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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 1 E——— Seames — THE OBSERVER - Makes Random Observations On the City and Its People - be a museum and Masonic art gallery. Here will be placed Masonio portraita and the many historic relics of Wash- ington and the several other noted Virginlans who from i{ime to time {have been members of the Alexandrin lodge, .. According to an unconfirmed rumor.! A replica of the first lodge house used by Anexandria_lodge, and which the change in the fire board was the result of Mayor Paonessa's disinclina-|was dedicated by Washington, will be tion to approve of the inauguration | included, Other souvenirs 'lncluh: of u two-platoon system in the fire de-|The clock which ‘stood beside Washe partment. It is said that the mayor|ington's bed, and the pendulum cord believes this is an inopportune time to|of which was cut at the moment of introduce the new system and knew |his death; a pocket knife given Wash- that Mr. Keevers would be a candi-|ington by his mother and which was date for the chairmanship of the carrigd by him as a boy and man; his board, in opposition to Mr, Hjerpe, the [old hour glass; the chalr he occupled former being opposed to granting the|as worshtpful master and which was firemen's wishes and the latter being |used for 122 years; and the Willlams work would disappoint many citizens after their spirits had been allowed to climb to a high point through antiel. pation of the improvement. It seems to be rather late in the day to turn back after going so far. cording to his creed and takes the lls | philosophically will not be | driven into physical illness by lhnnp“ anxieties, It man who is able to practice psychiatry himself, | ly timely, The coming holiday will be | | far happier for many unable to leave thecity on excursions into tha country, The park commission- this of life New B‘i‘fifl_ Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY (Tesued Dally, Sunday Excspted) At Herald Bidg, 87 Church Street, because of it Is & wise and fortunate ers are to be congratulated TR o »; RATE movement which brings R ON R | $5.00 o Yeor. pleasure to so many at such a small | L} 0 Threa Months. expense to the city, | EVASIVE OBRE 780 a Month, | W gon on s0 mueh | upon | | | l Il o Little enthusiasm has been created | favorites to reward, to step into Chief in democratic circles for the boom for| Rawlings' shoes but the chairman of |Mayor Paonessa for lleutenant gov-|the commission puts himself plainly ernor on the state ticket *his |mnh\g‘m| record as being in disagreement fall, If the truth be known, the|with such a policy. k |news that the mayor aspired to wield| It is argued that an outside man be improved, Dut not gO | the gavel in the upper chamber caus- could come here entirely free from | far and this fear of the opinion of the |ed no little adverse comment along|any likes or dislikes and determined people of Mexico, who have that in- |the street as it {s generally belleved |only to give the city the best police that there is little chance for two department administration it has ever 0N | have reason to feel that Obre- like to rela- tions between Mexico and the United He good that would to his country were matters (o | J S— Eatered at the Post Ofce nt New Britain| a8 Secund Class Mall Matter, | HURTING THE UNIONS, would have better Much harm has come to the of labar unionism by small groups of union men tragedy in lllinois is terrible example, There doubt but that a small part cause TELEPHONB CALLS Business OfM-a Editorial Puoms the violence of sees the The the is States re- | come The only profitable aavertising mo*lum In the Cit Clreulation books nd press reom always open to mdvertiners, most he dares lttle of the ( | | Member of The Associnted Press The Aseociated Press {v exclusivaly entitled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited In this japer anG aleo loral news pub- Nshisd herein. Member Audit Barean of Ctreolation The A. B. C. is a natlonal organiza‘*en which furnishes newspapers and edver timers with a strictly honest ann efrcalation, Our cireulation statls bumd upon thie acdit. Thie fsures pro- tection against fraud In newspaper d tribution figures to both national and cal advertisera. PLANS FOR THE FOURTH. Attention is called to the descrip-| tion of the fireworks to be the feature of New Britain's Independence Day celebration, published in The Herald of yesterday. Much as the words of | an oratorio, printed on a program, are of assistance the hearer of the music in fully appreciating the work, 80, in an entirely different way this description will he of use to those who watch the fireworks. Plans are being made today many residents of the city as to how they will spend the holiday. No one to by great unfon of was directly responsible, aided & government flamed by information given by a high union official that the workers should be considered break- ers, There enough to condemn the perpetrators of that crime. They should be pun- ished from the guilty officials who in- cited the men indirectly, down through