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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 12, 1926. | still like to listen to stump speak- to New Britain Heral ‘ HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY | ers; want hear their to what he has to say | the tor | to see and representatives; wish \v»:;l)‘ Tssued Daily (Sunday Excepted) | The city man, a = ‘At Herald Bidg, 61 Church Street. | 0 CltY mam. as ! sald, has been inclined become He with t apathetic. doesn’t discuss pub- | SUBSCRIPTION RATES $8.00 & Year. 2.00 Three Months. 75c. a Month. lic issues same frequency as the and doesn't give inter- | armer evidence of vitally ested. | being as Entered at the Post Office at New Britaln Second Class Mall Matter. with its nd whittlers sitting | The country store, gathering of tobacco-chewers a champion penknif TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office . the around a keg ‘of nails, is often object of f pictures in the city of As intelligent journals a shrine The only profitable advertising medium In the City. Circulation booke and press room always open to advertleers. democracy a sion of vital issues, however, hard to match it in the A city city. Member of the Associated Press. bowling alley, pool room The Assoclated Prees is exclusively en- titled to the for _ re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also 1 news published therein. or cigar stand may furnish city charms to the city but a of about man, disseminator trenchant and sound opinion the state of the nation cannot remotely com- Member Andit Bureau of Circalation. | The A. B. C. is a national organization | pare W try store. which furnishes newspapers and ad tisers with a strictly bonest analysis of circulation. Our clroulation statlstice | {he are based upon th This ineures protection agal: newspaper distribution figures to both national and | local advertisers. That is perhaps one reason why typical farmers’ journals are | so crammed full of strong opinions | about political ions. The behind the plow has time think, he foregathers soil-tillers at the full of willing to que: farmer eals dally in New | to Newsstand, Times | Entrance | and when fellow The Herald fs on York at Hotaling's Square; Schuitz's Newsstands, Grand Central, 42nd Street. with his country store he is chock —_— ——— |thoughts that he s VOTERS AND “MORAL | TURPITUDE” | may News that the recent decision of | © Cambridge, Assoclate Justice Frank D. n‘*s'hm he has his ideas and the poli- of the state supreme court will af- | bound to take note fect voters who now can be can—i fronted with tie claim they have | been guilty of “moral turpitude” because they have violated the 18th amendment, ‘wH} put this state al- swap with His rrent style his neighbors, be the Mass., language not in of ticlans are TO FLORENCE E. ALLEN'S CREDIT for the Democratic senator nomination waged by Judge Florence E. Allen of the Ohio state | supreme court has turned out more he battle most in a class by itself — a state that did not ratify the amendment to have any- down refused with and which thing to do the prohibition law ican body politic. 1t appears, however, those who have taken hard liquor since prohibition came effective will not come under the classification. get out of the interpretation of the decision by the registrars of voter: seriousl: the forecasters | defeated by senator, of a success than predicted. Although Atlee Pomerene, she was distinctly in the r\mmng,; and this ought to be gratifying to | the advocates of women in office, Miss Allen got her high position | place the were swept clamping a upon the Amer- former all of be- that a drink because with a From what we |in the first women of Ohio determination to sec important office. This was shortly | following the passage of the 19th | It entirely | emotion, voting for a woman in an only those who have been violating the law guilty of connected” with will be deemed turpitude.” “Transporting liquor,” it scems. comes under the category of the idea. Judge Hungerford's be- that the clause would not be who have only amendment. was an and the “moral legitimate many men | helped in feminine supreme court justice. And it made a good justice of the state's | new can be stated she has| lief applied violated or second time” appears gratifying. Wiyre nd highest tribunal, having proved a credit to her sex and the court at | the | Had no; to those the dry law “for the first same time. she defcated Pomerene for ordinary drinking leaves off turpitude” begins will | the nination that would not settled. Judge “moral have to be Hunger- | necessarily have meant she would reached the U. S. Senate, hard But it would have meant the d instead of as at as to ford sems to be of the opinion that | have ih ishment” “infamous Senator Willis is a man the dividing line. application of be pun- will defeat But the fly in the ointment is that | running of two on the sena- violators of the law | torfal ticket, the Registrar the the extreme pres- | and one wet. battle ent, The lack one dry to voting Ziegler. privilege, In citizen- felt. already accordin, senatorial in Ohio cases ship may not Whether gnashing of and the mains doubtful. such denial will be as good a prohibition ref- be erendum as the state could wish. there téeth new greatly will be great - T SEVEN YEARS OF DEMOCRACY about the law interpretation re- | France has its Bastile day .md‘ its Constitution day. | the | has mean something Germany BINGHAM HITS NAIL Both ON THE HEAD days in The Age of Tolerance ‘ Charleston, . C., in Civil War Days Refused to Perse- | cute a Dissenter and Honored Him With a Remark- | able Tombstone Inseription At His Death—An Object Lesson For Today. [ The age needs tolerance. Toler~ of other of ance the fellow's vie of his actions, his beliefs, of of character. his religion, his politics, of his personal Are we we as a people tolerant to be? as used Some will say we are; others that But that we it are not. scarcely can be denied since the war there has less tolerance shown than was the case before that epochral event. Perhaps this of the aftermath psychology” is merely of that ‘“war we have heard and read so much about. The finest lesson tol- erance in many a day — in many object in a year — has just seen print. And we are going to reprint it because it deserves extensive circulation. The original delving into the bringing to light it ar- chives of history, the remarkable transpired occurrence as in Charleston, S. War writer started, At- in Bos- just after the Civil done the Monthly, was by a in lantic published ton. Note that the Civil Charleston, War the started abolition the in and agitation which preceded war originated in Boston. When Boston can talk so well of Charleston means something in the realm of tolerance! The from which follows World. And comment is the New York here it is: consid- but to toler as a private a ‘public institution, a which can become part the morals of a whole people, it is nat- ural that even the most citizen should at times lose heart and ask himself if the thing | ever possible. itis possible, of course, -ance, code In respect ered not as of when the wind is blowing fair, when nobody | does, tol- what one’s neighbor it costs nothing to cares when erant But be when the pinch when the factory six months, when the boys are in the trenches and the list of dead grows longer every day — when it costs much to be tolerant there ever a of men mantic that placed stract principle before the the moment? Of hand, one comes to — was £0 an pa race of Yet that would hand say no. the evidence such a race has existed, isted “not in some remofe spot in Asla but within the boundaries of our own' country. This evidence by Langdon lished in the current Monthly. Mr. Mitchell, the tradition of an earlier day, tells of a remarkable event which took place in Charleston, S. C. is contained in an Mitchell, pub- Atlantic article been | the result | it | philosophy | hopeful | comes, | has been idle for | and has ex- | | concent; | we discussing | | In this city | ceding the Civil {named James Lewis F | Pettigru harbored during the i years pre- Shop Editor, care 0f the New lived @ man || iiritaip Herald. and your letter ttigru. | will