New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 22, 1926, Page 13

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B ———— NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1926. w CDOUIDGE WANTED ' 2 ] PSR INEARLY [WATAN RALE WANGED AS SPY 150 o STUR DESTRONS. e had loved and lost. are receiving a very small com-; T[] KEEP T Lost Mother At 12 pensation. A college education ought | ’ . { CASKRE lieaL it g s “When I was 12 years old my own 40 fit a man or woman to be .rw! one of the first o volunteer for I []F ASUNC"]N |mother was taken away. She was a [tent in any occupation, because it| : . | Pheip. rorm e e grtin g a | . e n , former agtor er the news of Lexingto sweet and gentle influence. I always |enlarges the capacity for the 4n—“ Practically Ever ney gene 'he latter will give the o atate, Tnl Tt oans Torel (Continued from First Page r er having my sister and me |joyment of the intellectual and ~ principal address. made a captain and in Sep- . e e e Ghampwn Favome th 0dds| State Has Special Pro- ™<Loiis i o i prinepa | o "ot e ne v mc Paraguay Visited by Hurricane 1} few wil € [ you v 1 S 1 N t ¥ only a few will ever sec 1 sing in her very last hours. She |me that a man with a college mr' speaker on the evening's program self as the leader of a fometimes think it should bo a won- |had been an invalid for as long as | cation and an artisan’s income would | Agams Tul][]ey Heavy gram and Patriotic Ex- which il bo 5ot 1n the 1ive con VARIan eiinoagded 0. gap. —Death List M&] Be 150 derful thing if every cit 12ad a T could remember. I can see now | be nost in an ideal position.” gregational church, South Coventry x supply boat anchored in the chance to sit down for a few min- (that she was a woman of taste and | “You made one statement, Mr. | ercises Are Being Held | Governor Trumbull will read 5| East river almost in the shadow of :m with his xnr‘)snl nt _Iv;m the way discretion and had a fine sense of | President, which I noted particular- | philadelphia, Sept. 22 () — No special message from President British man-of-war. A few days ® are sitting here. They would |discrimination. She loved poetry. Tt |Iy,” I remarked. “You said that caniitel LI TR ° . P - e Coalidge . Dis . i gt He YaltTitaead 46 vantan Giat ask a lot of questions.” was seven vears before my father |those men and women who have at. |CH4mplon since the days of the Bos-| N South Cov entry, His jootize. 0 S el Ol B to ““].,.,,‘: Rt Mq[ Almost at the same time the inhab. “What sort of questions?" the Married again. Meantime, T staved |talned dfstinguished success without |(on “strong boy” John L. Sullivan, | pe . hol talled on the outside of the chureh | military information, While on this{itants af the Tttle towh: - ‘o ainee President asked. a great deal with my grandmother |being married have worked under a {has been made as overwhelming a irt place. at thone S ,’, not obta mission he was captured and exe- | ng 1 g > Coolidge, who was a strong, resolute |great handicap. I take it to mean |favorite as Jack Dempsey has been tickets will be able to follow the | R T |RAsion wers oainineiiing ¥ IR worEno! it 2 nvn:mucrru'mn‘mms that there is no doubt in your mind |established for his 10-round decision program il e aster in Ilorida a hurricane similar and a true daughter of the Puri-|that marriage is a great contribu- [match with Gene Tunney in the ew Haven, Sept. 22—(P— The | Re plives of maatly Al the X7 = ; to that wheh viisited Miami and tans. My stepmother was all that |tion to & man's success?” [sesquicentennial stadium tomorrow. | gate that pred Dt “P il “,,fmm e, ’_‘,_’\‘,”" e World-Wide Economic lother places struck the town Mon- a mother could be who was not your | *“How can there be any doubt| In spite of a somewhat belated 235 produced B Nathan Halo, | SYCTIE A e e e s Conference Called |2y night with virtually identical re- very own. She was a talented wo-|about it?” he replied. “A man who |trend of sentiment among obscrvers | the patriot-maruyr of the Revolu- | Prfi IR In the programs. ' Ta ; % sults man, fond of hooks and of a schol- |has the companionship of a lovely | foonsd Tuney the Lkt fuw days, | tionary war, and Benedict Arnold, | of hoy scouts, Yot red gt pt. 22 (A—The League | Apout 150 persons were killed and 500 injured. The material damage is Asuncion, Paraquay, Sept. 22 