New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 8, 1925, Page 6

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v T _____—— SN Factsand Fancies BY ROBERT QUILLEN Trief avgument against Com- | munism Thou shalt not vet." t's day will be observed on lay of next month as usual, It is estimated that June weddin Fat) the first \.ml"'tl\luul: Wil garner 8876421 " \Whoge eyes hold merry twinkles, gravy ladles, | Though “tax-exempt” they may not ) ey be, Uhe ones who looted the bank| yyiy he exempt from winkies. e not the only criminals in speed- | i ng automgbiles. A Trifiet il g = | e “Ihe night has a thousand eyes”| Jordan: “You've never paid me | was written before moonshine | PACK that hundred deollars I lent blinded 80 many of them, | Even a pedestrian may run inte you, but he'll remain to fight in. | stead of ding up, Among the words that preface uifcring are these “Ladies and ntlemer fellow students, and | \embers of the faculty | Reading men out of a party ¢ t secm 50 serious it the party | 't ecating just at present. ! Neading 30 minutes every day| educ vou, but is there that | worth re ding? word od, but have that | | puzzles cveryl would learned like fish, that people nder as are crazy; but which half, times we v vouldw't scem so burdensome | it the landlord woyd charge us for garuge and throw in the house, Hindenburg v ma T menace, bu! makes them think he has| anged? | irive so fast; u awful acei crime news doesn’t the make good le. Some 1t doesn't it does. After fc to spoil our { rescue with i oy =ome people to 3 one Mountain's face is being i for siatuary instead of bill boards Corre ' I M don't vant B he, “but i have I lin otected by Associated Editors, and the first mortgage on today —Rudle Larrimore. they wpent you back in 1016." Andrews: “Oh, that's a war debt! Reminlscences Lgg By Martin B. Trilinger When backward one begins to gazo | And talk about “the good old days" They say his mind is in a haze, He's growing old and sill TI'm far from old, yet this is so Each June my thoughts begin flow Toward two events of long ago; Will do so, willy nilly. Tt was_in June that T was wed; Those Yateful, sald Midst smilax green and roses (They cost her dad some money Now oftentimes I sit and sigh; T'd be a very happy guy Were 1 as simple as when 1 Contradicted matrimony! Ten Junes before, a gawky fool, 1 graduated from high school; cool, Inside I was elated; Went out to fight, to dare and xpert says, | Gosh, 1'd be tickled through and |UP 8n average French peasant fam- through | 16 1 knew what T thought T knew When I was graduated! Progress Huber: “How's your ‘new ho | coming along?” Piper: “Fine! We put the r Mortimer Butcher. The Truth at Last “I hear a lot of old feflers get. | tin' sentimental about the little red lLoolhouse and the happy d “but T always take that kind of t. with a grain of salt. I went to one | them little red schoolhouses when | 1 was a boy, and the only real hap- py days T can remember are ones when 1 played hookey." Surprised surprised!” “well, T'm her fat eried There, on the young man's kn “Oh, papa, so are we!” —Norma Shea The Common Touch Mrs, Crawford: “The Mertons p $10,000 for their new car.” Crawford: “What if they d r flivver will run out of gas j the same as their car." | —Harolq Davidson. Junc Sent-i-nieants .. The felks who meet life cheorfully, of s Hard-Dolled | binding vows were hough outwardly quite calm and there,” sald Uncle ke, | sat. The startled girl replied, NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 8 1925, as much." ~Trederick L, Schuek, The Cosmic Urge Cn!lxnrln “He's rich, but unedu. cated, Betty; “Well, she's she'll educate him," ~=Mrs. poor, and Paul Beat, | . | Some women must be handled | with kid gloves — and others with silk stockings. (Copyright, 1925, Reproduction Forbidden) COMMUNICATED A Tocal Soldier's Experience With a Flammarion. June 6, 1925, New Britain, Conn. Editor of the Herald: | 'The writer enjoyed reading your editorjal on Fiammarion. In November of 1918 my outfit |came down from the lines and took | billets in the little town of Montig. | ny-le-Rof, some twenty kilometers |south ot Neufchatgau in the Vasges. This little town was originally | built on the edge of a ridge and had overflowed onto the plain beneath. Halfway down the slope, facing nei- thet the highway at the north nor |the plains on the south but rather set askew