New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 16, 1924, Page 6

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¢ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JULY 16, 1024, New Britain Herald| PUBLISHING COMPANY 1oy Bacepted) Church Biieet, ach of a song™ Citron You're plumb right Reg'lar apple o' the eye. And to think the pair who wrote it feared it might turn out w lemon he wordiy the w g uanas' proved a p time in the United States for five years, by teft 48 10 the intended B W in the case which time it is expected that large a doubt s will be imported from Mexl: | To this Judge Alling wiscly re 1a and Perela, How long the | plied that of the man HERALD Tssued Dally A Hersld Blig James A, Rasen, last is problemati there oould be ne brought before him. | doubt because he had left his autome- m te 7 that | (8u o supplies wi Bome experts say that the entire will eal Ben Hagan's wife wanted te join A country elub, h ewrites us, but he | told her he'd buy her a pack of eigars eltes and get drunk guietly at home, al the curh from 1 & Judge Alling ¢ common sense required him to cons that had mnn‘ violated. SUBSORIPTION RATES: known supplies in the world | bite at 1000 8 Year 200 | the present rate of consumption, last [a, m marked Months, e 8 Thiee | ne lenger than 20 years But New Britain rey? Matier | Month, 20 Is 8¢ elude the ordinance yuars EA FOR JUSTIOR | There's a erime that is ofttimes com- mitted, And policemen hasenothing to say, While for murder or robbing a persen | There is who always must “Zero Weather August st” Entered at the Post Office at as Becond Class Mall TELEPHONE CALLS Business Ofice , ' | EBditorial Roor | Cherry pie is good enough. But eherry wine is strénger, It you drink mueh of the stuft You won't eat ple mueh longer, | =Lida Frey, There is something to be said on Judge Alling When & England city for Lasing his 2 = ment on common sense instead of als | | y for conducting the best elcans-up eams | owing himself to be swayed by legul I'he lawyer in the case sl mention for are | C8lling attention to a weak spot in the they The law forbidding resis this erime X dents to use the streets for [ That of cutting a pie in six parts.” Wa try and notify acceptance wivate purpose N0 ~Lawrence A, Barrett, | A d which mukes a specia |. "H ll l“’l"" s a good "“"Hl' =~Lawrence A, Barre Rut—=very frequently we have to should he made as strong as possible take material in its original form and i 2 We “"'""'.';"':s::" ‘:‘:""'""""\fl | vevise 1t to auit our requirements. o Al This takes time, Also, it is physieal GAMBLING ON THE ] " e A " Diiiwone i d 1E FUTURE | The itinerant lecturer had taken his | Iy mpossible to correspond with our in Chicaga, Who is now | fisst ride In an uirplane, As he was | rendors, with possessing remarkable | clambering out, a bhystander asked: | ®o don't wait until you hesr from more than a | "What was you thinking about while | us before sending In mora material— in the air?" sond ‘n whatever you wish as soon The subject of my lecture, alr! The | as you can subject of my lecture,” | “What s the subject of your le ture?" “Imek to the soil, sir! Baok to the soll." ed | The western spring, he learned, would he wet and cool, He figured that this kind of weather would in- jure the corn crop, reduce production and increase prices, He bought “large | | deserves | Judg- : both sides, SPOTLESS TOWN New three wins a | commendation eon When a pretty girl welcomes a young man with epen arms he knows what 1t is to fall lnto a geod thing, in suecession | silver ¢ nmedium n | 3 | palgn In New England gt 1s ontitied to | {echnicalit other S0 now, friends, let us band together, Lot us say from the base of our hearts “"We thing it's quite time we out out also deserves favorable the congratulations of HAT headline in today’s paper would set our telephone bell a-jingling; —everyone in a hurry— “must have coal tomor- row, SURE.” Yet, there’s just as good logic in ordering now, even with cold weather four months away. Lower prices, better coal, —asure delivery,—and that satisfied feeling that comes from full coal bins. Notification eontributors on her of The Associated Press. clean-up campuigns elther ated P'ress 1s exclusively enti About use for 1o publi of all new ited to It or n Hited his paper and also lucal news pube lished herein. | where considered unnocoRsary oF where ordinance, | tail to elean up very eftectivoly publie Lynn, Mags. providing tappers with stylish, this — ty of funcy and even artistic footwear, year again carrled off the honors, bes voted by diced Judges us | Now England ms similar honors in 1922 | that the silver cup trophy becons of the and advers annlysis of Ustics are This fusures pros N newspa Wiss | both pationsl and furnishios with & sty