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ONE OF OUR MOST OPTIMISTIC MEN coln C. continues optimi New Britain Herald! HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY | coooo.0 1| Andrews.. pro- hibition ie Rum chief, Iseued Dally (Sunday Excepted) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street faces t row, he now rep “immediate extinction’ a res of the gentleman's agreement SUBSCRIPTION RATES $5.00 & Year. $2.00 Three Montha. 76¢c. a Month negotiated *in England. Trouble about the when utiliz- is he sald same thing a year ago ing rum He fon {ihe front indicate th guard the coast as Entered ¢ the Post Office at New Britaln chase wond Class Mall Matter. e be justified in his opin- rum may about ivices from row- TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office Editorial Rooms really been a lessening ssure {on that littoral The only profitable advertising mearm so long as th in the City. Circulation books and pree: room always open to advertisers. the will to remains bo nation rder rum Andrews opportunity Member of the Assoclated Press. the Assoclated Press s exclusively en titled to the use for re-publication of all news credited to it or not otherwiee credited in this paper and also local news published therein. SALARY DOESN'T MATTER for governors are td be; even Gov- admits it. Salaries not what ought rnor Trumbull But the The After they Member Audit Bureaun of Circulation The A. B. C. 1s a natlonal organization which furnishes newspapers and adver- tisers with a strictly honest analysls of circulation. Our circulation statistice are based upon this audit. This insuree | protection against fraud iIn newepaper distribution figures to both national and local advertisers. a governor isn't governor lary that is in it. is worth something. got out of honor Governor Trumbull the low ary statement his ald 1s on sale dally in New mind he was in Hotaling's Newsstand, Times | tention to the that s Newsstands, Entrance | always men willing ernor regardless of the ‘ The governor called it public calling at- there will right fact to be be gov- salary — FLOODED STREETS During a rain such as deluged | New Britain there are | streets, usually at intersections or | ON BUSSES at the bottom of hills, There is one thing about bus rid- city storm sewer system is inade- |jng .that knocks the average indi- quate. There are two such places | yigual cold, provided he is of the on Hartford avenue, another on little read- West Main, on Broad street, Church street, and elsewhere. | City officials Profit | hus along the investigate the that | pighway — especially cause a foot or more of water o | yivg like the washboard .pike to accumulate at some of these places with & view toward making satis- factory improvements at some fu- ture time, if possible. spirit. yesterday POOR READING FACILITIES where the class who likes to do a ng with his riding. The read In a or person who can might with conditions average street such high- Berlin — has never ben born. The gbusses shake too much for reading purposes. And night, customers can- at realizing that cash | not read anyhow, there is not suf- ficient light for any such purpose. On long-distance busses the lights usually are turned down low, evi- from Baltimore to Beverly Farms, | fently in the interest of economy. Mass, for a personal interview | Tne trolley cars remain much the with Supreme Court Justice Oliver | petter adapted for reading pur- Wendell Holmes in connection With | poces, and as they have an attempt to gave the super-ban- | juice on tap for the purpose, they dit, Richard Reese Whittemore, from being executed, made a legitimate effort in behalf | of his client. To bring such-a mat- ter to the attention of a U. S. Su- THE ATTEMPT TO “SAVE" WHITTEMORE The Negro attorney who went plenty of are well lighted at night. “BACK IN 1704 THE LAW SAID—" enough the evidently | Get law on statute books and in the will be easier to “run.afoul course of time it t the preme court justice Was so un- to attract nationwide at- ot futility there from the start. t usual tention. no doubt as law" than disobey a traffic cop. It Penn. its was was a foregone conclusion in There no that ylvania that if the layw books Whittemore can question long enough some d Exposition thumbed be one of the most | Wer f " could f to close the desperate crooks and murderers of law could fou in a Sesquicentennial on justifiable He got fair trial takes the age. a state that pride in its judicial procedure; legion; the ticular crime for which h the death penalty — that of ki ping from penitentiary — which much Sundays, 94, which the his| The statute of was has to case, least crimes