New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 9, 1925, Page 9

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{wh Speaking: of Sports| &inton Buduick, one of the best playeiw this city has ever turned out, made himseif solid with the -Man. chester fans Saturday and Sunday he plawed In the lineup and hit the pill all over the lot, His work in the field was of the cham- plonship brand and evidently Buddle has recuperated considerably from his attack of malaria, The Eastern league moguls voted yesterday to revise the schedule so that those teums which have been without Sunday game ay have contests on the Babbath. Hartford put in a bid for Bunday games and the team's representative won out over the protests of others in the eireult. New Britain fans interested In the Hartford feam, will have a chance to spend some of their Sun- days in the Capital gity. Jimmy Naughton's report about the City League tvas accepted by the public amusement commission last ight at a meeting, Jimmy gave the commissioners an earful about how good the City League is going to be and his words were not the old 8, O. 8. but the real thing. The league | will be faster and better this year than ever, | Four more teams tried to enter the league but they were too late hecause it had already been decided | to limit the league to six teams, | With a showing like this year, the city fathers who hold the reins over the city's gold will probably have a good argument to have them loosen up with a larger appropriation next year for the furtherance of baseball in this city. Still, you hear the wize ones crack and say, “Oh, baseball is dead | in this eity.” What with Landers'| league in full swing and the City | I1sague to opén so on, Johnny Tobin's Corbin Red Sox playing the road and the Faleon€ at home not to mention the Rangers, Orfoles, Burritts, Speed Boys. the Church league and all the other junior teams, séme people | have to have an awful lot of base- | ball to have the game alive, | The Gascos will play a team com- | pased of Tanders players at Walnut | Hill park tomorrow afternnon. The Gascos have yet to loks a game this vear. ¥ The date set for Judge Bill Man- gan's team to play St Thomas' geminary nine is fast drawing close and Bill will.have to assemble his lineup pretty soon. That s the day | on which Jimmy Naughton steps back into the old togs and does his stuff. Bill, himself, years ago a pitcher of no mean ability, will| probably occupy the mound agalul this year. 1 The New Britain high school base- ball team ends up the present sea- gon this year with two games, one against the LaSallette Serninary and | the other against St. Thomas' Sem-i ifary, both of Hartford, The local | povs ars ont to win these two last | games to even up the slate which has been a poor one, High sehool athletes don't neces- «arily have to feel so awful bad about the showing of its baseball | and track teams beoause the sportsy the past year are about evenly di- | vided., New Britaln beat them all at football and only for bad breaks, | a perfectly good hasketball team would have cleaned the slate, Base- | pall and track haven't been g0 much, | but then New Brifain can’t have | averything and another year is com- ing. | Babe Ruth hasn't found hin bat- | ting eye. Out of four trips to the | Dlate vesterday he checked up & | jarge goose agg In the hit and run | column. E “Ruster'’ Lou Gehrig, last with Hartford, is busting them | plenty in the big leagues. Tester- | Aay Lou got a homer, a triple and MMe eacrifica fly scored the” winning run for the Tankees, - o The Pirates’ baseball team will practics