New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 29, 1924, Page 6

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New Britain Herald HERALD PUBIISHING COMPANY fosued Liatly (Bunday Eacepted) AL Herald Bldg, &1 Chuseh Sireet SURSCRIPTION RATES 000 & Yer §2.00 Thise Months e & Month, Eutered at the Post Offies at New 6 a8 Becond UClass Mall Matter TELEPHONE CALLS Busiuess Ofice e Editorial Roo The eniy profitable advert! ty, reulation m aiways open to Member of The Associated Fress, The Associated Pres exclusively entitied to the use for re-publication of all bews eredited to 1t or not atherwise eredited In this paper and alse local news pubs lished herein Member Audit Bureau of Cirenlat A C, 1 & natlonal fraud in n > and both twotion against tribution figures to local advertisers, papes national The Herald Iv on sals dall York at Hotaling s Stand Bquare; Schults News siand, nd Central, 42nd Strest in New Times Entrance TROLLEY FARYS The Connpecticut compnny admits it I8 operating trolley lines in small sec- tors which are not and that the receipts from the more used to huttress the small paying expenses, important lines are the operating lines, This is one of the why the company feels it is entitled to a fare of 8 1.3 cents, which fare has been given the official O, K. of the Public Utility Commission, Why the company should operate lines that are paying their way and expect the pub- le in general to toot the bill is be- yond the logic of fair-minded com- mentators, 1t is said that small towns which enjoy trolley service which they do not value sufficiently to makc)t pay, deficits of main reasons Connectteut not want this system maintained, Seeling satisfied to have the largef® towns make it possible o give them service. The smaller towns “enjoying' trol- ley service wheh they fail to patronize In paying quantitics are a drag upon the Connecticut company«and this concern should to elimipate them, rather than insist on Pl)nt‘n\l- the service at such places. Where trolley servicé does not pay it 18 logical to install motor Dusses, seek which cap be operated more econom- | ically and would meet all the re- quirements of such communities. By insisting upon remaining in the field in poor-pn‘lng communities the Connecticut company not only injures itself, bu&nflk*m a wrong upon the car riders in the larger cities, whom it expects to pay sufficient’ more than the service is worth in order to be able to operate at a loss in the small towns. In spite of what the Public Utility Commisgion says, citizens ‘of New Britain are convinced that 8 1-3 cent fares are too high for the type of, service given by the Connecticut company in New Birtain. A\ One can ride all over New Brity ain for one fare, but who is doing-it? Most riders use cars to go from their homes to the center. 1t is safe to say that most “tokens” in NewBritain do not than ten minutes’ street car riding, and some of them less than five minutes, It is entirely beyond reason that such short rides are worth the pri charged. The jitney business is being ated upon a more logical plan; hauls from the outskirts to the cen- ter of the city cost %six cents. Their disadvantage lics in not giving trans- buy more oper- short Connecticut company eeded. But in ns out fers, which the doea—if they are street transportation nine per: of ten desire only to rde to the cen- ter of the city. 1f jitneys were per- mitted to penetrate all sections of the city pre of the Connecticut company, a tri be payment of and impose upon the fer system probably coulds ar- ranged between them by & =mall additional fee, 1t is surprising that at a time when are major of commodities on that the system prices of many 8 #trest car transportaton downward trend, Connecticut, enjoying high fares, can- but has to in bee in not woo prosperity, duige in a Bridgeport If the company junk of its losing lines in the small towns them the it be abla to a fare-raising would some end leata tor Jtneys might lower fare in the larger cities make money at THE WAY OF REVOLTS Craditable information from RBrazil fs to the effect that the coffee bhusi there by the néss revolt instigated did Tlike price- tiemen who fixing proclivities of the feder own gr n ernment is on the Only through been any The worthy chiefly richest states and a miracle could there have other auteome Brazilian " beeanse it centered in one of the richest that remarkable conntry. 