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New Britain Herald HERALD lesued sUB $5.00 & ’ Entered at the Post Office at New Britatn as Second Class Ma TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office Editorial Roome ... Member Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bidg., 87 Church Btrost. Yenr, 2.00 Thiee Months. COMMITTE AND COAL PUBLISHING COMPANY Governor Trumbull has been in touch with the coal situation strike started, with the aasist- | close since the anthracite aving studled it ance of his committee of eleven, SCRIPTION RATEB | Cohatetlny ottt iras faca i arahass three representatives of the Man 8c. & Month. | facturers’ association, three members | of the Connecticu amber of Com- | merce, and two ot! Mat(er, The only emergeney ut is one “inconvenien rs to h been the verdict 926 926 s he necessary for the public of substitutes th And It 18 stated paremtliot of the Associated Press wish to The Assuclated Press 1 exclusively en. titled credited |, news pubiished berein. Member Audit Burean ot {irculation, The A. B b tury tisers with elrculation, are based upon th protection distribution figures to both loca) advertisers. | The Hernl York at Bquara; to the ure for all news credited to it or Hotaling's Newsstand, Schultz! Grand Centra), nistra re-publication of not othermire and also local Instead of doing his paper for a coal ad- for the lo M would be o, a etrl our n | Chan o ( » nud adver- ly honest analysie of elrculation etatist dit. This ineures traud ewspaper | paign of edu onal and | 1» & national organizat ommerce, the i turers assciation and coal againe! ation, 1 and as clearing associations to houses for information during the 4 fa on sale dally In New Times Entrance npaign of edueation is ‘o wsstanda, Street, o i how se bl s cox an0 how to use bituminous co: suggestion is made that PADDING SHOULD END The tim various departments of ¢ be submitt penses fo Board of } estimates hoard and fixin prime 5 they s only thos necessary ernment quiremen It a cft titioned d cians or ¢ ment yidend them. H the practic buek” to t tion, th money ty is 1 ont of t reason not tion it the next fiseal year to the | inan preparir krows t retofore De nical experts are sald to be volunteer demonstrators, | OF ESTIMATES pr ings. ! | ired to address public meet- is soon here when city will | This attempt of the governor to| g their estimates of ex- | circu vent the coal situation is good | i & 1t goes, But it doesn't go One as far and Taxation. The | far en of the necessitlcs e b 1 to of {he present situation is that the price of low volatile | be kept down to reasonable leve This d. It fs| true people have budg bituminous coal at- | one of the! to call has not been ach that 5,000,000 1epar ments | been using bituminous coal but not ippropriations for nthra- in the nor's com- paying as much for it . This is the meat that the ch are really | cite co he clty gov-|cocoanut gover! mittee seems to have entirgly over- {looked. The public of | tment has been pe- | should not be asked to with the re- Connecticnt | he costs poiiti- there West | | of the anthracite and be coal or seems to hy inot pro- cost more in ommend | N ginia costs in the It volatile bitumin England tha the middle west. It wa the cost of the ous th make ox caused Mayor Paonessa to | e Board of Iinance and | his original suggestion regard- | fuel administrator for tl busy board | where the (i it = times | The governor and his committee have | o the people not need o he educated regarding| th bility of using hituminous | nts af- | g do| question. The conditions | fons. | advi practice of | coal an scarcely get any oth- | n followed | er. The {ssue hefore the state is why & in the | the West Virginia o t snch upon their prod transportation charges are paid and coal operators are high 5o that ¢ govern- ase. prices after allowed ex czitimate costs of handling and | listribution fa local communities a added the price anthracite o clogely resenibles what cost ea r in the T | HONORING THE MEMORY OF THE DEPARTED t the Elks lodg: its annual memorial serv- of this and t to provide & sup- of departed brethren of the local order. This is a service | | its nature touches every | art and opens the vista of the memory to past days when men joined in our [ now departed oys sorrows | those | of the ly- shared our he memory of carry ont a who have p: The impressives | Ll 1s only equalled | h