the county officials who did practically nothing to the m:n themselves it found, who committed the outrages. The were done passion— otherwise the awful outrages would not have been as great as they were But passion did influence men higher up in the when they sent messages which were taken | by the angry men as justification for miners it was by a com- and in- plaisant local ordinary strike are no words strong prevent it, to they can be deeds in not the unions any crime. Passion did not influence Jewell of the railway shopmen's organization he fused to appear at the special meet- the Railroad Labor Board President B. M when Te- born hatred of the “gringo” that can- be binds hig hands. is in a hard position. But this difficult position does not ustify his attempt to deny tales of imprisonment and the holding of Americans by Mexicans. His message to a San Francisco newspaper char- acterizes these stories , which apparently officlally recognized as be- ing founded on fact, as attempts to stir bad feeling between the two countries, and he asserts there is no foundation for them. In other words he seeks to draw fhe conclusion from the correspondence he has had with Mexican officers, that Americans were captured at all, In that correspondence there is to be found no direct statement that no Americans have captured. The situation is referred “normal,” and the mention is made of al- leged fact that no complaint had been made by any agency of an oil com- This situation might exist and not eradicated, He up no been to as the pany. are | New Britain men to gain recognition |at the hands of the democratic cau- cuses and as ex-Mayor Joseph | Halloran has already started an ac- tive campaign for the congressional nomination from this district, the Paonessa move is regarded as an ef- |fort on the part of someone to in- |terfere with Mr, Halloran's aspira- | tions, At the local democratic primaries last spring Mr, Paongssa defeated Mr. Halloran in a fair and square contest for the mayoralty nominations. ,\11.1 Halloran had previously announced that, if he ran second, he would give his whole-hearted support to vhol‘ drive to elect Mr. Paonessa. He made good his promise and became actively identified with the effort to put a democrat the head of the city government. In fact, it is be- lieved that the harmony within the party which he thus brought about had no little effect on the result. Halloran stock boomed and the for- | at lowers many who previously had been | apathetic’ toward his ambitions in the political field. It was whispered soon after the mayoralty campaign that Mr. Hallor- M. | in favor of it and determined to keep the issue alive, The mayor, it is claimed, realized that Mr. Hjerpe | would not drop the subject, it he was continued as chairman, and decided that the most graceful way out of the tangle would be to have a new chair- man. WASHINGTON'S ACTS had. Such a course would have its advantages, but it would also haye its disadvantages because a new man would not be familiar with local con- ditions and, if he were strongheaded, could cause no little unpleasantness fer well-meaning citizens. Moreover, it would take him months to learn the ins and outs of the department, to know which men were particularly { fitted for certain kinds of police duty |and to pick out those who did their rii W ceremony was planned hastily, completed qn an hout's special tools were provided, time was utilized. portrait of Washingtotn, of which he approved, With these will also be placed the spade used in the ground-breaking ceremony by Louis A. Watres, presi- dent of the Masonic Natlonal Memo- al Association, As this simple and notice, no but a orkman's spade lying nearby at the x The 32 acre tract wurrounding the mer mayor won over as personal fol- | stint loyally and willingly and those who were simply trying to draw a day's pay. New Britain has several candidates who are suitable to succeed Chief Rawlings. They have had proper ex- perience, they know their New Brit- |ain and are qualified in every respect to maintain discipline in the depart- ment and get the best service out of the men, The commissioners should be able to choose at least one man out of the entire department who would make good on the job. . e When Chief Rawlings steps out, | the patrolmen will lose one of the ‘her' friends they ever had. It is not difficult to find men in uniform who |are ready to criticise the retiring t Beautiful Monument Planned for the turning of the first sod on a beau- dria overlooking the National cdpital, w George Washington which will be a fitting companion piece to the Lincoln Memorial at Washington. spired b; temple has already been obtained by the association The larger portion, about 22 acres, valued at more than $1,000,000, was bought o! the city of Alexandria at a nominal figzure, which made it a gift. Ceremonies of cornerstone laying were planned for next November 4th, the anniversary of the inanguration of the country's first president, but have been advanced to early October. The day has not yet been set, but the pro- gram {includes participation by Presi- dent Harding, Chief Justice Taft and many other notables and high govern- ment officials. WILL LIVE IN STONE Commemoration of President Alexandria, Va., July 1.