tonight at Walnut Hill park This is an important session and all hers are requested to be pres- | . Tha Orioles will practice tomorrow night on Diamond No. 1 at Walnut | HUl in preparation for a hard game next Sunday. The local nine wiil iourney to Meriden to meet the fast travelling Clovers of that city. Re- ports from the Silver City state that the Clovers will have a strong lineup in the field and the local bhoys will | all be on deck tomorrow night fo | arase the rough spots discovered sg far. The Rangers and Matty Hayes. star eatcher for the team. are on the suts. Tast Sunday an argument srepped out between the, manager 5t the Rangers and Matty, and both zot angry with the result that Mat v swung over and played with the Fafnir-Dragons against his own teammates, ‘The Rangers all con. sider this a bad breach of athietic ctiquette and they' state that they | and Matty have severed relations for 1l time. : This will be a bad bit of news for | all those who have heen following tha Rangers in the pursuance of thair sports hecause much of the | team’s pep has been ascribed to Matty's work behind the bat. Hayes is & coming‘cateher who eould make | something in the baseball world if | he follows the straight path, His aet of switching against his own men iast Sunday was anything but sportemanlike and savors a bit of elevated opinion of himself. This. however, docs not seem to ba at all like the Matty Hayes of the dia- mond, who. a couple of years ago. was #o loyal to the Rangers club | that even when his head was split opsn by a batter who swung back too, far. he refused to quit until he was lterally forced to do so. Tt is the ardent hepe of all fans that Ma: and the Rangers will patch up thair differences and that the future [ held the lead to the fintsh |annual ball at the Elks home. The will see Matty in hi hind the bat. Tommy Aldrich of the Fafnir-Dra- gons is full of enthuslasm anent the chances of his team in the City league, He states that the defeat his team suffered last Bunday against the Rangers was only a turn for the kood beguuse the team will shape up betler when they start out in earnest to cop the champlonshlp of the City league, Brief Sketches of Famous Stars JESSE J. HAINES §t, Louls Cardinals Right-Handed Pitcher Born—-Clayton, 0., July 22, Major league career—Joined dinals fn 1920, coming from Kansas City, American Assoclation, in player agreements, (Had brief tyl with Detroit and Cincinnati clubs). Outstanding feats -~ Pliched the NATIONAL LEAGUE Games Yesterday Chicago 10, New York 4. 8t, Louls 6, Bwooklyn 5. Cincinnati §, Philadelphia 2. league season against Boston on July 17. It was the first time since 1876, a Bt. Louls pitcher had achieved the feat, Won 20 games ‘and lost 13 in 1923, Allowed 3.11 Pittsburgh 8, Boston 4, | earned runs same season. ' The Standing won o ve| EASTERN LEAGUE New York (4 T Brooklyn S T Pittsburg . 210 BSB L gyhany, June 9, (P—Worcester de- Cinclnnati ...... 1 23 000 goated Albany 10 to 8, In an 11-in- Philadelphia .... 21 28 AT Ihing game yesterday, errors figuring | Chicago ........ 20 317 iy fhe scoring of many of the runs, ft, Louls ....... 19 28 104 {Cagey Stengel, Worcester manager Boston ......... 