New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 19, 1924, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

New Britain Herald HERALL PUMLISHING COMPANY e Biieek Iasued Da Hernid 8l Ll . SUBSCRIPTION RATES. 0500 & Yeur 0o Monthe hiee Month, Eotered ot the Post Ofice at New Bilialn scond Olase Mall Matier PELEPHONE CALLS Busiuess Ofice Editorial R Fhe only profitable advert diym o Ot Clreulation and piess always open te sdvertisers. et of The Assoriated § The Assn 1o the use for eredited 1o W o1 I this paper and also local news pub Iished hereln. enn o Cirouliti a Member Audit The A B, C which furnishes newspa tisess with a strictly hov eirculation. Our cireulation statietics based upon this audit. ‘This neures pro tection against fraud In uewspaper d tribution figures to hoth national and local advertisers, n New Times Entrance 1 on sale daily News Stand Stand, L) otaling Schuits ) 42n. The ork At Square; Grand Cy —————————————————— NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, AUGUSI few it thighs in general, He as well as smoking | Henry Ford 1ot fy & at said coffee and tea drinking eliminated the ould he AR system evideatly human system with a he | comparing the But he coffes, be eliminated by law fivver think tea and tobacce would node of theught common sense would hring about the reform. The party in the woods should he & felightiul affair way these mags | nates of industry and polities play is a §ood example 10 Us MINOT MAgNALes The who don't play often and well enough | Perhapa if we did we wouldn't need 80 muech stimulation with coffee, lea | and the embraces of Lady Nicotine, | THE PRESIDENT'S VACATION It is to be hoped that President Coolidge, spending & two weeks' vacas | tlon In Vermont, to his de- termination to' enjoy “a complete rest,” The home of the elder Coolidge in Plymouth is far enough removed from the rallroad and the main routes sticks of travel to Insure a maximum of quiet | comfort and restful enjoyment, The nation has become convinced that our presidents are forced to attend 10 too much detall, There are no avail. able reports as to how President AN OUTSIDE AUDIT | Gov. Templeton is to be commended in his efforts to get at the basic facts underlying the state's finanees without | fear or faver; and s to be com-| mended for his desire to obtain New York and Boston auditors to go | over the state's books. | An audit by a New York or Bos- | ton firm will disarm critics who may doubt any other kind of audit even though it is just as good, The claim of Edward M. Yeomans, Democratic state central commlittee chairman, that outside auditors are to be employed® for purposes of “cov- ering up graft and incompetency,” seems to have been made without due consideration. The governor does not peflect upon the integrity of the state auditors, but senses the opinion of citi- zens correctly when he says an audit by a large firm of unimpeachable reputation will inspire public confl- | dence. ONE TERM ENOUGH? Gov. Templeton® has again read himselt from consideration candidate to succeed himself to the governorship. It is not the first time he has done so. This latest effort took place at Lake Quassapaug and is re- ported to have greatly surprised mem- bers of the town committee and other guests at the outing where the gov- ernor let fly his remarks. At the same time the governor named his preference as his succes- sor. Senator Ralph French of Thomas- ton, the governor said, has all the | gualifications. This looks reasonable. There are plenty of stalwarts in the state who are qualified for the job, but the method of selection is such that their qualifications will not get much of a hearing by the powers-to- be who intend to make the selection. The governor said he was “proud | of his record” as the chief magistrate of the state. Most governors are. He added he did the best he knew how. | He had opportunities to throw the proverbial monkey wrench into the state machine but upon some such occasions his arms became paralyzed. Nutmeggers will agree or disagree. with the governor about the record after they know more about it. as a| COOLIDGE, FORD AND EDISO | News item from Plymouth, Vi, paper: “Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, and Harvey Firestone stopped at the Coolidge farm residence and visit- | ed Mr, and Mrs, Calvin Coolidge. A | good time was had by all” Ford, who has just turned down an | {nvitation by the Michigan Republi- | can organization to run against Sen- ator Couzens, and Wwho was an easy- | running candidate against Senator Newberry o before the latter was thrown out of the scnate, ought to be able to talk entertainingly with the about the various and | president The sundry political man who said history is bunk appar- ently thinks politics as far as he is | concerned likewise is the bunk, juds- | developments. *"ing by his aversion to getting into it further than the tips of his