—With ful spot on the outskirts of Alexan- ork has begun on a memorial to RICHARD CANFIELD GUILTY he edifice, a stately temple in- To Be Sentenced Today for Disturbe b \ !‘ { cares to dictate as to how one should N8 ©f still the stories of the capture of lan would enter the lists as a candid- |chief, but the majority have a good Greek and Roman architec- seek enjoyment at any time, but it is| well in making plans, to give the city full consideration for the efforts that have peen made here to furnish amusement and to make the day an The celebration in other cities of dis- tance to recommend but counterbalance this attraction there is always the inconvenience and expense connected with making an excursion on that day, and the knowledge that when the sionists return to their homes in this interesting one, have the charm them, to day is over and the excur- ralled for investigaticn of the proposed His action hurts the canse of the men of the associa- tion which he leads far more than would the unconsidered action of al group those men, repre- such actions might be, an strike. small of hensible a | Railroad executives and officers | aware the advisability of fol- lowing the even, of a body of men which has the power to| | make decisions for or against them, | are af suggestions, such decisions, as in the railroad ! even though case of the judgment of the Americans might be true. Obregon will gain nothing by being evasive. He will lose what reputation for honesty he has in this country it he € the facts and ack,” “white,” fails to recogn s on calling * Facts and Fancies (BY QUILLEN) ROBEK1 Boob: Anybody who takes Henry Menoken's tirades against boobs seri- | ate for the nomination for congres man. There was scarcely any oppo: tion as it was generally conceded tha he was entitied to the united support of New Britain democracy. His for- mal announcement later that he did want to go to Washington was re- ceived with enthusiasm. Conse- quently, he went to work, combed the district, talked with influential | leaders and with groups of voters and was led to believe that he could | count on considerable support in the fall. The first wet blanket to be thrown on the situation iz the unofficial but undenied rumor that Mayor Paonessa ture, is being erected by the combined efforts of all the Masons and Masonic | orders in the United States, and will word to say for him and they regret that clr('nm“mnrr‘ymke his leave- ing Peace of Hollywood Los Angeles, Cal, July 1.—Richard taking imperatives Chief Rawlings is not perfect. To exXpect perfection in a mortal would be too much. However, it would be be a tribute to W: and Mason, teet from portico to observation plat- Canfield, Jr., heir to a million dollars and son of one of the nation's best- know gamblers, was found guilty late this afternoon of having disturbed the ashington, the man It will be two hundred {ability could depend form on the top, and will be sur- rounded by an extensive landscaped garden to be known as George Wash- | ington park. It is expected the memorial will be completed in from four to five years. The cost will be approximately $2,500,000, Constructed of snowy marble and white concrete, the columned struc- ture will tower high above the river and will stand out from a background unjust to say that he was not con- scientious in all his official acts. He was fair to the men under him and to the public as well. Regardless of religion or nationality, a policeman who did his duty to the best of his on the chier backing him up. He made allowances | for human nature and was willing to helieve the best of his men, some- times, it must be admitted. when they si wi peace and serenity Judge Chambers, who made his deci- seven disturbed by a party held in Sanfleld's home on the nights of June 3 and 4, and of Hollywood. on after hearing the testimony of witnesses whose slumber was i1 sentence the young man tomor- row. The witnesses told of hearing loud boisterous laughter, screams, did not deserve his confidence and of densely verdured illsides, a fi"mg]profani'y the music of ukuleles, a vic- trola and a piano, and the seeing and hearing of various other things. They recognize the fact that there is noth- | would like second place on the state [ticket. Thus far, the Observer has|ftrust. His long contact with the inhumanity to man makes|not been able to hear any joy bells Seamy side of life did not sour his thousands cuss about the|ringing. On the contrary there is|nature and he was willing to believe | widespread criticism of the movement | that a man who was down could get and opinion inclines to the conclusion | UP again. Some men live to a ripe old age, |that the mayor would do well to| On many occasions, Chief Rawlings | and some start somewhere with a|Withdraw, if he has really entertain- | Showed himself to be a humanitarian ed any desire to win the post. TIt[in his treatment of those who had is true that he has not officially said | been unfortunate