8| that 1 gove Iu. dle from the fael that the dis- affecied 10 luring to their side the loeal miliva ! coffer barons suvesvded wha were a formidable bhady te hans | die papecially s the Hragillan gov ernment naturally did not to | piteh pelimell inte the revelters and wish | il innocent eitizsens at the same | time, persons whe had ne part in the rovolt and whoe merely happened to © in the affected arva, The govs| rament restrained itself in coms dable fashion and could afford to wait out a8 little onsolidafe its forees and the inevitable vietory with fghting as possible, | SEEAMSHIP DISANTERS Three ported steamship aguidents were res Herald roch Mass.| issue of the vessel hit s Hole, shore of in one yesterday Une A while en rpute to W | another hit a ledge on the Japanese viasel collided 150 Seoti, and & on The steanier Nova went rocks or with and persons | were veported drowned | Iy following the amer Toston off Point Judith | P.ooven sum- ¢l aceident to | the »t Just weak, the peril of the de the | | during the calm days of mer, | One cannot come to any other cons ain gWInK 10 emphasis | ¢lusion in these nccldents than that | poor seamanship has |10 blame, There I8 scarcely an ex- | cuse for ships to be run wpon rocks: true, it may happen with the most {eareful of seamen at the helm, but | in our day, with charts of every coust | amply indicating all danger' points, such things thould be rare. And In| the case of the Boston, which was| rammed hy a tanker, there unqunu." tionably was poor seamanship some- where, and- it is our opinion that the | trouble was the mannegy in which the | tanker was handied during a fog | while crossing the pathway of coa wise steamers. 1f advice from a landsman is of any account, here it is: Don't try to | keep up a schedule durlng a fos. n somewhat MILK BOTTLE ECONOMY 1t is learned that New Britain milk dealers are put to considerable extra cost through the non-return of milk bottles. One dealer admits he has/ been losing 83,000 a year from that source. Fut there nothing to indicate that the dealers lose the money. Such losses are part of the cost of doing business, and the public pays. Bottles from Hartford, Springfield, | | and some from New York, have ac- | cumulated in New Rritain, and how they circulate in this fashion is| something of a mystery to the milk hottle exchange. Probably auto- mobile touring has something-to do with it. But where the bottles of lo- cal dealors go to is even more of a is | mystery, Milk bottles cost money; the pub- lic could benefit itself and the trade by returning them. | BUNGLING “DEF | The War Department, with Secre- | tary of War Weeks, one of the ‘best minds" of the Harding cabinet, has bungled in the major operation of the year 1014, The War Department has been cele- brating peace the past few years by carrying on against the “pacifists,” who it appears are citi- zens who do not believe in the efficacy of warfare to cure international ills. Also, a “pacifist” {s somehody who | does not agree with the War Depart- | warfare ment, One of the minor offensives origi- nating on the sector near the Potomac chart of Ameri- been | as a “spider we n organizations which have | favorable towards peace offorts| rather than efforts to cultivate the | war spirit. This notovious chart originated in the office of Brig. Gen. Amos A. head of the chemical warfare The chart claimed the or- named were influenced IPries, | service, ganizations it from Moscow; and these were among the women's organizations red respeeted bhespattered, with the The Girls' Needlework W. C, 'T¢ U, were of Friendly | Guild of America, | the the bolshevism the the G. | mud Soclety, Ladies of A W.C A » much re. indignation naturally had add- retary AVeeks to “completely disavow' the chart ing he had the sulted that ordered R, and the destruction | WNEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD', TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1024, id I hag beon se referred to President Coolidge, in & letter lender of the epposition U was unkind 1o call it “mobilization day." probably unanare of where the name originats da) erer ce o a it veut, said |ed The United States maintains a skels eton army, and In addition eitizens te a certain number have been iden- tifled with military organizations and attend