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T Ne Bnta Her d'(rn ts. And this | nd is being amply fi- :nn investigation, we fear, would noz! Two can live as cheaply as one |1f; Moris DeContl, cf and Spotec, rf. | third, fifth, sixth and eighth dis- w mn a.l il paripnie & | be very popular. today if you consider that they sce | Spotec got four hits, two.of them |trict committees followed similar MERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY aliowed ko Tactanthy of lthe news that | each other om)h bout half as much |[two baggers. The Mount Pleasant |action recently by the Livingston s ) : . i e 3 ) “ nowadays as they used to! Juniors claim the 12 to 15 year old | county democratic committee. Part - es out of Ch as do PRE E 5! 2] . h £ . tamed Dally (Sunday Excepted) | o 3 Gals UEEL i G Rt e on ‘;_“ Hanin (Copyright, 1 Reproductions | championship of city and want | leaders in various scctions of the At Herald Bidg., 67 Cburch Street. |[ance only. Th with the shootings of a small, in- : Boston Post | forbidden) to play any team in defense of the cie have since pledged their sup- nethod is to h - aignines S e e A New York soclal worker and t | title. "The score: | port to a “Reed for president” pro- ik SUBSCRIPTION RATES | minal stations, as ir the case in a |tion which does not know enough 3" Enslish reporter, both trained | Mount Pleasants ....302 020 0—7 | gram $5.00 & Year. { %) it By {and competent observers, have re- F d Drapers 010 100 2— e 3300 Thres Montha. = ‘;:“. n’\’:’h“”‘l f "h A to appreciate “1 y %0 N cently made careful investigations ‘ aCtSan ancles — SHOWER FOR MISS RIPPLE ce s have t} | stintingly provides. into the suffering of the striking i 5 REED 1S ENDORSED | s Wini 3 | ¥leld the use of public thorc | S L | coal miners. The curiously contrast- | BY ROBERT QUILLEN s Winined L hivpleds Eatered st the Post Offce at New BUSID | . og for taxi parking purposes, and | PLANTING FISH” |ing reports were published in two | [=gcia T o iR T Fun | Four Missourl Districts Want Him | tendered a surprise miscellaneous e they do so it is done with- ho streame | Sinday newspapers. One found |flshop aitor, care Of the New || It only patriotiom would sta for President of United States | shower last evening at her home, | 3 T Th restocking the streams | cong e ooaL th xide " i s d start = £ £0. Ploas: ok S 5 Bt Gk h t ; ms | conditions so good that no outside || pryiay Herald, and your letter || gasoline wars. Kan City, Sept. .4 {350 Pleasant street. by about 35 TELEPHONE CALLS | Sutouey in Kensington, Bast Berlin, Beckley |help was needed; the other found ||l g he forwarded to New York. States Senator James A. Reed has |friends. The home was attractively Business Office . 33‘: | case in Boston, Boston | 4nq Southington » 1,200 trout |starvation stalking through every s pesp . The world is grow) s N u2en indorsed for the democratlc | decorated with flowers, the color Bitoriy]. 8o0ma 4q0s. I olice commissi been under X Pl ion. Both obvio cannot be - = Erowing some e [ . qiqanty inati 928 by | scheme be pink and white. Miss P reccived from the state hatchery s § £ ter. You seldom see a hand-paint. |V Sidential nomination in 1028 I ing T he impresslon it owns the i = e Yet both we presumably | Such b-"Ov‘h’h.\' looks as some folks | 4”00 pillow, g paint-|o,r Missouri congressional district | Ripple received many beautiful and The ozly profitadle advertieing mediom | |as iwellidoneitand ikhe New I'r”"m‘flm‘f‘r, Each saw what he wanted| = wear! i ¥ % @ mocratic committees. useful gifts. She will become the in the City. Clrculation booke and press | e | Fish and Game association is en- |t e nd when we see ’em anywhere NN | * His indorsement ye by the | bride of 1 Miller t month. R v 1 Sadueriers. | BOASTINGEOEERATTONES i {0 all the credit extant for| This inability to see anything ex-| We want to hail ‘em with & “Say, | H""”’,?