enough to break the a place on the [law. His justice was always temper- labor beard, are but “advisory."” ously. tribute, visible from miles, and within a short distance of the nation's shrine, Mount Vernon, Every Mason has been asked to contribute a dollar toward the fund, and already more than $700,000 has been collected. Additional pledges bring the figure to almost $1,600,000. Masonic orders and individuals con- tributing $1.00 toward the fund will be placed upon the honor charter roll to be kept among the temple archives. The building, according to archi- tects, will be after the style of hero memorials placed at the harbor en- city they are apt to feel that the trip was scarcely worth w view of the fact th going to celebrate this year. All of which is merely to suggest that if a person the whether to spend the holiday away from the city or to remain here and enjoy the attractions provided for residents of this city, it would be well | to give New Britain the beneft of the | doubt. vile especially in | Britain is Man's | countless | taxes. ing to be gained by gratuituously “an- tagonizing the court.” The best law- yers refrain from doing this just as carefully as they refrain from seeking to carry the appearance of servility The court, and such a body as the|Pay roll. labor board, the men who| t New PELLETIER TO RUN AGAIN Will Seek Re-election as Suffolk County District Attorney Boston, July 1.—Joseph C. Pelletier, recently removed as district attorney ot Suffolk County, announced today that he would be a candidate for that office at the election next Fall. “I shall run as a Democrat,” he said. “I shall not be a stalking horse for anyone else in the race for the is “on fence” fespank Too many politicians don't care a|that he is looking for appear before it and stand up for|darn which way the world goes just|Party ticket, but his silence must be|€d with leniency. their rights as energetically as pos- |so they can lead it. but who don't attempt to bluff | construed as an admission that he| In a few words, when “Bill” Rawl- | does not entirely reject the idea. By |ings turns in his badge the city is | remaining mute and declining to con- | B0ing to lose the services of an up- | firm or deny the statement that he is|Tight citizen and a policeman with a sible, bird that striped We know a litt agreed to eat all the has suits long and honorable record. McCUMBER'S DEFEAT. Bome of the same influences which 1 or bluster their way to success. | The action of Jewell hurts not only the organization which he heads but it | | prejudices the cause of labor every-| placed on war grafters. The trouble with France seems to | seeking the nomination, he has alien- | |ated large numbers of votes and his| strength today is far below what it trances of ancient Greek and Roman St cities. It will be erected on a ridge If the boys in the North End of the | office. I am in the fight to stay.” After his removal Pelletier was dis- vote, Mayor Paonessa 70 feet above the Potomac, and from | parreq from the practice of law in city could would y in office forever. The opening of the public swimming pool in North End park this week was the signal for a rush in that direction on | the part of Young America. Almost | from sunrise until sunset, boys of all ages can be found splashing armmd.] “chawbeefing” clothes and taking part| in various forms of outdoor sport | which does not require the burden of too many clothes. The location of the pool is suf- ficiently far removed from houses to | become a nuisance, it is thought. It is also within a short distance of one of the most thickly populated parts was on the day he was elected mayor. | Mr. Paonessa shouid not make the | mistake of thinking that his election | as mayor was due entirely to his own | popularity. It must be admitted to keep truth in the record that he did | control a large element of the vote | mainly through his popularity and | long service and good record in the {commen council. But there were |other elements which entered into | | the sitnation and which brought about |a democratic victory. For example, | |the republican candidate, through | The modern man thinks he '-ig|several years of political actlvity, had | a|wearing a soft shirt with the collar| et 200 1o oeal LT OR O | of the city and a blessing for tired | i sire for a change on the part of the | mothers whose weary bodies rebel | against “giving the boys a bath” every voters who had become tired of hav- | a ing a republican at the head of the night during the hot weather. “Oh, Skin-nay!" | government. These things should be e taken into consideration in analyzing the result of the election. Residents of the northern end of the | If Mavor Paonessa is of the opin-|city who would be served by a new ion that the republican party intends |Sewer now in progress of construction to remain as disinterested in a state | disagree violently with the attitude of election as it was in the municipal | . S. Chamberlain of the board of elaction he is in error. The G. O. P.