be forwarded to New York. otions which war, a in that day popular in the south. He was | posed to- slavery. He was opposed | to secession. Wost of all, he was a mocker of solemnity, a puller of noses and a tweaker of whiskers As things grew hotter and the treated not a his guns and what he held to his were extremely un- op. | Another Hot Weather Hint, Folks! Thése days when the sun beats down so hard, not lay lokea b we off discard smiles, may wit our or war | i keep the heat out, broke He denounced folly of tt was pursuir out, he ré by step. loudly be the e state stuck = Pigured Out “How is working out?” American: “Great! We spend $10,- 000 to get $5 worth'of evidence to basis of a trial that costs and results in a fine of course natiy ishman: your Pro- . ion Tt this happened in our during the would be easy would would own day, it what He until per- into say recent to imagine happened to him been persecuted nis i not worth living h ested, perhaps thrown jail for obstructing war. not in the Charleston A spirit of tolerance pre at that time which even spirit war as the have 00 have —Mother R, was e THE CHALLENGE ACCEPTED Throwing the Gauntlet Back to Sunny. My Princess Charming! - Sunny: You no longer need wonder whose love's greater; In figuring a thing like that I'm quite an estimator! say | The farthest star is not too far To I my love reach to it; The deepest sea would quickly find That my love would go through it! 1561 1 there | stronger W 1 cution he And chancc | with the | died. Was he laid had ben traitor? He was not. \ecorded city took led as of W the To a protected Pettigru ind left him pleased then suddenly it to expres itself still effectiveness the rom perse- to e had a urther For in ttigru dramati t cetion for the depth and middle of ar E for you blankets all the earth— 1ch 1 adore you! naught for you I wouldn't to rest as though he He The whole attend the not his | rhat nemies, In width i was A1l honors, lay off speakers were a to ; or later, s 2 y toward t proof love goes for his political e turns recount he h And g e tool services rend ta my is the greater. Finally, raised, he given on which f tribute to his eloquence, and and that: UNAWED BY UNSEDUCED BY UNDISMAYED BY DIS HE CONFRONTED LIFE A QUE COURAGE DEATH WITH CHRISTIAN HOPE GREAT CIVIL WAR 00D HIS PEOPLE HTS COUNTRY PLE DID HOMAGE THE MAN HIS CONSCIENCE THEIR PRAISE FROM MRS, TRAPROCK COUNTRY d. I'un Shop, dear Sir, HONOURS ON| This is an open THE GRAVE OF THE PATRIOT |ed by mistake, either, but wide open TO WHOM, LIVING |on purpose, my object being, Mr. OWN RIGHTEOUS Editor, to request you to inform that RESPECT SUFFICED afer. my husband, Walter E. FOR MOTIVE AND R Traprock, \ von have sent off WARD. that f to the Nrth 3 that show up at L 1 by noon Monday nest 11"‘ : dard time, he'll get in a peck of il trouble and T'll do the pecking! toler- | 1 ask you, Mr ., is it fair? become [ public | jart me two months ago. saying that that the ideal f which | he was going down to the store to now strugele can be attained. get some spavin cure for J. Pierre- The Charleston of Civil war days horse, we call him indeed represented one our | J. Pierre ccause he has a highwater civilization, of Morgan in him. Well. he but if we r once, is it 1p and the next I hear utopian to we can get that far However, When T put nd e's the final proof: sunny, ghts of you think of naugh but money! There's SOME denial for your sake! Were I {o think of you, dear, no work, I'd be discharged— IN what would we do, dear? when money 5 workir all tho of omb- | am a |1 sl fact stone he inscription paid aside his w s wit, also 10 the OPINTON, FI R 0. '8; Lawrence went and lost his shirt races, so ae sent to the betting home an Higgins fair the 0. 