to kill his father, Dix W. Noel, Wall Street attorney. Mr. Noel was asleep in a camp when he awakened to find his gon, hatchet in hand, bending over him. The boy had severed ar- teries in his father’s hand and, had inflicted a deep scalp wound in two swift blows. He was then committed to the Craig sanitarlum at Beacon, N. Y. There he incapacitated an attendant for three days by beating him over the head. In 1924, while yeung Noel was serving as a seaman on the steam- ship George Washnigton. he tried to kill one of the cooks on the vessel, The day after his son got away and was captured in New York city, his father notified the hospital authorities that he had Harrison in his custody. Physicians warned Mr. Noel against keeping the boy at home. They said that he was too danger- ou: The lad was then seemed to be normal, now say they examined and The officials had no recourse>ex- cept to accede to the father’s re quest. Mr. N they declare, ac- cepted full responeibility, Police Chiet Edw I ae clares an affidavit sworn to by the ler by 1 1 wing responsibility for hi n's actions and so obtain ing Harrison Noel's release, would in Reilly's opinion, make that father corespondent for the string of crimes young Noel confessed, No Co-operation In Enforcement, Butler Claims PHILADELPHIA, lated 14.—(As I'vess)—Direetor of Public ty Butle; who said Saturday law enforcement in Philadel- had been a failure because of of cooperation, amplifying his y, stated that in the long Sept. Sa that phia lack bootleggers and crooks are to be | That will he added, when people themselves avoid petty law breaking. When I leave at the end of the year f can do so with the conviction that I never have gave an inch to the forces that wanted me to be easy of certain forms of law violation because they reported a hig investment or be- cause some big interests were baok of them “What has happened tn this city with regard to law enforcement, looking at the results in attempting to enforce the Nquor Inws, does not harm me, but it does harm the en tire enuse of law enforcement sy: tem in this country,” neral Butler's two years’ leave of absence from the Marine Corps expires December 13, He is under orders to make an {nspection of ind the, world after first of the year the May Have Worse Record, Responsibility for the laxness which permitted Noel to remain at liberty. is being probed, and au- thorities are preparing to round up all persons known to be suffering from dementia praecox. “Persons thus afflicted may re- main freé and harmless for years, then suddenly as if set ablaze, com- mit some horrible crime, without cause,” experts explain, Police hope to link Noel to crimes in this city: They point out that the youth had driven a taxicab in this city for a while this summer. One of the crimes they consider as possibly the work of Noel is the murder of Florence Kane in Brook- lyn several months ago. Miss Kane was beaten to death as she neared her home after attending a theater in Manhattan. No clew to her slayer has been found. Her Widowed Mother Isn’t Good Enough Children rarely are satisfied with their parents’ circumstances, nd they usually blame the parents for this. Dear Mrs. Thompson; I have a daughter just twenty years old who loves society, dancing, fine clothes and young men with automobiles, and her greatest desire is to live in a fine home. I never olfect to her having company. In fact, she ts on the go all the time, stays out late as she likes, and I don't say word. Now I am a widow and have a little home very comfortably fur- nished. 1 work every day and draw a small salary. I need her support very badly as I'm trying to pay for my little home, and she won't come home and help me because our home isn't good enough. We are just poor people and her ideas are too high for her circumstances. What shall I do? WORRI MOTHER. It appears that you are attempting to check her too late. She really shouldn't be running around at all hours, you know, and staying away from home, and there must be @ reason somewhere and possibly a mistake. The only course open now appears to be to appeal to her love for you, which must exist some- where. Interest her in fixing up your home as she would like it, by work- ing with you to pay for it. This prob- ably would mean sacrificing many things dear to you through associa- ton which appear “unstylish” to ner, She ought to want to stay by you and help you pay for the home people vy older, comfort and nliness and peace come to mean 1 more them in the home. When they mean everything Shunned. Dear Mrs. ‘Thompson: I’am the daughter of alien parents and am fifteen years old, My parents are well to do, and respected citizens of the community, For some reason or another I never have any Americ FIVE KILLED AT CROSSING IN MONTANA 14.