‘""’ I'I"‘“' 400008 of : Al : | The bombardment one he al- g cept what we want to sec is a|SUPDOSe your face should freeze | (hemM. Which allows each only five | ¢ erprise and determination to | A o ha o1 | pedestrians, Member ot the Associated Press | most every day between New Brit- about Ideal piscatorial condi- W'“mf m; ady of our times. Tt be- that wa Al B o Prem. 1s exclusively en- § aho pigcators comes harder and harder to under- St . g At the use for re-publication of | ain Plainville has nothing In | 4iong | stana the worla we live in because You Said It! | ’;‘(“1 “f-’ Coolldge must chuckle hy i 0 vit i lay: H 7 PSS s | “liffor - 8 y v I3 a little w] c en a c &Il mews creaited to it of not eherwie | common with @ fireworks Ispla¥i| Fighermen can buy lines and |people with axes to grind are doing | Cliford—-Marry me, dear, and |t UUIS When a9 efelenialls the news published thereln. | mean that the Con-|isokle. and obtain bait without |80 much of the explaining. The |YOUr life will be as free and wonder- prosperi e man it n Con L, s it 0 of e i, T o0 1 i 0 2 , ardware atlonal iGus 8 |much effort; but in order to fish | 7 I B O people who | Muriel—“Before I can be a but-| Is the humidity that makes th . Member Audit Burean ot Circulation. non practice. e i e o] I Lo b 10|t erfly T've got to marry a man who | hent oppressive. The drys fare be The A. B. C. fa a natlonal organization = : : | | want to think clearly. Ity s lfen Whieh furplshes newspapers and l?v.r;< Those boom-boom-booms that proposition is no enigma. | can buy the ;_|\y‘) ). ; o ; { L2 ly honest analysis of | gy ¢ renn o : | —Martha L. Barnmack. - T & Sty oulation statistics | 18tUTD the evening atmosphere| qwy reminds of the Xhorw..\.'ub‘ ekl i W T Gt e S ki his audit. Thie insures | merely indicate that the men of | .q are e . 5’ y A T d i = : e SR 8 e aine trand o newspaper | it ness of Governor smith of New| 28§ Vears go Today APPLAUSE CARD [a fly usually attack a bald spot from | B ] . o B 7e, 1o both national &nd | dynamite and courage are undoing |york fn making it possible for | [ Dear Fun Shoppers—We are asking | Pehind? local sdvertisers. |the work done by nature when the | progident Coolidge to be a success- | e |vou to help us select our merchan- The New Strand Theater— | rocks were formed in these parts |y, ; e : ‘ ting of v dise for the comin | ul fisherman during his stay in ing of the Y. p.|dise ] e s The Herald 1a cn emle ally o New|qgog oo, Tl e g (i lirst Paptist churen | Those who did mot fill in the at- The New Steele St. School— York st Hotalings Newsetan mes | 1¢ i ; e Adriondacks. |was held in the church parlors fo. |tached questionnaire yesterday will 3 ; 3 Eot oA KoL s | Tho Dlasting s 10 b | The governor reaiaed the Pres- |1 Taticns ererrma ot 197 please s by doins so todas—and The Renc\\ed Capltol Tneater-— Fan - Amd Street |more insistent, consistent and per- |jgent would have the finest tackle “,,Wm,.g president, Addie Lyman; |2ailing it today! HOT BASEBALL nym(,s o | 26TvER, WhO a8 a rule knows ULt | forjeq; but the governor was not [ponding se Eeiasy astma el Gar I Ny B The comhuctmn of magm cent amu:ement will win the £ SF O 2 5 Il; x at o New Britain g & yo ot peunct, who Wit W ‘m!