were and par- found applicable o now been revived; or at will of lower if the: decision court is not upset by a higher tri- a guard while e bunal The ball whether an admission is charged Maryland wa the sort around slightest doubt existed. Yet the ‘“hard Whittemore's life made by and friends tended to put as a sort fighting a exorable 1794 law also prohibits base- on not Sunday regardles of fight" to save Fortunately doesn’t prohibit counsel up creature automobile riding on Sunday be- 1794 him no such fhere wer is indeed fortunate Ford the cause in of cornered It Pennsylvania contraptions. with ¥ the instances, last battle an in- for that Henry did Revolutionary conqueror, law; and : not live at the time of consid- d as in most such erable his favor. That is the punishment. war. sympathy accumulat in “BACK TO LORIMER" 1S POSSIBL is st trouble Not is with capital only are jurles earl of the states p! to return T having direct inois becoming singly unwilling to to make a convict cept where bandit such cony! inc naries murder ex- the of first degr effort to the serious the notoriety conventions of gone of party days each hullat impels nd party bosses.” as the pungently put it 1 Dixon, L s from Chicago aispatch ore the swit loo made trap is sp or the electric h is turned on 1pon the been the now attack made 11, leg Numerous commentators have law at having pointed out that life imprisonment ined by t judges of for all murderers, without possibil- | circuit court of Lee county, ity of pardon or would be a goes before the state Supreme and co par g fit substitute would re in | court, no final ctions of crook Octobe: like many more s expected before The con- so far. be who in some New York are frced upon convenient techni- histo to calities B don ply any idered The prin Tilinois has It you will know before time come y law in and parole laws must since 1910, you r00d memory fore the law wa nice juicy ROUTING WITH one TRAFFIC POEM volving Illinois, 1 A direct nt pri worse the M cham to anything matter of opinion, but Lorimer scandal® was no chool pienic BE KIND TO CLERKS MAKES SHOPPING EASY ourteous kind and to distinctive The and of the or gentleman ibbed purchase Show making s I'm me 1} tired to started out and s splen upon clerks who . of their calling are 1 to their ition speak i most petty of But the head Through roa tr good- rson who will rather than exude a tooting human beings and kind “of customers me. same that It you want t cyelists to c 1e seem ¢h: n bi all cter cyele. The ecler blind, at enter a to be|in a spirit of good humor what a { | satistactory experience 1s becomes. cn shopping is carried out he | decision can be “Women In For Human Interest Quali: passes Mere Man, in tt ‘ — Some Giddy Exa | Comments. l champion | lovely woman,"” so the also reflecting what is normal he- “Woman, poem in say the mind of every man. And the mind of the aby: what is in every editor steeped in news When with a sald woman in it" he perks up editor gets a story a drooping eyelash, parks his hur- | Ty, then reads it over twice. Not because he has feminine foiples on his mind — he may be a mar- ried man with only one foible to but because he the certainty that experience that the the woman will gain and and with with with contend knows comes story about first women. The men what women do, about consideration with men want to read about the women other and want to read what women are doing. | The storfes about women that get into the public prints range all the way from the helghts of Judge Florence E. Allen of the Ohio Su- preme court — who just got licked in her senatorial nomination ticket — to flappers. truth, woman story the greater the reader — at least, so0 it seems. for the on the cigaret race Democratic smoking by the In more flappery the interest | The story in the the other day quoting a noted medical authority that cigaret smoking by girls is “not the worst of evils, naturally got a big hand from the modernists. Especially as the health papers authority added that puffing by lho’ fair sex is no more detrimental to the health of the young American girl than rouge and face powder. The doctor certainly has a mod- ern mind. But it dollars to a row of pins he hasn’t got a daugh- in public. is ter who smokes There was the claim made men like blondes because they are more This was to a motion for publicity n't feaze frivolous statement credited picture ac- tress, probably pur- But that editor if he sees a good kick in the Tl pub- yarns poses do ye 's why get women story. 