on, Our el based upon (his A toction agamst fraud tribution fgures to local advertisers, wnle daily News Htand ews Bita Btreet, of unpreju-| A mun credited A committeg fing the cleancat spot “mad million and a half dollars within & | tew weeks by buying corn, His scheme consisted in tuking note | of the spring wenther, not only by day | but what the weather bureau forecast- on the Lynn won | prescience, has (Copyright 1024, Reproduction forbidden), FOUR PUT T0 DEATH " INTRENTON PRISON {Excontions Take Less Than 40 Minutes--New Record Now T Entiance The Herald Is on n York at Hotaling's Bquare; Bclults Zentral, 42nd purmanent possesslon muni- clpality, How A legson dn elvie eleanliness, paign lasted from April 21 to May 24, [ under the auspices of the Chamber of the public | Lynn takes its annual bath is The cam- REN | FRESH AIR CHI -J. F, Riley, ozone Burlington, benefits THE The fresh camnp worked magic 65 young girls who have just returned Tree Grows In Yord Engine Dear editor: Last fall 1 Joft my Ford behind the barn, Tmagine my surprise when 1 holdings,” as the grain men call it, ;;,f“’::,,',‘;l,,.‘,,","';,",.“,,,:',,':;L.M"M site and held on until the price advanced. |~ 1 telephone immediately for auto- | 1t a1, every time it went up a few | mobile and tree exports to solve the points he grew richer. He s still | mystery, After a thorough investiga- t we re o holding on, expecting to “make” a fow | fon .we figured out how it had hap. | pone: There was so much dirt in the hundred thousand more within a weck | eylinders and on top of the engine Trenton, N, J, July 16 four men or so. | that a seed, falling frony a nearby tree [died in the electric chalr at the state One hears of this person because | had taken root and grown into a [prison last night. Three of them, his guess happened to be the mr,.um:lqm!y ::)’I‘I‘I:In'l P "r,‘ ri T ivlmr and [)'ns son-in-law, rect one. Had he guessed wrong, as [yt CCAE T Ng the car, | risita. “;.,”“ ]":’]'t"::' ‘]"f‘:fl“‘""l‘)r'“"::i many a wian has done hefore him, | this person would have gone bank- | health-giving 0 3 air at has Commerce, ichers In schools talked to 20,000 children and from the Herald's mecea Joy, ‘ojhp\ll‘l‘lll them on to do their bit, A total of 91,075 hours was devoted to make for a assignment of youthful hearts whe have alrcady be- | and gun at the camp. The girls veturned the proverbial “pictures with a golden tan in leaden wan and the vigor induced by taking the place of lanquor. It at time all around, as any its upon the of way new cleaning yards, sheds, attics homes, The weehs' stay their two fire department made 13,038 inspections; police ordered 300 im- provements; the street department it-lvun'.-d 320 miles of gutters and re- moved 15,000 cubic yards of sweep- ings: the park department cleaned, | raked and graded nearly 3000 acres. | Boy scouts distributed 30,000 circulars | | trom house to house. Citizens con- | tributed $580 to the campaign, while | the city expended $1,807.80, Ministers | in more than 40 churches mixed clean- | ing-up talks with their regular ser- mons. A city that can go through a clean- | ing-up turmoil in such fashion is en- | titled to the leather medal—we meant | to say silver cup. Maybe it nceds it | badly, and it is the hope of the re- mainder of New England that the Britain health,” place of to New of I¢'s the soundest kind of good ser Phone us your order now, while you think of it. The Citizens Coal Co. Uptown Office ' d 104 Arch St. Tel, 3268, the rest was a gr T was forced to trim the branches so |murder of Walter Crozier, a Glouces- thut T could at least sce ahead when |ter county farmer. The fourth was driving. To date a crow, two eagles, [ Anthony Bagdonowiz of Camden, who and seventen robins have built nests | was put to death for the slaying of in the tree—all of which goes to prove | William Bishop, a Camden jitney what a wonderful car a Ford is for the |driver. railroad stock. It has been a money. As this scemed to me quite| The four executions took place time since anybody attempted to ac- |a novel experience, 1 ‘thought your |within & period of forty minutes, Each | readers might be interested. wad carried out without unusual in- cumulate much of this brand of se- | i arl Jannsenn, |cident. curitics, but it is being done. Another Jagdonowiz, case of good guessing. The New Haven death mads a st gecurities cannot remain in the hole taking his to save his pals,” and laid % ) his wrong-doing to the spending of forever, “"‘: w “T"‘ "’]‘” "“I the [f)’“ | |ten years out of his twenty-three in hough! hem wheny they | institutions, il naturally profit. They one of them will tell, Cast-off sweaters, scarfs and rain- coats are needed; also more money, Berlin Yard Yard and Main Office opp. Berlin station Tel, 