5 Hartl | AND IN HE THE WITH FOR BUT HIS PF TO WHO HELD HIGHER THAN AND HIS HEAPED HER does £.0.8. “What stand other shirt." " Potterton. Send —Marion T. A LETT letter, not open- HIS | ALIKE E- o1 on Pole he Star ol expedition he n't Tolerance ther than this. deeper significance as a story, for it could 1y 2o fur- 4 episode ,has & n its charm shows that ance can a at or e of marks that hope that again?” in streak got never showed |ing “Wish you were with us. 1 read those bulletins of his about UNLICENSED DRIVERS The estimate of the state motor department that there of automobiles vehicle 10,000 are drivers in |starting a hotel up there in that un- | Christian climate where it's so cold have to milk the cows with | corkserews. The idea! Tl bet he | hasn't 1aid an ice-cream brick in the foundations yet, the big liar. they 25 Years Ago Today Charles Han'on is home from the ‘ 0d all communications to Fun | He | is a postal-card from the Pole say- | e KRAZY KINDERGART! (Conducted by Dusty) Teetcher: “Petey, will you ixplane why it is so difficult for yeu to lend me your attention?” Pete Titian: “I'm Scotch on my | muthers side, and its hard for us to lend anything. Teetcher: “In that case, Petey, I must ask you to exem—exemnpl-I-1 —oh, darn it, use ‘benevolent.”” Pete Titian: “I went to,Uncle Ben to borrow I sure wuz in a pickel. But I discovered, to my sorrow, Benevolent a nickel.” I'rank Muielers. Reproduction Washington, Aug. for Southern New E ably showers tonigh not much change Forecast for Probably showers showers tonight anc much change in tem Conditions: The pressure are moving and sudden changes in the northern distri FactsandFancies |- i’ | na | BY ROBERT QUILLEN on the Gulf and | coasts, The greatest | Ireported was 2.96 inc | moderate in all the trict Conditions part change followed Vesuvius is in eruption y have ordered it. Mussolini favor f There are story. two sides Find the second. to every in by mperat local sh Nobody enjoys spooning except | To settle the bet — the most |beautiful women in the world are the brunettes and blondes. | Weather is a good subj Regarded As | versation because |something about ect for con- everybody knows i Pythians, Chicago, Aug. 12 | Prophets are not so wise. Not one | yjon" of Jeprosy was {of them, twenty years ago, foresaw the elimination of the left turn. g bl Pythias yesterday as | preme “objective Pythian knighthood tsomething worth wh and something phila Under a resolution | ferred to a committ would interest itself colony on Culion Isl islands. Tt was ther | Stevens, a Pythian, d | if undertaken, would The boss of the family is the one {that gets sarcastic when the other |ture of a memorial t | fails to miss a rock. The resolution, if a | P — supreme lodg: Tt is suspected that the devil gets some of his ideas from human |ings. be- [ lodges, and If approv |ity of them would be — | Under it an | Argus had a hundred eves. But the people of today are sceing more {than he ever saw. s | upon the membership | numbers 789,819, | The resolution wou ‘Ph‘r that if the cprosy be adopted a immediate higlt should be urged to a 000,000 with which You ma roo have heard him in the lunch He can talk plain |enough himself, but he makes the | soup lisp. In describing her symptoms a woman can be entertaining. All a | 280 would propria n of |suffering man can do is groan. propriation | educational wor also is mentioned. ,000 a Whiskers may come back, as pre- | dictted. They will, if men quit shav- |ing or forty-eight hours. The college in North Carolina that has endowed a chair in Matrimony made a mi: ‘ake. Tt should have en- dowed a porch swing. Catholic Pricst Decla; Willers' " curate One. [y John | the shington J. Burke National Catholi ference in a stafeme with a recent religious controversy | Dr. Alva W. Taylor, Century. Taylor's port s resolution adopted b | mission, which he h by Father Aug issue Christian A salesman his feet. is no better than And when young people can | each other while telephoning the line | will be busier than ever . and is for with tirade report of added. ditions” | accupied Tt is remarkable the amount of | catholic work a colony of ants can do n a | wppe short time without any loafers to [ o stand around and watch the pro- | ot ceedings. of C: is sec the “It sense Socrates said he married for dis- cipline. Other men iess philosophical, have done the same thing but didn’t | ernment, when a in moderate east and southeast winds. Eastern New Yor have occurred during the south towards | would be |the various state and assessment each for two vears would be levied attempted. CRITICIZES Statement Burke to g or informative survey of repeatin word, is certainly jurious to our own American tradi- | | tions and to our institutions of gov-| 1) @WS Observation On The Weather 12.