50 many licity by. usually to hold pro- therefore air are more trivolous and less apt nounced views on things. better company for most “Dark dictatorial they are men,"” it likely insistent was said. women to be more and their pet are and most men do not like to have tradicted.” C thing for views con- and mankind to And at rtainly a mouthful, some- mere swal- low with wry lool that, it probably is true. Spooning — or petting, as it is called nowadays — is a subject of application universal prac- ilmost universal be- cause of almost Without spooning the coquet- its tice. ting business would be at a stand- still, mating would be an adven- land, and perhaps die ture in a cold even love would when that permitted that Consequently, news came Chicago would spooning here- the from er be in big Lincoln park in city it seemed that the human race was progressing. And one was forced to wonder why it was ever not permitted. It scems to have been taken as a matter of course in every hap- Brit- elsewhere, including our own py hunting grounds in New ain seem to Men don't and women won't tell People never agree about women under- stand them, all th Al man v know ading Philadelphia clergy- addressing a conference of some kind, blustered with an of finality that modern women are immodest. This was due to the fact able their ward- Yobes around in their hand purses To fundamentalist testimony, noted they are to carry refute such along comes a arks athletic director r nowadays healthier, and women are athletic be- fact they themselves stronger, more GAmAR ot have ‘emancipate from bustles, castiron corsets and steel- rivited petticoats park | | air The News” ties the Fair Sex Far Sur- he Opinion of Most Editors mples With Appropriate But ot | course, came from that lady of only 101 in Philadelphia, |who upon observing her birthday |anniversary told the world that igirls of today “are no worse” thn the best evidence of all, vears Canadian | mal vortex of handling the day's|they were in the year 1836 or so, at a’time when she was just be- pre-Vicorian flap- a ginning to be per. That ought to settle it. Most of the modern tic and sour-faced critics of Amerlcan remember back that far. as cannot | So far as our own evidence is of i\’alu»‘, we can say without a trace |of fear that spooning — or petting |—in the old days of horse riding was Just and | buggy as good — |or as bad — as automobile petting And it tages, too. is today. That claim emanating from Chi- cago, that a wife should be able ‘to dress in 390 seconds, and should | be out of bed and ready for break- {fast in 6 1-2 minutes, got consid- erable attention. That be in a while, but something depends upon ! what being ! may be done once one means by for breakfast.” | This cosmetician was a little| She claimed that however. 6 1-2 minutes the wife “foundation specific, in the | could cream, lipstick and apply lpowisr. rouge, lash brush.” Thought clothes. A this facial eye- s0; nothing said about kimono to go with all finery no ‘doubt be | enough for any reasonable hubby. will Much i that transpires in Middletown never sees print, but the ' other day a wéman went to a sta- | { tionary store and asked for a con- | gratulation card upon Naturally, to send the death of her husband. a woman this little item gained wide currency — or even :xr\rro\'aL; | Another woman in the ! Connecticut hamlet unlimited same | of | parking wanted a birthday ing card for her dog These broadmindedness a greet | two items indicate the and mental acute- ness of some modern women. Bobbed topic of hair is a never-ceasing interest to the and The judge, who claimed a man had a right to get angry and sm; bobbed the unbobbed Parisian therefore, h things up if his wife got her bobbed without deserved all the public' cen- elicited State hair his permis- sion, the decision the United the method s to get hair bobbed first and let their in on the sure In orite fav- i is for wi their | nusbands secret later. few_ people took the claim stock originating from an | optimistic cigar manufacturer that would smoking They'll take to pipes first. | Very any in women take to cigars. | King George for trouble, always He just disapproved short skirts for women d now nothing but kicks. is it seems. has sees | | The king should stick to crowns, | | letting garters alone One learns with satisfaction, too, | that women are now welcome in { barber shops, and that they have | tended to ¢ the | conversation therein. arify usual ’ But conditions are still such that the Police Gazette is on file | ers, | So far as marriage is concerned, be less of it than | . That may be due entirely |to the fact that our flappers The them there scems to formerl are | getting too particular fellow | who can lead one of to the |altar must first possess an automo- | bile, and be above'the av other