was a yellowlsh limestone | |dwelling. Beside its door was a cast iron tablet saying that therein was |born Camille Flammarion, ‘We were billeted down the street {a bit in the loft of a barn belonging | to a family pamed Marx, Monsieur {Marx was by calling a Camioneer which is the grand title the French bestow upon their draymen. Mon- sieur et Madame with their two buxom daughters, daughters who could with uniform nonchalance sew {on & seldier's buttens or officiate at o |the birth of a brand new calf, made to Bl L] Iy. Floundering around in a eonver- |sation with madame one day T man- aged to inquire as to who the Ca- [mitle Flammarion was who rated an [iron tablet on his birthplace. | Her reply carried no information | ¢ a8 to the man's position in the world | [for 1t contained ~ only five words. |"He 1s my elder brother.” use 00 "How's Your Pockethook? There is a tidy margin of saving on eyery ton of coal you buy NOW. You may have this money if you want it, Some folks can afford to wait until Fall and Winter before thinking about coal, but thrifty folks will act this Spring. /ey will be well ahead of the game— 200, The Citizens Coal Co. Yard & Office, 24 Dwight Court Tel. 2108, Branch Office, 104 Arch St Tel. 3206, | A meager French vocabulary for- e R ey [bid further inquiry and T had to “I want to know more about busi- |1®t it g0 at that. g SrAI 0 o | BRAINERD W. BROWN, | | For reply Robert kissed her. 113 mutligmesdow Ave,, | Then. affer several minutes, he New Britain, Conn. paused, “The keynote these days is e [ volume production!” he pointed MR. RORABACK | out. | OF CONNECTICUT | (Springfield Union) | With a remarkable eandor which | may understood out- side of Connecticut, the Hartford ii'mlranl definitely connects the | career of the Legislature just ad-| urned with J. Henry Roraback, | chairman of the Republican State Committee, Usnally in other states, | and we should say normally in all, | the | the Legislature is one thing and the | chatrman of a state committee of | either party another. It should be | | explained, therefore, that in Con- necticut it appears to he different. | Otherwise it might seem to outsiders | rather artless in the Hartford Cour- | ant to speak of Mr, Roraback as| | the Legislature, | Tt should be explained also that | the Courant is not doing this to be offenslve to Mr. Roraback or to ald | criticize the Legislature which has | | iust completed its work according to | not be well ays alk | her nee, id? | Mr. Roraback. On the other hand, ust | It says in all seriousness that “it i | many years since the Republican | | party had a leader as effective” as| Mr, Rorzback. This might give the | impression that Mr. Roraback is a | | novely. But he isn't. In fact, wu| | Accompanying That Wedding Gift | believe it is many years sines the 25 Years Ago Today From Yaper of Date crred with zens this 1o the Beckley N B " s H ld;n»ns\rm\\m\ of a Housatonie m:h\! vastsenterprises by faking advan ew rl n era way, It would merely be a con-|!age of the post-war inflution | MERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY venience to the citizens of the state | period. Since his deth a teud in T e and admittedly @& great con- | the Stinnes family did not gaslst in asued Dally (Sunday Bxcepted) i ¥ p At Herald Bldg, 67 Church Street ventence, 1t would bulld up a vast | malntaining the cquilibrum, The re- Lo tourist section which would be a | cent wthdrawal of Kdmund Stinnes JBSCRIPTION RAT b'_‘\“r Lo source of profit to citizens of (he | from participation in the central 00 Thres Montha. state. This in itself would be worth | orgunization, leaving Hugo Stinnes, LR while, The sooner the state caters| Jr. In control, was a atraw which Ratered at the Post OfMice at New Britaln to the development of tourist bus. indicated which way the wind wa = ) as Becond Cluss Mul) Matter, iness the sooncrwill the prosperi- | blowing ty incident th®eto materializes Now the tabilization crisis \8 CALLS . F’ EPAONRICS] But, as the Sentinel wdmits, thu arrived, It was brought about large- isiness Office ¢ Editorial Rooms thing cannot be attempted until ly by a drying up of the loan market - there 1s suMicient money In view in foreign countries, mostly the he enly pr % I the Ci lation bo or the pury United States, Young Hugo is being Ppreas room te°8d buttressed by the leading German AN UNSEEN INFLUENCE banks and no