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eritlolsm that the Herriot mintstry | will be the final sufferer by belng ousted. When Millerand was exiled from political office at the time the Herrlot New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Tssued Dally (Sunday Exeepted) AL Morald Bldg, 67 Church Btreet government assumed power almost SUBSORIPTION RATES .00 & You 32,00 year ago it was belleved he would longer | han a year; even hin friends were | dubius of an early comeback. But find him back in the to fight the HerMot | regime from this vantage point. 1t | Premier | succeasc “Ihree Months. “out of polities” much & Month, | Eutered at the Post Oftice at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter, already we Renate, ready TELEPHONE CALLS 928 928 [ 3 [ Business Office ... " Editorial Roona . much as if former will be Herriot's b cables in colaring he will be the next in line looks very Bri; v 1nved he only i the press ftable advertising Clrculation L slwaya open to ady dlum 5t and unite rtisers. | ) | 1o fuherit “the situation.” Whether | o will be able to handle it to the | all, or ¢ balance Member of the Associnted Press. sclated Press 1s exclu use for re- It or f| satisfaction of budgets without | moncy, or without raising taxes, is it borrowlng more in the future, should he actually be- Audit Bureau of Circulation, onal pap Membe i Aamber come premier agaln. He Is a states- a v organization and adver- st analysis of man of the fifst rank, but never in has | there been such fine statesmanship els of | g modern history of Irance rl reguired. PROPERTY RIGHTS all 1y on wsale dally In New IN THE AIR t2's N Entranes| We thought it would i { property rights in the air. And they | lare not identifiad with aivships, elther, but with just plain every- v Stand, come =— ‘ TWO RECENT WRECKS ON NEW HAVEN LINE Two freight wrecks within a few day radlo. i To Walter G. Cowles, of WTIC, Hartford, goes the credit of broad- castin® this announcement the other | day. He eald stations regard their | wave lengths as cxclusive franchises te those air channels and have a refuse to permit others | to ooeur | {5 encroach upon their “property | n a while and that they can- | njgnts” The remark came in op-| VL ‘position to remaining silent for part | of a day while two new broadcast- | ing stations in New England were allowed to make thelr debut by | monopolizing the_ particuiar wave | Jengths to which the gentleman re-| ferred. Those first in the fleld thercfore r train not stopping in time. ' j,ve the property rights to judge | Iroad company lesued state- |, yjeir declarations. Other, sta- 7 of both yons have to take different wave ks, but such statements, When | jongthg or remain silent while the they do not blame some individual, i older statlons broadeast. rarely weeks is enough for the New Haven railroad, and stepe should be taken | by to tighten up | the system, tnculcate a further ex- | the man gement tension o prevent titue irst principles, and > development of the at- w right once »o T river e wreck on the Ha closely | followed the wreck at New Haven. Both collisions | and both produced fatalities, Both to one being held up by a signal and | Connecticut bridge in ford were preventable wr cks were due tr he ra ments o~ explanation ind fault with the system of signalling and the danger incident | to halting one train and not halting another in the il LAW-MAKING SHOULD BE CURTAILED Man does not live by laws alone. | Yet Congress, since 1789, has passed 50,00 Representative Ramseyer, of Towa, took it upon himself to them - from the archives rear. i Back in the Mellon days, when & serles of disastrous wrecks helped | to throw the road into disrepute, | the wrecks were findlly [1??\0“""1‘ 85 it by magic by the enforcement | of better rules- of train operation, | tabuiate and the records. ©f course, 2 the development of a better | {hese nuraber of measures — large and were private morale among employees. It may | penstons and such things. These t0- again be time for something of the |ajled $0,310; of the remainder, 16,014 were laws and 3,836 were resolutlons. [ Mr. Ramaseyer, bringing his record { up to date, announced that the last | The Congress passed 632 laws. This| * not to eplarge the Yale bowl will | record was surpassed by the 69th with those | Congress, in 1905, when 692 public | YALE BOWL SHOULD BE LARGED decision made in New Haven | ™ot be fvery popular thousands who have been unable to | laws were enacted. tickets to The federal statutes each year. Although the bowl holds | g0y pages. 