—There the condition of victim of the In Shelby yes are young, appearances SAT FALL! is no change in Mrs. B, J. Lynch, nutomobile oa dent terday, in which five persons were killed through being struck by the Great Northern Limited, and hopes for her recovery are entertained. She is at present in the Conrad hospital. The bodies of Mrs, O, V. McIntyre and children, Virginia, 10, Gi Sept. and Jean, 12, were forwarded to their old ‘home in Missoula for burtal Mr, and Mrs, Michael Hasquet, pioneers of Toole county, who were the other two victims of the grade crossing, will be buried on the ranch near Shelby There are no new developments in the case, the coroner's jury holding the trainmen guiltless, Hasquet drove bis machine, loaded with wo: men and children on their way to church, from behind some box ears in front of the flying train and it was impossible to avoid cutting the car down, for Her company. Of course, we have never tried to get any. I had a party once, and all who were invited came. I would like to know some way that I could get them to come to our home and be invited to theirs, I have two gdod-looking young brothers. I go to high school. M. D. You doubtless are aware of the prejudice some Americans have for others because they are “foreigners.” It is absurd of course, because all of us are “foreigners.” There is less of this prejudice among the young gen- eration, however, I believe; and you should be able to form at school the kind of friendships you desire. But don’t surrender your self-respect just to make “friends.” And don’t invite any one into your home in or- der to attract an invitation from them. That's the wrong spirit and an unsuccessful way of making worth- while friends. ¥, F.—It seems to me that you have allowed jealousy to get the best of you. Byt there is no need to apol- ogize to the young man. Simply be pleasant the next time you meet him. If he has any real interest in you, he will display it. E. M—It looks as it Your wife has deserted you, Her note indicates that she planned the flight, and she cer- tainly would write you if she in- tended to come back. But since you love her so much, wait a while for her to change her mind before suing for a divorce. fe Sia wat Shak WOMAN PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO POISON CHARGE MILES CITY, Mont., Sept. 14— Arraigned in district court, Mrs, Nellie Ottinger pleaded not guilty .o the charge of murdering her hus- band, Arthur Z. Ottinger. The de- fendant is accused of poisoning her husband more than a year ago when he met his death She had been living on the home ranch and Mr, Ottinger was work. Ing for Otis Haynes near the city. Her bond was fixed at $10,000, Five Tongmen To Be Deported VY YORK, Sept. 14,—(Asso- elated Press.—Five Chinese arrested last week in the wholesale roundup to check tong outbreaks were or- dered deported after a hearing today before United States Commissioner Cotter, Sixty Chinese were sent to Ellis Island Saturday, some for de- portation and others for hearings before immigration authorities, Assistant United States District Attorney Adiler said that if tong trouble should break out again, fur+ ther roundups would be made. a Tell the Advertiseg—"T saw it In {The Tribune.” hd = MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1925 Ss ATLANTA, Ga., Sept, 14.—(Asso- ciated Press)—Morale was revived today in the southland as southern folk saw.an answer to their prayers for relief from the unprecedented drought, and industrial plants were hopeful of resuming their activity, which at present is curtailed by a shortage of electric spower. Rains were general throughout the affected area yesterday and ad- ditional rainfall was predicted for today, Ministers in many sections sol- emnly joined their congregations in prayer for a break in the drought at the morning services yesterday and returned to their places of wor- ship in the evening and sald a word of thanks. While blankets were said to be CASPER CHOSEN FOR DISTRICT ROTARY CONFERENCE IN 1926; CONSTITUTION WEEK OBSERVED The annual district conference of Rotary clubs in the seventh district will be held in Casper, April 6, 7, 8, 1926, according to announcement made before the weekly meeting of the Casper club by President W. O. Wilson today. The conference em- braces all clubs within the. states of Colorado and Wyoming, Clayton, N. M., Scottsbluff, Nebr, and will bring about five hundred Rotarians and their wives to this city.) Mr. Wilson has just returned from a conference of club presidents and secretaries in Estes park where Cas- per’s invitation was formally ac- cepted. “Constitutional Week,” was ob- served by the local club today with splendid addresses on the national constitution by former governor B- B. Brooks and Attorney A. B. Stir- rett. Mr. Stirrett, in addition” to emphasizing our constitution as the greatest instrument ever drawn by the hand of man, urged closer study of the famous document which has been preserved intact throughout all of the years without alteration or revision, and suggested that the Cas- per Rotary club could supplement its present work in no better way than to sponsor an educational cam- paign encouraging respect for it. in Mme. Hoda Charaoul, the leading exponent of equal rights for women in Egypt. She has just arrived in Washington to visit her daughter, Mme. Samy, wife of the Egyptian minister to the United States. “The keynote of the woman suf- rage movement in Egypt is, first, the education of women and then votes and equal rights.” avers Mme. Charaoul. She is the president of the Feminist Union of Egypt, which has already secured an equal education law and