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g0 out and steal, said Miss Bristoll. 400 CHURGHES IN “No child is born bad,” said Miss Bristoll, adding that if they nre | trained properly they will turn out | all right. She stated that feeble | minded ren come to her atten- on at times and must be d very carefully. atmmost ronwlfl‘ record of Elaborate Palm Sunday Rues st s i to e uie cach \.lurrln morning when court Are to Be Observed | starts, so that he is familiar with Rome, April 9 (UP)—The four hundred Rome churches are filled with flowers and paims for the cele- bration of Palm Sunday tomorrow The largest crowd is expected at Peter's where the palms will blessed and distril = priest of the basilica, Cardinal Merry tho habi's, shortcomings, home in the other factors in ‘s life before he is he the court. Valentino's Funeral istoll related secveral | stories in connection wi One of them concerncd ¢ oldest 14 years of fore Miss 1 ir work. [ det Val. arch- i FaRR priest of the basi Jolin W nother, more Lateran and vicar of Rome, will of- sked or 1 he ate at that ceremo Pope Valentino' Pi oce will celebrate ving + prelate of sion qu at the hands ¢ pal court. xpected to crowd P ~Photo by Johnson & Pt the name of Cardinal Merry del V s @ household word in Americar PAUL I CLARK. Catholic homes. sitica will br LS con R asks of red - ety ™ service t drita gl The palm presented to the Pope is vide In vw Britain scl real work of art elaborately ©Ff cou ey did not m in 1922 when accepted laited and ornamented flow- but had a very exciting Position at ew Britain St e et iy s aid not have money le school. After two years | 5 S e o Al they | 1eft to take his present place. - oy i l“:. and Mr. Clark has followed the woo 1 g ”:‘ i ‘\\'“““l | pattern trade for 12 years 'mrl wa ¢ Pope's palm is provid e ek it g bt ted for home they B »y the historic Bresca family of Sui ssrpeesin e ouring | Trade pasli itemo, that privilege being conceded et o F v it St ok ¢ them by Pope Sixtus V, iramatic cirenmst ‘o undic s Two boys fin- some would remain in hey had great diffl- a veranda to sleep when Peter's T s about to be nad given instructions that they were finally bsolute silence vail while the police and detain- the obelisk v b litted into over night. Their parents were place. At a critical point, however, fied and brought them home n to slip and certain A sailor in s following day. With the exception of the child who stole the money there was noth- the ropes b disaster w. the crowd disobey i Oved d, “Throw water on ' ing particnlarly vicious about the The act was quickly ' case, Miss Bristoll said. The theft e sed slipping and | was the first one for that particular | verted, The sailor be- | child. All of them were quite ade- | Bresca family, The quately reprimanded by their par- | (o Pope was so impressed that he ents, so the probation officer felt iy ' sranted hat the palms supplicd | an added reprimand fro her o h 1 a ¢s would he sufficient, The case was Pim on Palm Sunday shov ne the privilege of the Br fam- ily, which hes persisted to the pres rot brought into court. S Tlunger Made Him Steal (Poit The case of a boy who stola be- | ause he was hungry w re- | miltio 4 by Miss Bristoll. The WAS § ronds rought to her attention when sev- |y i wcred music Peter'’s by the Julia chapel, 1 programs of will b rendered in St. famous choir of the active in I GREATEST TOU! TflUR!ST TRAVEL EXPECTED along t tion estimate One tion forecasted y Scout worl 40 Million Antomebiles Out This Season shington, April 9 (UP)—T, eing America b automobile pend nearly $4,000, he highways of the nation this the American Automobile hird of the nation—about 40 n people—will take to the open in some 10,000,000 c: vacations in 1627, the figures collected 18500 ia- tomorrow, while the choir of St. e 15" Tiatel il i ad been stealing. An inv Fror Sadter ol g:r’xcnfl?calml,r--n will sing in t tion