1f the country isn't thor- | 50,000 people — which was deemed | oughly overlawed~it is no fault of a plenty at the time the bowl Was | tpe husy lawmakers. built — it is undeniably too small | yet that isn't all: There also is to accommodate the erowds when 8|, apundance of state laws. The big game 16 being played. Enginecrs | egjglatures are no slouches in this are of the opinion that it is easy 'yyciness: Indeed, more “fool laws” to enlarge the bowl to increase the | the states purchase the big games | cover 483,- are passed in some of ) than in Washington. | "The worst factor in the law-mak- |ing situation is that the impracti- seating — and standing — capaci .materially, but the officials in au- | thority have turnad their hesitancy to | unworkable and unenforeed | The an an-| into a de refusal to go ahead | o withi the idestred {mprovement; | statutes are rarety repealed. worst that ever happens to cient statute that should be dead nq burfed is that it is “amended” an effort to bring it up-to-date.| Then the amendment gets Jost| ag the other legal orphans and | in & few generations nobody knows It 1s estimated that there usually 1,000 people would be willing are from Ntw Britain alone who to pur- ! the bowl 1f Usually, secured for chase tickets for hey however, were procurable, they cannot be love, amor money or influence; disappointment i is rife and additiol zles, the New York Times and the ! remained for the,police of Charles | ‘in operation in other parts of the 50 that ity use in conversation or writing is. not possible, But from the standpoint of furn- ishing goed and cheap mental enter- talnment, cross word puzeles have fully met the requirements. They will continue to be in demand by a large portion of newspaper readers for & long time to come; and the craze may not entively peter out for place where the rents are tog darned high. ing a week later, It {sw't recorded that any peeple ever became great by scoffing at re- liglon, Men become more active under civilization; they must, in order w survive it, All laws have teeth. The trouble is that so many are the kind ‘that come out at night, Inerease in postal rates may work hardship on manufgcturers of waste baskets. § yeurs, Only two newspapers in the coun- try are said to have refralved from giving their‘readers cross word puz- Boston ‘Transcript. thought human. These evidegtly their readers were not WHAT MAKES THEM Al HIS WAY? There are various sorts and eon- Jditions of speed demons, but it has . Polse s what enables & young man to keep on feeling superior while asking dad for money. All governntents tend to bacome similar once the taxpayers learn to suffer in silence, “Ah,” said Happiness; here is & man too busy to notice that I'm here; Il eamp with him. Tt is a sad thought; the undevel. oped peoples are thosg that still have faith in mankind, Mass (i town, to be faced with one of | of | modern traflic regulation. It appears that a youngster salls about the| main street of that community, “in | the midst of ‘eheering throngs" at | a epeed of around 60 miles an hour. | The cars he uses in his pilgrimages, it is said, are mostly borrowed. One would think it an easy matter | to stop a careening speed artist, but it is only When one calculates on & method of how to do it without oc- casioning loss of life or a smashup that the method fails, The young- ster, it appears, merely continues blowing his horn and refuses to stop when signalled. Is there any way of stopping a rapidly moving fire tfruek? The speed artlst is about in the same position with the fire truck. * “Reckless motorcycle cops” have been assigned to chase this modern juggernaut. Tt is to be hoped they are speedy enough to capture the youngster, And when he is caught need be cy. The Charlestown prison is close at hand. | remarkable problems « 1t New York censors plays how will she entertain the pure in heart from the hinterland? { The eountry is safe while a law- abiding citizen isn’t unusual enough to be consideretl news. Uncle Sam is a “dollar cfaser. This is neceasitated by the tactics of those who borrowed the dollar. Americanism: Laboring to make more money; spending it to give the impression that you make even | more, | | ] ——— | Correct thie sentence: *“Why, you cried his mother; | darling boy!” clothes “how did you keep your so clean?"” ther no leniency. The tractor 1s a good thing, but you never saw a mule standing ina | field to wait for a spare part. ON APPRECIATING THE STEAM SHOVEL | There {s something about the operation of a steam shovel that is | a source of never failing