—Forecast ngland: Prob- t and iday temperature; and thunder Frida; not ature; mod- d pe erate southeast and south winds. high | areas of rapidly across the country and producing frpquent | in the fcts, weather Showers last 24 Maine and Atlantic amount of rain ches at Atlanta, northern to dis- or this vicinity y cloudy weather.and not much ure, owers, SY CURE probably Eradication of This Terrible Discase One Ambition of William (A ——Eradica- placed before the “great su- which might labor— ile in its scop nthropic.” which was re- ee, the order in the leper and, Philippine that Frank C. ied. The work ha in the na o him, pproved by the referred to provincial ed by a major- ecome effective. | of $1 p, which now 1d provide fur- eradication of s the Pythians aim, congress ppropriate $5,- the eradication An ap- ) to be spent in gainst leprosy REPORT res That “Good is Not Ac- 12 (A—Father Welfare nt here report of in Mexico editor of the con- tonk the by et forth the eads. in a odwill was said no reliable “true con- most part the anti- ¥ give “the alles. tarian in the Father in- committee of 10 RESTORE: PARTHENON Prominent Americans Donate 1 to Pay For Reassembling of 5| eral Columns. New Aug. 12 (P—Funds having been contributed by a group of prominent Americans, work will soon be resumed on reassembling several columns of the Parthenon at | Athens, it was announced today by Dr. Edward Capps, head - of the Greek department of Princeton) uni- | versity. York, The work of replacing in their original position the-fallen segments of the Parthenon columns was be- |gun about a year ago, Dr. Capps |said, and recently discontinued on account of dack of money. The columns blown from |their places by the explosion of the |Turkish powder within the temple by shell in 1869, were magazine a Ventian Among the contributors to the |fund for continuing the work of | putting the columns segments back in place were Elihu Root, former secretary of state; George W. Wick ersham, former attorney -generaly Paul Cravath, Harrison Williams, Cass Gilbert, president of the Na- tional academy, and Mrs. Gilbert; im J. Wilgus, engineer; Louis Tiffany and Dr. and Mrs. John H. 1 Finley. the supreme lodge of the Knights of | BOXTOW $3,000 and Build | It Up to Over Million New York, Aug. 12 (A—Three men in Sing Sing prison have re- |vcaled a scheme whereby they and |others are alleged to have built up a $1,466,818 credit from a $3,000 | purchase on credit, by means of |juggling diamonds and bank ac- counts. | The disclosure was made by Harry |A. Cohn and Harry and Alexander {Arnow, who were sent to prison for i” ir connection with an alleged |jewelry swindle. The New York | American ys today that Assistant |United States Attorney George J. | Mintzer induced them to tell their story to the last grand jury, through his efforts to trace $500,000 of- the |assets of Cohn, now in bankruptey. Four others were indicted by the grand jury. he New York Times every day | gives the most Treliable, complete \report of all the 'news of interest to sonerar sereury o | intelligent, think- ing persons. Inde An x on the back page daily is a |convenient sum- mary of the news. Order from your dealer. Americans will voice defense of the | denial of those rights which we hflml‘ — inalienable—liberty of worship, lib- | (' erty of speech and assembly, liberty | | of education, the right to hold Prop- | emms erty. and the right to trial by jur: Pan-American history of the world. 