Just Human Questions ot political que : swered. “They aren't half so much interested in politics as Washington thinks they are. Rut they are enormously Interested in you and Mrs. Coolidge. They would ask very human questions — friendly curious and terribly frank.” i ¢ h | unive arly disposition. T thus had the great |and graclous woman enjoys the su- imajority opinion has remained | the arch-traitor of that struggle for | ity collegw, Wesleson . good fortyne to come under the in- |preme blessing that life can give. [strongly in the champlon's favor. | independence, today pald tribate to | Con i for 4 -wide eco- | estimated at a million dollars. The fluence of three good women, a most | And no citizen of the United States {Few have heen willing to concede | the form e hero who was |the 1 o i " town is virtually ruined, complete : Eong e dopis “ 2 "_" desolation reigns. Encarnacion has 1 e 25 0 e Gar ) L yon R hiad ot '® la population of about 35,000 and is Well, for one thing, every sing Did you have the usual boy's am- e | “Dempsey has the punch.” most | ceremonies are t £ = gl ly that Germany is heartily | ihe second largest cit y 4 citizen would want to know, ‘Why |bition to be a policeman or & rail | ceremonies are being held through- | of special ohserva Al & o Y | the second largest cit yin Paraquay. Rvahill o o sl o s o | on e a policeman or a rail- Y any expert or non-expert will 8ay | out Connecticut Ahilaten ks i wvor ¢ © convocation of a|A majority of the houses were built navent vo t road engincer?” T asked. h an air of finality that seems t0 | Spacial exercises commemorating | {lon has sent 1 5ary conference along the lines laid down | ¢ wooq, Store, His Ambition ! carry the conviction It will quickly | tne 150th anniversary of the execu- | the life of Hale and other rial | PY M. L r of Fran Th The lower part of the ecity wi The President ushed his felt | 1 aspira B proy to ca he con pasy Living in the country, I did not ul the hopes and aspirations of the | tion of the young schoolmaster were | relitive to his c - f proposal to call the co: completely razed. A number of rnal(ob;\]:f 3,,:"";&"‘"!'1 ::;:‘l\lul '”]“J"(/K'I‘l have much knowledge ”ov Iroad ‘wn mer marine. R | held in nearly every school in the |in Conneeticut. Tn : e “'v o4 H PO wl‘l \(' boats in the Parana river were sunk. that time on 1 interrupted only to |Cn e police e h‘; answer ‘< Wh henor ot Dempasy s oGl ntate, A% state hoard prineip: o o assemblys commission on | WO hotels, the customs house and contribute additional questions. Tie (¢ e at 1 f.l\w’ 5 ome of his old speed or the old It-| The state's ofticlal observance of | present fitting pre 1 & ‘,‘ HblYE comminion wo banks were destroyed. During 1d/ tha Test s andiha’ seemed fo be| L oys rathet hoped that Imight keep “‘“&' BOCUIRCY, RP L LHor o DD the event will take place in South |otherwise commemorate 1l 1 hipical and economic questions. ' ine storm the power plant collapsed . store when T grew up . harassing court suits, injunctions and | coventry, ¥ale’s birthplace, this | sion. = sems and the city was thrown into dark- | baviok & rest gucdtime. | “Did it ever oceur to vou that vou | [[S6[t "Dl‘y’ Plank in Demo- ro on nave aftcctea his morale: | agtunons and somisn: Governor's Tribute Choate g(‘h(,,,[ Teacher | ne 1t s mot heon. possiis for me | MEN bo president when you grow [I5-the ‘crrent csels. ot erashing |y bLic exerciaes thiers will begin | In his official proclamation Killed When Tree Falls | iuen across the: sver to" Poroon 36 shend” vl He toemn Wt cratic Plal fl]llll [Py the current cycle of crashing|with a parade which will include [nating this date “Nathan ‘ Kille hen Iree I'alls taken ‘across the river to Posadas around the cotintry,” he began. “The | . “That never occurred fo me. If [ itden Hornaby, Nurmi and s host | Many distinguished guests, several | day,” issued ten days ago, Governor | Wallingford, Conn., Sept. 22 (P)— |for treatment. Two special trains details of administration hecomo | the question had been proposed to) S e, o e i e wat | bands, military organizations, school | Trumbull paid memorial tr Henry F. Vallanti ister of | carrying provisions and nurses have it it i ieivieg | v, TiRnONIT naveRbeentdiilts verc| SEL AR MINCRINEE oot el children and a number of attractive | Nathan Hale, in honor iFrench and