respects, especially. financial- ly. But occasionally ‘ stary, even | That bridegroom of 77 who mar- i one reads a | 500d ma Ve \ried a young girl of the same age, ter a courtship of only three days, is a case in point | The man, it is related, had been | married three times previously Some men never get enough of They for punishment | marriage, | or ittons for WARNING UNHE newspape Rhode Island s appear well aroused over the explosion to be pretty fireworks The was allowed to operate half of the center declare Bristol, the other day dangerous plant with- a and a the in_a mile of and residents | they | against town, complained to have repeatedly the plant and property. Now that something happened the no doubt will be moved to safer quarters. Tt is the only | way some politicians ever learn. as a menace | life plant THIAN CONVENTION Aug. 13 (A — Business was set aside at the biennial con- vention of the supreme lodge of the Knights of Pythias today while the knights and visitors witne: other fraternal order’s exp, the benevolence which p jor part in the Pythian program. At Mooscheart, IIl, home - of ‘the Loyal Order of Moose, a special pro- gram was.arranged in which » the hundreds of children at the home had a prominent part. A _pigeon that had flown from Louisiana was found recently in Rio De Janeiro. womanhood | had some advan- | “ready | looking | run of | for the perusal of waiting custom- e either gluttons | —_— ||| _Send all communications to Fun | || Shop Editor, care of the New | ]Eunuln Herald, and your letter || will be forwarded to New York. e The Fun Shop Carries "Em Too, Folks! As bathing caps keep out the wet When we're in swimming, why Folks | Not humor Our caps as well, and let tempers, too, stay dry, Folks! Tusually Mrs. Willlams: “I didn't get much sleep last night. It was three o'clock |before my husband got the baby quieted.” Mrs. Martin: “You don't say!” Mrs. Williams: “Yes, and then it | was six o'clock before I got my hus- |band quieted!” THEN AND NOW By Rogers Terrill | When writing, last November, to the | girl 1 used to love, I wished her joy down here below, and future peace above. I did not use the honeyed words that I had used before; her I regretted that we two should meet no more. Though kind, I wrote quite firmly, d I sought to make it plain best we two should r meet or write again. | I told nev |But THAT was in November! Now | it's August . . . and It's hot! A warming sun shines brightly on & well remembered spot. i\\'{-‘ swam there oft together when our new love was divine, So now, with summer temperature, I'm dropping her a line |1t opens “Mary Darling!” — which I think is rather cute And in it I request of her my long lost bathing suit!! Fresher Mrs. Newlywed: “I want some nice berries.” “How about some elder- to buy | . Newlywed: “Haven't you any young berries?" —Harriet Du Bois. Play Ball Frances: “Oh, Jack, you told me hat our team had the game on ice, and it's so hot I can hardly breathe!” | KINS' OVERHEARD AT THE JE) PICNIC By Jennie Higha m “Well, we've got a flat tire, so let's stop and eat!" — “Oh, for Land's I wish we hadn't started!"— feet off those Jelly | kind of ants | Who sug- ake! Take ‘rn!ls" ddy, what are those? 'Shut . up! |gested this picnic, anyw Now | [look! You've spilled the nonade in | my lap!™ M nma, little J § fallen into the river!"—"Daddy Clifford mixed poison ivy leaves with | the lettuce ose must have been mushrooms instead of Vr):td-’ stools, because 1 ate seven and T | feel all right”—"I wanna go home!” | ‘Oh, Dadd: ther spider in your butter tastes funn es like | grease! ott! Then I must have buttered the front wheel of the —Shut up, now! You suggested this blank, blank outing!"—"Let's g0 home! our 1"—*“This | Coats, “4 Y U Us me so? 4 Y R U so mad? O C D TRs flow! O0G, I M2 sad!” (For why you use me so? For why are you so mad? Oh, see the tears flow! Oh gee, I am too sad!) —~Sidney Saltzstein. (Copyright, 1926. Reproduction Forbidden) Factsand Fancies BY ROPERT QUILLEN Sympathy's greatest problem to maintain a neutral attitude. is Tex Rickard will is married manage After somebody fights. elee An unauthentic inscrip- lled an epitaph Eternity may not be more than a hundred miles ahead of the reck- less driver. Some matches are made in Heaven, the porch swing serving as | a mundane accessory. Among things wrong with modern fiction is a scarcity of fancy names for girl babie scem . stronger | bond of liquor- Few human ties than the common hood. smiling heard it There ig such a thing as volce. Most people h over the phone. Albeit, riches are sirable, ghere | is such a thing as being indepen- dently poor. Funny about an infinitesimal dis- ease