admiration | by the erowd that usually hovers in | the wieinity where such a contriv- | ance is being operated. A locomotive | or a steamship has more power, but ; neither are as spectacular in the way | they de thelr appointed tasks. The snorting engine operating a steam shovel seems to be the last J word in mechanical flexibility, For- ward and backward, upward, side- | 25 Years Aga Today ways, it moves the big arm, at'the | same time operating the big maw | From Paper of That Date at the apex of the long arm with as- (onishing efieiency. And one man, | t , taelt d with little motionless, taclturn and with Mttle |, by pajiot at the republican muscular effort, controis eVery |opycus held last night, was defeated movement by & slight turning or |in the formal ballot hy Ira E: Hicks, pulling of levers, 256-226. When the result was an- One of these monsters of 20th E“O“nced' somedne cried, “Three 3 cheers for Hicks," and there was a eentury digging has been in opera- | shrill “horoo.” A. L. Thompson was tion on West Main street; others are nominated for eity clerk by acelama- tion and Yeaton J. Stearns made candidate for eollector by the same method. Attorney James E. Cooper 18 & candidate for councliman fn the ward. Table: “Once there was a woman who wasn't indignant when a horn tooted to make her move faster. (Copyright 1925, Associated Editors, Inc.) Orson F. Curtls, after winning the eily, whergver cellars are to be dug | in a hurry or excavations made. About one of the first things primitive man had to do was to dig The one who is afraid of smirth Encumbers this delightful earth. Come on! Let's uss our funny | bones! “A faugh s ‘worth & thousand groans!" Too Easy Dr. Henry: “Whatever you sure and take things easy. Patient: “I do, doctor. I'm a hold- up man.” ~~Rudjs L, A I know the Fun SHop's meant for Jokes, And fun at ev'rything it pok But ‘\h(;n sweet springtime’s in the alr Most ev'rybody seems to care For something beside what s witty, Some sort of sentimental ditty Like “In the spring a young man's fancy, Nice things that sound like that — romaney; A bit of verse that hints of love, Of cooing ke the turtle dove,. So why not, in your column witty, Sometimes have something that's just pretty? —Dorothy Habersham. | s ( The Bosky Dell Some verse that's pretty? Very well, Let's write about the bosky dell; The place where bluebirds comé to | | | 5 Those happy harbingers of epring. ‘Where butter-yellow daftydill And pussywillow by the rill With saucy glance Intrigue the eye, ' And lacelike trees say: “See the aky!” | Inviting nooks draw lovers there | The earth-old promises to sweer; There, first, the trees begin to bud, Gentle Hint “Darling,” cooed the lover as he gaved et the flapper's ears, “have you never had these pink ehells plerced 2" “No,” she sighed, “but they've often been bored." “This running around just makes me boil,”’ sald the fitvver. The Birth of a Nation Mother was looking over a pew leaflet issued by the telephone com- pany, when the small son jooked up from his lesson and asked: “What natlonality are the telephone girls?” His sister, a few years his senlor, replied: “Why Central Amerlcans, of course.” —Mrs, A, 8. Meits. The Trickey Driolet Counter .. Obserying the Season My friends have all been great to borrow; Yhey gome to me when broke or bent; Because my heart i3 soft to sorrow My friends have all been great to borrow, ‘With promises to pay tomorrow Which though unkept, were all ‘well-meant, My friends have all been great to borrow; This year I've certainly kept Lent. ~Estelle Hwarr, Easter That is what we have been doing for the past fifty-eight years. We make a friend every time we make a sale because we give honest values. A Fine Loom Woven Fiber Suite with Spring Seats for only is just one of the many new Spring pieces we are showing H \ . PORTER SONS “Connecticut'’s Best Furniture Store” ¥un Shop —— 80 that eyerybody sistant professorship in political sci- should find something he likes — we would like to hear from you as to which features you ke best, and why. We have formed our opinion by your response, At the same time there are qertain features harder to | write than others and, while the easler ones to write may get the{ greatest phystcal response, the | others may be even more popular. Get the point? Write us tonight. | On separate sheet than your con- tributions. There's Wild Willies, Roguish Rollo, Provoking Polly, | Wally the Mystic, Traprock, Bala- | pate, Barnyard Bits, Jingle-Jangles, | Gid Boots, Fun Shop Movies, Me- ence at Yale are also announced. The Rey. Mr. Powell