158 Connecticut The anniversary of adoption of Weimar exposttion. | And he's so about women that he'd chase a petticoat as far as could it and, from what 1 hear, those eskimice w en don't wear any, the hussies. Who is this Aurora Borie-eyed Alice that he is leading a wild night-life with? And |don’t forget that the nights up there wre six months long! dle life a man has learned that it associ-| In the meantifie. what happens to |is safe for him to go to bed and {me? T'vesgot poles of my own to at- |jeave the hero to take care of the tend to, bean poles, to say nothing |yillain, Stockholm quoting a medical bulle- [of getting the hay in. T need & man | (protected by Publishers Syndicate) |tin issued yestetday. er heart ac round the place. You tell that hus- _ tion has been calmer and stronger, | band of mine to he back’ here by | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS |and her sleep has been good. i Monday or I'll knock him so cold | that the Tole will seem like Nogales | Lawrence Crean went Fran- |10 August! | drivers after they get into accidents |cis’ hospital today to have his knee | Yours, pe sarah D. Traprock. the | ‘ d are found out [treated. it ke v, | Editor's Note: Mrs. T. sounds as if o she meant business. We hardly know ?\(nn build | whether to forward the letter or not! who are operating crazy know it. operators’ We all spell binders credit where it Bingham t the wes Plainville is conducting paign for improveme center. The new station ing completion and the {have been torn down walks about the cen a great vould emized highways, The New ation held last evening. C'c received f the pente pienic, vited the give imp and se the a cam- about the is near- old barracks A few cement would help further ma- seventh P Jack Dempsey. has the most wide- advertised nose in the world. The tion in the popular mind is what happen to it. without rather surprising, (o | POINts to ineffectual control of the situation somewhere. It would state and city police were to begin .Of autoists to el ars 7 see orators itors SonatitnL] LS te s he s ] ¢ the licenses and is Germany | ly a will nator Hi- hed is due. S tion was celebrated in it Chancellor Marx ram unvarn truth about tion to farmers Ridgefield troubles yesterday, and is a pleasure that the hors, OWS WEAKER 12 (A—Queen Vie- toria of Sweden has been wealker during the last few days says an Exchange telegraph dispatch from | QUEEN G London, Aug. | farni | run Ytk * es " . By GLUYAS WILLIAMS ek situa- | note talked it unpopular if the i i can easily be realized that deal, as By the time he has reached mid- their ne- to | as it monarchists were 4 be vastly when ite de combat in Britatn Clarks! directly us underground methods hieethe e ons were ind Labor clerks are mornir forcing multitude§ shoulders. uni The themsel bring the kaiser back on the throne. | t show their operators licenses, yet om tinerd e day in- in WEALGD. Reading a summary of his ad- to be no other method s inregar in which the to participat parade sems in sight. One es in financial Iress furnished by the Associated rake money to tried to Connect hearers. s it is clear that the kaiser and | ill way to the stiffer e cure situation fn th ior s . 1 family will never “comc the g 3 would I fines to unlicensed . niable fa yosp THE FAMILY ALBUM—‘FOUR SEATS TOGETHER” political differences Farmers that the iction 1is growing yublican constitution is a building of | Hatch streat led application two-tenement twice o sessed, and then mor THE PENDULUM OF THU on Clark old holdings payments whe the could latform on w The United | association ha n duly |ated. The incorporators arc T. up | K David Dunn, Max Miller |ehael Clynes, A. Eisenberg, J {lay and J. W hwaldt lon East 2 ot chased. Foresters' Building incorpor- H. Mi- Dun- Property been pur- property as STOCK MARKET Wall Stocks Germany achieved,” were one of his pointed sentences The to “hear r be expected in street One of ns in enterting | yag hoe, 80 and then go down; have been doing were ‘When the selves The in ¥ ly inflated ¥ make the world | the boom safc democracy. Whatever has belief materially for that since before we were born and Al rash cam = e re r } . shake our | will continue to act that way to the i & been 1as The only Lieutenant ¢ 'the guest of ¢ today the guest of (‘c A 13-yvear-old | for theft this veloped that he who fired La barn He was When a bull movement |school to get| Prof. M. J. Dy York [lost his bet witi Alfred Anderson of | |this city last