3675-5, 24 Dwight Court, Tel. 2708, | rupt, In New York been quietly buying up some interests have | New Haven long A COPFEE REVOLT Brazil has been having a revolution In Sao Paulo, one of its most import- ant provinces, but it is not due to the government that the facts newspaper before he went to his tement that “he was it, when gr ng through a range of from 10 to !5 cents a week, when I can trade in that in voluma and get in and out In u short time? The stock market today offers none of these advantages, 3 “The stock market is controlled by Brazlian are known to readers, Brazil is governed cla WIRE TAPPERS TAP American by a s, 0 sons who According to testimony at their trial were low Allen Tay- politicians and pseudo-statesimen who mistakenly think that general knowl- edge of a situation will tend to injure | s of controlling it. This efficacions their chanc has never proven where | good work done during the campaign is not allowed to slump during the remainder of the year, It is evident that more cities in New | | will make lots of money |ea'led and will be lucky. | 1t is the unforlunates who bought | these securities when they were high I in lor a year ago in search amount of had hidden far Woodbury, last Janua nd Briglia entered Crozier's home of a large money they believed he Only $12 was found. The mer was killed when he resisted. LIVERMORE'S PHON Famous Plunger Tells of Thelt of cliques who are manipulating special stocks. There is no general publie interest. I think this is due to the fact that money is cheap today. Busi- ness conditions are poer, and you England—for theit own good and the welfare of their citizens—should join |in this annual contest. New Britain | dian't hear of it until the silver cup federals shell- | | was Next when no jonal elean-up con- Private Information can't get the general public interested when they are, g *On the other hand, the grain mar. ket is at present a worldwide affair. It is so big that no man and no group of men can control it or have any in- fluence upon it. This is on account of the short erops all over the world, THE APPLE CROP Outlook for New England is Favor- able and Connecticut Orchards Are T Anthony Bagdonowiz, 23 years old, | i |of Brooklyn, was convicted with two others of the murder of William Bish- |op, Camden taxicab driver, April 13, 11923, Four men got into Bishop's car |at the Market street ferries and or- | | dered him to drive out the Burlington Pike, near Sorvel Horse, Bishop was | shot and killed. A friend accompany- {ing him was wounded and thrown to |the road and the car stolen, One of the four escaped and has never been arrested. A second, Victor Antonack, turned state’s evidence and was sentenced to fifteen years' im- | prisonment. The death sentence of a third, Manfredo Grasso, was commut- ed by the hoard of pardons to life im- prisonment because he only was 18 Mrs. Blackstone:—"Bertha boasts | yearg old, Grasso admitted firing the that she never quarrels with her hus- [f.ta) shot. The youths admitted they band.** were “out to rob." tried. The reaction usually makes [ ey, the trouble appear worse than it ac- tually is. We now know that ed the cit yof Sao Paulo, killing mll!‘ ‘ doubt another sec injuring if not thousands, | 3 test 48 started. this city should enter of innocent people who had nothing % | the list of combative centers of clean- to do with the revolution, As a re- sult the city began sympathizing and aiding the rebels, and the federals were subject to a serious setback. The causc for the Brazilian revolt ft not quite clear, but there is evi- dence that it is based upon commer=- mercial disagreements over the man- agement of the coffee industry. British financiers have invested heavily in the Shee manufacturers are endeavor- |ing to awaken a sense of shoe styles in men, and at a shoe show it is to he explained to them what to wear and when. This plan, however, does not take Into account the humoring of pet corns, New York, July 18.—Charges that private wires leading from his office in unper Fifth Avenue to the offices of several brokers have been tapped lately, were made by Jesse L. Liver- more, famous plunger of Wall street, in a statement appearing today in the New York World in which he denied rumors that he had suffered heavy losses recently in his speculations. As a result of the alleged wire tap- ping, much information of a valuable and confidential nature has been ob.'