toes, May- be he is wise. But he is strongly for | the president and the latter, including the entire Republican party, nowadays Iord as an srongly for und-minded eitizen geems to be able and the Republic few en 1 party organs, which a years ago ridiculed the motor magnate are yw exercising astonish- | ing restraint, and whenever his name §5 mentioned it is to surround it with fefer that bLefits a ered great man. nks pretty much vith H. Ford, But lways been 014 Tom Edisor unlike the same Henr considered as a great Americar fired Am het , Tom has a Tom the imagination of s most of his inventions om had fnvented at a time when Henry was buggics We gasoline tinkering with puny on the strcets of Detroit have tead’ about a great many ideas on varlous subjects projected by Tom famous, and improssed us Edison since he bocame those ideas having to with me- chanical inventions have mightily. Before taking to the Vermont wood @2 visit the presidemtial front porch | |in the history of the science. Coolldge is bearing up under the avalanche of work since he has assum- ed oMce; his health appears to remain good and there have been no reports of the effects of straining to encom- pass the manifold duties of the oftice. It is belloved Coolidge is the type of man who knows how to stop and call it & day when the time for stopping has arriv and what is not complet- ed one day will have to go aver to the next; and if details accumulate, per- | haps some of them are found of a type that can be looked after by othe The correspondents are in Ply-| mouth, but these can hardly interfere | with the perfect rest desired. They probably also will do some resting up, but if the president starts pitching hay or hegins to help his venerable father | in looking after the farm work, one may be sure that entertalning stories will be “placed on the wire."” The president has time to ruminate | upon the prospects during the forth- coming campaign; and when he thusly ruminates, it i probable that he will | not keep his mind altogether concen- | trated upon the Coolidge crops. MOTOR LICENSE! The motor vehical department of Massachusetts reports its belief that there are 20,000 persons operating automobiles in the Bay States without | having obtained operators’ licenses. They are: not found out unless they figure in an accident. Many of them | are discovered in this manner, but | the total is Howhere néhr 20,000, 0 it is to be assumed that the majority | of illegal drivers don't figure in acei- dents—or haven't as yet. What conditions ave in Connecticut can only be surmised. It is probable that a large number of automobiles on our roads are driven by persons with- out licenses, although compared with | those who ha¥e complied with the law it probably is a small percentage, In some states operators’ licenses are not required to this day: Drivers | from such states, were they to tour in Connecticut, would operate without operators’ licenses. There probably are plenty such touring the state, but it appears they seldom figure in acci- dents. As a matter of fact, merely ob- taining an operators’ license is no guarantee of heing able to avoid an aceldent, as the statistics abundantly show. It is apparent that in many instances the examinations supposed {o be required for obtalning such license are a farce. A PEEP AT MARS An epoch in astronomy will take place Saturday. Mars will be closer to the carth on that day than it lias been in two centuries, Ever scope will be lavelled at it, and every astronomer hopes to sccure such a “elose-up” as has never been obtained For it must be remembered that two cen- turies ago, when Mars scared millions of people by its red epaiilet in the heavens, the modes of protruding watching its surface were crude; most of our astronomical lenses have been perfected to their present perfection during the past 50 ye Chief interest, to Percival Lowell's claim that Mars of course, attaches A by a series of wonderful osensibly bring is trave canals, which if they exist, wera constructed in order to moisture from the polar snow and ice caps to those portions of the planet needing it. Other astronomers claim Mars has no such “canals;” yet that nearly all confirmed the phenomena. claimed the elaim they tronomers have be Some a might geological cracks in t planct’s surface; A some of the canals were paral- they stats ich would not indicate ologic origin. | Iy certainty about our knowl- | edge of Mars is that if there are “pco- ple™ living they cannot be of similar | struct astronomer has said it would be talk- ure to those on the earth. One | ing with a fish's mind il we conclude that life is not possible on Mars merely because the is twice as rare as it is on top n(‘“,," of th Mount Everest, or one-geventh as rare | pupjjcan party, especially i an the surface of the 10Wer |4 is said vth. It is clumed | made the political sitvation plain 10| gyeiled up about her job. as it portiens