doubt extraordinary Member of the Assoctnted Press, T was distinetly no pasquinade methods will be taken to prevent an The Associated Press iy exclusively ® ttled ¢ use for. raspublic ARl the city manager plan of cconomic catastr which by the Tk el g R e ner Meriden Jour- way would be of no benefit to other news shed hevein. «d during the folowing ad- nations which are affected by the o miss ! re is room for bet- unes of international trade, Kale Member Audit Burean of Circulation, nent In the gosernment of (h unprofitable propertics, fneliling he A. B. C. 1s a T‘ e di i e Stinnes newspapers, ought to tleschoriLhEel st help tide over the crisis. clrculat our eirey are based this aud L - = sl (i o ‘”‘ New York ships news item on figures to both that is morc local advertisers, people and les Among the cabin passengers was R . that Herr General-Direktor Doktor Hein. 8 b on v in party pol rlch Nichus of the Lebensversich ultz's News city governmen mgsanstalt Westpreussen.” Why the ral, 42nd street can never be ured until all s last words were not ) united is partisan polltics are elimix until factions and party strifc mystery THE PRESIDENT'S TRIP o longer be an Influencc - AL TR St s or or action and for or fiie (Gl (50 & Paitisr's Dy Ban i Sl 4 inst appointment of men e n : «nd wonien 1o office, It may be centennial ¢ ation I8 one not en-| 410 tnis will some day be aided by trade organizations inter- tirely devoid of political coloring. 1t brought about by thecity man- ested in neckties” as one com- is 1 i a splendid tribute whic plan and it may be that i ' ynoniators puts it, decided on Junc will be acomplished by some the President pays to sturdy will dul b 21; but othe nizations, ter = ; k 5 m of the Massachusetts plan 4 LA e Scandinavian jzenship ¢ prevents the appearance of ¢sted in tobacco,” put the date ut ling his presenc party affiliations upon ballots. | June 14. From this v 1) Mrs, Coolidge to their * * * Maybe we shall try it ot rainer will be expected to do some 50 be regarded as here some day extra smoking and wear a new nec lering thanks | o )0 522 American eities now | tie and thus “celebrate himself i ) "7'" ; being operated upon the city mauna- st election 18 not entirely de= g rorm of government there have The real winner of that open g 01 significance for ti it T t tournament was v odon fe ReasRok A i fUture. |\ can no backsiiders. The list in fournament wi lones. 1 ) Coolidge av that z W an althan 5 ond na Ir. m vare that oo ticut totals only three so far has been cither or 1 Sar —New London, West Hartford and number of tournaments, and F g Stratford — and none show any|a bad start at Wor a signs of wishing to return to the Maclarlane by hut a sir v olitical fortunes of the i ear Makmiviapaiprot will EOIEY (he ! a0 party system of city g0y Next year Macliarlane y bly party in - Wisconsin, be down among t o rans while third party originated Sotne M M e active in politics | young Mr remains in political e e SR do not lke the city manager form a B rimacy. In this connectio nay s P ; e ; L rnment; perhaps it does not | averages be cd significant that Senator e » ; - A the | Teuulre a vivid imagination to de- ments he is enroot of Wisconsin is one of the i | : sl St rmine the reason for their atttude rir ‘»L e ol ‘1 i Thsicliy manareriplall DRyl S : an influence upon eity governments T wa S of the older persuasion, an influence | Hill park, 1 areer Wil .alolletteism water, has sho at next Wisconsin election that quite frequently is entirely | water, ha i : it considera | overlooked, This influence has epur- | insanliary N & D : SpRos 1 other forms of government to drained tions, the the President is a R days the heaith ch and prosperous '™MP! N ; to \ PrOBPeTOUs | @ arison with citios enjoying the | using it will not be endangered citizenship in a section of the coun- PG x & % city manager plan. Cities which have try where i& predominates to a re- 5 ade hi Y pil \dopted the manager plan usually | The ge n e markable degree candinavian 2 Atln | . had a prelude of races which migrated to the north- 5 3 = eredit to the days. under suc west turned a wilder into a ™M o E B e 5 dein “rit ( « I The ELano ! laspnona et 1 o A natt 1 is always possi- crati : : ity ana Ple for a city en suffering from o I city 1 2 1 its | fir hin m ess. Their chie ‘he 113 mod b ot production of ’ I tore A g man i 1d. The Presi Sl AR s