other:laws beneficial to wo- Mme Charaoul and the wo- men. men associated with her were in- strumental in, having a law passed making illegal all marriages of boys under 18 and girls under 16 years of age. Princess Mary of England (Vis- countess Lascelles) has revived the needlework fashion of working seats of chairs in designs of flowers and leaves, The art was practiced during the eighteenth century and called “petit point.” Designs from the Wil- Mam and Mary or Queen Anne per- jods are worked out on point paper, colored at the Royal School of Art Needlework, and afterward copied on canvas. Dr. Helen Campbell, 24 years old and recently graduated from the medical department of the Univer- sity of Edinburgh, Scotland, assist- America has an Interesting’ visitor Gov. Brooks stressed influences—communism, sovietism, socialism and bolshevism—that were seeking to tear down and destroy the foundation upon which this govern- ment was set upon and urged all berty-loving loyal American cit! zens to lend thelr unceasing efforts toward obliteration of these elements. He also gave an entertaining review of the early history of the original colonies and of their struggle to or- ganize our present government. A. A. Slade, superintendent of schools, told Rotarians that teach* ers in Wyoming schools must take an examination now on both the na- tional and state constitutions, in ac- cordance with a law passed by the last session of the state legislature which makes such an examination obligatory, A delegation of State Fair boost- ers from Douglas were guests of, the club today and urged Casper to give the fair its usual support. Judge C. O. Brown declared that 15 out of the 28 counties in the state were repre- sented with exhibits this year and that the fair this year promises. to be one of the best ever held Floyd Walker and Edward Ewel also mad talks on tho state fair to be held this week in Douglas. upon four Mme. Hoda Charsoul. ed in two operations recently on transatlantic liner Corinthia. Dr, Campbell is one of the first women to assist in an Operation at sea. She has come to the United States to take post graduate work at the Woman's College of Philadelphia. POST-PRIMARY DEVELOPMENTS IN GOTHAM MAYORALTY FIGHT HOLD FOOD FOR SPECULATION By ROBERT T. SMALL. (Copyright, 1925, Casper Tribune) NEW YORK, Sept. 14.—With Gov- ernor Al Smith being hailed by his followers as ‘the next president of the United States,” New York's hec- tie and at times unpleasant mayor- alty campaign is at an end so far as the primary phase is concerned. What is to come after the primary of Tyesday is quite something else again. Both sides in the Democratic fight are accusing the other of try- ing to “wreck” the party and it looks almost certain that some move in that untoward direction will te made after the primary ballots are counted. Mayor John F. Hylan, repudiated by Tammany Hall bet supported by Democratic leaders in Brooklyn, Sta- ton Island and Long Island city, has refused from the beginning of the primary campaign to pledge himself to stand by the results of the pri- mary and there is a feeling all through the city that if defeated at the polls on Tuesday, he will soon announce himself as a candidate, ‘The assumption {s that he will raise the cry of fraud, despite the fact that he has had virtually the entire police force of the city working on the primary lists of enrolled Demo- erats, checking and re-checking, and ordered the ‘force’ to duty at the polls, : Governor Smith has read Mayor. Hylan out of the party because of his refusal to commit himself to the primary results and because of his backing by William Randolph Hearst who has proudly proclaimed from California that the is not a Demoernt but an independent in politics. The fight tn Its final stages bas grown exceedingly bitter, deep wounds are being inflicted and everyone ts won- dering what the after-results are to be. Although the consensus of opinion does not give Mayor Hylan more than a ghost of a show In the pri+ mary and bets are being offered at odds of five to one against him, the mayor has undoubted strength among “the people.” or “the com mon people" as you choose to call them, Nearly all the English, lan guage newspapers are against him; even the Republicans are forgetting in large degree their own primary contests in to lambast the order mayor and urge his defeat by his own party. But most of the foreign language newspapers are for the mayor and he will pol! a tremendous vote among the citizens who read these papers to the exclusion of all others, He bas made an especial ay peal to them and as this foreign lan- guage colony is almost wholly with- in the confines of Manhattan, wher Tammany boasts its Complete con+ trol, there may be a surprise for Al Smith and some of the other regulars in the Manhattan vote tomorrow. Discounting this influence, how- ever, it would look today as though the mayor has been leading a lost cause for the yast two or three weeks. Mr. Hylan could have de! mmany in this fight and won his renomination and re-election if Goverrior Smith had not thrown all of hts political strength and striking personality into the fray. Governor Smith saw a growiig menace in the continuance of Hylan