|finance and taxation on his suggested for reasons of its own, may lay back |2bandonment of the project. Mr. in the sel of a mayor, but all | Chamberlain is opposed to the com- the fo ihe party will be found | pletion of the sewer on the ground at work when state or national can-|that residents of the outer didates are to be sent under the wire, | taxing district do not pay It behooves the mayor, therefore, to |assessments in proportion to promote harmony in the democratic |the benefits they would receive and arty instead of discord and to think |he has gene so far as to recommend well before deciding definitely to go | that the city stop work. It would after the nomination for lieutenant S¢em that this is not the best solution governor. | of the problem, if there is any prob- |tjmes, except when used in ritual by | e lem. Good progress has been made |the Alexandria lodge, the entire led to the nomination of candidates not of the in diana and Pennsylvania, may be felt in the nomination of Lynn J. Frazier over Senator McCumber, North Da-| kota. Senator Ladd, of that state, put | its tower, 200 feet higher, a grand panamora of the city of Washington will lie under the observers’ feet, as well as of the country bordering upon Mount Vernon, so loved by Washing- ton himself. Pilgrims to the patriot's former home and tomb will pass under the shadow of the temple, going either by land or river. The first floor will be given over largely to a memorial hall, the com- manding feature of which will be a heroic statue of Washington. How- ever, as the memorial as a whole will be dedicated also to the memories of cther great Masons of the country, there will be available to the grand lodges of each state space in the memorial hall in which they may en- shrine portraits or other tributes to Masons whose deeds place them be- side the first president. Such men as Paul Revere represent- ing Massachusetts; De Witt Clinton, New York; Benjamin Franklin, Penn- |sylvania; Henry Clay, Lewis and | Clark, Blair, Randolph and many others have been suggested to be re- membered thus as prominent history- making Masons. The temple will be the active lodge quarters of Alexandria-Washington |lodge, No. 22, A. F. and A. M, af | which Washington was the first mas- ter when it was lodge No. 39. Other rooms, surroundifg the atrium will be | given over to the uses of grand na- | tional bodies of the order. At all Massachusetts courts, and the Legisla- ture passed an Act providing that only a member of the bar could be elected to the office of District Attor- ney. where. It gives food for argument to | D€ the lack of some quality to make those employers of labor who insist| ¢ & lovable winner, that there is no use trying to argue It strengthens the case of those who insist that the only thing to | the case plainly when he stated t)\ar‘”w LByt o0 eny/le g0 abellgh Ab-al together. Because of Jewell's action Frazier represented the modern school in politics and that McCumber stood $lie: Lahat Board will e movs Severe for the old school Benator McCumber has played poli- | tics in the measures he has support- | Vis€ Would have been. ed. Some of those measures | been good in themselves, but the mo- | tive which seemed to inspire his ac-| tions has appeared always to be the same—what would bring the greatest number of votes. A few stances of the defeat of guard” will that the “‘old guard" Iowa, In- 5 | with labor. DELORME DECLARED INSANE. Montreal, July 1—Adelard Delorme, former priest, charged with the mur- der of his half-brother, Raoul, was declared insane by a jury late yester- day. He thus escapes trial for his lite. with the men over whom it has at least | udvisory jurisdiction than it other- | WISE ADVICE The “Psychiatry as means of arbitration would prevsn!i many divorces,"” sounds A well-trained conscience is one more m"The words were spoken by a physi- ‘vhat keeps its mouth shut when there “the olq| clan in an address before the National |is & profit to be taken. | Conference of Social Work in Provi- » | Another fine thing about Heaven dence recent, in connection with the ers have had enough of the old school |will be the harps, playing endlessly politicians and are determined to Statement that one of the chief TO"’flunaccompamM by saxophones. have a change. The stamp "old guard” | f the “psychiatrist” was that of an will be considered enough, arbiter. The statement is in reality | aside from the records of the men, to | Auite simple and true. handicap a candidate for office. sychiatry,” of The man who is practically con-|©ne knows, is the application of the| Ford says bur rolling stock is too i s | healing art to the mind. The phychia- heavy. It does seem to have an un- ceded the nomination, L. J. Frazer, L P | fair advantage of a jitney at a cross- is a radical of radicals, trist therefore doctors the mind. The |in proper sense. He is progressive to a by the sentence, conveyed then, | i degree, with nothing like Senator Mc- | !5 that curing the minds of the parties| Sound waves are broadcasted great Cumber’s record of twenty-four y concerned will often prevent them |distances by means of sending sta- e |tions; crime waves by means of filling in the Senate to