resulted and it was found ory ecction of the country re- that the parents had been in police | fote " oho prontese activity in his. e et | court for drunkenness and immoral’ tore” in" preparation for a banner conduct and that the hoy had been |oyrist scason. The Increase in “see- hunted around from place to place. jne Amertea by motor” this year over | He admitted that he had been stea® tho number of fourists in 1926 will | ing, but he satd he stole because he e at Jeast 10 per cent. IRR R []F H']MESI was hungry and wanted food. | In addition to those to stay | This was found to be true. The 'Ujitea States, more than 4,000,000 AP T child re d no food at home and cars will enter Canada this spring = | the father had instructed the grocer and summer on pleasure jaunts and Bad Eu“ronmem Cause 0[ De. to give him none, much agalnst thit many thousands will head into Mex- wort ions. The pro ico from Texas and Californ A . the child w points. linguency Among Children St for stealin which t0 will go touring this scason, one third buy things r the elr- fwill carry camp t and Girls are greatly in the minority extend their out it ' juvenile court o d that he needed estimated o ccording to Miss Ruth Bristoll, wo- | Aifferant 80 a home an will remain entour 10 \an probation officer. Miss Bris- was found for him in Hartford and gq oll, who looks after those children | the father was ordercd to pay for accom who get into trouble, tells many in- | his support. 10 stayed ab teresting things about the juvenile 2 week and t e left, returning court and the city’s manner of deal- | to New Britain. He was rounded up ing with delinquent children, that | and anotr ome was found for are not generally known to the him. He left that within publie. | a short time. The next time it was| decided to obtain a home in Yritain for hi icials bell that he it he conld To show the number of boys com- | ing to her attention in contrast to the girls, Miss Bristoll gave figures | or the first thres months of this » in a familiar hmm y vear. In January there were 23 | things would be straightenca out. woys and three girls; in February | He started to play hookey and he thers wers 20 hoys and one girl; | finally went as for two days. | whils in March the number of boys When he was next heard from he | had been stealing money for food, | { having been driven to such actions t1aken cara of was 45, while no girls MISS. RIVER RISES OVER FLOOD BANKS {All Available Men Pressed Into but will depend on hotels for modation Semce ade their appea i ol bus, {y. r Children are brought in on sever- d been given a falr ’-"v'_‘}l‘-"m 3 1\.‘: April 9 (P S S s = tnldving aecided, and nothing Waters of the Mississippl river werc 4 destruction of property, but | was left but to send Lim to the S°CPINg slowly over a broken levee ly & small percentage of those Meriden School for Toys. - Bvery able bodied man pprehended ever go before the Miss Brist belicves in giving g e tolled .w the point of ex-| iige. All are gi 1 a chance 1o the children all the c nee possible wistion to hold back the flood i fhalr wags, T or- | to straizhten themselves out befors Which had reached a level with th SRl ana toud ‘he i he orting to strict measures. |Lop of the levee's lowest point. 038 ana tol Lok A part of the dike broke away last right and wrong. T placed on probation and \nu,'l\l MACRANALD GIVEN | spring up befora hu derat 1s of nd should a wind b | l4|"] sacks are thrown into place, ,‘ it ared the waters would crash fore the judge. H.h'm';;h to submerge the town to a s usually held in| depth of six fect. Early rcports from other levee er. It 15| h more as a father than as o M Cheered as He Starts for VlSll Ister of justice. Most cas con- ist of a reprimand al ugh there (@l e some g0 serlous that it is nec I“'" B2 fours prsiong pher e 1 to United States In m“m along the twisting length of lississippi indicated no immedi- the tremendous