New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 1, 1924, Page 8

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New Britain Herald coOMFE (Sunday Eace o7 Chuich & HERALD PUBLISHING Tasued Dally At Hevald Bldg., SUBSCRIPTION RATES & Year 1o Thiee o o At Mail Matter Botered at the Pe ecand TELEPHONE Business Ofice Editertal Hoox CALLS. The only profitable advertising 1 the City, Cirulation book room always ¢ to advertls Member of The Associuted I'res The Associated P'ress is exclusively entitled 10 the.use for respublivation of all news eredited to It or not eredited In this paper and slse local news pul lished herein, Circulation, A national organizstion | newspapers and advers tly honest analysis of | ulation statistics are This maures pros | n_newspaper dis | both natlonal and Member Audit Burenu The 4, B, « in which furnishes tisers With a st circulation, Our vlr based upon this audit tection agninst fraud tribution figures to local advertisers, The Herald a on sale dally In York at lMotaling's News stand Pquare;, Bchulta News stand, Grand Central, 42nd Street THE RELIGIOUS ISSUL In this country, where separation of state and church tenet, religion hins no place in politics. Yet bigotry and intolerance rule the minds of millions in the land and we | find the religious issue thrown bodily ' into the convention of w major politi- cal party with the possibility that it might rule minds of citizens | throughout the campaign for cholce of president. The political leaders who forced this {ssue to the front did badly as poli- ticlans and have wounded the internal peace of their country. Obvlously, the Klan issue, both pro and anti, got out of bounds; there al- ways is this to expect when a question upon which miilions of persons deeply feel Is degraded by being dragged into | the realm of politi: The political | w | Times | Entrance | is a foundation the arena is no place to settle matters that | have no bearing upon politics, or even | to discuss them. | our political parties attempting to be | public :|u"5-i The trouble lies in too all-inclusive in the tions upon which they attempt to take a platform stand; and in their ambi- tions, spurred on by factions having | specious claims to further, the hnunvl-‘ ary line between common sense and | folly is easily crossed, as has been the | case in the Democratic convention. | e | TFRACTIONAL VOTING | No, the fractional voting at the | Democratic convention by some of the | states, inciuding Connecticut, does not | indicate that some of the d‘!vvr:'m-si have fewer votes than others and that | the one-half, one-third, thread | tenth votes one reads about are the re- ! and sult of some delegates of a state dele- gation being more” than others in the balloting. | In the case of Connecticut, for in- stance, which well serves as an illus- tration for the other states where frac- permission was “worth tions are registered, given the state by the political powers that be to have more delegates at the convention than the state has votes. In | other words, the wanted to send more delegates state organization than the original allotment called for. The state is entitled to fourteen votes at the convention, but there are ‘When the entire | however, seventeen delegates, meventeen delegates vote, only fourteen votes are recorded. Con- sequently each del amounts to Yess than one vole, It takes onc and three tenths Connecticut delegates to Those having fresh | ate | | | make one vote. minds for arithmetical caleulations, or | who can figure it out in algebra, can | eheck up on the Convention's experts. | When the geventeen persons votes one way it is entire delegation of easy for the calculators, as it merely means fourteen votes registered; but when they split, careful figuring and . tabulating is necessary, NGLAND Italian ITALIANS IN NEW I Vineyards by citizens are being operated throughout north naturalized gouthern Connecticut as far as Hartford, causing an observer to com- ment that the hardy sons of Ttaly seem to be equally at home in the factory and on the land. The Italians intelligently, are gaini Their enterprise are cultivating the soil good crops, and as truck farmers ls undisputed. Land ad not as been made are prospering, which for generations | heen touched by the spa to yteld wealth in the form of produce needed hy the population. Honor will always go to the man who can make | two blades of anything grow wherc only one- there a or none—grew hefors Is renaissance ¢ that one time con- Here spirit at the civilized Noman quered world? 