Spanish at Choate | been sent to Encarnacion. Plans are more and more time. The supervi- | {2 that I would never be qualified | py, ' \yijjiam Gibbs McAdoo Wing of | oreover, there are Tunney's own | 104 Viype of Conceticut m school since 1 was_fatally in- | being made to shelter the homeless. slon ofithe expenditure of nearly (> Serve my fellow countrymen Infg,, gemocratic party in Callfornia, | /aithentions to conctderhis. own List of Speakers | The governor points out ured in Norwich, N. Y. vesterday |All amusements in Asuncion have $4,000,000,000 each year Is a very |ihat position. T do not recall that! oso 1aq by anti-McAdoo delegates ]:“‘Im‘ T nu‘ht R A Speakers at the exercises which | there is “no more noble exp: u fwhen a branch of a tree fell on him. | heen suspended as a sign of mourn- large task. It is only a few years|2nY one In whose judgment T would iy, "o preliminary contests of the |(oe nos registercd many a knock. | Wil follow the parade will include |of patriotic fervor in any language | He dicl last night in the Norwich |ing. ago that our expenditures were less | Place much reliance ever told me Inf g 1o convention which opened here Sl Vgfi"lm“ Snd boRiie abil U. 8. Senator Hiram Bingham, Gov- | than the last words of t voung | hospital | The Inhabitants of Encarnacion than §500,000,000, 1 have been fold [MY younser days that T ehould bel iy camo back to a hard | M3 Fugsednes 2 ernor John H. Trumbull, Dr-A. B. | Amorican army captain “I only re i Word of his death was rec mnx lepend chiefly for their livelihood on that when William C. Whitney was | president. It my mother had any|iougn victory over their opponents | “hut invariably the fight enthusiast | MEFedith, _state commissioner ~ of | gret that T have but one life to los the school here today. Mr. Val- | commercial dealings with the Mis- e el b such notion she kept it to herself, | pari today, by a vole of 52 to 49, |t N e e ey | education, Dr. W. L. Higgins, chair- | for my country.” was a graduate of Harvard. |siones territory of Argentina, across land he inl Wasliington |and the remarks of my father rather [ (hoy' forced through a resolution Ap- | o on steect: cornera. in hatel lob.. | MAR Of the committee and Charles! Tn a'briet resume of Hale's life of was in Fitchburg, Mass. 'the Parana river. sixty-five days during one year. Of |Indicated that he thought it I dld|punging a bone dry plank to the |yjog and elubs—comes back to the course that wonld be impossible [not change my ways I would come|party platform. Ihelief that Dempsey's punch, the now, and the story may not be cor-|on the town. Ie kept up admoni-{~ phe dry resolution, indorsing the |wgoek” that put Jess Willard, Georg- rect. Mr. Whitney had a fine repu- |tions of that character until I had|giare prohibit enforeement act | g m.pu}nar and Luis Firpo on the tation as secretary and did much to | entered public life, I think his fore-|and condemning efforts to repeal it |noor & dozen or more times, will end lay the foundations of our present | cast impressed me as being very im- | by initiative at the Novem the “battle of the sesq navy. But in his day, whe portant [ tion, was carrfed only attc Among newspaper critics, among army and navy together were sup-| I asked whether he thinks there!patter controversy over methods of |(na men who have heen backing porfed for about £50,000,000, he |is as much opportunity for boys| voting, the status of proxies and the |(heir opinions in wagers at odds of would have a good deal of leisure |now as when he was a boy. merits of the question itself. s high as 3 to 1 on the champlon time which is not possible now. If reat Opportunity Today Efforts of the McAdoo delegates !and among the “wise men” of the T should leave Washington on ex-| *T think there is a better chance|to stop the roll call because dele- |boxing game there is almost univer- 'y , tended trips, it would not be pos- | for hoys to succeed now than there|gates were calling out their votes [ga] conviction that Dampsey will win - a sible for me to keep up the details eyer was before,” he replied. *Some | without rising were overruled, but !