training eampe. The total s comparatively small, There is nothing that smacks of militarism in & na- tion of our size maintaining such & small military establishment It is eustomary to hold annual eamps in various states, where sol- diers identified with organizations of this kind can enjoy the benefits of training This is & necessary ad. Junct to keep them fit as soldiers of the commonwealth, By the same token, it would not be calamity if there were a general mobilization on defense ir it were done In the same spirit and with the same decorousness as aecom- panies our soldiers when they go in- to annual camp, If the War Depart ment had avoiled fighting alleged pa cifists and had gone about its duties without trumpets, the entire military establishment have gone through the motions on Sept. 12 and aroused little if any opposition, It has been the incessant baiting of persons dubbed “pacifists,” that ham aroused the spirit to fight back, the spirit to oppose, to call a halt in the plans, It is idle to suppose that thase opponents to the national defense day constitute an “insignifi- eant minority,” as one critic asserts One need only to read over the list of organizations in the “spider web"” chart to gain a contrary impression; and added to these, are the member- ships of leading churches and mil- lions of citizens, pieticularly women, who don't like the spirit of the mobilization plans, Without doubt a goodly proportion of them will let their opposition affect the way they a day, could vote in the presidential election. The president's backers may bask under the assumption that he i8 a strong candidate, but he cannot afford to an- tagonize peace-loving individuals who had - been inclined to look With faver npon the administration as a result of the disarmamént conference and the administration's protestations in favor of“the World Court. The very first announcement of a state program for defense day was made In Maryland and this. is how it read, in the Baltimore Sun, of July 15: “An enemy is coming * * With- in 12 hours after they get the signal to take the air, their ar- mies can blanket the Atlantic coast from Maine to Florida like swarms of locusts, * * The coun- try must use its mighty man- power. Its men must spring to arms by milllons. They must drive the enemy out in man-to- man combat. * * They, with the organized branches of the ‘one hig-army' Wil be asked to join in the big gesture that means, ‘Ameriea is ready.’ " The New York World, after a calm dissertation of the War Department's innovation, calls it propaganda. So far as we are concerned, we are unable to warm up for or against the proposal as yet; if it is propaganda we do not intend to be propagandized. But we are much concerned if the women of the country are insulted and maligned by public servants in the employ of the administration: And we have more confidence in the common sense and good motives of women citizens than it is possible to have in some male individuals who enjoy a short term of power and show small signs of knowing How to use it with discretion, Facts and Fancies Most of the heat prostrations are hooch prostrations. "The best platform planks are the ones that will be forgotten. FEven modern girls prefer a good ‘| provider if he can danse well is one who thinks very emall A conservative | knocking big business | business, more | of all “available copies.” But Mrs, Lucia R. Maxwell, libra- [vian in Gen. Fries’ department, said | to have compiled the chart, announc- ed according to dis- patches, that she intended to expand The original was Dearborn Inde- press yand ecopyright it published in Ford'a pendent and copied by other publica- | Rut the “spider web™ chart is only against alleged pacifist societies, all of it to no avail fare them composed A large virtnally of vomen as. sortment of Inflnential journals, s helped by Demos which in the pe- manifestations of the War to take ynd sacred ratic organs saw culinr an_opportunity a Iepublican methods of gov- canged the partment fling at ernmental adninistration, The only thing that seems at bat, | ¢ As to the World Court did you ever sec an umpire who pleased both sides? | % > EOR > < &« ' 5 ) ) instance of War Department w ar—[ wave fen't you're really talking A permanent | permanent-—ugless | about the ¢fime wave, A ilent campaign has its advan | tages, bmt it is going t6 