recelved the degree of B. D. Magna Cum Laude from Yale in 1921 and the degree of M. A. in 1922, He graduated from Phillips university (Oklahoma) in 1919 where he has taught for the past two years. He formerl;: held pastorates in Medford, Okla., and in Niantic, Conn. Prof. Conover was appointed in- structor in political sclence at Yale in 1924, having been a member of the faculty of New York university for two years preceding his appoint- ment at Yale. He has studied in the graduate schools of Columbia, Harvard and Indlana universities, and the University of Minnesota where he obtained a master's de- gree. He is @ graduate of Dickin- son college. In 1917 he served as bill draftsman to the Indiana legis- lature and in 1919 as courier to the American commission to negotiate peace. He was an instructor fn poli- tical sclence at the University of Pennsylvania in 1019-1920 and « member of the staff of the institutc for government research at Wash- ington in 1021.1024 The Worst Injured motorist — Dogter, tell me the worat! Doctor — Your car is smashed to smithereens! — Kasper, Stock- holm, (With 8 Bow to the Editor) Kid Boots, Fun shop Movies, Me-| | branches - from stones, he enlarged his llving quar- | Using hl¢ hands, trees or sharp and excavate.. ters under the protection of over- hanging pocks, or in caves, he dug protective holes out of the eides of fills when there were a lack of na- and in the game manner he built mounds, and tura] caves in a territor excavated ground in which to bury his dead. What & wmighty advance there is between the primitive methods of |thisd |ago, jabbed a screw driver into his |hand. y Clerk Thompson this morn- ing received a present of two shad. The eard accompanying them said they were the first shad caught this year. They were sent to the colonel by Captain A. . Taylor of Portland. Charjes G. Anderson, while work- ing at P. & F. Corbin's a few days His afm has mnow 'swollen considerably and is in bad shape, An effort is being made to have a factory baseball league this summer, Mattabessett Tribe, T. O. R. M, held a full dress ball in Siering & Holmes' hall last evening in honor of its tenth anniversary. The gen- tlemen in charge were Willlam Ris< The best thing that happens in April is Easter. The best that hap- pens th Easter is no skool, Easter has a lot to do with eggs. The best kind of eggs and the best kind of candy is candy Easter eges. They keep on talsting jeet as good even wen you are old enuff to know they are not recly rabbits eggs, be- cause their aint eny sutch of a thing. ; At Easter time you go erround with a regular chickin‘egg yelling “Upper, upper.” This meens you get ferst crack at eny other fellows egg that wunts to pick you, and if his egg brakes he has to give it to lets, Spotting Goods Counter, Music | Department, Soclal Primer, ete . . . Write tonight! Heel and Toe Dr. Carter: “Your heels scem to be rather run over." Patrick: “Yis, an’ that ain't but| balf uv it. The truck ran over me | whole foot!” —Donald Crouse. Betwixt and Between Evelyn: “Beatrice is at an awk- ward age, isn't she?” Peggy: “Yes; she's too old tu marry a young man for love, and ——e e Statement of the OWNERSHIP, MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, ETC. Required by thg Act of Cangress of August 24, 1012 THE NEW BRITAIN HERALD Published Daily, Except Sunday at New Britain; Conn., for * " April 1, 1925 lancient man and the cruehing ag- | gressiveness of a modern stcam shovel! Where man once laboriously dug at the earth, perhaps with ) childlike zeal and satisfaction, com- [ The “‘h:r]m";j' “gflw“ ’Yx‘s’jfl."‘::y‘ plimenting himself that he was e O it |little better able to proceed Wwith {annual meeting yesterday afternoon | quch endeavors than the wild beasts, [at the new president's residence on |56 mow Tets an aft-but-human steam | Vine street: shovel do the work. ‘ [ ;vrrs‘_\' :.nm\mgi in our r\‘lh;fll~ obseryations tion {llustrates its advance so graphi- On The Weather 1l new law thi the differcnce hetween y 10 CODE ancient man's pawing of dirt with the | i fingernails, and the latter-day April New England: Fair Tuesday. Slightly ould be! Moderate Tues- northwest winds State of Connecticut, County ok, Hartford, ss. Before me, a notary public in and for the state and county afore- sald, personally appeared T. K. Jackson, who, having been duly sworn according to law, deposes and says that he is the business manager of The New Britain Herald, and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, a true etatement of the owner- ship, management, circulation, etc., of the