}y a knockout inside of four round e r}ce w Gn @! s ow f e of admistration. desire one avenue of success and | when the count showed tlie resolu- |Seyeral wagers have heen reported d I thought of his annual journey|some another. If & young man!tion had carricd, an anti-McAdoo {at odds of only 2 to 1 that the chal- Rl up to the little villaga in Vermont ants education and that mental! motion to reconsider the roll call [jenger will take the fi count be- . “There is one trip that you man iscipline which comes from con-|was defeated 53 to 46. | fore the end of the fourth “ age to find time for every year,” T iy ot with hooks and learned men, I| In the early hours of the conven-| Tt is nothing new for the cham- ame 0 rl e one ou suggestgd am eure the opportunity was never!tion the anti-McAdoo contingent | pion to he the favorite. All of them , ck to the Old Town so good as it is now. If he wishes!swept into apparent control of the |since Sullivan have been so regard- “You mean Plymouth,” he smil- ({5 1 oney and go into business| gathering when David §. Ewing de- [ed in the bouts which saw titles eneTnat 1S PAaren o Bl mO i ) idea of accumulating a|feated Judge Claude . Purkitt of |change hands, but it will be more A . glves mo something that 1 need in | il S o more avenies | the MeAdoo faction 50 (o 56 for the | than an ordinary sliock to the sport- er ew or 0 l rl | |ing fraternity as well as to the pub- ’ lll Il q a reso- ‘What sort of questions?” he re- important element in guiding the [knows the truth of that statgment |the challenger more than an outaide | hanged as a spy by the British on | will be represented » ATESEROL any, anar, better than I chance, September 22, 150 ye ago. Fitting | n an effort to 1 o e AW A AR e ” my work and can not get anywhere | “OPC Jose at apy|t°mporary chairmanship of the con- else. It is now 31 years since T left )"'K_;‘m‘““ “Hm “"1"‘ (]v-l Ii"?,',‘“:on,‘”w‘.mmn 1 early last night Ewing’s |lic at large, 1f Tunney, popular Plymouth fo study law In North- [ PFevous Tt 8 I8 ik is a | victory was emphasized by his elec- | though he s, dethrones Dempsey. | . ampton. The people among whom T |0 B2 5 5 C o ing & real | tion as permanent chairman. | Tt will be a remarkahle come-back | e e S 5 I t{:””‘*“‘":"*m"“n?;*w*‘i was rearcd were of the Kind that | !TUe £ N e lNow men, from| The convention adjourned sine !for Dempsey aven it' he fulfills the :3«;\‘@@* il . > s ke up the hackbone of the na-Scrviee for W8 il undotbtedry | die after adopting by acclamation a expectations of the majority and . For some years 1 have lived | fy ot o blace in the estimation | Platform —submitted by majority |wins declsively. Few et fn much diferent surroundings and | DRINE Tim 8 Wee 0 A FEIEN O members of the resolutions commii- | have retained the winning punch in a very different atmosphere. But "" his nelghbe i ent for| !¢ Plus the bone dry amendment [and speed after three-year layoffs. 3 1 return there whenever I can so as [ Which will represent paym forced onto the floor of the gather- [ Dempsey himself had his troubles in S | his_eftort ould say again that|; o5 4 "oinority members of the |1923 when he fonght Tom Gibbons L to refresh my knowledge of how the | his St e ordinary run of people in this coun- | there are ODROILAnILIE ARl o mmittee, land Luis Firpo after two years of N*«'\\‘“&*’\‘)\;x\ try live. T do little work on the in_history | The republican post-primary con- [idleness. The titleholder is past 30 SR &‘ farm now, but T did much when T | Vhat about the girls?” I asked-i o hii0n ajgo was held here yester- \and such veteran competitors as was a boy. I like to dispense with | “They can vofe and hold office now, | It was harmonious through- |“Rig Bill’ Tilden and Harry Greb | the kind of service that if is neces- |and some of them are be '8 10/ oyt The party platform was unan- {will tell him there's no odds-on | sary for me to have at the White [look on politics as a possible|ymousiy adopted and endorsed Pres- | prospect of victory against flaming House and wait on myself. Tf T find | carcer.” ident Coolidge, the direct primary |youth bevond that milestone. & strap is broken, I like to get ont avors Marriage For Girls |and all party nominee |" Tunney has every incentive to win the tools that are mused hy shoe- “It a girl wishes 1o fit herself for o e and apparently enjoys unusual con- makers and harness-makers, |a political career, 1 think the best fidence in himself. The versatile make a waxed end, and repair it. T {thing she can do is to get married former marine may