Away. 25cyaar nly to pay his respects aot in badr 2 rec alw ace that has , M1 £ ¢ vailre 1a R ce radiati 5 i 1 3 Broker old political or 5 2 5 & M, MOTOR TRUCKS nis of aut A TOURIST HIGHWAAY i e en Jotored 1o e Persons of a cynical dispo: h ¢ The A Sentinel brings for- claim Sunday a8 ITC New T point that a trunk | in commenting ] . + necesarily made by railroails tha a iy v 200! \ way ¥ is u L5\ i fitory mnd lson: | taxed osnelpprotide oo SVEREH s hut can build Ways for competing molor LruckS Rt Blanssy £ ave repeatediy a4 railvoad | Over-S 9 from up % g I . - it uga managers why they S i . In attemy 0 pre : . ; e o e lare 0 situation and of 1 e motor trucks f(or haul g : The Boston & Maine \ has ¢ vodeling about Chag a « 4 ’ p ghway, connect- injustice™ of buing 1a o L] ; g I in this : ot s the firs P ® 1 ca o S g : ration of motor ! s E 5 1 scale. The i ! g A, 5 A rd © o freight by motor tr ! e along the cast | Lowell and Boston and Lawrence i ; A ot N fre very. The system h i S K m was at s that wi o Lerritory, to | o 5 s ¥ it W d P ve to poph ofte grea . n shipper 3 v sorts Co it. Com Jatforms of fustria to e ¥ i ¢ o forg ¥ z i S taking freight ereirc xNever It ought to e huilt. ‘The trut in othe = e PO passing throng ' Gbservations A W S ded n other) Mas I"b u,’ / L n lhe Weather cou fress Argium \ ) ! I tions. ¥ rely or N ¥ e 1 N € ra l wi ) ] This w . ing upon trucks father than upc e of f Wher ons : pionesr 1 L4 1 8 1 . - ] 1 constructed they 1w r 1 g platforms and rd : 1 ritory which could yroduce 8 ¢ ght ter 1y y ficient business to m o A1S) o 1 reighit v i = for gene s r al to ' rai ' flow into such enterprises the ge B & M. & oug 5 5 ernment made gifts ntages stretches of land along the tracks, for - the usual method heing to ! PAYING THE PIP ’ E ne railroads every other v E o 8 sti § land. In th )« ¢ \ S crease in 1 YL g i ’ p long run W 1 re g & UsL ; the intrepid for their has oy 1 ‘ risks. Some of the western rai g $25,000,000 in & Lt uther roads still own considerable of this loans in the United Siaics a 4 At the loans neared T Jand. and when they sell it is a L untit 3 3 enormous | e e ast ! But s i ment could immid 4 " t ng the Th i ugo Stinnes bullt wp < SRS Dot geme to the staie follewing | The laie Hug | warmer, The Card 1 Sent A wedding gift is on its way e Card 1 Meant | Republican party in Cennecticut had any other leader, notwithstand- 1 like to feel that 1, toon, may ing the inclination of a large pro- In all your new-found gladness| portion of the Republicans of Con- | 1" o kethook were undisturbed share; | neeticut to have another. Congratulations, Happy Pair! { The Courant appears to be as . | correct as it is naive in proudly identifying the Connecticut Legisia- | which Louisiana State College Profes- sor Murdered ———— & ity with mutual agreement. Such a | approval of the local muster com- g ) “These inviations should be fs- | tion may not be expedient in gom mittee."” ' 5 ENTIRE CONTENTS COPYRIGHTED ‘Hmzn‘fly with specified units only | during their participation in parades 'nnrl patriotic demonstrations,” the sued by units commanders and the local muster committee in conform- localities and should not be under- | taken in any territory without the To amphasize the eivillan char- acter of the muster, corps area com- Baton Rouge, La., Ju | 2 1ge, La., June 3. (AP) |y anqers are directed to present their With members of the student body | | ideas as suggestions and recommen- under close survelllance, police to- lay renewed. thelr seich for ops | dations to the ~muster committees day renewed arch for the and local poMtical officials. layer of Professor Oscar B. Turner, | i albi i instructor in agronomy at Louisiana | p A was found dying in the agronomy | building yesterday, with numerous | /i T gashes on the head, face and throat, |Serious Floods in Lower Part of evidently inflietel with a heavy bloodstained fire ave, which was| Mexico Are Taking Heavy Toll of lylng near by. Lives. & Thae. officlal theory was that t erime was committed by a student, i Mexico City, June § (AP)—Spe- who might kave been discovered by cial dispatches from Vera Cruz re- Professor Turner rifling a desk from | certaln examination papers, which were to have been used by the gronomy class today, were missing. | Return of the examination papc under circumstances almost as mys- | Jleavy damage was caused oyer an terious