aforesaid publication for the date sworn in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in Section 443, Postal Laws and Regulations, ta wi lit exists until some smart legisla- ¢ young enough to land an old | in an effort to awe not young ough to millionaire.” —Mrs, Hattie Klotz. |1ey, Ernest N. Humphrey, A. T. An- drews, and George Dyson. Music was furnighed by Lynch & Dunn's orchestra, you and you can sell it to the baker for a cent it the insides havent ran out on the way. Peeple also takc a chickins eges) at Easter and die them so meny diffrent colors that if you_ showed them to the chickin it would think they was layed by somebody elts. —Kid Boots. bowl officials is lost. | tor nauls it out We are of the opinion that i€ it| ... Apswers to Saturday's Cross Word Limericks . tarted with ten good laws. They s vilal today as the day he brought them from the moun-| T | continue to outlive| 18 pone Moses of the bow are a 8. Car; 4. date & willi 1. Scotch; 2. Soldier; Ryght; 6. Wise. 5 wil tain. Y in usefuiness and mous publl e the bowl ar 1 1. That the names and addresscs of the publisher, editor, man- aging cditor and business manager are: Publisher, Herald Publish ing Co.; Editor, Johnstone Vance, New Britain, Conn.; Managing Editor, Johnstone Vance, New Britain, Conn.; Business Manager. Thomas . Jackson, New Britaln; nn. That the owners are: Mrs. R. J. Vance, N Britain, Conn.; Johnstone Vance, New Britain, Conn.; Mrs. Agnes Vance Weld, New Britain, Conn.; Robert C. Vai ew Britain, Conn, ‘That the known bondholders, mortgages and other security holders owning or holding 1 per eent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages, or other securities are: Burritt Savings Bank, New Dritain, Conn. 4. That the two paragraphs next above giving the names of th: owners, stockholders and security holders, if any, contain not only the list of stockholders and security holders as they appear upon the books of the company, but also in cases where the stockholder or security helder appedrs upon tte books of ths company as trus- tee or in any other fiduciary relation, the name of the person or . corporation*for whom such trustee Is acting, is given: also that the sald two paragraphs contain statcments embracing affiant's full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances ani conditions under which stockholders and sccurity holders who do not appear upon the books of the company as trusiees, hold stock and securities n a capacity other than that of a bona fiGe owner; and this affiant has no reason to believe that any other person, assoclation, or cor poration has any intercst direct or indirect in tha sald stock, bonds or other socurities than as-so stated by him. 5 That the average number of copies of each issue of thjs pul lication sa!d or distributed, through the malls or otherwise, to paid subscribers during the six manths preceding the date shown above i 11,309 THOMAS F. JACKSON, his Gth day of April. 125 AL J. SMITH. 1. Author; Thickens; 3. Rea- son; 4. Time; 5, Crop. (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction Forbidden) YALE APPOINTS WESLEYAN MAN Prol. Bingham " Going fo New Haven University Missing Her Chance Anne: “Loulse says she will never divorce her husband.” Caroline: “Foolish girl. And she photographs so well, t00.” —H. O, J. Smithers. offlcials ng Ll Lt ral application 7 to do everytl or to our representatives % and in Congress 1t neces- ahould refe AL IO Leglslatura | | | | | Jaw-makers. atill o pass an 0 ally than | MILLERAND COMES BACK 10 HECKLE HERRIOT Frencl jer to enable socie w condition; but ir 1 Washington, 6.—Forecast for gouthern tonight and warmer Tuesday day. Moderate becoming variable. Forecast for eastern New York: Fair tonight and Tuesday; slightly | warmer Tuesday; moderate to fresh tea hovel f ecial mention is steam shovel for specia Inortheast and east winds. it is usuaily entirely over- | | | Wally the Mystic l o | He'll Answer Your Questions As long as Cupid roams the earth There will be gricf as well as mirth; | But those with grief a solace find, | And always will, in Wally's mlnd,; B uge of laws & steam ghove % 2 1 of endeavorivg o | Jiffer- tomo- Of course therg are other 4, ex-president ! ences such as biles, railroads, radio and e other | But the reason | airplanes, is a serious blow at prestig Pren some of the old ones. moflern inventions. jally as the gove P did everyt upon the nearly-human There's a Reason Dear Wally: CROSS WORD PUZZLES ON THE WANE? cross 1 we pounce ing possible to aid Your advige 1 seek. | I always thought my girl was