which it is car- | nesday NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1925 LEITERATL GOING Nicholas MINISTRY 100 FAR Murray B Columbia president of university, who las besn he in this city, emitted quite a blast in his annual report which was made to- public day; and his the and notable of the throughout lingnosis times was charge that both the famlly o Iterate mini has been lax in the nEing of plion he up youth and to this as least ibes prevalence of Dr decline But in in referring 3} num of theol to the al students in the universities, at- tributed it to a “widespread intol- had 1ions which ap the United Ftates.” be not lerance" recently 50 1 th any un} ougliout All of which may may not. We do think there has Leen e tly an “illiterate min- istry” - the choice bad gerated, But of the adjec- seems in taste apd rather that there has intollerance of a kind created no admiration th no doubt, INSURGENTS STILL INSURGING ches from Wash- can be Although dis ington Saturday indicated that the Republican caucus of senators had accepted young LaFollette — al- though he wasn't present at the meeting = there evidently has been the L re {nsurgents 4 started a revolt h naming political dis- in in no improvement in alignment otherwise, or patches de the House ha connection Longworth Cooper. What is doubtful and altogether sequential, ] main thought be- hind the movement is symptomatic that insurgent etill lives; and there is every likelihood in the halls to the rem- R as speaker, preferring this will amount to he the movement that sundry new men of Congress, added the old insurging form trouble nants of insur- new bloc de- and hinder gents, will a singed to majority This is politics party. as it s played. A politician is really in a class by himself; he doesn’t need to Indulge in golf, bridge, chess or marbles to | realize he is playing eomething. | time. Work would be recreation. October weather 1n | evidently | By having December New Bngland true and it | | taxing tncon- | the | does its hest to keep the wolt from | | {he door—of the gasoline interests. casy to agree with the . In the Rbinelander case it was even easier than That Mrs. Rhinelander 14 not decefve “Kip” was evident It is comparativ verdict of a jur usual. from the testimony throughout the 1t fatuation. trial. was merely a case of in Three sented falks on pig raising on the that broadeasting stations pre- same night. One might say they were hogging the air, MOSUL QUESTION DOES NOT COME UP TILL WED. League of Nations Council Assem- bles Today For Important Meetings a, iee. T (P—The league of | today dispute betwern Britain as the council assembled W Mosul Turkey and Great most vital problem awaiting solu- tion. While tie queston does not come up for discussion until Wed- e Mosul &ub-committec nd it seems certain will be made negotiations met yost that anot] to bring ¥, c attempt bout direct | hetween the two parties. | PRUSIDENT'S TRIP TO THI. WEST in Ch mnprecedented | will be | to message 1o | incldentally lay W Coolidge is Presid Washington temorrow v and what to Chicago ausplelous occasion he Politically speaking. it today addressed | an town must be of some nual meeting of the | ureau Federation, ven slightly in- cal sense ean gr have as much luck as he ha with the othe | cont rerious difficulty has arisen at tsct in the refusal of the Foreign to ac A ery ¢ Turks, re Minister cept any ment of th the resented here b vfik Rushdl Bey, decision involving abandon- area, which part of the of TIrak over les 4 Rritish-m (Mesopot The Tur out that aga t would have the i in military o tion puted territory. “Wa are ther but added: Tt mean that pe A territory spokes E an pointed ec 1 declded the Bri antage of beng of the his country dis- too * he remarked, at, however, does not some 1o com FIGHTS EXTRADITION Man Held in Ohio For Milford Po- lice to C(ome Back Yor Trial Here, M rd, Cor Vanbenheurk eged embezziem residents in and a, Ohio —Caspar L. for al Milford Rav- wit gs. Captain of the police today on his r 1o formal fortimer B. Fox iepartment repor pros in Fowler went bring him back Chief Maher pers will be § offer : isition pa- to es €0, Captain Fow- again for the m Jisappeared Hartford police ¥ in Ravenna and notified the Milford department Re- i | | | FactsandFancies BY BUBERY QUILLEN tlyers weren't all iropped in Morocco, American Hint France: A onsibility, not a the air service mandate 18 & target, Join someth and Jurisprudence, learn Among those who are determined to eliminate the sub tune It 100 early to American collector will 1s yet tell which Tut's Baldness ¢ ample time tonie. Riving to T for The is hoid, most noticeabls nervous tension in the 1t you've kind, soft cen used to the doesn't turn other coal ¥y How odd overlooked that vernment the simple method of bootleggers to death, It Is easy to recognize the peak in the stock market, That's the suckers go in, Fasy way to make a wife hap, i dear, you look skinny ccmpared with that woman." Wales must find things dull at home, whem almost cvarybody goes to bed before 2 o'clock. 