| tained by persons for whom it was not intended, Livermore asserted. He said the rumors that he had suffered awarded year, hundreds, STOOL PIGEON cen defend their ac- | tion in employing a 15-year-old boy as a stool pigcon to ferret out sup- posed liquor law violators. The father of the youth, who lives in Hartford, indignantly called at the office of the Meriden police when he heard of his A BOY Police of M | e | The new regalia for the center traf- ‘[ cop—white sides to his platform fic and a white umbrella—is indeed a symphony in white. Autoists who are | inclined to do fancy driving, instine- tively slow up to get a good eyefull, the snowy outfit thus serving a double a All's fair in love unless you prefer brunettes. About 82 per cent normal. _‘Vakefle]d. Mass, July 16.—Condi- tions up to July 1 were much 1.ore favorable than the avcrage for the ingland Crop Brazillan coftec crop, stipulating that .the outgo of coffee into the world's markets be regulated and storing mil- urpose. son's employment, but got small satis- | PP faction. The police say the youth rep- resented himself as 20 years old, and | No wonder she never has any degent Mrs, Webster:—"T"oolish woman! jewelry or funs.” —Betty Fitch, Four executions in one night estab. lishes a new record for New Jer the previous high number being two. heavy losses were laughable, “The report that I have suffered losses, particularly in American Can Co. stock,” he said, “is obviously due to certain intercsts that are trying to apple crop, the New Reporting service announced today, and 13 per cent Dbetter than last vear. The percentage of normal con- dition on July 1 by states was: Facts and Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN W reported by police to have heen | well qualified for the job. F'rom this distance it appears that | it would be difficult for a youth of 15 years to represent himself as heing a wide-awake Maine 88, New Hampshire 88, Ver- mont 87, Massachusetts 82, Rhode Island 84, Connecticut 82, all New Eingland 85.2. Earlier varieties were reported bet- ter than later ones, with Baldwin and MreIntosh mostly a moderate crop. The report pointed out that the crop “is yet subject to several unmeasured influences which may al- ter the present outlook very much. Peaches were reported a good crop in Connecticut and Rhode Island but light in Massachusetts and virtually rone in New Hampshire, this purpose. The world's greatest marKet, the United:States, was to pay the profits on the deal by paying the | prices fixed by the English mhldle- men and financiers. But the pros- perity of Sao Paulo evidently suffered greatly and the insurvection followed. Which goes to show that a majority of modern national ills are baged upon economics, Uncivilized tribes formerly fortght over choice hunting grounds; still at times fight over lions of bags of coffee In England for | | manipulate that stock. I have not lost a dollar in American Can, to say nothing of several millions. I haven't even been in American Can since last winter, when I was at Palm Beach. At that time I did have a small loss in Amerfcan Can—not more than $120,000—atter a two days' flyer in it. “I haven't been active in the stock rket now for two wecks, and I won't return to it until there is more public participation. It s nothing now but a professionally controlled market. Why should I bother with e Observations ; On The Weather Washington, July 16.—Showers and | thunderstorms probable tonight and Thursday; not much change in tem- perature; moderate southwest winds. Eastern New York: Showers and thunderstorms probablg tonight and Thursda cooler ln‘cuntral and north portions Thursday; gentle to moderate southwest winds. Conditions: A slight disturbance central over upper Michigan is caus- ing unsettled weather with local showers in the upper Mississippi val- lley and nortliern portion of the Lake region. Pleasant weather prevails his parents were in no great haste to | SChCIAILY elsewhore t‘:;"p::fl:nfifl“";‘;; AL TR {above 90 degrees yesterday in most One day, when John came dOWn 0 | 11, 005 potweon the Rocky Mountains breakfast, his head was rather tousled. |, g tne Mississippi river and a few “John Henry,” said his father, “are | giationg reported 100 degrees or over. you sure you combed your hair?’ | “congitions favor for this vicinity “Well," replied John somewhat| .. iy cloudy weather ,with cool rule some general sweeps the .:’.:h:‘-.n] combed all the heads I ,t:nis and warm during the day. ‘]\IHHH‘ 1 field ;\Cfi‘r ()IVH' wars, but U\\U’ i Clara Aiken Spear, ime it is general apathy. i g I Hear You Calling Me hear you calling me—the sad re- frain Comes to me oer and o'er and yet againg as 1 may can do hush that still, small comes from you. The Jingle-Jangle Counter At the race track talk I freely scoff; When a race is on they say “They're It oft!" cal | Opportunity knocks but once would make a darned poor poli speaker. | speaker, + —D. H. Smith, . . 