1s that springs from the a race | stories in Boston, and it is a poor day | man ¢ Boston. | is | pect | great [ tinved Most 2 this country ra comparatively poor; if that were immigrants e t 80 they weuld not have emigrated lands, The "It takes a little 4 poor man in a strange land | native wealthy | m their y ure “tourists. for adapt himself to changed eondi- | ynd aeeumulate sufclent money up & front like the genuine put rican, During his lifetime he el ut the ehildren of folks in his may not his ehildren are no native land than night is like day, Their apivit and training is American, and the ehildren do not require Amers icanizing because they are born and 1in the of freedoms rais atmosphere loving Ameriea and are conversant taught ils and aspiris with its institutions and are to revere its history, A tions, They beeome first class Ameri cans, and as & rule possess some quills | an improvement over puritanical austereness, Thelr Influ institutions and mode ties that are ence upon the of life dominate in districts where they pres It in wels already marked, rather CONANECTICUT NEWSPAPERS Newspapers in Connectleut have not presentation of is nothing to fear; to ha comed departed from a sane { news and carefulness in comment, The dominated cities with is free from the | 7% that unfortunately has developed in some other states, state, not by luge populations, journalism Citizens of the state do not need to | be coaxed Into reading Its newspapers | through the use of sign-board head- lincs over ordinary news, Large type has its uscs, hut such use 1s not justi- fied every day New England's type is Boston, of display | It would seem that center this erudite metropolis of supposed cuiture would be the last to revel in a daily bath of scare heads, but with- out question it surpasses all other cities except Pittshurgh in display. Much space is given to trivial scandal type when stories of bandits, thugs and thieves do not gain prominence out of | all proportion to their social value. There are exceptions, of course, the Boston Herald, Transcript and Chris- | Science Monitor being in this The like a 1 with hootch. tian number. othe shriek The f rther one Boston the less one sees the yellow Worcester has run wild with it, at least from t1 tandpoint of big type; but from there the tendency dies hapers | is removed from strain, out. The vast majority of new; in New England plough along close | to common sense; those of Connecti- are models of restraint, Compared with Boston, York papers are mild indeed, exclud- ing the Hearst complex. They are slow to deck themselves in frenzied' type. Concidering the polyglot population of the metropol one shonld think there would ba more reason for wild New York than in cut the New rides on type in It isn't big type that determines the quality and reliability of a newspaper. Nutmeggers, it is certain, brought up | in an atmosphere of restrained | Journalism, are inclined to look with suspicion upon a publication requiring the forced-draft process of poster type to eall attention to Its ‘wares. 4 in wearing a red inctively compare it with a necktic and a| vest—such person would attention, but wouldn't be listened to in an argu- hey man vari-colored a attract he | ment., Connecticut isn't alone in preferring | with romance, Philadelphia, and nmf its news unpeppered distortion and fakery. | Baltimore and Washington, cities those territories, are models of Pitts- burgh is loud and dizzy, in the class| in unemotional journalism, with the bhean-eaters, Cleveland mild. Cincinnati boas newspaper with the most clahorate head-type in | but it remains conservative | news stories. Chicago and bad. St America, in its is mid- | way hetween good Louts | mild, Den 150 Kansas City is exeessively soft. r, wild and woolly, which | the in California. | Tastes of the public toward w\\<.“ the | In! is « papers are pretty nearly what newspapers themselves create citios and states where conservatism | publie A | in cities where news- | in display rules, t layouts and aste follows; ta Dlasts papers have it the public to ex- brazen and yellowness, hends aceardin | The public of the retained its good taste in journalism, | has not been violated or de- | taste : Nutmeg state has | which formed by the press, | NIAGARA POWER elopment of hydro-els from Niagara Falls is turning that | into mere Mich con- seenic magnet a shadow of its former grandeur opposition is developing against deflection of water for indu trinl purposcs. Large numbers {the New | ung NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUE receive, Every eity, town and hamiet n plenis tude ed aftord, When lespoiling Niagara it was thought by scheme the United States enjoys a manufacturs that all of eleetrie eurrent and sold at a cost can A begiuning was made in that Buffalo promoters of the would become a great Instead it by their eity industrial center has heen left far behind other industrial eenters. ELECTRIFICATION All trains on the New Haven rail. voad, running between New York and are now drawn by electrie Not over this pissenger or freight New Haven locomotives. a wheel division except through the power of electricis ty New gime, and It was perhaps the only achievement of worth exceuted by this much ma- ligned of the Elcetrification on the hegan during the Mellon and abused president gies upon electrifieation, instend of engaging in financial adventures in the purchase at fabulous prices of trolley ste would have heen well with Mellon and the New Haven, It is sald that, although Melbon got much of the credit for making a be- ginning with electrification of the rall- and maship companies, all road, the real power behind the plan | was J. P