‘”""“ the work required to remove | quite sure whether there would be [union, William Latham: chairman of | Jokes et palaces, of high public educational institu- pennant? And after tha [a mountaln, may be of the opinion | gusricient fish at White Pine camp |lookout committee, Edward Connol- Poems A iR Beadeg man: & Shiatlss tions must necessarily be guided by men of world’s series—what teams are BO- | that one is being eliminated from |(, make the President happy |ley srams sounes "b'fms alws to be 1 o ARt . ing to have the honor of PIA¥INE|ine landscape; but when next he| rhe moment Governor Smith| F- H- Alford has taken out a epr- Burlesques RO “mg Vvision. el fovernor Smi i 1 s A AT oons 5 to the matlon as a gallery in the fyo5rg in that direction he finds 0 | jearned the Presiden Jronmitgto jbuila ouse ndyebriok od Post Offic T : Their choice of huilders” hardware should be . incidentally di- |learned the President was to spend |harn on Court street. Inspector 4 Post Office See America first. Your hageage “big series” and incidentally his surprise that the mountain, or | summer in the state he grab- |Turnbull says that there are just & Kolleg: {alinenocta b atont os ot your choice. e [ the hin, is still there. It apparently | pea a telephone and called up the |MOTe puitions for leave to build (hi Tl at home in these arid days. “For permanent, lasting beauty; resent month, e e | tak a eni s ¢ ¢ vear than there were last year at| c s. = S i % _ > s B ot 2 chctEaM LSRN RS riah and ) mmalcommission [this time In addition, I think: | O s e e For efficiency, for economy— stretch in the penns s ing to make any headway out plenty of fish on hand?” First Baptist church of New | (If you have any extended th siderable period of fime during Corbin must be selected no doubt decide who is to Win i gt way, Why not use nitro-glycer-| o IV»-) filed a certificate oforganiza- | or suggestions add them in | which Europe didn’t think ill of [ b P Eol s . s both’ the Natlonal and Americal |jne or T.N.T., or some of that new nough for any emerger ay with the state secres |rate note.) [ Our exhibit of P. & F. Corbin Builders Jeagues, In the former the race has |sture which smashes an fce hers | came the repts | itol. Witliam Kiese- Name . ; e Hardware will interest you—drop in and see 5 11 along, with |, > S Bat thet | wett JHLES OV CRE | There's one g about the re 3 v 5 A c been a cloh affair fl( i\m Tl | with one wallop? But then, this is| «Then get together every e SEoentis P e "'\:‘.‘,T L fi"[ o it. We are Corbin’s ex- St. Louis threatening to win a pel- jonjy an example of weak and ou can spare; take them u at | clerk He Got Life for This 2 ] Vhe e gets 1 RS P nant for the first time in the his- | yeq wit, Yet, if so much blasting | Kirkwood camp the President has| ~ew Britain defeated Hartford at | ‘| just got a job as blacksmith in | 7 Y”\VU;“”:“:I“H a new stock New Efié?;ig entative in o city e Mississippi | % R 2 g ¥ i “lthe rifle shoot held at the German = i N am. tory of the city on th nl' ',] is necessary, some nearby residents | hired, and dump them into the lake | i, "olub vesterday. The local team | = —and: naturally the cltlzens of e |y o thinking It would be Worth | there T don't want fo take a chance |was composed . ’ m:ou‘ r,«n]‘!”:m gine the republi- southwestern metropolis are aulle | whjle for somebody to invent a[that the state might be humiliated |Baum chal, B b e e R L exclted over the prospects. | dynamite mutfler. This idea 15 |1y any lack of fish." |and P. R They shot 223 | S o e 22 = b i b the % ik e 9 ¥ L to Hartfo | THE BOSS RETURNS FRO) HES .. In_ the American 7 g handed to our horde of Connecticut| As a consequence several fruck-| rmpa stol bascball team defe '\!-1‘ HIs VACATIO e New rk o LT e ! S ki G giens i supremacy of the €W YOT% linventors free of charge loads of fish were rushed up to the [ed igeport vesterday, 11-2, and | (Observed by Gordon Kemonn) Alas! A war between two great | Yankees at last is being seriously T e a pu the lake before | clinched the titlein the state league.