be hard on General Dawes. To say that a candidate is a “safe"” man is to say that he won't disturb | existing grafts, helpless than a new baby is a pitcher | sagement rag You may wish to hock it after you are married adc ey A diplomatist 1s & man whe ean | make his wife belleve she is a wow in last summer's furs A cause for excitbment in 1826; “There goes & woman with long hair!" TIgnorance of the Iaw is no excuse Anyhody should be able to remember t%o million What has. become of fashioped mother whe was baby's liver would turn over? the old. rald her Another good way to cure a lame | back is to wait patiently until friend wife gets the lawn mowed, Before the nomination: “He won't do." After the nomination: “He is the | candidate and I shall support Correct this sentence: “Billy and I are pals” sald the wife; “and he en- joys taking me everywhere he goes, THE CARROT-TOPPED GIRL (By Anne Zuker) . .o 1 got red hair, 1 hate the stuff! My sister's is a yellow fluff, Ugh—what luck! I've freckles, too. Do 1 love pink? I guess I do! And always have to just wear blue Or lavender or sickly green, I want a ca Just like of scarlet, too, ngs to Sister Prue, | 7|1t would look rare with flame-red hair. | I got red hair and I'm a girl, it's stringy straight, it just won't curl. Now is that fair when I'm a girl? And “CarrotsTop!” My coflin Jim Says that old name's as bad for him. He can't know how it hurts a girl. Sometimes folks say they love red hair, It's wonderful and they'd not care If it was theirs. What a whopper! Those folks I hope don't mean a lie, But you can guess with just one try From what they've said their hair's not red! Too Proper! Miss Bweet:—"Are you familiar with Mark Twain, dearie?” Miss Highbrow:—"Why, the idea! I am never familiar with anybody!” ~—Edward H. Dreschnack. Truthfully Told I the world my wife is keen."” “Absolutely. The' minister's wife called on her one afternoon while I was in ther attic experimenting with a new recipe, and she said to my wife that she hoped that I wasW't of the godless sort who'd try to get around the dry laws, in any way, and my wife promptly assured her that I was above doing such a thing!" —Louts Schneider. A “Banker's”-Privilege Mrs. Brown:—"Your husband goes swimming pretty often, doesn’'t he?” Mrs. Jones:—*Oh, yes! You can find him In a pool-room almost every day." —Robert Bellot. Painting 11\\ngs red at night some- times develops the blues next morn. ing. - - B Rare Magazine editor:—''There's no sex | appeal-in this story. Author:—"But you told me you wanted something new, original, dif- | ferent."” —Robert Hage. Hide and Sneak Outside the boys are gathered Excitement’s high, you bet, While Johnny hides from mother, And smokes his cigarette. Inside the women gather Sxcitement's higher yet, While mother hides from Johnny And smokes her cigarette. ~Peter Pung. Mary Had a Little— Mary's mother calne suddenly into the room, and found her little year old daughter vigorously slapping her mouth, i) “Why Mary, what's the matter!"” asked her mother. "“Why are you glapping your mouth so?" “Darn thing won't whistle!/” answer- ed Mary. s | —Ruth Pinkham. } Perzonal Traits Explained | A telling persorality— The village gossip. | A personality that counts— | The bank teller. | Engaging manners—— The kind that lead to engagements {Earmarks of a Yady—— Her diamond earrings. L heartily sorry dat yo' has been de vie. i of a mistakenship, but yo' has misunderstond de methed ob which pastors is pald, We ovide you wid ntern and twe gunny sacks. and den yo' sellecks dat salary yo'self." ==Paul #impson, Superfluons = rother Washington Lincoln John. son," said Parson Williams, “kain't yo' all donate some small contribution t' de fupd fo' fencin' In our ceme. tery 1" “1 dunno as 1 kain, Pahson, 1 don' 886 no use in a fenee aroun' no cemes tary, Them what's in cahn't git out, them what's out doan' wanta git . —George I, Paul, Circulating Library (being shown through the What's happened to your Kriss “It's circulating among my . A, Bisbee, THE BEVEN AGES OF NAMES (As applled to man), At § years—Johnnie, At 10 yea Jack Brown, At 20 y#firs—J, Dillingham Brown, At 30 years—John Dillingham Brown, At 40 years—John D, Brown, At 80 years—J, I, Brown, At 75 Years—Old Man Brown, ~Lewls H, Kilpatrick, One of the .nmates of a Louisiana asylum planned a long time to escape, He finally got a chance to scale the walls when a painter left a ladder resting against the locked gate, He leaped, landed on his feet, and then went to the front door and rang the bell. When the superintendent opened the door the patient said, smiling: “Doggone it, 1 forgot my hat!" ~—Calvert G. Smith, The man who slips on a banana peel is llke the man who buys wildcat stock—the drop is unexpected. (Copyright 1924, Reproduction forbidden). ‘The ¥un Bhop 18 & national insti- sution conducted by news ! the country. Contributio: from ers, providing they are original, published, and posses sufficient merit, will be pald for at ng. varye ing from $1.00 to $10.00. rite on one side of the paper only and send your contributions to the “Fun 8hop Editor,”” care of the Herald, who will forward them to New York. Unaccepted manuscripts will mot be returned. - 2855080880085 5090888080080 25 Years Ago Today (Taken trom llerald ot that date; One of the local merchants dis- posed of over 50 bicycle lanterns to- day, All of the dealers are well stock- ed with bicycle sundries and a big trade is expected tomorrow night and next Monday. After the rain yesterday Whiting street, between South Main and Maple streets, was'a sca of mud., There s no macadam on the street which is little better than a series of gullies and dirt hills. It is understood the residents of the neighborhood will shorly petition for a macadam road. A ridge has been worn in the as- phalt between the tracks on Main street by the motors of the cars scrap- ing against the pavement. “The as- phalt s too high” remarked a motor- man last night. Quoth a well known politician *“The motors are too low."” The Curtin family left for Block Island otday, They will spend the month of August there, What was thought would develop into a tornado started about 4:30 o'cloek yesterday afternoon and, it looked for a few minutes as though the town would blow over. Outside of trees beingiblown down and a few awnings ripped off the damage was nominal. oy Observations On The Weathér Washington, July 29.—Il%recast for Southern New England: Unsettled tonight, ‘showers in east and south portions; Wednesday fair; not much change in temperature; fresh, possibly strong, northeast shifting to north- west winds, Forecast for Lastern New York: Fair in north; unsettled in south por- tion tonight; Wednesday fair; slightly warmer; fresh northeast shifting to northwest winds, Conditions: The western area of low pressure is moving slowly east- ward and is now central over North Dakota, It is causing unsettled showery weather from Montana east- ward to upper Michigan and as far south as Kansas. Another low pres- sure area is off the North Carolina coast, Pleasant weather prevails generally this morning east of the Mississippi river, The temperature is considerably above normal in western and central sections., Several places yesterday reported tempera- tures of 100 degrees. Conditions- favor for this vicinity fair followed by unsettied weather, MAY BE WORCESTER MAN. Body Found Off Lincoln, R. 1, is Partially Identified. |19 at ease— i | Comfortably sick and reclining in bed. A disagreeable personality-— One who happens to differ with you. The stamp of a gentieman— | When he puts his foot down | A maid of winsome ways— The ways to win some man. —George W. Lyon. | H Cafeterin Style | “Breddern and sistern,” said | pastor sadly, surveying his dark floc Lincoln, R. L, July 20.—The body of a middle aged man found last night in Stump Hill pond was thought to be that of Robert Findley of Worces- ter. An identification card in a ! pocket gave an address of 113 Pleas- ant street, Worcester. The name was Ladly blurred. Medical Examiner Marshall sald that the body bad been in the water for several days and gave a verdist of death by drowning. Worcester, Mass, July —Mrs. l DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL The Smotherers By DR, FRANK CRAN | The trouble with the egotist is th More marriages have cause No one can continued sistain a heen wreeked by smotherers than by any of at he smothars you ’ intimacy unless he allows the other party to that intimaey a certain amount of independence The instinet for personal expressie iy, for a deep resentment A recent writer tells of a man twelve years of faithful married life wife and children throug night and that he eould “A fine eoereed him Lt bear it, was