germ being able to make a big, strong man lie down and roll over. The rule s that a third political | party is too poorsto afford a scandal. Government statistics show that it will take a few more prophecies to put the noble horse out of busi- ness. Even the man who prefers the classics wouldn’t object to having his salary jazzed. The difference between an ama- | teur and a professional is that there aren't any parages for a profes- sional. Two heads are better they are not on the Sunday morning at 8 probably comes nearést to an ap- propriate time to break a shoestring. Short skirts have disposed of the clinging vine type of girl. There is self-reliance in every stride. hat | no been | Daniel Webster's campaign has been found. There are holes to indicate it had ever talked through. 0, well, the type of American who goes to Paris to show off may en- | joy being hissed in the French language. y | (Protected by Publishers Syndicate) At a meeting of Lincoln lodge, 1. 0. G. T., held last evening J. J. Otto Gleck, Lottie Robert May Hart, Albert Schneider, and | James Relyea were clected dele- | gates to t rict convention to | be held in Jr. O. U. A. M. hall, this | city, August 21. Mrs. A. A. Pep- per, May Rackliffe, Amy Hume, | the | ¢ 25 Years Ago Today ‘ and alter- George Hume, Garfleld Hume, Martha Ward were chosen nate The North & Judd molders, who |hae been on a lockout for some five or six weeks, received a check from national headquarters today, through Secretary Russell of ~the local union, for $2,086. This is their second check since the begin- ning of the lockout, the first having been for $1,446. Brown derbies for fall ady. The special committee appointed |to audit the city collector's books had its first hearing in the city clerk’s office last night. — Auditor Leupold presented a report, and Y. stearns called his attention to the fact that the books had apparently been altered since the examination wear now - of Hartford me to town ‘this morning and drove down Hartford avenue selling potatoes at 35 cents a peck, when all other peddlers were - asking 45 cents. Three others jolned forces and rushed him, but he lashed his horse and escaped. The others fol- lowed, selling at 25 cents, and Sil- verman cut to 20 cents, Whereupon another aftack was tried. Again Silverman made good his getaway and headed for the southern part of the city with fine prospects of a still further cut and of a free-for- all, James Desmond, the electric lamp trimmer, was bitten by a dog on South Main street today. Mr. and Mrs. John Lincoln street have son for two weeks. The local Foresters are not in a very happy mood today, especially in regard to the railroad. They had organized an excursion to Savin Rock for next Tuesday, and now the railroad has not only got up one of its own but has cut the Foresters prices by ten jer cent. Ex-Judge F. B. Hungerford was riding his bicycle up West Main street yesterday afternoon and when he reached the corner of Washing- ton street he collided with a team and was thrown into the gutter. He was uninjured and after a few minutes proceeded on his way. Fenton of gone to Madi- Observation On The Weather Washington, Aug. 13.—Forecast for Southern New England: Prob- ably showers tonight and Saturday; not much change in temperature moderate southwest wind Forecast for Eastern New York | Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday probably showers in south slightly cooler in north night; winds. Conditions: The disturbance which was central over Mississippi vesterday morning moved rapidly northeastward and is now central over Ontario. It caused unsettled weather with local showers from Oklahoma northeastward to Maine. - Several reported more than an inch The greatest. amount was inches at New York ci Warm, muggy weather continues in o castern portion of the lake New England. An area pressure central over Al- berta is producing pleasant weather with low femperatures in the west- ern districts. Conditions favor for this vicinity unsettled weather followed by clear and cooler. portion; portion to- moderate to fresh southwest NEW JERSEY DIVORCES Trenton, N. J., Aug. 13.