ing watcrs, Fami- however, wel gteadily moving possessions to higher ground addition to raismg and rein- NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, APRIL 9, 1927 “OUR scH00Ls (T THE S.F.T.P.0.C.S.C.P.G. as- lwh By JOHN J. DALY 3 | vention of calling sleeping car por- Hardly anyone ever enters a Pull- | ters “George” and conducive to an car in cse United States membership growth. In fact, the without thus signaling the porter; t thing on earth, provided, of though, of course, the porter’s name , & man's name is George, is ually 1s not George. to hecome a member in this soclety. A4 el ot et There is no Initiation fee. There are of all the ent the prac- | CVerything In the way of service is 1l men named | would give rather than “George”; men who | thelr good right arms have slecping car that they belicve themselves better | !lnn other men. So they, naturally, A from making public their | mmy int against the public. Rather | s called out of turn. embarrassing it was, and is, at| Society for the Prevention of times, for the average man named |Calling Slecping Car Porters Guorge to be anywhere near a rail- | “George™ took lessons from others | 5! = oo o> | governor of Arkansas; George Alex ~ rond station, and espeelally near a | that had gone before it To begin: Silvorman, along with Rev. GeOrse | nqcr parks, governor of Alaska Pullman car. Invariably, such a | with, it placed its national headquar- | Middlemesa, a Methodlst preacher. | o 00 Hunt, the first governor of | irs a hevy of voices | {ors in the natural and logical place | who holds to the beliaf that the time | (SO0 Bt ST BN g houting and calling | for national headquarters—the na- | has come to call all good men and | o ny"n o0 hack again in the gover- name, George, he becomes | tion's capital. In Washington, there | truo to the ald of the cause; 10| 0q chair; George i (he playe] 4 d. In imiliar situation, | is said to be a society, or lobby, or | Stamp out the pernicious practice of | i y¢ “oythor of “The Torch Bears would be A in plac- | organization of some kind, for calling slecping car porters George™ | oo The Show-Of" “Craigs | ease hefore a lawyer. How | cvery three persons in the city. All | When their names might be John, | wip.» gic.; George Marye, a former | = p know whether someone | It some fixed purposé; as, for in- | Joseph, Jehosophat, Jezebel, or even |, pyaciador to Rust George | . v lly, or whether | stance, the increase of human happt- | Jacob. Young, the Canadizn who swam the | w s ts merely | ness, the reduction of taxcs, cancel- | The practice has got to 8toD.|caraiina channel; George Lincoln | m the regular order of the day, or the | lation of war debts, promotion of | Strong men are behind the move- | Burr, of Ithaca, N. Y, former prest- | i night, as the case might be; the péace on earth and good will toward | ment, and mighty men in thell | gont of the American Historical ns- | Al Pullman populace calling for its men, and women, the frustration of | walks of life. When such fellows|gociation; George White and his . B fratricide, the eradication of the |as George Carter, the Public Print- Qeozei Al - viey atterson pa .~ on a traln 1ed for | holl weevil and the corn borer, and | er, and George R. Wales, of the | aotor; George Ellery Hale, astron- | pu hington, the nat capital, | other purposes that range all the Civil Service Commission, along|omer, of the celebrated Mount Wi e T tlemen were seated in the way from the sublime to the ridicu- | With George McGinty of the Inter-igson Observatory, Pasadena, Cali- " king ez re unknown to | lous. state Commerce Commission, start|fornia; George Sterling, the poet of | argent st '(\‘\m:' c % no “ittention | A aw of the socleties that main- | out to get something done, they|gan Francisco; George Wharton Ed- | T o e 1o the other, | tain national headquarters in Wash- | usually succeed. They have With | wards, the