| Boss—I'm ready to dictate that|motor firms doesn't affect the ! lcamp and put Into the lake before | o i ‘challeriged. The club which has held | TRUCK TRAVEL e | Health Of Bull r ex- |letter, now, Miss Andrews. Kore!|price of the car you really want. ‘ e hea 1| e e o < ? g cellent health and no contagious | Give that typewriter a little more | = #nay at ”'f ';’“d"' :vt.»vhn‘in:w‘ 2k *(' enlitely vacles D “} Just one more proof, if any more |gicenses for Av -ust in Plainville. |gas, will you? H'm, my fountain | So golf costs America half a bil- ARCH STREET | pEman now finds, Asell HEALDS |veigh ageinst U trucks - which ¢ nocged, that Al Smith should be| There was a fire in the kitchen |pen fs. dry—Johnson, bring me the lion a year! What is more, it 1 | desperately to retain its lead, which | make sport of traffic on the main |y ool lof the New Y rk dining rooms on |flask—cr—ink bottle T e e e o ren Telephone 106 n growing steadily less for | thoroughfares. They kcep right at 3 fain stre t t 2 o'clock this morn-| Johnson—Yes, sir. Mr. Blanks of | consume a lot m has been g g | 4 ¥ v rig ke = Sy weeks past, although still five |it, regardless. | e |ng: e dlre) ¢ partment vespondsd | Biacks & Co. calles, and = — ‘‘Hardware Meant for Hardwear" e 4 e st | et 5 X |promptly to an m but had an Bost o called, did he? Well, _.ara games as this was written. It is especially noteworthy v)mt; Or TR S 55 Worlt piitt it out. The ten- |T'll raise him five blue chips—er—I | Considering the fact that the many of the chief offenders in this| ¢ 9 & e nts In the blcck were trapped by |mean that's fine. | Yankes must meet the strongest of |eity—those who travel too swittly, | o' o qels A merlcan L eEianH g o e Mrs. (G medley carried | Office Boy—Shall T get you a the league's clubs on their home whose drivers seem to realize fully |"ToUShout the country to induce fher ¢ DEERESR A arlnieiotics an e Rslng | * .| more widespread voting by the but fainted hen she hed the | 3oss—Yes, give me a shot—T| srounds before the season ends—|that they will mot be injured ir| 12" FEEHEAS FECE M yoteom, An overheatcd chimney s {mean drink. Ahem! Johnson call including. six games With €helr|there is u smash—are composed of |FeCtOTale With satisfaction “andgjqyo caused the fire, | my chorus girl—nang it, T mean of- most dangerous rivals, the Cleve-|the big ponderous species which | ””::’ "” HHscomn T | = fice girl process by which a Jand Indians; it no longer secms o | transport street-paving material, | ¢ Leglon will e | . ",,“‘ Bfl Caseres e s RV e (vl transfers erore t e used to say, that the Yankees will |~ There curzent meifer. the ity [ 2ZEBRIsAHon Svhish has aliemp “"‘ Qbservation i bea Ty TEby sirestle Biite win the pennant. Only the fact that |should set a good example in work | ° "‘1'“‘ "1"' Earisan Solaabn || like hLer big rough daddy? Does So many ¥ exerclsing their privilege and di : s ] ! You can say one they got such a magnificent siart it is doing, or to insist upon a good | “\" ‘l’"' thalp Do 22 d‘" I 0" The Weat’ler Oh, excuse me, Miss Hodges, I didn't | thing for Amerfcans. They keep on School Bell carly in the season has enabled [example by others hauling material| DUt the results so far have been realize what I was saving. IU's about | rying to make themselves behave. discouraging. about 11 lett 1o Smy &| 2 them to keep on top until this|for city purposcs. But the belief = 1the I'll dictate lemen: | time. They have been very vivid secms to be a misapprehension. FosE Rt kR apntiona I ors 8 Your thre nces and a_pair of jacks || "]!"I‘:' pleasant the world would . . examples of how it to gobble | LB JEsniEaioniaiEn ni Ko te M- | oudy tonig 1t hand and will say that one of the <.l1.m,»I s o ;(, Loclia i Rll‘lgS