u8 those surrounding the estensive zone in Oaxaca and Vera crime inclined au‘horities to the be- Cruz states, The waters swept lief that the slayer was one of the [awhy whole familics, thelr live stock student Dbody. The victim's wateh and other possessions. TArge irees lwere uprooted, adebe heuse lev- The missing papers restored to Pro- [eled and crops ruined. fessor Turner's desk after the dying | San Blas, a suburb of the city of Markham, ‘Tehauntepee, was reported alnost portthat more than 100 persons have been drowned and several harmlets destroyed in the isthmus region, by the overflowing of the Tehauntepee and Perros rivers, caused man was found by R.G. senior agriculture student, whe had |destroyed ; de: s .“.‘“‘,?‘“: o] | A wedding gift is on it way. | ture as Mr. Roraback, According t0 o, sorving as an assistant teach Special dispatches from Juchitan, sh el bed | And here and now I want to say |the cuiet observations and openly |\ (1. \hen the student hall was nea# the Gulf of Tehauntepce, siate Ehe it roke down | Gifts €hould be tax-exempt, they | expressed opinions of many people iy ongeq with detectives and crowds |that the water are six foet above i he 1 too over the border what the Leglsla-| o .\iqus persens. normal and =till rising. Railway The 0 Are business losses, real and true! | ture did was what Mr. Roraback| giqents in Professor Turner's |traffic has hoen cut off, with bridges S aha ot DO | did. Some of the Republican lead-| oo™ 0 o he given a drastic and tracks washed awa : o On Her Wedding Day ers in Hartford County, it 1s alleged, | . uiioning before the cofoner’s fury e e Yale, Pref. 1 The Card 1 Sent had offended him ""“"”"; 'h‘i\{ op- |\ hieh adjourned last night until to- Two Fatalities QOccur Al s Whit f T ean’t forget that it's today posed his choice for United States| .. afier failing to make any recom pasis A e o UTatare aiong:ite'a happy way | Senator and these leaders did net :,“:‘,;‘“;;”:”(. ) y In Worcester Sunday Pr len(ip AT ley of | Together, may the years just smile get committee appointments. | (LSRR 2 Woreester, Mass .lpno 8. (A= e sehool Loard, and Drof. 1. G. And bring you everything worth| As is well known also Mr. John Two persons were killed, twg were hard. The Apollo Vocul club | while! 1. King, a Repiblican leader in! PLANS seriously injured, six received Bruines el 15ic . | Bridgeport, has long besn a.thorn } {and lacerations and one arrest was The oy 1 gle |in the Roraback flesh. The Legisla- | made in automobile accidents 1 1 B s ‘camp The Card 1 Meant | ture, therefore, passed a so-called | Worcester and vielnity yesterday At Bar Sat. | T can’t for that it's today “ripper bill” to impair the local gov. | | Arthur 1la:’1\. 80, was Killed in e 8 G her | You'se planned to throw Yourself | arnment of Bridgeport. At least, 8o Leominster when struck by an auto- s e ‘ 1 be re. away Bridgeport alleges and the nature of e '”_”‘I'"" v“‘““)"“':“"" Leo . 1‘1\ hitney : g et s ool ayeery | n pusithrianClpsemaila haTe (DRen Patriotic' Demons(rations t0: b |7he ascident eccurred in trant et i ant : — | where ';::Or,.‘..\mum orgml‘lrav“l()}; e IAh R ey JEuTieni Rra " for The Great Benefit el i Key“ote |son of Trial Justice Dennis Healy of ; ! 5 b antisRorabiacle: Hardwick was killed in Barre when 5 Mrs. Covington: “Little Kenneth| Quit .as naive an the Courant's} hit by a car eperated by Fred G : e is doing #o well In school. He €an | (dentification of ths ConnectieUt| i\ rton June 5. (AP)—Direc- |Chouture of Gardner. 1 ase 4 1 reag all by himself nnu}\' Legishture as Mr, Roraback is its "85 fi:rm'{r_n siellaies] S 8 rks will s Morriston: “That will be a great ! giatement that, if becayse of all the o : i) 0 i g J satistaction to the people around | Republican outery being made “Mr, Mol Hemopttiatiepins s Postal Revenues (;ou}g iy " ou when yoy take him fo the| Roraback should In disgust throw oo "y Tt T aed 0 a Down by Millions S o G uniis et L LR the chplrmAnsap oF the Republi- | o\ prenensive cirenlar of instruc-| Washington. June § (AP)—Postal S e —Lia Woll. | can State Committee, nothing ould | \jon " cont gut Ly the war depart-|1¢venues instead of heing boosted as pimps Wil be 1. the two | b "’,r"""““":“:”r;'l““(‘;"”’1:;\“";““:":’;"_ ment to the nine arca commanders. | contemplated in tha Increased pest n . L pressure ea- Ay i = ¢ g P! CVET. | The commanders are directed to age