Morgan, The financial inter- est of the the New Haven raflroad siderable; and Morgan, a staunch be- liever in electrification of railroads, consented start being financial was con- de on chaos to a ma Haven. The into which the road other cau temporary halt to the scheme; tod electrification stands completed over a goodly streteh of main track, forming theé longest stretch of electri- was plunged brought a but through fication in the east. Only the Chicago, | Milwaukee and St. Paul, through its rocky mountain division, can boast of a longer stretch, one of 450 miles, the | current being secured from waterfalls, The plan of Morgan for the New Haven was the electrification of the entire line from New York to Boston, Had the plan been carried out as originally intendad, electrification the shore line between the two cities have been a reality by this time. Electrification of the line tween New Haven probably soon On the whole, electrification of rail- would be- and would have followed. | toads has not proceeded as swiftly as was expected a decade ago. moves | Had he concentrated his eners | Morgan banking house in ) of | Springfield | | | The war | health /ing to buy you a nice big hand painted SDA New Malne's hydr-power Eoing 4 henefits, It is & short.sizghted policy and not to England is of At all the vallreads of present to waste a nohody eredit of the slate, BAD MAN , Higgins) . . ™Y (By John . A vaquero came riding down, On the trall from San de Vrecs, As bad a man ua ever had A horse between his knees, ”“\I":'l'\\u A8's adorned his belt, A knife reposed screne, A rifie in his sheath was held He was the worst man ever seen, To a desert town he came As he rode along the trail, Ho stopped before the old saloon, Across from the little jail With scowling grin he drew his guns, And shot all o'er the place, And broke the glasses into bits, While each man hid his fac Aloud hie called for the bartender To come and serve his want, The man arose in blank dispair, And hix fuce was pale and gaunt, Hard on the bar the bad man rapped, And suid in his snarly drone: Now jest yuh fix up fer me A large size e m cone," Bett Stage “Mother ald Betty, “do you know what I'm going to buy you for your next birthday 2" “No, d “what fs it “Well," said the little tot, “I'm go- red her mother, vase,” “My mother them."” “No, you Betty emphat cast ¢ v her of sald two one,” want dear, T have "1 wouldn't ' sald | down- haven't, mother, ally, but with t broke it."” Elenor Mackey. Our Own HOROSCOPL Department If you were born on July 1, your constellation is Dynamo, the sign of the Live Wire, Which means that you are right there with the personal magnetism and the 100 h. p. energy. Dynamo people rarely make good farmers, because they never let any rass grow under their fect. But in any other profession they suc- specially in a ablishment, always having a lot of irons in the fire, They are usually exceptionally but are apt to suffer from period was a factor operating against | fatty degeneration of the figure after | such expenditures. The Pennsylvania for years has operated electric trains to take care of suburban service out- side of Philadelphia, successfully using the third rail system over a private that nowhere is crossed Tor an even longer period have been right of wa by streets, third rail electric trains operated hetween Camden, N. J., and Atlantic City by the Pennsylvania rail- road as a supplementary service to the two existing steam roads between the two cities. The Balttmore & Ohio was the first railroad to wtllize elec- tricity to propel trains, making a be- ginning in the 90's through a tunnel which traverses Baltimore. The only object, however, was to prevent the ac- cumulation of smoke in the two-mile tunnel, It is said that the plans to electrify the entire right of way between Philadelphia and New York, and then continue clectrification to Pittsburgh, The New York Central within the next decade is expected to electrify the line between Nesv York and Albany, and probably beyond, The city of Boston expended more million dollars to provide a electric suburban service Pennsylvania than a station for South tation, Boston, but after this considerable outlay to encourage electrification, none of the roads en- tering the station. use electricity and 1 wh ation meant for electric trains, I i3 under the present station, goes unused; don't know it exists. The line between New Britain and Hartford was one of the comparative- Iy early electrified lines, third rail system was in use, with fm- proper safeguards against accidents, it So far as it known, this line was the first electri- fled The was abandoned, line to return to steam. New Haven's system of ove head wires, in uge between New Haven and New York appears to mect every requirement of safety. It is more ex- pengive than the third-rail system on account of the necessity of erecting towers to carry the wires. The most expensive system ever put up was the [ inal system installed through the Baltimore & Ohio tunnel in Baltimore, which was a atructural whereby a shoe on top of the clectric engines glided over a steel superstruc- ture, ind made less claborate, thousands in the city | but as the | is | steel system | The system has been modified | answer to that eternal query | weaker reaching forty, For this reason, they should avoid the second helping and | take more exercise. A Snappy Tale He lifted her into his arms and crushed her maflly to his breast, Raining passionate kisses on her up- turned face, he whispered fervently: | “Darling, I love yon." | Just then his wife appeared on the | scene, “Henry, put baby down at once-— you're spoiling her!' she exclaimed angrily. —L.ouis Sobol. A Real Test | Blackstone;—"Are you going to thave a vacation this summer?" Webste ‘I'll say so! going away for a month.” 