Agall'l up a huge percentage of games | FAME tlonal enthusiasm for voting. But |ipiy light chov ¥ |fish was t-h-i-s long and w mhn]i 5 st s 2 ¥an, Suring he first months of the sea-| A wiiter to a Boston paper re- | When all the votes were counted ftiin portion tonight, cooler |« e Yo e e e P se st imen Thon: Tt oh e At re | Was found that half the voters moderate to fresh west t it is pre-w 1 (S é 3 son while the other teams are get- M3 hat when Plato lived thers , 22 heliva Kiok, beltere | WHO. at first glance, seem nearest considering the countr: a whole, i 3 s i S s | perfec t e ladic ting the kinks out of their arms. | Were only —comparatively few onsdemE NiEyEas ARphol ost for New York: |me! Please advise if you ever made | Peffection. turn out to be ladics. hould closely observe thelr The sporting instinct, so far as|Athens who understood his prin- had abstained from going to the v cloudy tonight and urs-|a hole in one, and got 15,000 miles | ¢ TR s B o A0 o 60 of baseball is concerned, is well sup- | ciples. [ POUE e Gtk praidential | probublyfanowsrss lxcent) Sn out of o pairigr cord tlre SRedlens I{0E 8 e GRS e EshasliCRIlARSS iayepdoteciveiaiatlons 3 ¢ | election, too. | north portion; slightly warmer in|gine trouble, I didn't have a darned 5 1= t i hand t ild ir plied with. fodder this month. The | Since that time, he Hokl e | south and cooler in north portion |bit. Have examined files for data | °F¥ Of youths who will be football N e S LBeloU e races are thorughly en-|more than two in each generation| Connecticut’s record was just|y ., cooler Thursday; moderate |on blonde chorus girl. Erclosed | Stars: o 8 slIEHiEe v denge of s o Aotal tas bad as the other states in the| b o ind 1 j! Tr Sgfet Yl Daated sl o a0 joyable, n from a distance have been totally conversant with |38 bad as otk ‘ the | ghirting winds becoming fresh | please find love SE e SR e e TOTRER ¢ have his eyes examined before the the inner meaning of his doctrines. | North. [ nortnwest Thursday. | vours, J Gordon, S Ell draw | oo o it Tera ol bell rings again Z : The PR Cie Congitions: A long ridge of high cards! iave the shape of a le X PARTY LOYALTY Which puts Plato in a class with| Th jon is tackling something | o e e [said he, “but I'm going Don't wait until school opens to have Party lo g assiduo: the Einstein theory, so to speak. |{hat is one of the pressing prob- S BIVis (5 s e T kmickers anyway.” the children’s eyes examined. Do it now preached by nd old party| But, the writer continues, there |lems of the times. Why it is that | proqucing pleasant weather in the (Protected by Publishers Syndi- ~—they will be better able to take up speakers and at the pres- | were m popular actors in | VOLers, who would be up in arms if | eastern distr A long trough of i :'\"‘L{T"c'gl.,h“]°'b"~" e e an E a | A o = vesight trouble beforehan i i bt . \Uhen | anyone suggested they & denied | 10W pressure extending fro orth ‘V - y ent time—so vehemently, Athens during Plato's time. When | aNYone sugg " " VIR0t e E vt Rt Tae i fa 0 ) 0) CLAIM JUNIOR TITLE B the metliod behind t one of them died there was much | the Tight to vote, should be so re- unsettled® showery weather P The Mount Pleasant Juniors tool A is beginning to attract attention. mourning. |luctant to exercise this primal 7 the Rocky mountains and L swes ceae their cleventh st E The reason is simple. If| The world doesn’t remember the | function in a democracy. is beyond |the Mississippi river. The greatest FER 500 Buiks day when they beat the Drapers at ran . 