artist, Greenwich, Conn.; . this man reading his newspaper, | ington accomplish their ends, forth- | them, in their battle aguinst the | George Kirby Holmes, eminent gov- | P t Blid Lhnt man @ magasine, the other fel. | with, and go out of business, auto- | public, the people who man-handlc |ernment statistician in Washing- | aln low a letter from his wife, and the | matically, Others, never quite real- the good old-fachioned name of | ton: Georgo ,;uu?n Zolnay, lhc: fourlh complacently smoking | ing the dreams of thelr founders | George, such men as these, repre- | sculptor: Glorgio Palacco, conductor | & | and fathers, carry on, and on, and | sentatives a]l, and in high standing | of the Chicago Civic Oprera; George Demonstl’atlon . eudden, from the reccsses on, and on and so will be doing busi- | in Congress; George C. Peery, of | Hodges, cx-governor of Kansas and | e ing room, appear. | ness at the old stand when the | Virginia; George Schnelder, of Wis- | Miss George Elliston of Kentucky. | moth sized man who, Union Jack is furled for the last oonsin; George N. Segar, of New| Eminent psychologists, members | il e e g and set down In the dust of | Jersey, and George R. Stobbs of |of the 8. P. C. & P. G., have been | tarts SMEkinE A hoad gl O Massachusetts. Thess Georges arc | asked hy the officers to analyze the | e While office space is to ba rentad, | out to do battle. situation and di if possible, | "",\"\;v::.\v‘r;.'#: 2 hagarine a let. | sccretaries paid, presidents and oth-| That well-known travellerhunter | the mental I;}Xnkuvh‘\!.hfi‘x s pcalvle T d tof. and n cigar ‘dropped to the ©r officcrs of the socicties housed, | and explorer, the Hon. George }L!}% call -d-“"?r"; 1 punllcjohassotery ues ay, foor. Tour men leaped to their feci {od, and clothed, Washington. as a | Tinkham, of Massachuselts, is one | “George. 'hero s in truth, &, o e fhty wire all named Citv, 15 reluctant to sce any of these, | of the most prominent membera of | companionablencss in the name not 3 o its Fussts, accomplish too soon what | the §. P. C. S, P. G, and has set | exuded by any otheri as, for in- A rll 12 i) e lon r had dis- | they propose to do. They scldom dis- | out to make the world safe for |stance, Michad or\r‘n?r'(:!.m:us.n(znpl' p . ppeared, on his quest for the por. APPOint As sung in the old song: |Georglan democracy by gotting rid fe e camerican sroanid SR e A€ may be for days, and it may be | of this habit of calling Pullman car |amend their ways and stap calling | er, the four gentlemen named 't M0 aak " sleeping car porters “George, — s 5 forever” before the vast majority of | porters “George.” He has with him, | George introduced themselves atl | JETEL W0 RE 0 ¥ rough with in the fight, George Rt. James of | 5rand old name is llablo to dis out round, and thus was the beginning |08 Ot 0 (asks: whatever | the Federal Reserve Board and | €ventuajly. Men by the name of of a socicty that has for its sole object the accomplishment of one great boon to America—the calling | those tasks may be. In all the history of Washington, | utmann ar porters by they | o1y one soclsty lost no time in get- | 3{;-1,[. and lawgul | and. baptismal | Ung 40wn to business. and doing | imce-“and not b ‘the e ot this without the usual hubbub — | e amitss Goosge be their col- | further without issuing statoments orEe: Unles [to the press. Dospite a silent cam- The society for the Prevention or‘;‘““'(f‘ fov menthors; Chotg R, (G- ling slceping car porters | NOW DOLuNIOf (& RSt b | years ! proaching 140,000-——according to the records of its natlonal seccretary, George H. O'Connor. Aside from his official tapacity as sccretary of the s was organized some these four gentlemen whose n named happened to be the s that of the father of their sam S P. C. 8. P. G, Mr. O'Connor is Cm]\‘l‘lim fn 0\’\' w)»‘ih '(v’:)nz';-: four | ONe Of the best known amateur sing- | Goovies of the Pullmin sensed