not have the like to do a little Dblacksmithing | spnd bring up a family. I can con- | fighting instinct that always has around what fs 1eft of our old shop, | ceive of no experience better adapt-| been Dempsey’s guiding star but he try my hand amain with the car-| .3 to give either a woman or a has determination, condition, );r:n:V\ penter’s tools, go out and repair the |y that knowledge which is most {and no little battling equipment in fence where it is breaking doWn, [ iy to be of value in the discharge i his favor. end mend the lafch on the kitchen [ot public office than that which door. Most people in this country do | oo "o Se family Jife, I am A . SHORTAGE OF SHIPS hire them done. I want to Ke excellent cxecutives, both men and mind how people live and what it | S i i | . : omen, who have lived a single life. (| (4] Canadian Grain Suffers As Major- DL O R R LR Rl i i o e y alohgganl e el s ol handicap ity of Vessels Are Transporting s worked une a great their ordinary income. My father | 2 i : o : hich perhaps i ¢ a| Stamford, Sept. 22 (P — Te 5 and my peo that Lind of a |Which perhaps entitles them to af rd T Ten Tite which is altogether natural and | Steater credit. A successful politi- | Spaniards, who are belteved to have [ Coal To Britain. o w s altogetl and | £ | VICTORIA JH VIRGI et Al al carcer consists of being able to|attempted illegal entry into this [ \rontreal, Sept. 22 (P—Due to the Don't Judge Women by Ap- Rl 1'”,”‘. to I'mm'up_ a mirror (o niean more to me than all the "4 boy who grows up on the farm | Provide the people with what they| country were held here today awatt- | on ety Bo0 S ot BN it e R :p(‘ ::|:.“| re ‘r‘( that to judge ‘ln ap- carcers and all the success in the has & very close companionship with |need in their relationship with each|ing the arrival of a government eut- | SO S CORARELT S0 BB Fin pearances, Says'Gifted Au- pearmuccs often means the con- | world could mean. his parents,” T said l\flwx I think that the family life|ter to take them to Ellis Island | g 4sh Teles, required by British S e e SomEag douik r i inotent patson, Loves Children, Writing, Too The Parental Tnfluence 14 the cornerstone of our social life, | pending further investigation. They | f00 M0 Bl 0 W50 tha coal strike, New Story Be. 1 spite of the demands made “Yes, and that is a great advan- [and 5o of our political lite. We do|were arrested. yesterday while on | JT03 B0 8EEG IO S0 She trans- 5 o . il |fEon her Dy her career Deatrionl, oo eee tecw my shidesn. § tage, provided the boy ias the vight | ot in this country l;.l\fl opportunl| the ;' e ,n::":;' to New York | o tation of Canadian grain o gl nidayRinSthetHerald i i \:v« i e cH # (hj. | ould give up my writing in & min- sort of parents. I had the right sort |tics which can be referred to as af-|in tw s 1xicabs. Atlantic is becoming manifesf 5 . i e e o “1 ute if it meant that I had to hire of parents, My father had qualities |fording a strictly political career. | drivers of the taxis were re- |, “yionireal, according to the Mon- e R G £ o r:‘fl‘|‘v;; ™in hor lita " an office somewhere. T want to do Pl 11t were greater than any T posses [Therc are many avenues of public| leased late lust ',’,“7]"' f[“”“‘j'"¥ ”*f‘ real Gazette. Writing, Too. e 5 el my work right here at home, where He was a man of uniiring industry |life, each of which requires for its|arrival of W. A. Riley, United States | “opyo chortation rates for grain | Has Strong Sense of Humor I can keep my eye on my house- and great tenacity of purpose. His |hest exccution a special preparation. | immigration inspectdr from Ilis |\ o rigon so high, the paper says, o And there is no one who finds hold all day long. long experfence in local office ave |The national government has ten [Island. The inspector also ordered [ \ii® W% SRt 0 ive tor B nore time for her friends than does | “And yet my life would be very him a very broad and, T found, a partments under cabinet officers, | the release of two other men Who ., ..y buyers to take grain from By KATHRYN KENNEY jeatrice Burton. She gives them | stale if I had to give up my writ- very accurate knowledge of law. Heleach one requiring a special knowl-| were arrested a short time after the this continent. Author of n unaffected 1d loval affection, | ing. I love every minute that I plways stuck to the