he failed ito throw him three times within an hour in their hout at the Casino. He | secured fall but proved | |himself much the better He | |complained tha was | greased. | Youn German outing Ve of time, troublesome nel Thompson end wvas Niantic gthened, it is a beam of sun-{,nq vexing point at issue is, when mpany ying s6- tha and ex-Ca was ky to realize that | ypev will go up and when they will A = — — i clamped upon go down? 0 in court it de- incendiary & Clark's the reform sold out at to California s involved, even if the o5 Harhins ad the noticed one t But impartial rver has ; > on the other side of the vas tho AFTER SOME DEBATE WIFE SAYS, HERE WE‘ARE LL STRAIN HER RIGHT IN HERE,'AND PLUNGES INTD THIRD ROW FRONT thing that has occurred e e to LEADS FAMILY HAPPILY WHISPERS BRIGHTLY DOWN AISLE. ISN'T OFTEN HERE ARE FOUR SEATS ~ DECIDES SHE! HE CAN GET THEM ALL RIGHT HERE + EYES SITTING SOFAR BACK. TO6ETHER TO THE MOVIES FAMILY MOVES ON DOWN Lyine ring the conflict these with unending regularity something, anyhow. many years EIGHT T0 ONE looking VACCINATING FAKMERS WITH POLITICS ver enough in the as progressed far the gencral public on up- e ward swing, when speculation has 1 to nominate on their i been stimulated to the point where ticket only ol provided cvery amafeur practitioner thinks 1 man, Anderson > the ous and nomin- 1 1 1 wealthy, suddenly he is getting farm Al from Ohio st Smith er 1 for turns there comes an unexpected swing meet in a picni ill look goo presiden- o John's held an v at Jacob Walthers' boys plaved | Iball, and an accident occurred. ihat slipped fromw the fingers of (Winger and struck Fritz Steiner Wall {{he' face, knocking him unconscious tact |for a long time. He was said to be the |all right today. John Graham lexpeet to go to next Mon y. BRIDGE in the other direction. | ‘cople’s society of St. | Lt yesterd wspices of a ial timber. After the smoke has cleared away eran church | it is generally found that listen to some s T Gov Donahey running for rnor essman. or smination the Democratic this, ipro- The The Spider’s Web Congress on fessionals” got out from under just the al- b 4 his opponent That KLASS AT KRAZY (Conducted by M. I, J.) Teacher: “Mrs. Black, 1 under- stand you made a fortune with your invention to dekink the kinkiest You certainly have some gor- geous clothes. Tell us how you do it, | not’ forgetting ‘lesson.’ " Vera Black “In winter Ah drapes mah form wif furs lolls in mah mobiles, Bt in summer mah de furniture, “ause de lesson Ah wears de bettah Ah fel;lsfl; 5 fore slip occurred KOLLEGE D in cight to one, he will d to speak ed governcy is ¥ latest little setback in filling dates cot was. blamed upon the York ers’ gatherings Bin right that Governor Smith can re- Sepator New hat the unfilled orders of of elected governor of Medley to work | and Lewis did Westfield taste it often as he cares 10 run. Steel Corporation not come up to expectations; and then some- REACHES VACANT SEATS ~ PLOUGHS OUT TO AISLE FOLLOWS THEM IN UNTIL TAMILY MOVES BACK TO AND FINDS FAMILY MISSED AND HEARS WILFRED ~ MILDRED ANNOUNCES AISLE WHERE HE LOSES THE SIENALS AND DIDN'T CALLING THAT THEY'RE MOTHER'S MADE A MIS- THEM ENTIRELY. TINDS FOLLOW. CANT SEE THEM TWO ROWS BACK TAKE, THERE ARE ONLY A SEAT ALONE IN LAST THREE SEATS HERE ROW Every county COLLAPSES Tokyo, Aug. 12 (P—The bridge on the Nafiromachi, one of the main thoroughfares of Akita, in Ugo province, collapsed late yesterday. | Thirteen bodies have been recoy |ed and fifty persons still are miss. ing. body changed the money call TEXAS PALAVER M her ¢ ing its meeting ready speakers is Governor Ferguson of | ¥ates The touched Connecticut T ponent. Dan the how would you like Moody re AR TUN Y i As Ah numerous auto- upon the procl of never accepted her offer 10/ to be in the position to manipulate in his The soil-tillers ha farmers n with those call rates, and thus know clothes drapes city foll lost * contact with politics; comparisc ign. Evidently quit arguing. e by this time Duan has|what was going 1o happen ahead of | time? not | they (Copyright, 1926, by The Bell Syndcate, fnc.)