their | ©rS 10 all the land, certainly e DLAGN ot fha 2 s | most popular in the city of Wash. | w mission. They wanted to get | he proper atmosphere 8o thay | ! drove over to the oldest part of the city and there, in Georgetown they | pledged thelr purpose. Then came to life an organization that silently | and surely went out to enlist nxu services of every man in the nation ington, where he Is known as the ntertainer of Presidents, having | | aparc hetaeo every President of | the United States since the day of MeKinley. “If thero is one thing T would rather do than anything elsa 1n ; g aLE o [lite suya Mr. O'Connor. “it ia got Dleligs them to! the' burpess pros | N €A potters *Ceoryert? pledg m o PUTDOSe DFO- |1t heging to look now as if the poscd—modern St. Georges slaying | o 0RS T8 T TR 8 b0 bae the dragon ot | long to the S. P. C. &. P. G. is about Sindeiunit d '_‘}-‘ men "?;’f"" |0 bear fruit. Though there was a corse have, through their soclety, | yimg whon members thought serl- 1 the sympathy of the great- ously of having emacted a general G enlis “hool for boys In Meriden. Children | est minds in the nation—and there | o5y i e 2 At o | forcing the levees, a natural spill- R e B DI e U e g p.to 18 years of e {1 nonson Apellve OB onearedl B RS i i o s e t"‘ """,","“' 1°§";;1‘mm-r penalty of §500 fine and a slth in the juvenile court. Usually |,y grivirs and rallway employes, [ A3 Has been estapilsiod betyoen was about to conslder & Mill | yeur yn fait, calling & Pullman ear o hearing hefc 0 lgerta gut- ay MacDonald mer labor ) ! SR L Lol ould nm}ui;u’ a SIAULOrY | porter by the name other than his fent, be fid 18 50 o0 micr started for Southampton} ©ot B o R o Tevdes below , Cronse to call a Pullman car porter | gwn, they finally reconsidered: the ressed that he rem ers what §9 1 5 ing to board the steamer A flonded thousands C-0r8e if his named happened €0 | mattor and went about it in anoth- 58 | squitanie for New York. As hei 567 CHEATS SV T8 Henry, say, or Richard. WISer | o wav' What they did amounts to court rded the hoat train at the Wa- | Of acres at tha is oxpeated o Reads came to the rescue, NoWEVER, | 5 Nroke o igenium-Tnistsaasotrans it accompanied by »m“ ”" e “‘l"‘m riso is expreted 10 Ly it was decided not to Importune | tugonizing thelr fellow citizens, they . o, OF, 18 - who will - accom- | K, when through o crevasse | COnSress but to carry the fight right | enisted the support of the Pullman s iy Btr Uniton ) Slatea L% T TR R AEIE L B o ranks of the peo- | car company ftself. And today, as & Four-Yi men and toxt driv- GRS G aded = | ple—thoug > of the members roguit of this bit of diplomacy, there 1 Ol msay.” |1 “'Y“‘“W’ i X | of the P 0.C. 8 CoP re displayed in all slesping cars Fis ehildren, Alistair and Maleolm | M1 lpenslaibey o | (e convinced that the work before | certain signs inscribed with prop- jon to say goodbye. | 1OUE an Loares 00 them will keep them busy for the | v names of the porters. Once, but ' ltertile farm land lies between the | feet of thelr lives | s orLel a train Mr. Mac- | ! ok j rest of their lives. only oncs in a while, is the name ng shot at the ' 1 a line of bluffs, prey | There will always be men, travel- ! of o porter seen to be George. went’s trades unign | Hons are being n By dite | salesmen and the like, who fall |~ yyith George Washington as fts | Cross to move out 500 persc into the natural and casy habit of | Lairon, the S, P, C, 8. P. G. now bee plo of this coun-['® Tefugee camp to b \ddressing the major-domo of & | jongg fo the thriving Institutions of ery serious situ- 8 b el ping or Pullman C&r 05 the country. It is always on the Up + unsettlement cre- | A T SELle San b orge.” In fact, according to the | 4ng Up—alway going forward, nev- 1 I'll be away only 5% v"l'”’“ _”““"‘ officers of this society, it was some | yr Jagging backward. Tts present S iha bl Awhe nd part of | thoughtiess