18 27 400 {and Bill McCorry, Albany leader, were notified of their indefinite sus- pensions by Dan O'Neil, president of the Kastern league, for their actions in Sunday's game. McCorry threw a bat at Pitcher Muich of Worcester, |and Stengel threw a ball into the .. |grandstand from the outfield when there was no play on. The score: | rhoe Albany 001 320 200 00— 8 12 6 Games Today Brooklyn at 8t, Louis. New York at Chicago. Philadelphia at Cincinnati, Boston at Pittshurgh. AMERICAN LEAGUE Games Yesterda New York 6, St. Louis 5. (10 4n-|Woreester 010 030 300 02—10 12 3 nings). Odenwald and Caulway; Batchel- Detroit 7, Philadelphia 6. |der; Goldsmith and Cousineau, Boston 3, Cleveland | New Hayven-Springfield | New Haven, June 8. (P—New Ha- |ven took the final game of the series - {with Springficld yesterday, 5 To 4, in Chicago-Washington, rain. The Standing . Won Lost one of the most sensational contests Philadelphia 15 seen at Weiss park this season, The Washington 18 Profs were leading 3 to 2, when the Chicago 22 052 |visitors staged a rally that netted Cleveland 24 AT8 them two runs in the ninth. The lo- 8t. Louis . 28 472 calg filled the bases in their half of Detroit 28 440 [the pinth and won on a two hagger New York 28 %417 by Runsel. The score by innings: Boston ...... 30 .3 AR |Springfield ... 011 000 002—4 5 1 Games Today {New Haven... 003 000 002—5 11 2 Detroit at Philadelphia. | Mayberry and Niederkorn; Me- Cléveland at Boston. (Other teams not scheduled). | Kenty and Berger Hartford-Waterbury INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE Waterbury, June 3. —Hartford de- feated Waterbury for the third : e straight time here yesterday, 'the Yesterday's Results score being 2 to 0. Owen bested Reading 6. Toronto 0 Raltimore 5, Buffalo 3. Jersey City 8, Syracuse 2. Providence 3, Rochester 2. Pearce in a tight pitched game. The Senators took’ advantage of the only Brasseo error to push over one run in the second and the other run in |the eighth came on the end of & double steal. The score: The Standing P Won Lost P.C.| T Toronto . 34 19 542 | Hariford ...... 010 000 A10—2 § 0 Baltimore .31 20 808 |\waterbury 000 000 000—0 6 1 Jersey City ..... 30 28 856 Owens and Kenna; Pierce and Reading . 20 24 547 |Schauftel. o Buffalo .. it T TR ) IR Rochester 20 28, .17 Bridgeport-Pittsfield Syracuse 18 33 3531 Bridgeport, June 9.—Bridgeport Providence TGS 327 {came. from hehind with a four run rally after two were out in the ninth and defeated Pittsfield, 8 to 7, he yesterday afternoon. It made Games Today Torento at Reading. muffalo at Ballimore. Syracuse at Jersey City Réchester at Providence. a clean sweep in the series with the Hillies and the sixth conseeutive vie- tory for the Rears. The batting of —— Henzes and Christy stood out. The FASTERN LEAGUE score: P | B Games Yesterday Pittsfield 203 002 0ND—T7 13 3 Bridgeport 8. Pittsfleld 7 Bridgeport ... 300 000 104—8 12 0 Snover, Schelberg and Hager; Wil- llams, Caffery and Army. New Haven 5, Springfield Worcester 10, Albany § Hartford 2, Waterbury 0. i 'Donation Tournament Tl e At Shuttle Meadow Albany 18 The Shuttle Meadow club Iink\i PR - will be the seene of a donation tour- i nament among the members to ha Hartford o I played tomorrow. Each entry in the Dildpnens o tournament will he awarded a prize. | s 1 F No entries have been received yet ag Waterbury 2 the tournament will be run post en- ‘V’\'g;:"::;r o tries. This s a popular event at the club each year and is one that draws a great many entries, fact that’the poorest duffer will be |awarded a prize makes the tourna- | ment one that is not limited only to |those who are good or who consider | themselves in the Hagen class, but {all others may enfar with the assur- |ance that they will he a winner, Games Today Albany at Bridgeport New Haveg at Waterbury. Pittsfield at Hartford, Springfield at Worcester, NO 9 SPORTS Wesleyan .. .. .. P R TE LT T Middletown, June 9. — Weslagan deteated Trinity in a loosely playad baseball game here vesterday, the score being 10 to 1t was the elosing feature of the Commence- ment program. Trinity gained an early lead but Wesleyan overtook the visitors in the fifth inning and | Howard | and Rupprecht both hit homs runs. | The ecore by inings | BOYS, JOIN THEY! SUMMER MEMBERSHIP RHE | Trinity 210 010 p01— b 8 2| FOUR MONTHS Weslevan . 