of the avallable tele- | | | | others then | | | i epinions | that life eould adapt itself to suc human | Martians | Phere is toa much earben in | times Y revified atmosphere I ealculaled that the ¥ a8 we of the earth and hag been if they exist, would be three large eeuld lint times as mueh, due to the differences of atmespherie pres many was not inelined 1o | sure and gravitation, If this were the | ease planitary canal digging would be aceording to his | | now, | | | | ‘('flnlidg" of Prof. Lowell's assistants | simplified, without machinery, On (he other hand, this is ne guaran- the eanal even tee of high intelligence; diggers may merely be large animals with the instinets of anis ologie and other developments on the surface of Mars might have been entively different than on our own planet, 1f the development was somes what similar, It is believed Mars today 18 & dying or dead planet, whieh was capable of sustaining some forms of life much greatly antedating that on which has nearly run of Murs our earth and its course, What we Know today-—and we may know a great deal more by next week-—would indicate, aceording to astronomers, that it lacks an of water enormous deserts, The heat at times must be much more intense that we abundance | know it even in tropical regions, and ws much colder than the At other times gr I8 experienced earth, A human being could not s; but for that matter, & Wg cannot live in the water, which Consideration of all, anywhere upon live, on M human b teams with life, available data seems to indicate that some sort of life may exist upon the planet, but that there s intelligent life comparabe/ with that of man s un- llkely. Yet, one never can tell-—we are far from the planet, and even on Sat. urday won't he close enough to de- cide all of what is left largely to the fmagination. Thia celestial enigma on the southern horizon This week the ball of fire is only 30 . Through one of the big will the solar system's biggest thriller just Thousands of photographs will be taken through telescopes and what week will be discussed sunset, may at miles away telescopes it millions of be we learn tl for generations to come, DISPERSI THE NEGRO VOTE The disposition of the negro this coming election is causing some concern. been considerable migration of negroes trom the south to northern states; and whereas in the south oply a portion of the colored vote is permitted to exercise its constitutional rights at the | ballot boxes, in the north there are no restrictions and these newcomers will have something vital to say in some of the states. In the 21st district in New York there it is an intention to run a negro for congress, a move which has received the emphatic 0. K. of President Coolidge. 1f all the negroes voted the Re- publican ticket in the northern states the matter would be simplified for the | Republican party and weuld give the Coolidge and Dawes ticket a decided advantage. But the faet is that they do not all vote the G. O. P. ticket. The younger generation of negro voters are not of the same mind as the older generation, which when it got a chance voted Republican, mostly in memory of Abraham Lincoln. It must be remembered that the congressional elections of 1922 with their declded swing away from the came at a time Republican party, to the when the colored migration north had niready taken place. Tt is stated that the cities of New York, Chicago, Indianapolis, Louisville, jumbus and Cleveland wers put under Demogratic control aided in part by colored There are 30,000 negroes in Massachusctls, and Boston, where a large population of them live, {s an overwhelmingly Democratic city. ains in Boston are of the colored voters. Democratic’ ehieft certain.a large block voters will line up with their party. voters in the north aided the doubtful states In 1 for this aid, Jeaders say, Willlam Howard chief justice, advocated to Colored the Republican party in 920, In return colored Taft, now President jon in political relationship with and scarcely any ir assistance resulted The new attitude of Harding a new status and condit the colored vgte recognition of thei in Washington. the Republican by President Harding in his Birming- ham, Ala., speech, which did much to alleviate the colored vote, Harding said {here was an “inescapable difference” betwen thetwo races. But shortly be- his death this attitude changed, and he nominated Walter H. Cohen, colored, comptroller of customs at The senate refused to After ty was announced fore h New Orleans. confirm the nomination twice, President Harding's death, President the senate, where it was confirmed by a close margin. major colored appointment party in power throughout the entire fact that This has ben the only by the administration, despite the advent of the Harding ad- with the overwhelming Re- ministration publican majority arrived in congress, ) somewhat reduced. All have received for their