truth. Tt al- | .age for its administration. Even aniards were seized, hey cireled As high a rate as 30s ($7.50) a @ md as I am numbered among |spend at my typewriter, trying to ways seemed possible for him 10 oy municipal governments have also | police headquarters twice in | 55 SEL T T 0 S0 o early Just Among Us Girls” those friends I can never cease to | set down In words the story of the form an unerring judgment of men | pmany departments. The only pre-| Massachusetts car and were arrested | o0 mar to carry American coal to SO . marvel at a woman who can reach woman of today. and things. I can not reecall that “p, ation that is worth anything is a|in suspicion that they might be in»“ England. It is figured that the WOMAN .Who smokes will do | gyccess at such an e Iy age with- “I believe that to be a successful ever knew of his doing a Wrong ;..o of study which will make one | terested in the transporting of the | Civalent of this rate in grain anything.” out having it spoil her in any de- | woman's writer—that is, a woman thing. T have no doubt he is repre-j,,, "cpori jn the department in|Spaniards to New York. Two other | oo iation to the continent is It is that sort of chance remark, | groe e has that most unusual | who writes for and about women, sentative of a great mass of Ameri- | yon ¢t js proposed to serve. (Spaniards who could speak Fnglish | ;pounq 34 cents per hundred weight. overheard at a dinner party, which | trajt among writers, the ability to | vou have got to be a woman's wome can who are known only to their olitics Undesirable and who claimed to be from Brook- e bl prompted Beatrice Burton's latest | receive criticism with a smile. Nor |an. The xind of woman who fs ine local neighbors. Nevertheless they “I doubt if it is possible for aflyn are still held. They were oc- NOTED ENGINEER DIES serial, “Honey Lou,” which begins | does she take herself too seriously, | terested in cold-pack preserving, are really great. It would be diffi-1 "5 00 choose polities as a|cupants of the taxis carrying the ten Rrookline, Mass., Sept. 22 () — in Friday's Herald. Tn her charm-anq her sense of humor makes her clothes, mothers' clubs, and the best cult to say that he had a haypy !'!fu carcer. He may go into the diplo-|who, police believe, were being | yoemond Fitzgerald, former presi- ing apartment with its book-lined | g delightful companion. way to hold a husband. In other He never seemed to be secking hap- | 0, o0 (oo as it is now constituted | smuggled into the United States, [ oon 00 0 B98I0 el e of walls and predominant note of ja It would seem as though the gods | words, a normal everydsy sort of piday Hajwdd aifims bellever In i\ this country, or into the civil| The latter are believed to be sailors | i) Broincors died at his home green, Beatrice Burton yesterc had been kind to the Burton fam- woman. Ofherwise, you can't un- hard work. Ih.lhy’\r!vwl v]mll;n"v; | service somewhere as the result of | off ships at Boston. here today. Mr. Titzgerald, who outlined the idea of her n L Harry Burton, Beatrice Bur- tand the women all around you. lly ofiens L L e e | 5o sine i ox nination bwitiror tne | — was 80 vears old, complained of ill- which I can assure you, is the best ton's brother, or of McCall's| “And, if you stop to think about REDL sadsRgiian m:‘ ‘;,.,,:,"(,(V‘U",,,]{., young man to expect to gain a livell-| Fears Truant Ofl'lcer, ness when he arrived home from she has written. Unquestionably the ine, and brother and sister | it, you can see that the normal, MISHCHBA KOWAYE SO0 LERAS Tiood by holding political office R A F H York Beach, Maine, last night. greatest writer of newspaper fiction, | g genuine in one an- | everyday kind of woman is the would seem to me to be very un.| Runs Away From Home Miss Burton belies out-worn il ot hsantiral s i At b .mrn-'lblv- I should say thgt hel ijrhof Vlh?_lruam)nn‘l‘r‘.rr‘ Nsllx‘(lfl idea that ‘l‘m;{'\ and_ brains never s who have attempted to|day. She is free and alive and full ought to have some business on ieved by relativ 5 vo .‘.9 “r'\:nl;i e BO "OKT‘“!