1t may not be a good idea to mix religion with your bueiness. Your business may be politics. The one-horse shay came to an end all at o Many modern ve- feve the same spectacular “It's a little too hot for whiskey" once referred to the weather, not to the darned beverage. 1¢ Now York would crooks, why not make to rent them offic discourage it a felony b3 kill the weaklings. Just isn't neccssary to on a few more | His game s being played all the |taxes and let Nature take its course. The Federal prisons are more en- ! joyable than ordinary jails. You meet &0 many more millionaires there. Correct this sentence: “Well, well,” the man chuckled; “it seems impossible to get that clinker out.” (Protected by Publishers® Syndicate) 25 Years Ago Today w Dritain's representatives have Iready begun their work to put through New Britain’s new sewerage system. Senator Sioper and Repre- sentative Attwood and Brady will be escorted by ngineer Cadwell through various Massachusetts clties with systems like that propoged for New Britain. The Massachusetts o chemist, H. W, Clark, has made a second examination of the seil in to sovereignty | | | ard of him | Beckley Quarter and finds it highly \daptable for sPwage PUrposes. Rev. J. E. Klingherg has been 4 president ot the Swedish Baptist Young People’s soclety at the state convention in Meriden. H and 1%, Askland were the New Brit- ain delegates. A new school is needed in the cast end, the school committee, finds, a8 the street school now overcrowded. There are many as 62 pupils in some rooms. Someonc left the gas burning and the window open after the subway commission meeting last night and the janitor was notified about m. 1le got up and turned off the jet. The New Britain basketball team, consisting of Loomls, Kron, man, Prelle, S Clark and Peterson, lefeated the All-New York team by 18-13 Saturday night at the Casino. Ne: st as { Saturday they will play the Mt. Morris team of New York, the game being preceded by one hetween New Britain and Hartford high schools. The Tabs have appointed the fol- lowing committees: Revision of con- stitution, T. H. Kehoe, J. I O'Dell J. M. Halloran, J. Fitzpatrick; soctal, J. B. Smith, E. L. Hannon, D. J. Sullivan, M. J. Connors and James Welch. Charles Merwin of this city has been chosen right tackle and cape tain of the all-star interscholastic team picked from the New York league elevens, Edward Meshken, local furrier, has « cannot continue for |a full line of fur collarettes, On The Weather Observation Wast cloudy m to win t for cloudy tor s probably light rain or snow in north and central portions; slightly colder Tuesday in north and extreme north portion; fresh northwest win Conditions: Pressurc this morning rn states east of er the center of listurbance being nea White River Canada ,on the northern shore of Lake Superior. It is causing cloudy and unsettled weather with snow in the lake regiox Buffalo, New York, reported seven inches of snow on the ground tliis morning at Areas of high pressure south Yore Mos: ht and 1 is relative- Iy in all the northe ow he lake 8 o'cle overspre n of the ntry. Conditions favor for clondy weather and cbange in temperature this vicinity not rine is Nep- | <{ By Georg where | is | 3a| Leh- Missis- | much | Shop Editor, care of the New Britain Herald, and your letter will be forwarded to New York. - We'd Trade There, , Wouldn't You? | Why not a corner jokery | Where they cook up good cheer, Make rolls, or current fun To foed our sense of humor on! | i Ready Yor It | Svivia: “Now that the football sea- m's over, what N going to with your football suit? | Harmon: “I'm going to learn to Jance the Charleston,” JOHN ANDERSON MY JO, JOAN A Revised Classic U to Bobby Burns) Shepard Chappell 1 (Wit W Anderson, my jo, John, | first acquaint | There were no flappers then, John, | Wi' cheeks be {1 was a comely 1At least yo told me so,... But all my color was my ain, | Jehn Anderson, my jo! on were i3 my John Ande; n you on, Jo, John, and 1 > young, | © no jazz-lands then, John { And simple songs we sung. Now “Annie Laurle” crackles | From out our radio! | T wonder which ye like John Anderson, my jo! Trecisely! Mrs. Shubert: “Every time my husband gets a slight fever he's frrit- {able and hard to manage. | Mrs. Hampton: “Sort of a ‘mean’ | temperature, eh? e we beet, | fyron Bossert. PROBABL They an owl looks wise. Maybe you would, too, it you saw the sights he sces every night! Do You Know Any Newlyweds? Your Mrs. King, a newlywed, had Just finished making her first cake, which had raisins in it. Quite proud | | of it, she took it in to show her | mother. Motler looked at the cake which seemed to be done very nicely, but when ghe pleked it up she said: “Why, Ethel, it has hardly risen at all, and it's quite heavy. Why is that?" Well, mother,”” answered Ethel, “I guess it must be the raisins in it |that make it so heavy. You know raisins contain iron.' ~—Dora Houston WHAT CALIFORNIANS THINK OF FLORIDA (Observed by Frank H. Williams) AR 11 EE I TIAL S Well, maybe it's nt so bad, for .6, Everytime folks talk about Flori- ¢ ey talk about California, too. i shegeEe” "&&!111882727 It 1sn't the heat, it's the humidity. Mxeee222111&L&$$8 22 I'd sure miss the mountains if I was in Florida. | 1. | CE&E8I—& Don't forget that California | the ALL-YEAR climate. 727008888 ea i Just wait until the Florida boom’s Then watch California. 4042278887211 1830 & k& RO&— No, I'm not jealous, but I can't understand it. Really, there's no comparison between the two places. | 214 *$3$I"DDSSS 8 has | I GFDSS? Golf-Mania They tell a story about an inveter- | ate golf fan who took his first trip | in an acroplane the other day. While doing a fancy stunt in the air, the machine turned “turtle" the pilot cried to his passenger | “Goodh old man." “Say,” replied the golf fiend, as | they approached the earth, “we're going to land on a lnks. Perhaps we'll be able to have a gamel” —James J. O'CONNELL, IN KLASS AT KRAZY KOLLEGE (Conducted by Gertrude) Teacher: “Becky, turn around here in an casterly direction and see what you can do with the word ‘orlental.’" Beck Andcallsky: “Mine mind I can’t make it hardly opp— | Jake Blitz wants te marry mit me, But either dot feller's a prince mit dleguize g { Oriental he's cracked up to be. Sitviite Teachar: “Miss Howell, now {s your chance | to produce a sentence with the word | ‘opportune.’ " | Letta Howell: “The ecat was singing her evening song Under the silver moon. So I shicd a shoe with all my might, And made her give opportune. I —Charles Neidecker. KRAZY KINDERGARTEN (Conducted by Gertrude, Jr.) Teetcher: “Lemuel, stop scratching and use ‘hellicose’ correckly Lemmie Lissen: J “You can puntch me all your mite on my stuck-out chest, And 1 can take a horse's shoe and almost bend 'er; In fact I am a tuff guy in every place but one, | S0 don't hit me in the bellicose its tender.” . | Teetcher: " “Bertrum, the werd “cheese’ off of { vou." { Dert Seed | “My sister went out on a party | And came home at sunrise next day, |’\na her frends sang down on the payment: ‘Cheese a jolly good fellow, her- ~—Yvonne Judels. Liqnid Assets | Owens: "Whatever happens, you're aliright as long as your re- serve gtock holds out.” Fontalpe: "Youre right at that QUESTIONS ANSWERED Tou can get an answer to* any question of fact or {nformation by writing to the Question Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Bureau, 1222 New York avenue, Washington, D, €., enclosing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can ex- tended research be undertaken, Al other questions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can. not be answered, All letters are confldential.