epubli- an but since ther the negrocs previous affiliation with the cans has been that the anti-lynching pill and several other bills in which were 10 | they were interested failed of passage. The history of politics the past four atmosphere | voqrg has alienated a large propor- e negro vote from the Re- n the north, Negro group leaders have and ha | seen | vote | As is well known, there hfls‘ Co- | again sent Cohen's name to | | thelr follawers, and wherever negrees the nerth Deme the | have migrated in | eratie leaders mo longer dread | | potential voling strength of the news the comers as ecertain to accessions | Republican party |" The | doubtful states is as follows | York, 125,000; New Pennsylvania, 87,365; 215,000 Indiana, 135,000; Tlinois, 103,280; Kentueky, 102,660; West Virginia, 10, | 620, impertant New $0,800; negro vote in the Jersey, Ohio. delivered en | normal conditions | But eondls ir it under This vole, were | bloe, would form a balance of power, tions being as they ave, it is safe to | assume 1t will he at least divided | ! among the major parties in the large eities, especially sineg 1022, It scems to be leaning toward the Democrats. | Whether it will lean this way in the { national election remains te be seen, If anything, the negro vote in the northern states is quite independent, | favoring the party that s likely to be most to its advanutage, “There are about 12,000 negroes In Connectieut, not recent newcomers, {and they are expected to vote with more independence than formerly, al- ,llmuxh they are still claimed safely | tor the G, O, P, 7,000,000 NEW VOTE Seven million new voters are quali- fied to cast their first ballots this year. This estimate is based on the census | of 1920 and indicates that number of | porsons have come to voting age be- tween 1920 and 1024, | What difterence this may make ls | indicated hy the fact that in New | York the margin between the success- ful and unsuccessful candidate usual- Iy is around 160,000 votes; yet in that state 660,000 new voters can cast thelr hallots this year. Ohio has 374,000 new voters which is | four times the average Ohio plurali- ty; Massachusetts has 289,000, How will the G, O. P. of 1924 ap-| or Davis peal to these newcomers; and Bryan? or La Folletie with his third ticket? | Youth will he served, Tt usually Is| more indcpendent in thought and ac- tion than veterans at the polls. And the more youlh refuses to affiliate it- welf with party machines, preferring lo‘ withhold its stamp of approval ex- cept where such approval is earned by deeds and reasonable promises, the better they will serve the welfare of their country. Facts and Fancies BY RUBER? QUILLEN | The hoat-rocker knows he is safe. | You can't sink a head like that. A provincial is any man who yearns ! to see the Yanks lose the pennant. Once there was a man who money without marrying a Fable: Imarrim.l | boss. Men are funny, When they make a call they are glad to find somebody in, The few Bathing is safer this year. twelve remaining sea serpents are miles out. | The high priced alienist simply | thinks up harder words for the word | | “crazy.” | | Perhaps a modern girl shouldn't tell her mother everything. The dear old things are sa charming in their present innocence. Our idea of a he-man is one who drops a long fiy and doesn't limp as an alibi, A general practitioner is a fupny bird, He cari do it without the assfst- ance of three nurses. Another thing this country needs is a league of bald-headed men to resist jokes about them. People don’t drink enough water. Note to composing room: Please don't erase the word “water. Diligent gearch has yet to reveal any form of virtue that will cause a severe headache, About the only liberty a man howls for 1s the liherty to do sothething he shouldn't do. Well, when at last Ford has all the money we can use Kord parts as a medium of exchange. An old-timer is one whe can re- member when affixing 2 patch was a delicate art. 1t sy to pick the fellow whose father jerked a forclock. He is ar- rogant and overbearing. No man is a complete failure. At the last he.can be a chamber maid in his wife's boarding house. The way to tell & bandit from a dry agent is that the bandit doesn't al- ways shoot when you run. Daughter says woman is more than | man’s equal when it comes to being | v#ay, | country where 19, 1924, RESCOUE (By R, E. Alexander) Mister, that's my deg—that's Spet! Naw, he ain't mad=he jus'=jus' Look at that, He's got somewheres—mayhe twe; ‘Cause he's some dog, 1 tell y'=—Say, You let my dog go, right away! jus' ean't lake Spet! I raised him from & Bay, lis'n—yo Why, pup=— I'm all th' relytive he You watch him when An' be Hee that? lands, aln't hands! ot Ay ‘Set up —My good all-—Hi shake That Spot, I gucss you'll let me have him now! He ain't no ‘just & dog'—he's mine. Ain't ¥ Bpot, ol' boy? (Bo wow!) He answers like that ev'ry time! It y' take him, you'll take me, t