20 and be credited by Employing a boy especially jail—convicts' delight; A dawn-to-dusk flier sces a lot of sacape atmight; country, but he misses the bootleggers. ~—Paul A, Ulenbe i o e Johnny was naughty school, T am told he felt, not learned, the rule, —B. Kelley. Our county They sleep all police department. for stool pigeon purposes, | the Kind of stool pigeon work demand- | d of him in Meriden, seems like golng g After a day in the sordid marts it one day in is comforting to pray or go see Jackie Coogan, a little too far. The police of Meriden may be core 1rul. in their diagnosis that the em- ployment of agents is the only method to eliminate resorts and speakeasies — +who violate the law; but that isn't the point at issue. The argument is that | a hoy was employed for the purpose, without due regurd, if any, for his | serving the police de- civilized trib business, although phrases are often given to cover up sweet-sounding 2 5 P A visitor from Mars might think the murder car one of our most popu- lar makes. * Sweetest music charms the senses; the actual motives. | Cats meow upon the fences: Gloria Swanson. The Mirrors of Home John Henry had broken the mirror in his room by bouncing a forbidden hall. The picces stayed in place, and DR. FRANK CRANE’S DAILY EDITORIAL Be Not a Door Mat By DR. FRANK CRANE Door mat is a term used to signify ®ne who lets others walk on him. It is the slang expression., Slang is the product of the vigorous imagination of the people which has not yet been sufficiently shopworn to be accepted by the “best people’— who have no imagination, p The Door Mat often takes great pride in his matness. It is the most dangerous form of pride, which is.the pride of humility, It is reversed egotism, ingrowing vanity. It calls itself hy anyone of fine names, such as Devotion, Loyalty, Self Sacrifice, Christian Character, and the like. But it is a subtle form of self deception. For in reality the Door Mat s cruel and noxious, Does the Door Mat ever think, while he is exercising his own grand and noble self-crushing, and thus developing his own moral stature, of the harm he is doing those whom he allows to step on him? He does not, Unfortunately there seems to be no provision in our religion for putting a limit to martyrdom. . And & rampant martyr in any family is a fearsome thing. Many a mother prides herself upon slaving for her daughter. 8he washes the dishes while Mamie plays the piano. She dresses dowdy while Mamie goes forth even as Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed. She chaps her hands at the washboard, breaks her nails moving the furniture and roughens her fingers sewing, while Mamie seeks the manicure. She lives the life of a scullion and chamber-maid in order that Mamic may flit from flower to flower. . And she is happy, and Mamie is miserable, She is full of patience, gentleness and goodness, in order that she may fill her precious lammy with impatience, selfishness, callonsness and extra- vagance, In all this, mother certiably thinks she is doing God's service. Is she? Is it God's service to guard 2 child from the blessing of woik, when without toil not one soul in a hundred can escape ruin? No element of happiness is more essential than self-discipline; s it any mercy to deprive the young of that, and to feed them dzaily on the poison But how can any ¥Frenchman be as calm and neutral as they expect their president to be? THL GASOLINE OUTLOOK Sounds like a hieading in a petrole- um trade paper, but Have heard gasoline? Lizaie bigger b s il ges about | Morals while 1 partment, Hopd Lo | drinking place @ been cleared out, but it was How comforting, after heing shot, Ito know itwas a dry agent and not a | highwayman, you the news that of the old-time saloon et ] e police of Meriden say hers and sisters, e yerous can The country is getting so pr that any little one-horse bank interest a bandit, Vi et siine prices will not re- | Ypeh | neces to continue the campaign W yes- Pric | trans- ary against it [ restaurants, grocery store back rooms| tenement It this purpose that the Hartford youth | was employed, after ha had told police Cery uneyen, | Me was conversant with places where | eover this season, ofl expeit terday,” breaks in liquor selling in cheap | one news report d the vit SRS were the Alice Alfred FATE TRANSF deeds of and in houses, was for | REAL L The following realty filed yesterday at the office town clery: Steve Stella and | #naidak, Smith street; John Anderson to Per Edwin and Arthur George Magnuson, Columbia street; | Barl T. Hackney, ot al. to Mary Kos- iorek, rear of High street; Istate of Marie Beh to John J. and Elizabeth Radil, Liberty street; the Bodwell [ Realty Co., to Dominick - Galati, | Lyons street and Clifton place; Ida J. | Slate to Wil J. < Wells | strect; Herman O, Schmarr to Bridget Smith, Vance and Monroe streets. portation fluid to sell for 12 cents in Rochester and 16 cents in N Y The ne rond Albany, A