self.preservation own eonformity, He would beve left her'" Singularly enough, some of sald: our the carter's or hlacksmith's wife very It a husband or a wife makes the satiafaction, porfect nelf-giving, independence, There can And if there is an effort ‘The eventuation is not harmony, but By and by there is & con putting a premium upon deception, AUTO DRIVER FINED $100 Jeremiah J, Coffey in Police Court After His Machine Collides With North End Trolley Car. Jeremiah J. Coffey of 87 Tremont street was fined $100 and costs when arraigned before Judge B, Alling In police court this mornipg on a charge of driving an automobile while under the influence of liquor, He was ar- rested shortly before 6 o'clock last evening by Policeman George Moffitt at the corner of Main and Lafayette streets, The arrest was caused by an accident in which Coffey's machine struck a Francls street trolley. A short time before Coffey was arrested the police recelved a complaint from George Cadwell of 77 Harrison street that his &utomobile had been struck by another machine on Main street at the intersection of Commercial street, It was learned that Coffey's machine was the one that struck Cadwell's and while a search was being made for him he figured in the sec- ond accident which brought about his arrest, Joseph Sakalauskas was arrested on Stanley street near the entrance to St. Mary's playground last night by Po- liceman Patrick O'Mara on a charge of reckless driving. In court this morning he was fined $25 and costs, According to testimony presented the accused man, in passing another ma- chine, struck an automobile dfiven by Michael Connors of Elm street, It was said that Sakalauskas was driving 25 miles an hour. WANT CONFIDENCE VOTE French Government Likely To Ask London Conference By The Assoclated Press, Paris, July 29.—Premier Herriot's statement to parilament on the prog- ress of the inter-allied conference in London will be given this afternoon in the form of a telegram to the*minis- ters, and will be read in both houses. The report,” consisting of two type- written pages, was received today and was examined and approved at a cab- inet meeting. The cabinet in discussing the condi- tions reached the conclusion that the government probably would want a vote of confidence upon the London negotiations, and parliament, after passing urgent legislation, is expected to adjourn until M. Herriot returns, when he will appear before the cham- ber and senate to justify his decision in connection with the Dawes repara- tion plan. " 10BAGCO SHEDS BURN —tepe Buildings on Marshall-Phelps Farm in Poquonock Destagpyed in $10,000 Fire of Unknewn Origin. Windsor, Conn.,- July ~—1'ive buildings on the Marshall-Phelps farm in Poquonock were destroyed by fire last night, the damage being estimated at between $10,000 and Wheever treads upen that instinet back 10 his setting Crime is often a common impulse, magnified and s He was escaping from a supplementary pleture of *Your Honor, if she only had hit excuse for divorce, but not smotheration, For Endorsement of Work Done At ! is one of the deepest of our human. and denies it has laid the ground who was arvested for desertien after “He said that he had been coming home as usual, that he had seen his the window, that he had seen them there ry but he conveyed a lespon ained, and his impulse me, 1 never laws make violenee and brutality It is well known, hgwever, that eagily puts up with an oceasional heat. ing, but It is difficult for the duchess to live with an egotist partner but a reflex of himaelf or her- self, and of his or her ideas, it may make for eonformity but hardly for It is a diffienlt thing to see, that perfect unity is Impossible without be no sinecere unity without deliberats on the part of one to make the other conform In every way to his wishes and his ideals, the result is smotheration, disharmony, Nt effort to evade what eannot be argued with, Whoever will not tolerate anything but his own ideals and convictions 1s Submission, or self-giving, must he entirely voluntary to he worth while, Copyright, 1824, by The McClure Newspaper Syndicate, ——————————————————————————————————— $12,000, Barns, tobacco sheds and other buildings were burned, one of the barne’ containing a large amount of hay and farming imple. ments, Thé sparks from the fire were carried half a mile to the farm of John A. Dubon, where tobacco sheds caught fire but were saved, the Joss there belng estimated at $£200, Other sparke were carried into the woods moré than a mile away, where a serious fire was rag- ing last night. Fire wardens from Windsor and Windsor Locks, alded by a large gang of men, are fight- ing the blaze in the woods, Sev- . eral buildings are near the woods, but it s believed that these will not be burned as the fire has been driv- en towards the swamps. The origin of the known, HUGHES ADDRESSES FRENCH LAWYERS Thanks Them for Hospitality Toward Americans fire is un- By The Assoclated Press, Paris, July 29.