An' you'll see what my Pop'll de! Bay, what's he want a muzsle f'r? 1 told y' he never gits mad, Look at him wag his tail! No, sir Y' got t' let him go—he's had Th' mange, feas—Look! Behind y', man! Quick Spot! y' can!" Yaay! Ketch us if Devilish Ingenuity Satan (to new arrival):—"Well, is it warm enough for you?" Renlistic “Don’t you just love those slow mo- tion pictures of horse races?" “No, they remind me too much of bet on,” the horses 1 alway His Ability “Say, looky here!” eommanded Con- stable Sam T, Slackputter, the guardian of the peace and dignity of Petunia. “You move on now, and don't be making a crowd on the side walk!" fuh!" returned & eitizen who had previously incurred the enmity of the sleuth, “What in tunkett is the matter with you? One person ain't a crowd!" Song of a Sunday Dinuner Chicken (as man approaeies with axe) Backward, turn backward, O Time in thy flight— Make me an cgg sgain Just for tonight! —Joseph G. Taylor. She Was No Jewel “Toygh luck, old man, I heard all about the breaking off pf your engage- ment to Pearl. What was the trouble, though, Reggie—the dlamond?” “Ne,” sighed Reggie, "I guess the diamond was all right.” “Phen was it Pearl's fault?” asked his friend, “No,” said Reggie, glumly. “Neither Pearl ner the dlamond?” “Naw,” said Reggie, with disgust, “it was the mother-of-pearl!” —John Tranter. A Hard Course Agric. student:—"My eourse in agri- culture is very hard.” Engineering student:—'"What's hard about it?” Agric, student:—"We have to cover 80 much ground.” 0 ~—Al Sheehan, ightenment Barnum:—'"The movies are gtill in their infancy Bailey: 'hat acceunts for the number of bables that were crylng around me in the theater last night.” —L. B. Birdsall, The Jingle-Jangle Counter Banks have money out on loan; Dogs are thankful for a "bone." -—N. M. Levy. All that glitters is not copper; If she talks, a kiss will stopper. —Pearl A. Frueh. . . When my girl writes a heart's all aflutter, I read it so fast that my eyes fairly stutter. . letter my Aemac. .. . A big sharp rock in a country road: Said the inner tube: “Well I'll be blowed. Herbert Prestwood. he Green Flame The follo g incident, reports A. J. M. took place in the Peace River the hush fires have been very bad this summer. Our correspondent dropped in on Mr. V,, and casually asked him where his hired man was, “He's out fighting the fire,” answered Mr. V. Knowing that the man was just over from the other side of the pond, A. J. M. asked him if he thought he was safe, and in no danger of being burn- ed. “Laws no!” was the reply. "He's too darn green to burn.' Empty Headed Clarence (boastingly:—"1 gay what 1 think!” Winnie (sweetly):;—"Is that why you've been so quiet all evening?" —Edward H. Dreschnack. always He Died With His Boots On The great humorist lay dying. His face was pale; his breath came in pro- testing gasps; his pulse fluttered. The famous specialists cast significant’ glances between themselves. “There's—no hope?” he asked then. Their heads shook, sadly and is unigon: “No hope.” The great humorist beckoned to me. “Jim, old boy,” he whispered in my car, “bring me—my—shoes, pleas 1 carried them to the dying man's side. Weakly he thrust his-feet from beneath the covers. “put them on for me,” he begged, growing visibly weaker from the effort of speech. 1 saw that the end was near. To humor him, I drew the shoes over his feet. He lay back, satisfied. He.who would enjoy power must shoulder TRUST CO RIT pi WERITAIK THE _BANK OF SER By Unable to restrain my curlosity, even in the presence of death, 1 asked him: “Why did you have mg do tha 'S0 I won't stub my toes when 1 kick the bucket,” the great humorist smilingly replied, Then, with a quiver, he dled, Truly, he died with his boots on. ~—R, Carmen Davis. n Anyone Guess What Happened (o Pat “I tound something of yours today, Doris,” said baby Patty, “I'll get it.” Doris was entertaining her best beau and did not answer, Presently Patty returned, saying: “Bee, Doris, I found one of your corn plasters.” ~Mrs. Paul C. Welch. She Rose For 1t She rose on the surf, and smiling she sank, A vision of bliss; 1 feared for her life as I stood on the bank, She rose on the surf, she sank, She wanted a buoy—no harm to be frank. My life-line ami; She rose on the surf, and smiling she sank Till I threw her a Kiss. ~—George W. Lyen. Bobby (overcome in the woodshed): —"No more smoking for me, I'm sick of it.” (Copyright 1924. Reproduction ferbidden). —_———— “The Kun 8hop 13 a aat ation conducted by newspa; the gountry, Contributions from readery, providing they are uriginal, unpublished, and posees wufficient merlt, will be paid for at rates vary- g from $1.00 to $10.00, Write on one slde of the paper only and eend your contributions to m!