9. H. Dreschnack. My wife's Our Own LOST AND FOUND Department B.—Can you give me the “Why A. G. r the shore Dear A. G. B.:—Certainly. is the ocean so ne Oh why is the occan so close to| the shore? 1t's really self evident knowledge you crave? If it didn’t cur] implore, Then how would it get its pl:rmmmnt, wave? up on the bench, 1 .o Bertha Liddman—Isn't there a poem that encou by the line succeed, try at first you don't Again 2" Dear Bertha:—Of course there is. An unfailing encouragement for the sex, all women need, To get around the helpless men, So if at first you don't succeed Cry, dear ladies, cry again. He Favors the Home Team Always! s:—"Are you interested in our I ball team?’ Sriggs:—"Well, T haven't had time to think much about it. You see we have twin boys at our house, and that is the bawl team I have to think about." Tears are we —Mrs. Edith O'Brien. THE JINGLE-JANGLE COUNTER A needle has a single eye to see where it is sewing, Potatoes have a score of more to see where they are growing. —G. 8 C L e ] It's very wrong th® baby's bank to rob, But mother dear just had to have a bob. -8, B. Burke. | | Miss Peggy es persistent effort | Y, JULY 1, 1924, Nails and eider run to kegs; Ham is very fond of eggs. The Memory That Failed Miss Peggy Warren, traveling in California, to her flance, Mr, John Hughes of *Atlanta, Georgia My Darling 1 must write this little T goto bed, It is almost morning, and here 1've been sitting all night read- ing Kipling, I don't cave for him, as you know, hut ever since the wonderful night last summer when you told me the story of he Light That Failed," I have | intended reading it 1 wanted to know | whether it was you_ or Kipling that had made of it a vithl memory, Dearest, it was you, As 1 read, there |came back to me the soft, summer night, the edor the cinnamon vine and you, your dedr self, with your | deep tender voice, Don't you remems | ber that when you finished the story I kigsed you and wanted to ery? To- night when 1 laid down the bhook 1 I, and wanted to kiss you! Peggy. . Telegram Atlanta, Georgla, Warren: Hotel del Coronado, Corow Beach, Calif, T have never read the failed, do light that John Hughes, Reflections First deacon:—"1 wonder why it is that we have so many pennies in the collection box?" Second deacon: less it's beeause coin,” don't know un- we have no smaller —Hildred Black. | The woman who gets ample dam- ages in a breach 'of promise suit hasn't | exactly loved and lost, (Copyright 1924, Reproduction forbidden). Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN The smaller the town the iess money a man needs to be asked for adiice. Ior some time, at least, the gradu- tate's 8 O 8, will continue to mean Soak Old Senior. Truth crushed to varth isn't the only thing that will rise again. There's the swatted fly. 1t may be just a coincidence, hut it secms strange that primary teach- | ers make the best wives, Fable: She was annoyed when she ¢ herself referred to in the paper as a social leader. Politicians must suspect that the tenderfoot of the west has given place to tender feelings. It she brings him his slippers, it is only because she knows he can't go without his shoes. In the old days the word “simple” meant “foolish"; now it is used only to make frocks cost more, An optimist §s a man who will eat raisio pie that has been served on a picnic cloth. 3 Carpentier will use his monay in the cheese business, and he ought to know a cheese when he sees one, So live that you can leave a drug store empty-handed without making people-think the druggist said “no. Yet perhaps your wife would he as unfailingly sweet as your stenographer if you paid her as much, 1t has grown so great that it couldn't be recognized as a pork barrel except for {he taxpayer's spueal. It is a hard world, and no man can hope tosbe as important as a sec- reta voice sounds on the telephone. Each age produces its standard of glory. This one's is a triple, a double and two singles in four times up. And it may be that some people will spend eternity chasing all over hell to return pencils they borrowed. It must cause great suffering to want Dempsey licked and then size up the dubs that are eager to try the job. An election is a ‘process by means of which you help select a man you should have helped to select at the primaries, Correct this sentence: “I don't mind spending the money,” said the hus- band, “but I hate to part with this comfortable furniture and get new.” Catholic Prep School Fund Over-Subscribed Cleveland, July 1.