—Lawyers whose diplomas are seal “by an authority of conscience which is higher than that of any government” must furnish the leadership for the democracies of the world for “if we are true to our pro- fession, we ate apostles of progress,” Secretary of State Hughes declared at the reception of the Paris Bar associ- ation to the American lawyers who are visiting Paris, Mr. Hughes, as president of the | Amerfcan Bar assoclation, thanked the French bar for their invitation to th& American lawyers and for their | hospitality to them., Speaking as a lawyer to lawyers, he emphasized the need of democracy of “the expert service of lawyers of broad vision, of those who are trained in the law but are neither over- whelmed by their learning nor govern- ed by its technicalities.” “Our systema of law arg -unlike in some respects,” Mr. Hughés told his French colleagues. “Our methods of administration present certain strik- ing diffedences but our sense of unity of purpose is so profound that these differences merely excite sympathy, interest and a desire to understand their historic cause and effects.” Commenting on how much alike were the results attained by different prosesses, Secretary Hughes declared: | “Tn what is fundgmental—our cencep- tions of what one ought to enjoy, what one owes to his neighbor, and what constitutes social wrong and essential publie justice—we are very much the same, “Your methods of trials are not like ours but in our controlling thought, we erect substantially the same stand- ards of gullt. According to our re- spective fashions, we pronounce in similar judgments. We come to wor- ship with you In the invisible temple of justice, that great edifice which represents the best thoughts of all peoples of all times," Pony Hero Saved From Disgrace Rex, world's greatest pony hero, has not been forgotten in cities of his time of need. His five owners, members of a rescue party with a fa full of woe, “when 1 '|')l\\ Hie Leggart of 113 Pleasant street took this congr'gation, | was promised Neald late last night that the deserip- | f ¢, Fhie ” ;W tio 0 -] i 31 2 2 . . : 2 e B o Ay B ey s oot et o 1o Stump HU that freed him from his prison in the New mine near Bicknell, poundin’ de seriptures for two months, | Robert Findley who roomed at her| Ind,, a year ago, sneceeded in-borrowing enouglf money to pay and now 1 wishes to ax—whar is dem | home, but who left for a visit to rel-| his board' bill just before he was to have been sold at auction to | chickens?" atives in Rhode Tsland last ¥riday. | gatisfy the debt. For four days the warmth of his body kept. his ! There was a long silence. rhe woman eaid Mr. Vindles had |y, an companions alive at the bottom of the shaft after they Then a gaunt deacon arose, and |Deen in poor health for several years. Leaids " Resrend Jonce, we is mos | He was employed as a boiler setter, | had been imprisoned by a fall of earth. city to feel the ‘ging of a to its ans For the rebels to have seized a department - The man who howls the loudest about the way the country is rum sel- dom has time t§ vote. the size and importance of Sao Paulo ! tremendous ogposition and held 0 enough to place the Brazilian revolt | This “defense day” idea was to be far above the class of South | the leadng military event of the Think how vexed the boxed speeder American disturbances that 12. Jtould be if he knew how slonly the and was to take placesSept. ¢ Sreveh earse 5, gesularly as the seas . and Navy Jour- The revolt Ya8 more it for even a week, was | for a Hed “defense | puny come as A { nal characterized it as year, writef ik the Army dificutt mobilization * Chopse & perfect stone for her en- to . e il b e s s et b s

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