—Editor, Q. How many s of teeth do logs have? When docs a puppy us- ually stop teething? A. Dogs have two scts of teoth, A puppy loses his first set just as o child does. The permanent sct con sists of forty-two teeth with four large grinders on the upper jaw and six on lower, Teething for the second set begink about the third or tourth month and s usually com- pleted when the dog s seven months old. Q. What does the word Shenan- doah mean? A. It is an Indlan word with sev- eral mecanings. Among others it i said to mean “daughter of the stars” and “a sprucy creck. Q. Are citizens State of the United country if they live abroad? Yes. is salt rising bread It is sometimes called self- rising bread Dbecause no yeast is used. It is raised by wild yeast that it collcets from the air. While it is eing made there is a disagreeable odor that disappears when the bread is baked, There is always an ele- ment of chance in making bread, but the following is a good reclpe if followed faithfully: 1 cup 1lk, 2 tablespoons white corn meal, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon sugar 1 tablespoon butter. Scald the milk allow it to cool until luke- warm, then add the salt, sugar and corn meal. Place in a fruit jar or a heavy crock or pitcher and sur- round with water at about 120 de- grees F. If the hand can be held in the water a moment without scald- ing it is the right temperature. Allow the mixture to stand for 6 or 7 hours until it shows signs of fer- mentation. 1f it ferments sufficient- ly the gas can be heard escaping. This leaven contains enough liquid tor one loaf. Make a soft sponge by adding one cupful of flour for each loat to be made. Beat thoroughly and put the sponge to rise at a tem- perature at 120 degrees . When it is very light add more flour gradual- ly until the dough is stiff enough to be kneaded without sticking to the hands or the board. Knead 10 or 15 minutes, put at once into pans, allow to rise until about two and one-half times the original bulk s0 light as that raised with yeast. Q. What are the largest dams in the world? A. Measured by cublc content, Wilson dam in Alabama {s the largest dam in the world containing 1,260,000 cubic yards of masonry. The next in size is the Assuan dam in Egypt with 1,179,000 cubic yards of masonry; then the Kensico in New York with 942,000 cublc yard the New Croton, New York with $25,00 cuble yards; and Keokuk Towa-Tilinois, 540,000 cublc yards. Q. Where and when was Edse! Tord, the son of Henry Ford, born A. He was Born November 6 1898 in Greenfield Township, Wayne can always trade a bottle of You pre-war stuff for a ton of coa ~—Mrs. H. G. Espy. The fat man has to be good- natured because he can neither run nor fight! (Copyright, 1025. Reproduction Forbidden) required to pay an income tax | this | and bake. Salt rising bread is never | county, Michigan. | Q. Does the Constitution prohl- | bit a third term for President of {the United Statea? | A, The Constitution does not pro- hibit a third term, but the prece- | dents established by Washington and Jefferson muke it hard for a man to run a third time with much hope | of success. | Q. Has Lloyds Bank of London a branch in the United States? A. A branch of Lloyds is London and River Plate Ltd,, at 51 Wall street, New York | clty. In addition they have many correspondents in the United States Q. What is the name of the poem which the following lines recur each stanza: r men must work Women must weep, And the sooner {ts over, the sooner to sleep, And goodbye to the its moaning.”? “Three Fishers”, by SEATTLE MAYOR WILL SUE ATTACKERS, HE SAYS |Brown Promises Action That Wil Put End To Character Defam- ers For 100 Years | Seattle, Wash., Dec. 7 (A--A large ;mass meeting here has gone on rec- jord in favor of Impeaching Mayor Edwin J. Brown. v, Ambri rst Baptist the Bank, M! Bailey, pastor of ¢ church was the | principal speaker last night. He re. cently started an attack on Mayor | Brown's administration, alleging that vice and graft prevatled in the city. |1 King county grand jury last |week made a report recommending {that the mayor be recalled. Tmpeachment petitions against the mayor which have been in circula- tion werc ready for presentation to [the city council today, Dr. Bailey sald six councilmen had promised to vote for impeachment it sufficient {evidence of alleged conditions were forthcoming. The mayor, who delivered a mem- ierial address before a lodge at Port | Angeles yesterday repeated his de- Inial of charzes agalnst him and sent word that le intended to sue some {of the persons making the chargus !s0 there will be no defamation of the |characters of public officials in Seat- tla for the next hundred years. in in and ar and A, Kingeley, Q. In what Department cr first secretary? A. The Department of the Navy reated by an Act of Congress pproved April, 1795, Benjamin ‘Flmldar[ was the first Secretary and | entered upon duties June 18, 1708, | Q Was Thomas Paine one