recommend or—as from secking a divorce, some believe—to handicap him. This i pe | stations, Leaving this e, ; | ¢ on the work, Jarge sums of money | ill be open to the public. expression of the people will take its| With the statement that there would| Prohibition: The theory that a peo-| Chairman Dunn of the pr;ln': t‘ontl- have already been expended for yahor‘,mmglnev:—::e hnllp which leprlse in a place by the side of political expres- | be fewer divorces if the minds of both | ple drinking illicit hootch is more mission has the -“F““’I“s‘_”m',',‘l'r'fi't |and materials and abandonment of the | cjerestory from the ground floer, will slons in Indiana, Iowa and Pennsyl-| parties were normal and uninflue righteous than a people drinking|when he takes a formal stand agains need | e lized 'beer, going outside to choose a man as vania, as another distinct indication| by anger, temporary mis- chief of the police department. There of the change in public thought have sentence mysterious. \ convince vot- | days the bad guy fre- in the fracas, but a shot in the arm. | In the old quently got shot |now he merelyge course every- | almost Strained, tired: eyes affect your health. Our Glasses relieve the strain correctly. A. Pinkus Eyesight Specialist 800 MAIN ST. TEL. §/0 as es of used in the idea phase of the matter Jealousy, It understanding or discouragement, the has been some talk during the last indicates that the people feel as Gen- | matter may be viewed to advantage | “"}']‘n ';;: :‘m ‘;:::":fi *;‘r:"’m”"”n‘;”;: eral Wang felt in refusing the pre-|from other points. | | miership of China—a politician| The wise physician knows that the | trained in the old school is not want- | first thing to do in many cases, es- ed. | pecially nervous troubles, is to calm | —————————. the patient's mind. Worry agzra\'avss‘ THE SWIMMING POOL any disease, some more than others, | The city has adopted | of course. | officially what was formerly an If this be true, it is evident that official swimming pool in the Stanley| worry will affect a person's efficiency quarter park. In other words the pool | —and that such is the case is known At times we wonder why courts| has become a place where people, | without recourse to the dictum of any |can't order mistrials in the case of | especially children, find fun| learned man of medicine. If every man |MeN Who have money to spend and s save the expense of juries. with safety and propriety. | and woman would realize that he or| FLAR S The most should be made of that|she might cure himself or herself of | FOR Pacific Coast Shippers The Régu]ar Ferry Car — From — NEW BRITAIN will leave Monday, July 3rd, 1922, to connect with the C. & T. INTERCOASTAL LINE 8. S. “TIGER” scheduled to sail from Pier No. 5, New York Dock, Brooklyn, July 7th, 1922, for Los Angeles Harbor, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle. HOULDER, WEIR & BOYD, INC. 24 State Street New York City General Atlantic Coast Agents calves progi- It is an interest in fatted that makes the modern son practically un- may “It is a great thing to come from a swimming pool. The patrons should many physical ailments by the prac- | state of poverty,” says an industrial be taught to respect the tents that|tice of psychiatry, or the application MAagnate. It is it you come far enough have been provided for dressing pur- | of a little healing to his or her mind, |0 '* poses. Those tents should be taken | the world and the people in it would care of, not because of their value| be far happier. necessarily, but rather because propnr? The speaker on psychiatry sald care will encourage those who have | further that people could be taught the interest of the bathers at heart to| through psychiatry to carry their make more extensive plans, when the | burdens more easily by overcoming proper times comes, for their pleas- | worry without the necessity of hospit- wure. | alization; that they might be thus en- The opening officially of this swim- | abled to carry on their work in the j¢nvironment in which they must con- tinue to live. Bob Quillen wrote something once to the effect that a philosopher was one who had learned that a lawn could be made to look pretty fine, even though full of weeds, if it were kept trimmed. p phy. The philosopher who lives ac- lu in other parts of the paper. | Mediums admit that nearly all | spirits are liars, and this would in- | dicate that death doesn't change folks | much, after all. A producer says that only the so- | phisticated few would understand in- | telligent tilms. Well, isn't that true of‘ wicked films? One hesitates to discourage the dear girls, but it may be remarked in passing that rich husbands frequent- ly are poor husbands. d there, should be an incentive to who do not know how to swim, Jearn that valuable art. Some time it was pointed out here that the would be productive for y children and older people, if 8y learned to swim. Here is an op- unity that should not be missed. Civilization doesn't improve the odors much About the time man learned to take a bath, he learned to smoke Turkish cigarettes. 1R e e e S R et sor e et