travelling s nWho | prosident is one of the most popus em In of t takes place 111 be louisianit, WL warted the calling of sleeping car | jar men in the United States Sen- e hamne & T 1 by the Mis D porters or many, many Years e, the Hon. George H. Morse, of REANE 3 t . Ouchita, Tex- 2o, and the custom has grown un- Hampshire. . t it has now become virtually @ | are only two vice-presidents ational habit. Just so soon as a orge M. Cohen of New York, g man or a woman becomes settled | “Tha Yankee Doc L fs 1 e s nn., in a Pullman car, needs some at- | Governor George ot t s M ob tention or other, some service, 8 | d when a ki | window lifted, or the back of &! Though there are no dues to col~ terday | chair adjusted, and therefore must | leet, or bank, the P.C. 8 P. G, month of the White |seck service of the porter, out | follows tradition and clects a trea- oma county, Mississip- ' comes the natural nominatlon: | surer each year. The man holding of the : @ inke o down the post at present i3 George . ippi indicated to o lie Georges do mot like this. | Hoffman, of Pennsylvania. there 1% natural pur levee in front Tncy are travellers and many & Georg Qinal Mundeleln, of d- wan hy the name of George has | Chicago. ts chaplain. George Ade oc- main Leen peremptorily startled out of | cuples the post of poet laureate. exproted to his w on a Pullman, by hearing, H. M. Georgo V (England) has h ocenr at thi“ the lady next to him shout at the | been chosen by his American com- that P W0 g occupled by an- top of har vol George!", thereby | patriots as their English represent. is a Preseription for proximately 700 residents, wouid be jnaking him by has with ' ative. The general counsel for the Colds, Grippe, Flu, Dengue, s mhous Fever and Malaria. | 1t kills the germs j wil4. And some eir children to READ HF ALD CLASSIVIED ADS ' TOR BEST RESULTS him the wite he thought he had‘ society is Judge George Olvany, of eft behind. New York, and the Sergeant-at- OnsirEnbia:susheas ik atn ns | S o than George couraging to tha society for the pre- | Herman (Babe) Ruth. Clemenceau, another are Monsignor George George B. Lynde, Members of the S. P. C. 8. P. G. are scattered all over the land—in every village, hamlet, and city in the country, Plans are now being formed in Washington to hold the first great national convention next year or the year after—probably at Lake George, There Is also being considered a proposal that the en- tire membership of the Qpciety meet In the city of Washington during the World Fair planned for 1932, an event to commemorate the 200t anniversary of the birth of George French rep- eneral George Dumont, e ity free. There is only one thing that resentative, % ioned in The Acts? T e | worrics the Georges and that 1s the Military aitache of the French em | spurred on by the S. P. C. 8. P. G.| "0/ lion Bolar. and /BN e Rarne about tHat thayildee " deter. | 1ength of their soclety’s name. In Dassy in Washington. After that, the| Some of the notable (vvnrgt'q v .1 hiles " Waro urcastal hy: tho) Jers C1'to i an ond to . ‘Thay & Jand whore tho sogan, it any, ts Georges are mostly Americans. | naturally, hate to hear the revered [ (1% WETS Grresied D3 d5%: e ontY appy.” sponsors of the | There is Senator George of Georgia, | name carclossly shonted in railroad | 0 COUTCHL T Juruaalem, what / thoughtless man LAP.0. (0, B 'CLIP: Gy have A0 <Benalor Coorgs B McLoap of [atations tand siceping Sars. A18: |l iy et andl arilea) aowh el Gros e BLEs e declded to abbreviate the abbreyi. , Connecticut. That makes three Sena- | George Weston, the author, who S L o S niman | ation; to cut it down to a simple [0S With Senator Moscs, president, | lcads a peaceful life on his conntry | POl (9 WVE MU exoemed? - % o pma | six-some; down to S, P. C. 8. P. G. 