—An in- crease gn marriages and divorces in New Jersey in 1925 was reported in a statement made public yesterday by the department of vital statistics. The number of marriages in the state increased from 27,601 in 1924 to In 1925. Divorces in- creased from 2,000 in 1924 to 2,338 in 1 on July 1, 19 On July 1, 1924, was 8,599, it was 3, On the basis of these estimates. the United States department of commerce figures that the number of marriages per 1,000 of population was 7.69 in 1925, against 7.84 in 1924, and the number of divorces per 1,000 of population was 0.65, as against 0.57 in 1924, Salem and Somerset counties set the record for increase in divorces, both showing more than twice as many in 1925 as in 1924, Strongheart, the Pup | willin'to let go if he'll let go firs | & The Wisdom Tooth Hostess (apologetically): “This damp weather makes the furniture stick frightfully.” Guest: “Isn't that the cat's paja- | mas?” Hostess | drawers.” “No, it's the bureau's —C. A. Bolton. PI-EYED POSTOIFICE (Ezra Triplett, Postmaster) Gusta Wind: “Is the fast mail in?" Postmaster: “Gosh, yes—got in an | hour ago, but I ain’t had time to go | down t* the station fer the mail bag vet. Cat got in an' licked all the gum |oft o' four dollars’ wuth o' stamps, las' night, an’ got to paint ’em all | with molasses.” | Gusta Wind: “And my poor sister |in the sanitarium may die any min. | ute,and, me, pever anow it Postmaster: “Pshaw, she writ ye a posteard yistiddy — I fergot to give THE Take HU 4 me! I don’t C Y IM CD, But I M, § NDD!" (If a ke you see, | Take a chew for me! I don't see WHY I am seedy, But I am, yes indeedy!) —William Kuechle ek s Fan Attic: “Haven't you got any- thing for me but that sofa squirrel of mine?” Postmaster: “Well, ain't -a let(er from your stiddy beau enough for ye?" Fan Attic: “Not riiushy! Listen: when he's this this mess from ! BERING HE MUST KEEP HIS CLEAN WHITE FLAN- NELS CLEAN TFOR THE PARTY TOMORROW NIGHT Kl - STA ROCK , DISCOVERING REMNANTS OF E66 SAL- AD ON ITJUST IN TIME OF E66 SALAD AND TQ SIT ON GROUND HONAN FLY GOING 10 TRY FURDPE Will Take Steepest Steeples Qverseas New York, Aug. Meyer, who calls human fly of America,” will sail for Europe next Tuesday to begin & two-year campaign against the tall- est steeples and most difficult build- ings there. He has already con- quered the best-known buildings in the United States, including the Woolworth building and the tower of the Chicago Tribune, he says, and now he is determined to seek world-wide fame. I will climb them all, the Kaiser- schloss in Berlin, the dome of St Benedict'’s in Parls, the highest buildings in Russia, Italy, Germany, France and England,” he said yes- terday. “They have some beautiful taal steeples in England,” he added, with an anticipatory gleam in his eyes. “Then I will be world famous. I will return to New York, I will climb the Woolworth building again and everywhere I go people will point me out. I can sell nerve tonic and my picture then for the rest of my life and I will tell people, ‘See, 1 used this nerve tonic and I wasn't afraid of anything.’ “It's all in the mind. You go down to the Woolworth building {and look up at it and you will think ‘No one can ever climp that’ But I said to myself, ‘You climb that and you will be famous. You are the only one in the whole world that can do it’ And I did it. “Only once have I ever fallen. In Cleveland 1 was cleaning a smoke- stack and 1 hooked my belt on 2 rusty bolt in the stack. 1t broke and T fell 50 feet to the roof. Thank Heav The roof was rotten, and I went on through to the coal strike. I still have three holes in my stom- ach from that. “But it's a better game than prize fighting. I used to be a boxer before 1 was a human fly. T didn't know how to fight, but I was a good catcher. I could catch . all the punches of a good boxer. Then I went in the army. I was welter- weight champion of Camp Meade for three years, 1920-1923. “When I got out I.was broke. went to the Blackstone hotel Chicago. I told the manager I would climb his flagpole for $25. I wanted to eat. So I did it. But it was a $50 flagpole. Since then T've climbed buildings everywhere. In St. Louis, Bepdy Fox, another hu- man fly, and 1 played tennis on the wings of an airplane. Of course, we didn't really play tennis. But we stood on the wings and pretended we played. After that everygody followed me. But when T me back from Europe I will be: more famous than I was then.” e e— 13 (A—Johnny himself “the 1 in SIMPLE WAY OF TAKING GOOD PICTURES First—Buy one of our Box Cameras which sell from $1.00 to $3.50. Second—Load with Agfa Film and shoot. Third—Let us develop the film, and watch the reshits. ARCADE STUDIO CAMERAS FILMS' —— SNAPSHOTS OF A MAN KEEPING HIS FLANNELS CLEAN e By GLUYAS WILLIAMS S ICED TER NOT A sPOT R TO LOWER HIM-" SET5 TOOD DOWN AND' LOWERS HIMSELF SELF ON CONVENIENT BRUSHES OFF A PIACE CAREFULLY, SPILLING ICED TEA ON FLANNELS 60ES TO PICNIC,REMEM~- 515 DOWN ON GROUND REMEMBERS TLANNELS, ~ GUESSES RE'D BETTER AND RECEIVES PORTION JUMPS UP AND BRUSHES EAT STANDING UP, BUT | HIMSELT OFF. HURRAY, TINDS IT ALTILE HARD TO DO SO TFEELS RELIEVED THAT THERE'S NO USE KEEP: ING THEM CLEAN NOW, AND ENJOYS HIMSELR . 15