in office. He demanded to know upon what the Caesar at the city hall had fed that, he should grow great enough to ‘demand a third term of four years at $25,000 a®year, Governor Smith's greatest politt- cal asset has been the vote of great: er New York, It has carried him through all of his fights and in 1920 almost upset a million plurality against the governor in the upstate territory, For his own future polit {eal security, Governor Smith hnd to conserve this vote and not permit the Hylan influence to grow too strong. So the governor has been the big thorn in Hylan’s side in this battle. Hylan has known it. He has seen his third term’ virtually swept’ aside by the activitiés of thy governor and 5 IN SOUTH GS RELIEF comfortable in Birmingham, AJa., the south as a whole received slig ht rainfall, South Carolina set a new low temperature level for the mogizh when thermometers dropped to T2 degrees. In Virginia precipitation was sp ot- ted. North Carolina reported scattered showers, The first rain since Aly § fell in Atlanta. CAUTION USED BY GOOLIDGE 3N MITCHELL CASE Question Is Passed? to: War Department: for Action. By DAVID LAWRENCE? (Copyright, 1925, Casper Trigiune) WASHINGTON, Sept. 14.—~ Presi- dent Coolidge is handling the iMitch- elk aircraft controversy with al the delicacy and caution of a mast —vho is careful not to get his fingers burnt. Instead of answering: the bunch of inquiries asking fer his views on tHe points raised hy. Col. Mitchell, the president let it be known that he will do nothing about the case except as it may be recommended by the war «lepart- ment. The responsibility, there’, any action will be upon thd’war de- partment and not upon the presi- dent. Mr, Coolidge in the mgamtime gives no indication whatsowver of whether he thinks the milita naval establishments need ina, tion and overhauling, He disscreet-. ly disclosed that the affair tiad not been the subject of a cabinet; confer- ence, but there js reason to. believe he has talked the situatian over with Acting Secretary Dwty:ht Da- ls of pichoae department and Sec- retary Wilbur of y Eataes It the navy depart- Navy officials like Admfal Mot- fett of the bureau of aermautics feel it necessary to make: pointed reply to Col. “Mitchell's charges. Secretary Wilbur, recognting the popularity of Commander lodgers, who has Just been rescue®in Ha, wall, promptly made known the latter's appointment> as assistant ehief of the bureau of aenonautics, so it no longer can be. sald active fliers with aviation experkenco are for not in charge of aeronautics in Washington. Ret urning members of congress are talking of the Mitchell case as if they ingend hay- ing a. little investigation . of. their’ own when congress reconwenes, Mr. Coolidge is & shrevad enough Politician to know that attacks on his war and naval Secregaries are merely part of what might become a Seneral political attack agginst him. And the congressional eles:tions are only a year off. Mr. Coolidge 1s anxious always to avoid .clatterme Up congress with investigesHons that take the time and energy wf individ. ual members of congress from the paramount proposals on his legisla- tive program, x The problem, therefore, 4 3 Landle the Mitchell Rp tag out protracted debate aml yet sat- isfy that element of pub{c opinion which might be estrange’® if Col, Mitchell were merely 31%cfplini and his criticism igndeas LATE SPORTS | Ae ST. ANDREWS BY THE SEA, NEW BRUNSWICK, Sept. 14.—(By The Associated.Press)—The United States retained the Devons fre Cup, emblematic of the senior tenm golf championship of the North Ame ‘an continent when American play- ers defeated their Canadian oppon- ents In a series of matches here to- a HOUSTON, Tex., elated Press.) — vy weight Str: + 1—(Asso- Toots” Mondt, wrestler, wijl meet ngler Lewis in Houstom, Tues- y, September 22, for tle ‘heavy Weight wrestling champ! pnship 0! orld. ‘This ‘annoyftusent was de today after signed ccystyacts receives \ for the two men rere FOREST HILLS, N. Y., Sept. 14 —(By ‘The Associated Press.)—Rene, La Coste, 20-year-old Davis cu'x star, received a cablegram from th e French military authorities tods sy ordering him back to France fpr compulsory military training. He Was ordered to safl Wednesday. Officlals of the American Lawn Tennis associatign appealed — to Dwight W. Davis, acting secretary of war, to interande for La Coste with the French emt y at Wash. ington to gain an extension so that La Coste could fiaish play in the na- Uonal tennis chanygtonships, —<—__.. his rage has known no bounds. He has “cut” the governor dead at a meeting which .boéh happened to at- tend. Al Sthith*hag made the primary a choice between ‘himeelt and Hylan N The love for the mayernor is. greater than that for Hytan, In allithe circugnstances it is easy to see that the mayor, if défeated on Tuesday, will do hig best to, get revenge on Smith by! ant indepéndent candidacy. The ohdinues are that if the expected cry of “fraud” is talsed, the mayor will prorfaim himself the “regular” Democratic nominee and that court fight w01 follow, Already the mayor has lost one court battle, He waa enjoined trom using the municipal radio broadcast- ing station for his \gn political pur: poses.