100 150 12x—10 11 0| Whittaker, McKniff and Pryor, | il Thompson; Nichols, Jacobson and | Rupprecht. | ST. ELMO LODGE MEETING Tomorrow night at 8 o'clock St Elmo lodge, Knights of Pythias, will | exemplify the degree of knighthood | on a class of eight candidates, This | is the last initiation for this term. The election of new officers will be held within a few weeks. On Thurs- day night the lodge will hold its first $2.00 ENTITLES BOYS to all PRIVILEGES, INCLUDING SWIMMING POOL affair promises to be ons of the| most brilliant of the season from $ALESMAN SAM reports recefved from the commit- | v tee in charge. | i e e | WAC - COOK | Buffalo, N. Y., June 8, (P—Eddie (Kid) Wagner of Philadelphia afd | Harry Cook, Buffalo negro light- | welght, fought a fast 10 round draw here last night. The weights were: | Cook 135, Wagner 1 ‘ ——— 600 Punctures But : Still Full of Air A new puncture-proof inner tuba has been introduced in Chicago which was punctured 600 times without the loss of any air. Motorists can in- | creass thelr mileage over 12,000 miles by using this tube without re moving it from the wheel. It costs no more than the ordinary tube. If interested write the Afrlox Tube Co., Dept. 4605-H, Sioux Falls, South Da- kota, for full information as they want thesa tubas introduced every. where. Wonderful opportunity for agents. Simply send name—a post- card will do.—adt, 1993, | only no-hit game of the 1924 major ‘ ol The | AB, R. H. PO, A B — Burns, 1t 0 138 0 0 Fonseca, 2b P g | (Continued From Preceding Page) (gehuntz, rf . T e I B S Harper, of ¢ 0 174878 0 Hawks, 1b 2707 e 00 CHICAGO Henline, x 1:8, 0. W9 g AB.R. H. PO, A B.|wWisen, ¢ oI T A 1 3§ Olgnd, s R R T 1.0 3 0lkimmick, »s e R (e 0 ] ‘ 0| Huber, 3b | n 1 01 0 32 1 0 OfRipg, p % B S 1 1 0 0fymokan, xx R S ] 7 4.1 Oipetts, p d 0 8 0 8 s 1 L ] > - - - - - R R O ) Totals ;[N SN DR I or. 1.0 0 CINCINNAT 9-.9.08 8 AB R H, PO A B - - = = ICrits, 1> PR ) L L] 3 4 L] Totals 36 10 12 27 16 0 |Dyesien, 3b . i e x—Batted for Gowdy Iu 7th, Roush, of . A0 S e e | New York ... 000 102 100~ ¢ [gmith. 1 i . 11x=10 [ Walker, rf 4 8 3.8 0 0 Three |Caveney, ss . R R e base hit ~Brooks (2), [Niehaus, 1b AL L B ‘T"")‘ Ja riffith, Alex- |Hargrave, ¢ , ‘ n n [ ] LJ ander (2). Double Gonzales 10 |Rixey, p . e TR S AR T Freigau; Adams to Frelgau to Gri EEVh s gy gt Vi Adams ‘to_Grimm, Totaln T LR T York 4, x--Batted for Ring In 5th. nder 2, Bentley 3, Greenfield, Struck xx-—Batted for Hawks in #th, y Alexander 3, Beritley 4. Hita—off | Two hase hits—Harper, Huber, " tley 10 in 4 1.3, off Greenfield 2 in|Thres base hit—W, Btolen base— | Wild pitohes—Bentley. Losing |gchultz, Double play—Critz, Caveney to pltcher—Rentley, Umplres—Moran, Wil- |Njehaus. Left on bases—Philadelphia 5, son and Quigley, Time-—1:58, Cincinnat! 7. Base on balls—off Ring 3, I | Botts 1, Btruck out—hy Ring 1, Betts 1, Rixey 4. Hita—oft Ring 5 in 4, Betts 1 . H. PO. A I, |In 4. Tosing pitcher—Ring, Umpires— | Stitehett, ns 1 4 & 0|McLaughlin, Rigler and Hart. - Time— |Johnston, b ASLe sl 3. Wheat, 1t . 10 3 0 o — Foutnler, 1h T ol 0 Brown, of .. 01 3 0 o th A“ Loftus, rf . LRt gl n e eys Btock, b . e e D Taylor, ¢ g 1 s N ol Ocschger, p . 4 0 6 6 o) ROGERS BOWLING ALLEYS Ouborne, p .. 0 0 0 0 o o - - - Two Mon L Totals 6. 