democracy is 4 land in which you |1 get rich and then pretend you have | ancestors to be proud of. Well, the Japs were given a fair trial in this country, and they just wouldn’t enthuse about baseball. Ba there wore five gasoline | Poisoned liquor was being sold, from Underlying | he police say is nccessary to seliing it at | it vice stutiohs which were N oy | abtain complaints or actual knowledge Try there's naught that 1 scarch and Here the stool | as de- violations before a warrant is justified. of pigrons—comes into p picted by the scheme appears unobjectionable if the Kind of is employed. The stool pigeon confirms of fol- The stool the price decline is an | ©f i To voice that industrial slump. in the mid-continent | ¥elsure | value police ents—or lots of lem which is be- There’s one good thing about politi- cal bosses, They take time to take an interest in government, petrolcum ficld, where small finiched than nine understand strength 11 T cculd only know or how you guess the within my hand, An old-timer 18 one who sighs for | Whene'er 1 look it o'er no.pair 1 see I try a bluft—I hear you “calling” me. the days when the sheik insinct made small boys pull pigtails. | it Crawford. | 19 1t alley, L and gasoline are selling for Meriden police the | Just cents a gallon ost of production person—not hoy— | right LL CRITICALLY ILL Boston, July 16.—Mrs, 1 Stewart Gardner, still critically s said today to have held the strength gained in the rally of yes- te from unconsciousness. Rela- tives have been at her bedside much of the time for the past week. threat of having the st stock regarding the sale the complaints accumulated in the you kiss your swectheart in the ! of will the mountain peak? Perhaps it would®e fairest to 1 the blocs take regular annual turns at | | cleaning the treasury. then search warrant als evidence a a rosult | Havor, the history of husines As the history lows—and o the arrests, Slick Sinpson, editor of The Daily | Buzz, reports that Artie Pulmerio was severcly bitten by a mad dog last eve- ning requiring three bottles of Con- Blable Pete Wholey's evidence to sus- | tain life until Dr. Pillem could ar-| rive. Late reporte were that Artie was still pickled, but out of danger. largest stock of liné in pigeon’s rule cannot has Accum- convict without corroboratoin. . ot Think of the agonizing suspensc the poor things endure while waiting to | see how it will look when bobbed. it down the | t spring. which « \ CURBSTONE GARAGE LAW brought | riding, helped to swel pleasure total Tank wagon prices for gasoline are Attorney Harry Ginsberg tionin | Onr national culture secms to de. on | velop rapidiy by providing more and more places where you can smoke. “The Kun Shop 1s a natioual Inst) aution_ conducted by newsnapers of of self-indulgence? a 4 the country. Contributlons from i 44 P . : readers, providing they are original. & Hf‘rt s a topic for mother's meditation; the utter Selfishness of utter anpublished, and posses sufTiclent Unselfishness, . merlt, will be pald for at rates vary- The very first thing any human being needs to learn is that only by an g from B1.00 Lo $10.00, Weite on ||| inteltigent regard for one’s self, only by keeping one’s self as strong, healthy, yout €ontributions to the “Fan Shop cn:‘r‘r!ul and self-respecting as possible, can one be of any real service to others. Bditor,” ecare of the Herald, whe will forward them to New York You can’t love your neighbor as yourself helpfully unless you love yours self understandingly. Unaccepted manuscripts will not be Copyright, 1824, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate. de- | up a point we y consider pald to be su t to fin ation, suggested the public | pending upon competition, There are | police court today when he 4,000 “cut points” e Mountains, to cut-throat forbidding More Desirable Mrs. Bank:—"Don’t you conld be neighbors to each other Mrs, Plank:—"“Oh, it's so much | nicer to be friends.” | . ~—Harry J. Williams, that the ordinance | parking of automobiles on the ast of the Rocky iy doing without things von want | you can save enough to buy finer things when you grow old and no longer care for them. sub- ) wish we where companies are {rects all night be so amended as to hours during which the and ject competition state specific sagged. Th Connecticut has e inhibition 3 As counsel for a resident inta conrt for violating Attorney Ginsberg con- where prices have duction in nominal, Ol experts declare there Marked difference in the oil situadon is in S | Correct this sentence: “Here among | the hillg" said the ad, '|r{rr£h||lb’i breczes blow all the while. who had etnrned its of Songland Quince:—~""Yes, We Have No Ba- heen hrought | the will be no ordinance,

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