—A campaign before AUNT SARAH PEABODY At the Convention | BY AUNT SARAH PEABODY much chatter going on around the hotel as there is in the convention 3 % )i {hall, The only difference is that you came floating over the transom, s g0t (alossi enough toahesr WHAL | they're talking about in the hotel. 1 went back to m¥ room and sat down to rest, Got to thinking about the old hen that's due to come off with her chicks in a day orgso, and worrying ahout whether ~ Martha Snooks remembered to water my geraniums. Just couldn't make up my mind about going home, Then I found a letter on my bureau which made it up for me. It was my hotel bill, T have presented the planks for the democratic platform that I had in mind and I've dene all T can toward making the convention a success. Having just discovered that there |are some newspaper people here who jare writing ahout all of the conven- {tion doings, T do not think T am needed further, ' see yon Home Town."” New York City, July 1.—As 1 sat in my room last night strains of mu- | sl It does one's heart good to hear men folk, gathered together, singing the old-time songs, | “here was real sentiment i the way the men in the next room were singing “Sweet Adeline,” And I could Just tell that they were a lot of dele- | gates, feeling sort of homesick, I have always heard that there was something funny about these conven- tions, Wel, it was mighty funny to me today when a new doorman re- fused to let me into the convention hall, He's the first doorman who really has looked closely at my badge, and he said it was a “delegate’ badge all right, but not for the democratic con- vention, Ordinarily T* would have argued with him but my feet are so sore from walking around that I was per- | fectly willing fo go back to the hotel, all I:ar}( in “The Old Besides, it scems there I8 just as | 1888088080800 8852555588088 325 Vears Ago Today 3(’I'skl~n trom terald of that date) TIPFVTPTTIVINTIVRVRIINTND ¥red Eppler is a member of the committee in charge of annual clam- bake to be held by the active Turners July 23, According to a resident of the south end the thermometer was down to 39 this morning. The lowest point previ- ously reached for 15 years in July was 44, W. Bullen is being prominently mentioned for the captaincy of Co. E, C. N. G. The election will be held on next Monday morning. At the regular mecting of Washing ton Camp, P. O. 8 of A, held last eve ning the semi-annual election of offi- cers was held. Albert Heilneck was elected secretary and Charles Dehm vice.president. According to word received here | vesterday Joseph G. Woods was a suc- Icesstul candidate in the civil service | examination held heére recently for the position of clerk at the local post office. Out of nine who took the ex- amihation Mr. Woods was one of the four successful candidates, PREFER JERUSALEM Observations On The Weather for Southern New Eng- tly cloudy with showers; partly cloudy; not much temperature, gentle to moderate northeast and ecast winds. | Morecast for Iastern New York: | Partly cloudy tonight, probably show- ers in south portion, Wednesday probably fair with not much changa in temperature; gentle northeast to northwest winds. Conditions: A disturbance central over North Carolina is causing un- settled weather with local showers in a narrow belt from Alabama north- { eastward to Maine, Pleasant weather previals genecrally in other sections. The temperature is unusually low for July. nditions favor for |partly cloudy weather nights. T orecast land: | Wednesda change in this vicinity with cool An Elector | Zionists in This Country Want Head- quarters Moved From London to the Holy City. Pittshurgh, July 1.—Removal of the world Zionist headquarters from London to Jerusalem® was urged in a resolution adopted here today by delegates attending the convention of the Zionist organization of America. | The resolution, submitted by B. A. tosenblatt, New York, will be con- sidered by the greater actions com- mittee of the world Zionist organiza- tion when it meets in London next | month, [ Pointing out the progress achieved in the development of Palestine, the resolution recommended that the headquarters be removed to Jerusa- lem together with the headquarters of the Palestine I'oundation fund, the chief Zionist financial instrument to which American Jews have con- tributed $6,000,000, Convention leaders declared they | expected the recommendation would precipitate a bitter fight at the Lon. | don meeting, strong opposition com- fing from the European Zionists, | It the democratic nominee for the presidency carries Wyoming in No- vember, that state's electoral ballot probably will be carried to Washing- ton by Mrs. Anna B. Haggard of Cheyenne. She is one of three wom- en electors named by the Wyoming ‘rlemocraflc state convention, | |l DR. FRANK CRANE’S DAILY EDITORIAL ‘““——*‘__ ' What Is to Become of This World? By DR. FRANK CRANE Statesmen and political spokesmen are given more these days to view- ing with alarm than to pointing with pride. z The vonderous