rates which beeame effective . Rl v 0|y aaamay b s IBAR SL MANTENC insemato bie AL it misfortunes com .qqfer with state and municipal au- April 15, are declining gt the rat o L A eneinc his wife epeaks of him as @ | C-oLe PAFty in Connectlcut It WOBL thorities and local committees in or-|of more than $12,000,000 & yesr, it ; installed AT g a5 | be because Mr. Roraback voluntarily .r 1o aseist in every way in arrang- was indicated today in a sunimary i P throws up his job. There are those g (he demonstrations. of receipts for May . = who say that he never has behaved | Aq was the case in the original de-, Receipts at 50 selccted pest offices ecretary Weeks Now Enough Is Safcient as if he had any such feeling. WhY | fense test Inst year, details of the(for May totalled § 4561 aw Q i g L FEuest Shat Ju IhR NIF, {should he? The Courant admits with | muster and of the patriotic celebra- |compared with $20,983,231 for April Showing Improvement \»’M.“":T‘:“\\”fir‘ ):‘a'nu;: '1';;:".{ oy | Chcerfulness and _pride ¢ Mr{ (lons are left_entirely fo the lTocal |$29,085,090 for March, These of- Boston, J (A]')—Continued 2 L o Roraback is the Legisiature and that | communities. The regular army per- | ces, which turn in more than half improve 1 t litlon of S nics in Juney should be enough to make him im-| gonnel is under instructions, Jow-|of the country's total post receipts. it of W W aakn, ‘\ because, 1 hate to oes . portant even if not unanimously &p- | ever, to “give the impetus and direc- |reported a decrease of more thay who was operat Uy L0 proTEssng. e XM 19y preciated. [ tion nocessary to insure @ successful |$20,000 for cach business day as Phillips it0e s aliereUim L MR GULIR YA ix i e | defense test.” compared with March, when the old o8 r gall stones, was oon E. W. PETERSON GRADUATES | A new feature is the instruction to | yates were in effect, ° rey lay vékcians, | X dward W. Peterson, son of Mr.|army personnel to seek the appoint- | S ] 2 (opu | DUt Lefeatithat some day T and Mrs. Edward Peterson of 402 ment of local muster commitice FIND BODY IN RIVER am 1 . buttetin | . W1l be hit, from out the sk¥, | park street, this city, was graduated | through the cooperation of elvillan| Mjddietown, June 8 (AP)—The 5 By @ loose nut from some super- |jast week from North Park college, |authoritles, the commitices to “rep- hody of Julius C. Dumeer, §8 years i fying car Chicago, TIl, and is epending a few | resent the state and local agencics old, was found floating In the Con- this will make at once of me | days at the home of his parents in | which would be used in procurement |necticut river near the dock of the SR A se nut; and you'll agree his city. He will Jeave shortly for under either a voluntary or selective |Connecticut State lospital yesterday There are plenty of them now, as| South Brookiyn, N. Y., where he will | service system,” to the men to fill )y Robert . Markham of Portland | matters are! ~ have charge of a church during the ' up the ranks of the varlous compo- Dumeer was believed to have been . 5 . L. Schiachfer. |summer. In the fall he will take & nents of the army of the United [a victim of the heat. Death was du: WEDDING TOMORROW. | — post graduite course at the college. | Btates assigned te each locality. o uscldental’ Showiihg Beotending \ y John sonnds Reasonable | Mr. Peterson is well known in this| “The functions in this respectto the medical sxaminer. . Pe son of Mr. and Mrs| Heusewife: “No, I won't give you [ city, having attended the schools|ghould be demonatrated in each com-| Dumeer disappeared Thursdas ¥ r Pc N Bur-| the dinner until you've sawed the| here before entering the ministry.| munity by filling Yhe ranks of the \morning after leaving his home to stoeet Phy Chachul- | pile of woed." | He waa active in Young People's cir- | organizationa stationed ip that vi-lgo to work aé the MNdletown Gas v ta Tramp Ray lady, you'll save & cies in the Bethany church and also | eir he person vhich may |Light Co plant near the riverfront place W =4t 7 o'clock | 19 by giving me something now. |served in the common council as & |le secured throngh initlations to cive It is believed that he was taken Wl tin th 1 Heart chureh. 5 | After all that exercise I'll eat l!lgtl(ey(uenuu\: of the fourth werd. ‘uuu of ity ase g asxve ¥ol- [and fgll lnte the tiver, »

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