00 w1n v ik ; g e |amount of rain reported during the Macyle flold by 8 7 fo & acore, the grand old party me of such actor; et | the f m, 24 Tiours wad 584 Inches &t Bragalia caught and Gyp pitched for minority party, instead of that of Plato resounds down the 5 | Calgary, Alberta he pera- the winners. Setephen Gengen and 827 0 | - gary, pera. : . C 1308 jority party, party loyalt 15 | SHOES AND TEXTILES ture is rising slowdy in the western Gyp were the leading hitters. looked upon as a political evil and - | New England’s chief industries |® 'v'm,u.b ’ R ) ,:“\. 1xph\m he ”“m(‘.vn.;“\'\ ‘:r s ORTOAch s iy onditions favor for this vicinity A03 g jpRcatonk Al B ets 5t dopravity HICAGO. PUBLICITY [are the shoe tndustry and the tex- |y "Geather followed by increasing bage, 8s; Andrini, 8b; Ziike Balos |1 Jf The shouts and squcals about| NAicfy-nine per cent of the peo- tile industry. This tier of states also | cloudiness and slightly warmer. ! . N ple of Chicago are law-ablding | has other big industries, of course, | S o citizens, while one mer cent get 99 | hut the two mentioned, according (‘ompam Ito Dl ll for party supremacy. Th cent of the crime publicity. to the statistics and common con- | Governor’s Day Parade B oritarn a1t In the least In What the city really 1s like is|sent, head the list. Company I, 169th Infantry, will terested In tho pr of I indicated by the raucous yelp-| The shoe industry Is not pro-|not drilh at the state armory on thing. s of the Dloodthirsty gangs !tected by a tarlff, while the textile | MORdaY night, September 6 as pre- AR R | 2 viously schieduled but will drill on | B e sfaten) the grand old r bootlegging spo industry enjoys one of the highest | weanesday night, September 8, fo were in the minority, every Dr. Horace Ellis, writing in the walls In the law. Richasel fort 16 h s Soeanrs bat would be told it was his or her National Republic renders a Yet both are in bad condition “‘hm"m"luk jark on Thursday after- bounden duty to be inder ot in | distinet fcalio! this! citytont the || Baots 5o shotsiare on iHs roes|nOCHHeniEnilectywhen e mill . e | tary units in this vicinity will stage thought and action ke by g its true sclf. No ist; so are the hides used in n n battle at the Connecticut | _ 5 thinking person would have & ing shoes. All tate Falr on Governor's Day | KRAZY KOLLEGE TAXI RIGHTS taken the real Chicago for the ¢ pete with the boot | Company T now number §1 en- | d by M. . J.) The t of abutting property o of the police blotters, 4 4105 induatiy Ariit can utlie | st men _uv,l‘;.p.‘y‘v’ !:;.’10;‘-1“1,” ree “1’. 1:1\3:':7»‘\\’\"; J“l:xmm,lr;ullln_ iners to give taxi cabs exclusive R Nt : | officers in command and.is the sce- | die yawn, no matter how owners to giv i isiv is necd in pointing out to|can't. | ond largest infantry comapny in the | Lored they ar ! privileges of standing before their unthinking that all is not The textile in is protected | state. A recruiting drive is planned Etta Hamm—*"“And real gentlemen i remiscs—for a rental ime In Chicago P 1t o o in the near future to raise the nu- | praie ey don’t notice it at- P to the hilt. But it is no better off praiend they don’t notice it, no mat ing fought out in many ci Dr. Ellls, in listi [ rial | than the boo shoe industry so “Hm ‘\m ngth to 93 men, t1 ter how sore they are.” t o 5 allowe infantry organizati | ¥ € our reparfee is ite 5 () /| if B - i ; S getiaony with e e e dnoans Ewrlll Hoglal taveat Looabn s B (e 1 COUNTER TOR DISH OF ‘SPECIALS' PASTED ON TENTION OF CLERK WHO AT LAST. ASKS HIM WHAT B o detern god |the world: Tt T untetes have improved | Practice on the rifle range at Lake |} ICE*CREAM MIRROR . WISHES NAMES 15 WASHING GLASSES AT AN 'AURORA BOREALIS' o Sl G e Linei, but e sonsidoncd sue et | CO7IE0UTS. Brlsiol, an September e Hgmom: WERENT S0 FANCY, HE GANT END OF ZOUNTER. 