editor vies with the excited soap-hox orator {n showing | us we are on the verge, on the verge, | Preachers and literary folk demonstrate that ruin is Just ahead, In fact, a good part of the energy of our instructors and entertainers seems to be devoted to scaring the daylights out of us, Meanwhile the world goes lumbering on. The ocean heeds the apos- trophe of W. 8. Gilbert: “Never you mind—roll on Little children are playing marbies in the street, the cool potatoes, the young lady and her June-spic lor, Pa is busy gelling nails at the hardw on the front porch, Only here and there one of us gets heated up in our mind and feels the world ig wobbling. What of it? Suppose we bang ito a comet tomorrow” Suppose the Bolsheviks blow us up and the JapancSe grab the pieces, and the trusts and capitalists devour us, and all the labor unions strike, and the baby ehokes on a quarter, and the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse come loping over the hill, and there's a panic, and the end of the world comes the fifteenth of k s busy peeling e are holding hands in the par- are store and Grandma is knitting next month and the devil flies away with us? What are you going to do about it? In spite of our fits of despair the world is getting better all the time, The poorest among us have comforts and luxuries that even kings did not have a few years ago, God is attending to the universe. And even it you don't believe in God, has | § The st wasteful mode of propulsion known to man. Only of the inhérent in coal is turned into transs portation, the rest of it being wasted. nings of European history, which lustrics are operated by Niags n locomotive is the most ey but did anyone ever hear of for $3,000,000 for a new Catholic preparatory seminary for the diocese of Cleveland ended last night with over-subscriptions of approximately 50 per cent, it was announced today. upheavals, and Members of t 1 He took her to a quiet nook, The whispering pine told the babbling brook. survived innumerable 1s still making good America ar pow being sold a fraction The greatly industrial product power race come to prosper | c account of it? cities in an astonishing variety of \eaper on activities ine —Hal Gratton. r th 1ls haven't in Cleve- They are found In factories, on the land, in the sciences and arts and even in politics, rightfully proud of in professional callings Mayor Paonessa, population as a result oxgased in cither, of the slowest Great Lakes. Buffalo is one the when it was nearly growing cities on There was a time Detroit and Cleveland; now | as large a Klectriel on the other hand, is the most economical method e of installing the ry wires or third rails, and the of and only the expe neces construction numerous power discovered, | “The 'un Shop 15 & national tnstis cutlon conducted by newspapers of the country. Contributions from ceaders, providing they are original, unpublished, and posses sufficlent Seventy thousand persons contributed. The new seminary will provide accommodations hundred students, land, and other cities of the diocese for several you must admit that You are not running it. Time stalks on. KEvolution continues to evolve. plans, and is mighty close-mouthed about them. All our live is an adventure. Nobody, outside of the graveyard is safe, Sin was in the world long before little Johnny began to cry over it, and will probably still be on hand long after he has wiped his eyes and gone to bed, Destiny has its own his ancestry and equally proud of his American citizenship and his record of achievement in New Britain, is questionably giving lightened and efficient gover it perience, All we can do is each, in his small corner, to play his part and be as happy as he can. We'd as well be happy. Why not ? merit, will be pald for at rates vary- g from $1.00 to $10.00, Write on one side of the paper only and send your contributions to the “Fun Shop Editor,” c¢are of the Herald, who will forward them to New York Unaccepted manuscripts will sot be returned.s Toledo is close upon its heeis. houses, deters its general If the state o Maine would electricity use upon Paris ,July 1.—The council of ministers, acting on the recommenda- | tion of General Mollet as minister of | universe rolls on, as aforesaid. war, today named General Walch as The Creator made the world. chairman of the inter-allied military | boy at school nor grown-ups who ought to control commission at Berlin to suc- | but their own undoing when ‘hey play God. ceed General Nollet, Copyright, 1924, by The Mogluri Newspaper Syndicata, « Despoiling of a great natural won- | railroads. - ¥or whether we be glad or sad, the the as en- | der entirely city unnecessary o gain | permit the exportation of It's His, not ours. And neither ths little nt know better accomplish anything '8 | electric power for industrial and light- | capable of being produced from its 1 10 3%- | ing purposes. It appears that be | gets benefits they wouldn't otherwise enough cheap electricity for the use ¢ experienced or hog nobody | countiess waterfalls, there would

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