7x24 14 1|Btror 8 94 105 485 s |venb'g 82 92 g5 459 R. H, PO. A B[ = - = Rlades, If ... geigity 151 186 200 194 193— 954 J. Smith, cf Layict Hornsby, 2b .. yay 82 97 92 93 88— 462 Bottomley, 1b . 0 3 13 LES R g LU L | O'Farrell, ¢ . g0 —- - |Flack, rf . IR 181 104 189 Bell, 3b () CE Toporcer, &3 . fis s 54 91 93 Dickerman, 0780 S 1 120 83 Stuart, p . 09 0 9 e e Dohthit, 2 1 RIS R 17 211 176 Totals 84 6 14 o1 92 103 88 104 105 491 x-—-None out when winning run scored, |Wag't 85 108 88 10, 26— 475 z—Batted for Dickerman in 7th S S 2 Brooklsn ...... 0 030 0nn 1 08 1 201 966 8t. Louls 3 100 110 0216 | = E— S ixnbemhltac donzeton Bty MOVIE WORLD DIVORCES ades. ome run—Toporcdr—Doubla : 3 | playe—Mitchell to Stock, Stock to Mitehel | /08 Angeles, June 3. (A—Two di- to Fournier, Mitchell to Stack to Four-|VOrce actions invelving motion pic- nier, Loftus ta Taylor. Left on bases— [ture actors have been started here. Brooklyn 7. St. Louis 9. Base on balls| Florence Vidor yesterday filed snit ot r-w:mmmt 5, Qeschger 3, Osborne|gor givorcs from King Vidor, direce Philadelphia Lew Gets Unanimous | paen appointed an asststant superin- |2 Struck out—by Btuart 1. Hits—off g | tendent, it is announced in a bulle {Ocschger 10 n 8 (0 out in 7th), off Os.|tor, alleging desertion. &he asked | pecisjon Over Pittshurgh Welter- | ' e e bulle- {berne 4 In % (0 out tn 9th), off Dicker-|for custod yof Suzanne, their six year |tin from the Prudential Home Of- ‘h:ar‘l} 5 wrz'r_ off e:;mu 1 m‘ \‘L;mymz\qlq child. weight in Ten Rounds, | fice in Newark, N. J. He has been [Ergirenokiem and McConener—Omorne. |~ Tan Kelth Boss, known in the film ’ assigned to Meriden, a detached gs- 15508, ; D |world as Tan Keith, is asking a af- | Philadelphia, June S.—Lew Tend- |sistancy of the Hartford distriet, of . |vorce from Blanche Yorks. He ;vr.| T;M::nd;lp;:fl' \\ell,';:m'elxht,‘ de- | which John E. Mahar is superinten- |charged desertion. eated Jack Zivie, sburg, in a |dent. R, H, PO. A E.| AL fast ten-round bout at Shibe park. | e Nei, ef L n L] [ g g - y 3] ad A el o o? - o Nk S 1 % % 1l ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT, |(The Philadelphia rec herld :he PRESENTED WITH PURSE. Welsh, rt . ® 2 1 0 0| Mra Addle Plude of 100 Seymour [unanimous decision of the -’"'F 8 Mrs. Henry Abrahamson of 179 Burrus, 1 o 8 1 0fstrect has announced the engage-| Tendler out-punched and out-box- | sypjiee street was presented with a Gibson, « ? 2 ) 2 Olment of her daughter, Miss Madiyn, |84 Zlvic. Both landed many hard | ., ... ot money last evening during Harrls, If L g iR 0 , blows, but Tendler's appeared to Padgett, 2b o 1z 2 ofto Walter E. Vance, son of Mr. and | >0V lling® effect The | 2 birthday surprise party tendered | R. Emith, s 0 1 5 & ofMrs W.C Vance of Plainville. Mr.|have more A “f”‘" esrted o | her at her home, The house was dec- {aranam. 'y 00 0 0 0|Vance ls employed by the Vulcan ‘:’l"““_] “”"h“" d"”‘l“‘,;l“m"' """",;.h“dle: orated in a color schems of green, Nl ® o o & &lIron Works and Miss Plude in the|clinching an d ,"-' i with pink roses. |Genewte o 4 o & 1fW. L Hateh office. No date has “"[‘f“"d ’q“h 90“,""*;3?:" o [oNen, = O S aias e enny Schwartz, Baltimore, re- | 5 g |O'Nell, xx 0 | becn et for the wedding. i Bt itaeil e o PALUSO LOSES BOUT Totals 35 47 2 13 ) | ceeesse—ses——w-—— | Bohby Wolgast, Atlantic City, and | Trenton, N. 1., June 8, (M-—John- i PITTSBURGH ‘ g 4 Tiger ¥lowers, Atlanta, Ga. was 'ny Brennan, Trenton flyweight, last [Cerarier aswom oo x| Cuts Gasoline Cost awarded the verdict over Les An- [night won a newspaper decision over 135 re 2h { Sl B to 10 Cents a Gallon dn.r::on(i l:ins!r‘n. Both