‘F. ;w g 1 possessed | j what they are wont to call | of the joy of living, as women for the disappearance of Willlam of a vitality which accentuates her | peaqyy irton’s style, have won- | never have been before in all hise hich he d depend for a living, : A Mary J l_am Ufle \‘,\,:; !,‘,,l,' ,”:.':‘\,xlsflh? :-'11,\(;1'0 nwuhml.:» Silverman, aged 14, son of Max Sil- Exclusive loveliness, it would m that M dered why they have failed in the | tory.” |and a8 he i : - | verma 24 Tremont street. The Burton not only 1 her cake, but " i o = i elihood, | Yerman of n 8 d i only h ke, DUt | formula where she has succceded. | Has Charmin; losing his means of live boy has mot been home since 9 We want a High Type was eating it as well el o Fd) o EE MM R T AN | Otherwise he loses his independence. [ PO¥ 1as nof been home snce © € B T will el vou reason. There| T wish that Beatrice Burton's ) My is that a e el 9 oo “My latest story, ‘Honey Lou,' is | is e of reality pervading he any reade § A SERBlintand Dallet blsasca onen My own opinifon is that as many} g oo\ yag notified the police. ¥ latost story oney Loun ) © of reality pervading her | many readers could meet her and ¢ ‘ L I boys and girls as possible ought tof i h sttt reial about the girl who smokes, paints, | work, her characters talk as do the | feel the charm of her personality. W. C. A\v auditoriun ocial ”,_‘, intend to follow a professions ”‘.mm “‘) YN dlaMl when thernew tion of being wild, but who, in day Ii Here is not a stage with fonly an extremely clever young ancing Classes open Saturday, | b iaitine e . il eving stilts i 1): e Jvf. el el e SRR S i s e B G e e reality, is fine underneath and emi- stilted actors saying stilted things, | woman, but @ real person as well, Hall | mistakes lies in thinking that Dbe-|qithough his parents were unaware nently respectable. Tn contrast | but @ cross section of the emotions | She is one of the givers of life, a man with her character, T have pictured ch are cxperienced by everyone. [hoth to her unseen friends and “For instance, I never could bear s Lampone is ember of ||cause a boy or girl has a college|or thig fact. An investigation was j Miss Lampone is a member of the other girl In the story as look- And t secret of successful writing | those to whom she has endeared Associ- education he or she must there "¢{ made by the attendance burecau of VT | seck a professional career. It is my | (he school department and a truant o ing like a saint and acting—well, is making the reader say “That's | herself. You will understand what —_— J|observation that in large cities the| officer was sent to the Silverman To whom we will pay a good very differently.” what 1 would have said that's ' 1 mean when you read “Honey { home. The boy is thought to have || salary and bonus. Experi- Miss Burton, who in private lite |what I would have done." Lou” which—I will let you in on & become frightened and decided to )| apnee necessal Y. is Mrs. Beatrice Morgan, says th As we drank coffee from large|secret—is the best story which she R A B oreld TIONE RAG Rl 5 ; people will simply have to get over |cups, the largest size which are to | has ever written. And the thoue with long trousers. He is large for Mr. Burke associating immoralit w the | be bought, because Beatrice loves sands who read and enjoyed her . P - girl who paints her lips and inhales | coffee, Miss Burton said pervious successes, “Her Man,” an RAGTH"AE (Popular MHSIC) JAZZ : A t t s le & her cigarette “People are always asking me|“The Petter, printed in The }le: i HIGH SEAS: NO WIND u umu Ive a s “It has always been difficult o which means more to me—my fam- |ald, will understand just how much i g . ; 3 Sydney, N. Sept. 22 (A—Tre- draw the line between the so-called ily or my career. of a treat they have coming ia PIANO BANJO MANDOLIN mendous seas rolling in on the . ‘bad’ woman and the ‘good’ woman. | My family does—of course. They | “Honey Lou." HAWAIIAN GUITAR UKULELE southern coast of Cape Breton with- serwce cu Expert Instruction Private Lessons out a breath of wind behind them " Low Rates Guaranteed Results is a phenomenon reported today ¥s Only Booth Block from Forchu, Mainadieu and other Ford Dealers places along the coast. According Ch"stensen Sdmol of Popular Muglc to local weather prophets, this fore- | | 248 Elm St. Tel. 2701 casts a storm of unusual violence, S Phone 545 Hours 11 A. M. to 9 P. M. 250 Main St. % % o New Britain = . READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS i ™ e — 4 the American National ation Masters of Dancing

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