meek, ‘And so 1 kissed her. Gosh, some shriek! Why did she holler? rand's opponent to the seat because Conditions: A disturbnee central Fiorida has ecaused severe bulld and construct in the manner |local showers during the last 24 do today; without it the Panama k’,’f:“'l’)‘n‘:‘_“ ;}J‘["»C:" ":"’\‘: “["lyll;(:":'\\ll Canal could not have been built. It ance is central this morning over e mon- California. An extended area of high pressure over the eastern por- tion of the Lake region is producing pleasant weather with low tempera- tures in the northern district east the Mississippl. z Conditions favor for this vicinity fair weather with brisk northerly winds and cool nights . Forest fire warning: Tow hu- midity and brisk northerly winds during the day make the atmos- pheric conditions very dangerous for forest fires. Epeae S word | | oked. Without it we could mot|over ment 3 the seething point and STek afo onit courss, | ol New Haven, April 6.—Yale uni- Puzzled Sheik. | versity today announced the ap- worl ot mea are does not mea | we Herriot gov demand for a considerable | it The fall of the is predicted in 1 t there py quatter ggeatinaar it when we watch one of th accumul a slight falling oft votres of this x\flr»l dications that ha east stors perform, and right in our own of Some women joy. 1f 'twas for help she g2 She was displeased with your tech-} nique. hs would t ! d* of the past few mont city, that it urges a devil's dus tests. mentality appreciation. buttress such an anticipation philosoplhic Q‘ FactsandFancies 0Y RUBERT QUILLEN in nas | financial u vouchsa of of Herriot's ing © t 100K | cyni the voca the were not cross word puzzies making; that they existed b office. The only way to financial sitvation would nation of . Down with Analysis Dear Wally: ize, according 104 The ¢ were supposed to he is right in poir fadled to mate fore le | observer: broadened mueh rom addiction to these brain : ’ \ beeribwed before me t ve invariably failed to get result sworn to (Seal) av higher taxes, and the government . which stands for higher taxes, even twisters O3 Ah, well; with congress on | hand thecountry can cuss umpires. 4111, people who got drunk in the ys didn't call it “Jiberty.” no The circulation of The Herald is considerably more than twice that of any-other newspaper pub lished in New Britain. In addition, it is the only newspaper in New _Britain with an andited circulation, . AN SRS s S-S GO L eUL i USROS much broader. {his may net have been ting trouble. | Of course, ¢ault of the puzzles so muc To broader in a good caus But the religious university circles over ! ment of a political proieg Sorbonr fault of jndividuals, t oull 1 > good ‘ a a pro- | g e | vocabulary requires it is useless 10 KV Ofall the words glad, the pick are it to Dad." t mak fessorship in the memory; ow th . | condition of 1 anc anirg of lay d o, 2 new word in one word and the mcan- Dear Puzzled Sheik: | potatment of Prof. Harold Clyde Know this, my boy: | Bingham, PID. of Wesloyan uni-| cqueal with sudden |versity as research assistant in the | instituté of psychology at Yale and ve a shriek, [the appointment of four research | assistants in -the institutes: Helen | Heffron Roberts, and Alvira A. Kirk, | ressarch assistants in anthropolozy: and Carelton I%. Scofield, and Don- ald K. Adams, research assistants ¢ in psychology. Dr. Bingham is pro-l Did Adam ever }:n‘:‘(dly\ lkrllslsm S fessor of peychology at Wesleyan, | o Fve, or has that lovely scheme and’ Miss Roberts and Mr. Scofield | s are now op appointment in-the in- Developed ';“’f;"c.:“;.l"m“g Dream, | stitute of peycholay. Miss Kirk | AR 4 i le from the anthropol- | Out of the Mouth— Dear Love's Young Dream: f\‘;‘y‘"gc;‘;fl‘;"fl;( eblint _‘mm‘m“; There are bright moments in the Why wonder Who il um of Natural History, New | life of a schoolmaster. At a recenl Devised that lovely game for two? Arork oity and Mr. Adams from the sxamination in general knowledge | Away with bistory and facts! Beyenological laboratory at Harvard girls | g pupil defined a volcano a8 fol- | Enough to know it has no tax. university. ] arge | jows: “A mountain with a hole in — "'he appointment of Rev. Wilfred l”“ top, and {f you loof down the rhe Editor's Gossip Shop | B. Powell to & visiting profe rehip { hale you can the ereator sSmok. > that we « sevics of {in religious education. and the pro: @' (ng." — London Morning Pest. levery description running lo the metion of 3ilton Conover, 10 an as- |\ precarious Rave brought about 80 muc T < : 4 Now have h public | a the an A irable aeighborhood is