were ten fl‘,mtn ‘P;!luao. a; !I:‘;H'L!ke City, fn & Wt 5 1 1 3 3 1| James A May of 4605 H 8t, Sioux | Tound bouts. ALEESHY TOURCIROIL | Traznor, 3b . ¢ 1 % 2 1 0|Falls, & D, has perfected an amaz- | —. | Bighee, 10 ... T8 S A R0 e deviee that is enabling car | ing new device tha nabling Grantham, 1b ..ol 143 0 0] umers to cut their gasoline billa in City Sights | Aldridge, p 3 0 1 1 3 o|half by doubling their mileage from T - = — --|gasoline used. Many owners have B Sl 12T 2 mude over 40 miles on & gallon. he SUDway Platform x—Batted for Grantham In 4th g xx—Batted for Genewich in fth, [Tt also removes carbon, increases Hoston ~ iiiiis 000 300 0104« motor power and pep, prevents Pittsburgh 3 1080 10x—8 [ oo 1 bl o d heatl | Two base ts—Wright, Grantham. Stol spark plug troubl> and overheating lain bases—Caray, Moore (%) Marriott, | ANyone can instal it in five win- | Traynor. Bacrifice—Aldridge, Gibson, utes, Mr. May wants agents, anl | |Double play—R. Smith to Padgeit. Left | g offering to send one free 1 one | on bases—Boston 6, Pittsburgh b et it on halls—oft Aldridga 3. off Graham 2, |@Nto owner in cach locality oft Marquard 2. Struck out— by Ahlndz;i"im today.—ad Base Write “ Announcing ~ Station TWO | of the O’Neil Tire & Battery Co. COR. PARK and STANLEY STS. New Britain, Conn. SAME Service — SOME Service We Lead — Others Follow AFORMER TIGER NOW 34, STIL PLAYING John Eubanks Is Grandlather But Pitches Well Battle Creek, Qlich,, June 9. (F— merly wore a |A b4-year-old grandfather, who for. Detroit Tyger uni. By CHARLES P. STEWART NEA Bervice Writer Washington, June 9.—~When the ‘Conk county commissioners refused a few days ago to turn over the | state's share of the county taxes to the treasurer of Ilinois, they took the first wtep toward what may | prove to be the greatest change this country has known since big form, still fs able to pitch winning | cities began to grow. baseball despite his years, Fans who knew the 1906-06 will remember him, Eubanks, who came to the club the | same year that Ty Cobb did, Of all | It's the crux of t Tygers in John the players in the Americar® league the) Walter Johnson, and Eubapks has tive purposes long before Chicago |is in Chica, just two remain, Cobb and vivid memories of each. Fubanks, who lives at Rellevue near here and pitches for the Bel- levue United Stone Johnson's first game in the Amer-| ican league, and says that Walter's | spiked shoes were the cause of the | team, recalls young rookie's defeat in that con- test “Walter was only 19, just a kid, | when against Detroit in that he piteched for Washington maiden league game of his,” Fubanks said, “He had never worn spiked shoes | until that day, always preferring tennis shoes, “When he got on the fdirly stumbled all over himself, He | wasn't used to the shoes, fleld he But he could pitch, and the score was three to nothing in favor of Washington in the seventh inning, with none o!‘ our boys hitting. “Will Armour was managing the | Deotroft team then, and he told us all to bunt, couldn’t field a bunt course Johnson with those or spiked shoes, and we got the game. But we always knew it was those spikes that lost him that one.’ Fubanks has a son, a dalighter and three grandchildren TENDLER BEATS ZIVIG | The state treasurer naturally will | | sue. And since a federal constitu- tional principle I8 involved— Ah, a word as to that principle! whole thing, Tliinois was districted for legisla- | — Chicago and Cook county are the same thing — ‘had attained its present population, On the basis of |its then number of inhabitants it was glvun adequate representation at Springfield. Chicago grew, however, out of all proportion to the rest of the state, | OW of all the citizens of Illinols, nearly half are Chicagoans. They pay more than half the big | state taxes. But thelr representation forever, in the legislature hasn't | creased by a single seat, | Finally they demanded a redis- tricting of the state, on an up-to- date population basis, Rural mem- bers of the legislature, heavily out- | numbering the city representatives, turned the proposition down, . been {n- Thereupon, “Cook county,” sald the commissioners, “is being taxed without representation — without due representation, at any rate, This is unconstitutional. By violal ing the constitution the legislature has invalidated Ilself. We repudiate taxation imposeq and laws made by ;un illegal body.” Well, as previously remarked, the Sowarf el led state treasurer will sue, of course, probably in the state courts, But, a federal constitutional principle being involved, the come missioners doubtless will get the case before a federal judge, There will be appeals, but both sides will be in a hurry, the treasurer tor his money and the commissioners to vindicate their position. It will be a litigation well worth ‘puahlnl ahead. In short order ft | will be before the supreme court in | Washington, | .. ¥ | Now, suppose Chicago wins. It will mean a revolution, nothing less, | Not a blg city in the country but fix, New York, Philadelphia, Boston, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indlanapolls, 8t. Louls, Kansas City, New Orleans, | Minneapolis, 8t. Paul — all the rest | == all in the same boat! | Not one but is under rural domi- nation. The country is predominant. ly urban, as census figures show. But it is rurally governed in every single state, It looked as if this might go on The situation could be changed only by the votes of rural 3] Y f legislators and they wouldn't vote that way, Chicago, however, has thought up a method of attacking the probe |lem from a new angle — the ju~ diclal instead of the legislative one, | It may work. | If so, it's inevitable that every center of population which hitherto | has suffered under the misrule of those who, at best, knew nothing of metropolitan conditions, and, at worst, positively enjoyed playing horse with city slickerdom, will fol- low the example of the community- | by-the-lake, | Then look out for some mighty ! rapid changes in a lot of laws! MONAGHAN PROMOTED. Willlam A. Monaghan, formerly a newspaper man, who became an agent for the Prudential Insurance Co. In this city In January, 1928, has @ McClure Newspaper Syndicate Howdy & Guzzlem's New Rum Row ) JU5T GOT Wi OUT N TIME., Gu2Z-~)' | THINK HE'Y COMING 10, NOW — WHEAR'S TH' BOTTLE 7 Pile Sufferers Mr. H. P. S8eaman of Abingdon, Mass., writes; “I have had plles for 25 years and you can imagine the number of remedies I have tried, but neighbor of mine, Mr. F. E. Perkins, gave me a box of your Hamadala Tablets. Mr. Fugene F. Diener of Dunn- ville, Ontario, writes: “I wish to thank you for the benefit I have re- ceived from using your tablets for | piles. I have suffered with bleeding | piles for over 29 years and have tried | everything, from the best doctors to |all the advertised remedies, but | Hamndalfl s the only thing that ever helped me. The Hamadala Treatwment is sold | by M. A. Axelrod and all good drug- gists under a rigid guarantee, Qut of {town sufterers can obtain them by mail. Price $1.00. The Hamadala ! Co., Box 445 Buffalo, N, Y. By GLUYAS WILLIAMS Get Quick Relief I never had any real relief until a.

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