'aking care of the Upper House for e, Morningside Farm, eny R T HOLH oo | Even that is too long—say some the Goorges. The Lower House is|Conn.; George Seay Wheat of Stam- | *Tht 10 569 ant f"r‘;‘l"mm-‘ pone famnilive with the | Of the members; soon to be in the SroMger in its numerical represent- | ford, Conn., the man who writes lit- | $1°F Hie latter's - conversion &t " G As anvone famillar with e | narket for a set of buttons, some. |atlon. It contributes George F.tlo pleccs about airplanes and air-| Damaseus? ociety for the Prevention of | What lke the Pickwick Club used Brumm, representative from Penn- | ports and all.such things; George| o . W0, 0% oM ¥ pany ging e A ars ngo—hig hm,, but- | ylvania; George W. Lindsay, a Re- | 'rank Worts, an authority on 2 3 1& o 1 Sleeping Car Porters MM with the initials S, P, G. S. P, | Publican from New York; George | Toker, co-tuthor of Webster's Pok v flan aitar ;{?f’c"'e ‘To the Un- | ! McManus, the ,_"w,mm. Huddleson, a Democrat from Ala- | Book; George Hand Wright, artist. | nr.;,mn(::‘;"‘whu e v reader of the dally press that | Will be asked to submit the design ! buty then, 1t st Tight to | of Wastporh, Conn, a mbibav ot the | L ESle T iRl “ I eiiation o tite | for tia bution ‘and it has bben aug- § MeBIlon politics intconnection with | cslobrated Ralmagunal olubiin New{iFid * EAul S54eT Al SAMORE ap= = dulijen orean ‘,.""!*"""’ gested that It bear no resembiange. the 5. P. C. 8 P. G. It puts its | York and of the Society of Illus- | peal to Cacsar’? L Soche Tl ',1; tly | Whatsoever to a Pullman car. [ o0t down ‘omisuch ‘matters. ‘Demo- | trators: * George Carter, editor-in-j 8 In whet iy = Fas iale o= his oreanization has heen silently o 1o ahbreviation and easily | crat or Republican, members of the | chief and managing cditor of the | peal very Important to Chils work now for some s 5 % e Y| House of Representatives or the | Wilmington — Evening Journal; | tianity? | or more; operating, so to speak, un- izing the significance of _ ; | George Norlin, president of the Uni- | P | fellow Amerlicans will soon | Senate, any man whose name is| BEOER FOF R DR EER 00 T PO | ee———————me—m— o by naturs sensitive, | 16arn (o know what S, P. C. 8. P. G, | Goorge—regardless of his poltical | 1ersity o miatle critie: _ the | SUR——— Ml S eanis ~yhen ha huittons asolbco d. || atiiiations2ean \be “and’ Kenerally | Nahangithe drauiatlo S ortiiny sty t name do not want the T o ey atatons aré bro-C- | s a member of this society. Political | Hon. George ~Wakeman Wheeler, populace to think them up-stage or | © when they adorn the lapels of . : et wn | chiet justice of the state of Connec and religious lines are not drawn A within this group of Georges. man’s name is his bond. Thus, si by side, fighting for the same thing Daugherty, vice-rector of the Catholic Univer- ity of America, and Rabbl George sccretary of the War Financo Corporation. The press of the nation is well and ably represented in the ranks of the 8 P. C. S. P. G. Some of the outsanding Washington corres- pondents named George are, ipso tacto, members of the society. As an observer of public affatrs, | George Authier, former president of the National Prees Club, and Wash- ington correspondent for the New York World, recently remarke “One of the troubles with Presi- dent Coolidge's cabinet—if 1 may | say so—is that there is no one in | it by the name of George. As a paid- up member of the 8. P. C. 8. P. G 1 resent this. Tt gives us no rep sentation. in the executive branch ! of the govcrnment and means that | we will have quite a time getting any support from this outfit for our eampaign to ecliminate the revered name of George from Pull- man car environs." APSHOTS P PUSHES BOTTLE AWAY. MILK SEVEN DAYS A WE WONDERS 1" MAYBE HE EDIBLE ROUND HIS CRIB ~ oA ) A N JACRET. DEBATES ITS TOOD VALVE F A BABY VARYING HISDIET . . . HE'S SICK AND TIRED OF COULDNT FIND SOMETHING DISCOVERS STRING OF HIS George Barthleme, representative in America of the Cologne Gazette, is an enthusiastic member of the 