1S, AND DECIDES T TRY i ot | 18, overnight bivouac. Lic 'he toreador at bull fights is f clarify the entire situation to the | grounds within the hint = " ¥ t t Thoms - TELL WHAT THEY ARE ONE ) ey ought to be tenant Thomas E. C y represented | A brave and pleasing s satistaction of ! ten of these parks al shoe and textile industrics | this unit on the regimental rifle| For only that red shawl of his p s banca g 0 acres. There ar acre two problems that cannot | eam for which he was .awarded a Contemptible to fight.” fime whether individuals | of ad public fo ich tackled from the same ang AL B o) RAir EiThaa d, < o E ioped to qualify e men for the | {RAZY KINDERGARTEN = have the t out space in | have rired for v ) no tariff n sh t | regimental team thi r | 3 (('7&) { is no £ on shoes, ve gime tea s year, (Conducted by Judy, Jr.) 2 \ front of th to taxi con- [a notat nich ities | there ave no imports beeayse Amer- T Teetche fommy, you look corns, revenue from | could well follow. I e T e PAKE OVER RAILROADS alesty ,n,,” l“)m\v come?” il S ; ¢ AR b 3 C | — ommy Hawkham—"Pop took me % i b I 0 playground in | celled for quality and prices National Corporation Now Will | to sce a drammar called ‘Omlet’ last ng non-payers from valled houle There high itf on tex- Mannze Rail Lines is Belgiom | and de show wuz a lotta hams such porcions of 1} vard alor Hae 60 |{iles; vet forelgn textile makers are | wssells, Sept. 1. (P—RBelgiur nd had eggs cuttin’ wid swords and Sy e bl | a ouar to/ia fhahseement o Teetcher—"G wiz, aby g through h a , ar 1 150 hospi- | American product and importations | & national corporation under a 73 | using Ty R g courts nca ed the pre- est symphony | into the United States ar id to | vear lease, in conformity with the | Tommy Hawkham: tension with that the world, a elvle | be high cabinet’s economic and stabilization | “Ophee madness sure wuz sad, 1 | rogra The st effec 0! e | i s streets lLelong to the ot to | opera ociation to which thou-| The shoe makers, without a ,"' \‘Lr‘:~’\\ ”:“ H”';VI ””:'m' ,(y'u‘h, | 1 red it lnhn hml‘n’ S il ¥ o insfer was an announcement that | But my maw she wuz twicet as ma ebutting property own s same contribute; an cnormous pub- | {ariff, scem to be considerably | passenger fares and freight DS AR 16 TOLD T GETA 25 ¢ RETURNS WITH CHECK AND REPEATS HE WANTS AN DECIDES ICE-CREAM Faault s anticipated In Boston and [lic Mbrary with many branches: | more prosperous fthan the textile | would immediately -bo Iner il CHECK TROM CASHIER FINDS CLERK ENGAGED IN ‘AURDRA BOREALIS BUT 15 GETIING 0 (OMe such other cities where the battle of the world's greatest mu- | malk hjoy” the high | temporarily by 25 per cent, operat e AT END OF SORE DEBATE DOWN DUMB- WA LEAVE THE WHIPPED PUCATED NOWADAYS 8 being fought or is yet to be | se and art collections; and pub- | tarifr | n]n’g « '\p\ n]:m:”u ould be dr: ,m_‘fn,v(wd— Appropriate 4 ER ABOUT SENDING MORE CREAM QFF. FINDS IT%S to a le owdown ia" ‘solefb duced and other economies effected. Reporter—"Here's a story abou! i broux’:: bl legal showdown. lle spirited citizons who have| One would need to compare every | The incroass In PRssenEors fares | twe toomen mating Inte a ha : SPOONS UP ONLY 20¢ THAT WAY, W" ng 1= more rtaln than | given iillions to the welfare of | detail of fthe two Industries very | I8 expl 1 on the ground that at|What'll we head it HE MUST CHANGE CHECK { - that public thoroughfares belong to | the public. Its street widening and | closely to come to a sensible con- | the present they equal only 70 per | City Editor—“Another War Be- ¢ the public, and not to private in- | zonin 2 " | cent of the pre-war tariffs, figured |tween the Tongs.” P | g plan is taking 30 years to [clusion as to t eas ut su g3 g | he reason. But such | o o gold basis. —Esther Mahaley. o T