of the signers of the Declaration of In- dependence? A XNoi Q. Detween which countries and when was the first Amcrican trans Pacific cable laid? | A The first American cabic [ across the Pacific, was laid by the | Commercial Cable Company, be- ween San I'rancisco and the Philip. Mne Islands in 1003, Its length was |7, $46 nautical miles, | “@. What is the standard size of a | four-car garag Charles year was the Navy ted und who was the his | Imperial Sword for Jap Royal Infant n Francisco, Dee. T (P |Preparations were completed at |"Tokyo, Japan, tod for the presen- |tation of the imperial sword to the infant daughter born to Princess Na- |gako, wife of Crown Prince Hiro- hito. With the arrival of the grand- |daughter of the imperial family at |8:10 o'clock last night there was an A. Eightecn by thirty-six feet. |air of general rejoicing throughout |, Q What are the dates of the|Japan and newspapers issued extras | birth and death of Wiillam Shakes- |heralding the news. peare? { The presentation of the imperiul A. He was born at Stratford-on- | sword, which the royal infant during Avon, County of Warwick, England |its lifetime keeps as an heirloom, is in April, 1564. He was baptized on |the first of several traditional cere- "Arrn 26 and since it was a common | monles to greet the new comer. On | practice to christen infants when|the day the child is named, the sev- [ 1hree days old the tradition which enth day following birth, an imperlal akes his birthday the 23rd (May [fete is held and on the fifteenth doy 3 as dates are now reckoned) fs|the imperial grandchild (by proxy) generaily accepted. He died on April {pays its first tributes to the spirits of | 2. 1616, lits imperial ancestors. R e e e O e | /| LIRE MOTHER USED TO MAKE | hat deliclous homemade bread and rolls: can you make them? | 5 of knowing how. To becoms a maker of good homemad | requires tice, but after all, it's 4 slmplo matter of fol- lowing directlons. You can't go wrong if you follow the recipes and fu- structions glven in our Washington Bureaw's latest bulletin “Bread and Rolig* "which describes the Eponge and straight dough methods of mal ing all kinds of delicious breads—white bres ¢ bread, graham, who. wheat, rye, b gluten, salt-rising, rajcin, Boston_brown, and cor meal breads—Parker House rolle, finger and dinnor French rolls, b cofieo cake, tea rings, twist bread and so on, Send for it s S CLIP COUPON HERE TOR, Washington Burcau, Dally 1322 New York Avenue, Washington, D, (. I want a copy of the bulletin BREAD) AND ROL! with flvo cents in loose, uncancelled, U. [ #me: EAET ,ED" ew Dritain Herald. and_enciose hern- | > stamps or [ NAME con BT. & NO. or R. R. ... cITY ., . . BTATE ... I am a reador of the HERALD ‘ . Beneficia | rrry Ghrighmag | To those whose Christmas is bright, happy and prosperous, ! we offer our congratulations. *| Tothose whose Christmas is darkened by need and misfortune, we offer the aid of a financial service that will enable them to secure winter comforts and necessities. . Note easy terms: $ 4 a month, plus lawful interest, repays $ 60 cash loan } $ 7 a month, plus lawful interest, repays $105 cash loan { $10 a month, plus lawful interest, repays $150 cash losn $15 a month, plus lawful interest, repays $225 cash loan ! $20 a month, plus lawful interest, repays $300 cash loan | Every repayment reduces the interest cost Only lawful interest charged BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY 99 WEST MAIN ST, ROOM 101. Open 9 to 5:30 Licensed by the State and Ronded to the Publie Saturdays § ¢o 1 | T Y AT 0 S 01 LT T AN ) RAPHALL BUILDING PHONE 1:0-4-3. ATTENTION T KM THEY ARL STILL TALKING NEXT ROOM PROBABLY RIGHT NOW THEY' SAYING ‘BABY'LL HAVE T T OUT? WELL, HE'LL GV Snapshots of a Baby Wanting Company WISHES SOMEBODY WOULD COME IN AND PAY A LITILE LISTENS. NO LUCK - THERE L0 —By GLUVAS WILLIAMS Copyright, 1025, by the Bell Syndicate. Ine. HE'S TED UP WITH AL THESE BLOCKS AND RATTLES - WANTS SOMETHING HUMAN O PLAY WITH START THROWING TOYS AROUND: SOMETIMES THAT GAG BRINGS TATHER OR MOTHER ™ U WELL HE'LL SEE IF A GOOD LOUD CRY WILL FETCH THEM NOTHING DOING. THIS MODERN IDEA OF NOT PICRING BABIES UP WHEN THEY CRY 15 ALL BUNK= HE'S HEARD GRANDMA SAY SO IN FORGETS AFTER A RIT JUST WHAT HE'S CRVING ABOUT BUT KNOWS™ HE'S GOOD AND S0, FEELING THAT THE CARDS OF LIPE ARE STACKED AGAINST HIM, GOES TO SLEEP CRY E THEM A RUN TOR THERR MONLY AND MAD right, 1928,