8 P.C.8 P as are George W. H. Britt, of the Ncwspaper Enter- prise Association; George Rothwell Brown, celebrated column conductor of the Washington Post; W. Combs, of the Lynchburg, Vi News; George Durno, who represents the International News Service at the White House, coming in almost daily contact with President Cool- idge and therefore one of the most | and that is. inculcate a higher re- spect in the hearts of our fellow citizens for a revered name—and atop our brother Amoricans from calling our name out of turn.” (Copyright, 1927, by John J. Daly) NOW YOU G., | Nubian Knights of the Whisk-Broom 1O annual dues; no expenses of any \yashington. influential newspaper Georges in ASK N I Ehveting Fas ans sort. Everybody In the socioty wi : : : | {paveling buck and forth, across, up, orte Kyerybody In tho society work®] 1t the Georges ever got together, | the country; George H. Manning, | down and athwart the country, day fof the foy of working~the oblsct! yure wil certainly be a goodly | representative n Washington of he atter ;J"”;nz\: t0n nfght, ook { ReluBBORE 2 ot | Sathering; elther in Georgetown, D, | New Dritain (Conn.) Herald; George | in and wick out, only so many a orpuaties SIS C. or at Lake George N. Y. or|W. Summers, of the Wheeling Reg: {n.\i.h-«! George £ hile “I‘V‘A onal : eadquarters are | somewhere in Georgia. ister and the Buffalo Courler, ~nd 1. In which gospel is thi | Chances ara 100-to-1 the average TNANed In Wagiingion, M"[ On the roster of the soclcty are | Georgo P. Torbett, who writes for | oo ™08 B00t 6 the Tost [alsgto ! is done as a labor of love; by an. Shaw, the English press representa- | Newspapermen, lawyers, artists, |, { 7o may be William, or Roger, or |3 done as & lapor of love ;"ir::‘ tive; Georges Carpent playwrights, sculptol authors, | | & ';”l"“lh":’:‘d"’.?he LA“ckL: :fd'&"" 1v S Llewellyn! s ‘w for letters are furnished by the fisticutfer; George W. teachers, doctors, businessmen, ete., | \mst‘l‘fis,' e ‘orsooth, there is no sense in e véia 5 > G | ete., the high d the low—all, all | * . | lions of Georges COmbined Georges. Everything, the well-known Chicagoan; Georges | ;; nu:’neh(f»t‘)r:: ar’:m":rvs:od ’“! 3. Whick apostls’ ‘performéd ) | the first miracle of healing men- this great movement ~|r0n'ur.wl nn4| {iout: George Lang, president of the | Alabama_ Presbyterian college; | George Edward Cryer, mayor of | Los Angcles; George Donaghy. for- mer governor of Arkansas; George | Washington Hays, also a former W) BEST | | George are not naming their sons George. They call them “Junior" now. Mothers are becoming sensi- tive. They resent their sons being shouted at, say officialy of the §. P. B PLa, ly happens when | the bovs go near the railway stations or travel on Pullman cars. So bap- | tismal rccords show a falling-of in the number of babies being named George. "Tis, indeed, a sad state of affairs “To think,” mourns Mr. O'Connor, {sccretary, “that we have come to nufih a pass—where we are unable to leave our hearth-stones without hearing our names shouted in pub- | Me. Far worse, the spirit of the age is against us. The doctrine, ‘Let | George do it,’ is putting our country in wrong with the Georges. Our wives and fellow citizens are begin- ning to look upon us merely as a lot |ot handy men. Well, we admit be- ing great: but we know our limita- tions. We can't do everything, but there is one thing we intend to do Watch Monday’s Paper. It’s Right from Rackliffe’s. of S mec the By GLUYAS WILLIAM! BUT AT THAT RE!S GTLL. HUNGRY . WHY DONT THEY GIVE HIM SOME VARIETY? WELL, ANYWAY, HE'D RATHER. SUCK HIS THUMB THAN FINISH THAT MILK o EK LOCATES A COLORED BLOCK THAT LOOKS BRIGHT AND TASTY . POPS IT IN DECIDES THERE'S NOT MUCH NOURISHMENT IN THAT AND BESIDES IT'5 KIND OF CORNERY N THE" MOUTH SUKS STRING REFLECTIVELY. NO THAT DOESN'T SEEM TO SATISFY, EITHER. OH WELL, HUNGER 15 HUNGER. SIGHS AND REACHES FOR- BOTE 4-q