-l “Fup Bhop care of the Herald, whe them to New York manuscripte will not be BHAEELESHLILEHLL88L8088 25 Vears Ago Today (Taken frorn Herald of that date) TEIPPPPNPIPIPIINITH Henry Juengst and family will spend next week at Savin Rock. There has been but one-eighth of an Inch of rainfall this month, There was over eight inches of rainfall during August, 1898, which was the wettest August in 14 years. This month so far has heen the dryest August in 23 years. Mortimer Rhodes New Haven where left he today will for spend and smiling | Mills has returned from a drive of 150 miles behind his fast | roadster. Mr. Mills covered the | northern part of the state, | The water commissioners have | mailed notices to 150 property owners | to pay thelr water tax immediately or have their service discontinued. A sheriff was in town today to serve a writ Issued by the city of | Hartford against this city charging | pollution of a stream of water called | Piper brook iu Hartford, 1t is al- | Itged that a tributary of the Piper brook running through this city is | polluted by acids from the factories, The local companies of the National {Guard are in readiness for their de- parture for Niantic on Monday, This will be the first time in a number of years.that New Britain has sent only iwo military companies to the camp. ¢ ! Observations On The Weather For Connecticut: Fair tonight and Wednesday; slightly warmer Wednes- day; moderate northwest and north winds becoming southerly Wednesday. Conditions: The area of high bar- ometer central yesterday over upper Michigan has moved eastward and crests this morning over New Eng- land states. The disturbance in the western districts overspreads a large part of the country and is central in IKansas. It is causing unsettled weather with showers in the ypper lake districts and westward over the border states to the Pacific coast. A tropical hurricane of moderate inten- sity was central last night between FPorto Rico and the Virgin Islands and moving northwestward. Conditions favor for this vieinity: Tair and slightly warmer weather, 523 CASES OF WHISKEY Jennie T Had Considerable Load Ahoard New London, Aug. 19.—When 528 cases of Scotch whiskey were cleared from the deck and hold of the fishing sloop Jennie T, seized Sunday night by the coast guard cutter Seneca, alongside the liquor-laden schooner Tom August in rum row, fresh biis- ters in the paint and scorched wood- work were revealed about the vessel, leading to the belief that the Jennis T is the vessel which was afire Satur- day night ten miles off Block Island from which three men were taken to the Newport hospital. Authorities are satisfied that it was the Jennie T and not the Jennie B, as reported, The fate of the vessel was unknown until this morning when customs offieials here boarded the vessel and decided upon its identity. l DR. FRANK CRANE'S DAILY EDITORIAL Tired By DR. FRANK CRANE No, T don't want to go to any kind of entertainment T don’'t want to go to any place nor indulge in any game. I am tire The world is toe much for me and 1 would like, mogt of all, to My bonea ache, my back aches and my head is weary, sleep. Youth is too much for me. The T am too tired. for supper, nor to see anyone dance d. e antics of children weary me, and the forth-putting of these who are still in their youth gives me_g feeling only of uneasiness and no desirc to join them. 1 am tired, plain tired, and I ask no more of the world than that it shall go away and let me alene, 1 ‘suppose that there is such a thing as an instinet of rest a an instinct for activity, a feeling for s well as a welcome of death, or its likeness sleep, as well as a feeling for the exercise of ene's faculties. 1 suppose 1 am growing old. terest mest people. activity. 1 do not 1§ nerves. the hum of insects. The chatter of friends no longer still and go away. be to leave me alone. There were times when the blood was high, in exeitement which comes from any kind of society, 1 want to indulge i 1 want the country and its quiet, with The things do not interest me that in- n no sports and take place in no ke the city and its noises, its continual hub-bub gets en my the gentle fall of rain and interests me, T wish they would keep The most considerate thing that anybody eould de would which I called for the any kind of forth-put ting. But those times have passed and 1 look forward only to sieep. 1 can conceive of no better heaven than one of eternal rest. Those who conceive of heaven as a who understand the human frame as be developed. 1 am not a bundle of potencies there is nothing mere attractive than My body is tired and my soul also. the impressions that hearing thin 1 have all There is nothing new to me. 1 am Perhaps the new life may come place of endless activity are those a bundle of potencics only waiting 10 The vessel has been emptied and sleep. 1 am tired of secing things and can be accumulated. entirely sophisticated. with an infusion of a new spirit, but until it does the old spirit must have its wa Copyright, 1924, by The McCiure Newspaper Syndicate. faii il

Other pages from this issue: