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jorald 18 on eale Gally in New e > Nowsstand. Tumes Republican organs are ceasing to publish Dr. Joha Roach Straton’s sermons and political diatribes, evi- idently having come to the conclu- sion they have helped Smith alto- | gether too much. ! R 1t has been the observation of in- numerable business men that therc | is no money in catering to returned | vacationists. Why is it that the legal speed lim- it always is about ten miles behind | the average of the average motorist? | We sce more Smith than Hoover buttons in circulation. But perhaps that is because the women have no coat lapels until the cold weather | sets in. | e | The driver of a small car has this | advantage: When it turns over and he finds himself underneath it he has less weight to contend with. What difference does it make whether John McGraw and Rogers Hornsby got racing tips. They are not political candidates. The Republicans are said to have | adopted “Onward, Christian Sol- | diers” as a marching song. Let the | Tlemocrats adopt “Abide With AL" This is an idealistic campalgn. | But all the same the candidates pre- fer mudguards on their machines. i | ages of other sections and some that he poundage of air mail between New York and Boston has increased | 140 per cent since the rates went | down. This ought to be a tip to the | Pullman company and the railroads. Corporal William Bullock of the U. 8. Army recruiting station in this | city made public the rules for dis- playing the flag just a week before there will be many flags displayed in the city. All citizens will get the tip and will do the best they _can. The western police chief who re- signed in order to return to his for- mer job as a patrolman, may have several reasons. He may wish exer- | cise and fresh air; or he may have some pleasant friends on his beat. Salt Lake City now has noiseless street cars—boxes on wheels with pneumatic tires. That such a thing is possible will appeal to the hopes | of those who live on streets where | Connecticut’s noisy contraptions ar routed. ; No, this city is no absolute mon- archy; merely having a mayor who knows how to say “absolutely.” Not being bowed down with his duties and cares as un airplane ex- ecutive, Colonel Lindbergh helped the army to do air stunts in Cali- fornia. But, according to the dis- patches, the navy showed the army that such can be properly done after long practice. For the sake of safety and | his own reputation, the colonel had | better stick to straight fiying. airmen soon things APPROPRIATE THE MONEY Reconstruction of the highways in Walnut Hill park should begin next spring and the board of finance and taxation, when asked for an appro- priation sufficient to do the work, should agree to furnish the Clyde Ellingwood, superintendent of parks, makes it clear that the roads in Walnut Hill would have been re- built this r had the d provided the necessary $20,000. The money. finance boz blame for the poor condition of the roads in the park therefore rests up- on City Hall rather than upon the Park Board. During the Park Board Walnut Hill, resulting in draft of $162.84. The last fiscal the $ year 284 an over- spent on account for i nut Hill park does not apply to the road system, |likewise is higher than in other sec- | the plant was moved to New Eng- | | schools agine. The last fiscal report shows that a total of $64,048.57 was ex- pended upon all the parks. The ape- cial appropriation made by the city for 1928-29 was $60,000, so that in the present fiscal year the parks are expected to be operated on less than formerly. But nothing is included for rebuilding the roadways in Walnut Hill park, and it this is to be done next year it will have to come after the fiscal year ends March 31 and money is appropriated therefor. The work could be done readily after April 1 if the finance board with Edward F. Hall at its top added the' necessary $20,000 to the regular ap- propriation. In order to make this likely friends of the finance minister should drive him around in the park | 2 bit, taking care to hit all the rough | spots. The Darius Miller fund for Wal- but to beautification of the park. The balance of $24,491.- 59 would pay for the roads but it can’t be done. The money must come through action of the city. There is no sound reason for witholding it longer. NEW ENGLANDERS AS TRAVELERS An interesting sidelight proving that New Englanders are the mout} frequent travelers in .the United States ia obtained from the statistics reflecting the sale of luggage. New | England, it ls shown, consumes ap- | proximately 10 per cent of the total | luggage produced in the Lnited States. The percentage of better | grade luggage sold in New England | tions. The statistics come to-hand from | the explanation of John A. Williams, | manutacturer of luggage, incident to | the removal of his plant from New York state to Fitchburg, Mass. It was the contention of the manfact- urer that by moving his plant to | New England he planted it in the center of the luggage consumption and that he might as well be close | to the market. In addition, it was found that 95 per cent of all the locks used in lug- gage, and 80 per cent of the bag and are made in New is closer to the suitcase trames, England. He now source of supply. Which leads one to observe Le al- | 0 is closcr to New Britain, where the manufacture of luggage locks— or any other kind of locks—is no | mean industry, And there were other reasons why L actuality, !the rear platform of a train in al- nine times out of ten, by handing him one's watch and chain, gold- plated fraternal pin, and wallet. A reckioss driver, on the other hand, too frequently is satisfied Witk noth- ing short of one's life. ‘The report is that the police court judges are ably co-operating. In- deed, the report is something of an seeing how fines have gone up like stocks during a bull market. If cops and courts everywhere took up the same method the roads would bécome decidedly safer. TAFT AT 71 Judge Taft has scen the world. He has been a traveler all his life and even when President was frequently smiling at crowds while standing on most any town from California to Maine. Administrative duties for the government took him to our island possessions, The genlal gentleman has been almost everywhere. Now he is chief justice of the Bupreme Court and during vacations sees to it that he woos cool breezes further away from the capital than any oth- er justice. Murray Bay, Que., must be an exceedingly pretty place to at- tract a man who has glimpsed so globe. Greatly to the satistaction of all many other pretty places on this old | not believe anyone could rehabilitate the state by reducing expenses, They concluded that Deavitt could not make good his promise and it was useless to give him the opportunity to flop. THREE DEAD AFTER INDUANA HOLDUP Police Trying o Piece Loose Ends Together Evansville, Ind., Sept. 17 (P—Po- {lice today attempted to piece to- | gether loose ends of an attempted | {holdup in which two men were| fatally shot last Friday night. W. 0. Bohannon, 47, prominent Evans- ville attorney, was found dying from two bullet wounds In front of his home Friday night, and Frank Mills, 19, of Detroit, was found dead in a | field near here Baturday morning. Frank Palsley, 24, of Essex, Mo, | pal of Mills, who was arrcsted Sat- urday as he viewed Mills' body in-a local morgue, sald that Bohannon !shot Mills when the two youths { came upon the attorney and & wom- an companion in a parked automo- bile in the country. Paisley shot! Bohannon, he confessed, “because | he got my buddy. . Drifiks Polson Another possible angle of the citizens, the only living ex-President he must watch his dlet, keep regular hours, and all that sort of thing, otherwise he would get to weighing even more than happens to be the case. But he has u smile—whoever saw a picture of Taft when he wasn't smiling?—and he has a mellowing presence that makes friends with all who meet him. Long may he pros- per, RUNNING WILD Governor 8mith, westward l\ound,i hopes to carry one or two of the cannot do it, of course; but that isn’t stopping the intrepid governor from trying. Yes, he has a chance—if only slim. If he looks at North Dakota he probably will conclude the chance | is better than the Hoover forces think it is. It must be a terrific strain to be a politician in North Dakota. A re- sume of the wild-eyed political situ- ation in North Dakota was printed in the Boston Globe the other day, | and from this a reader not addicted to political 8t. Vitus dance could gleam the following and survive: North Dakota®as one of the ori basis of an exhaustive the facts proved New ssed all the advant- | land. On the investigation, ngland pos: they couldn't touch, The investiga- | tion disclosed that “reports of unfa- | vorable conditions in New England | are erroneous and unfair.” . The conclusion is inevitable that a | section of the country which has the time and money to use up ten per cent of the luggage produced and which prefers the best class of lug- gage cannot be otherwise than & leader. THE PRIZE ESSAY INDUSTRY Down in Bristol the other day the Board of Education planked down | its collective No, 11 shoe against per- | elementary | | school pupils from participating in mitting high school or prize essay contests sponsored by in- | terests outside of the schools. This | the an.|inally—but the Nonpartisans on the Lo the number of scnators and rep- decision closely follows nounced prize of $5,000 by W. C. Durant for the best plan submitted by a high school student for bringing | off the committee, and voted a dras- [(o contest its constitutionalit about the enforcement of prohibi- tion. The intercsts who would use for the writing of essays usually have axes to grind, or pet ideas that they want the vouth of the land o think about. An enor- |Governor Smith can well atford to | mous amount of effort would be wasted in a prize contest such as the Durant affair. It would, and s the | inal dry states. Yet a plebiscite on prohibition a few months ago—on a proposal to repeal a state enforce- ment law which had been on the books since 1889—failed of repeal by | only a whisker. There was a large turnout at the polls and astonish- ment at the close vote was wide- spread. The next “odd item” is from mm-} dock who came into office upon the i death of Governor Sorlie, announced | he will file for re-election as a Dem- locrat. He had been elected lieuten- ant governor on the Republican tick- et Governor Maddock's declsion !hinges on the third “odd item.” The Nonpartisan League wing of the Re- publican party s in revolt against the national ticket. The two in- surgent wenators, Frazier and Nye, remain with the Republicans—nom- Republican state committee kicked over the traces, chased the regulars "tic repudiation of Merbert Hoover. | Governor Maddock is a Nonpartisan | League man. It the strong Nonpartisan League elsewhere throughout the west runs wild like it is doing in North Dakota, smile and make some pretty remarks in his specches to the farmers. | X = FINANCES IN V like paying out $5,000 to get thous- ands of students to think, research prohibition. Who gets the prize or how It is awarded is not important, The important el ment in the contest is to ifduce the children to think and write about donor would 4 write about the sybject the priz like them to worry about. The action of the Bristol hoard, of bits other propaganda ef- forts besides prohibition. The board course, is playing no favorites, and some £00d causs—or causes whicn groups ot advocates 4 | evitably suffer through such a rule. Yet the The should not be considered as ve r as good—in- rule is schools just. icles for propaganda students must write jeets shonld be those chosen or sug- gested by the teachers, Let the prop- Keep hands aganda their off experts G WILD DRIVERS fanfare of trumpets or the s the department is making special cfforts reckless Without a ashes on cymib police to make life harder for driver motorists, who constitute to 95 Walnut Hill was the in the city all the only park ac- count overdraft, &mall balan Maintenance necessitating an others showing of the does not run into high sums, possibly more than the citizens im- ity parks yet pe commended. r cent of the total, and is to be If there is anything fhat takes the joy out of autoing it is to meet & reckless driver on the Many think it is safer and far more convenient to meet a high- '\nymu’ A bandit can be appeased, highwa 1f the high school | essays the sub- | This is encouraging 1o sune | | | Faced with the nec habilitating itself following | ravages last November, Vermont has added $8,000,000 to its public debt. v\lll!:h of this outlay paid for ruined | roads, In addition, the program of permanent highway continued. Conditions prevented su- per-economy or a pay-as-you-go pol- fey. | Governor John E. sity of flood re- Weeks, in office while rehabilitation progresscd, s | 74 years old. He is spry for hix and guided expenditures ciently that he has been nominated s0 for a sccond term, breaking a pre- cedent in the Green Mountain state. state. It is curious that Edward H vitt, his opponent, failed of the nom- ination because he promised to duce state expenses.” His idea was hing like that current in Con- ut. He would “pay as you go." Instead of issuing bonds he thought state could raise much 1 the by increasing the money on - zasoline Lfrom three to four cents a gallon ! and thus paying for the roads necd- ing fixing from dir In dition, he wanted to abolich the di- rect state tax. #eeming to think that ncom: the owners of automobiles and tarm gasoline engines should pay most of | the taxes. | It is to the credit of Vermont citi | zens that they saw throngh such po- | al chicanery. They simply did remains in good health. To be sure, ' farm states, The Republicans say he | | construction | mystery developed last night when Miss Norma Fueger, 21, Bonannon's auburn-hafred stenographer, com- | mitted suicide by drinking poison |at her home. The girl's mother said | her daughter returned home about |9 o'clock Friday night. This was 15 | minutes after Bohannon was found { by his wife In front of their home, seated at the wheel of his automo- bile. Miss Fueger's home'is some dis- tance from the Bohannon residence. Her mother told police that Norma | did not go out in the company of her employer, Paisley's story to police how Bonannon made a break for a gun while Mills, & former pugilis was attempting to tie him up. Th double shooting followed. Then, fa tally wounded, Bohannon drove his automobile through & corn field, acrss the fields to a road and five miles back to Evansville, Found by his wite, Bohannon gasped that he |had been shot by holdup men, and | [never again regained consciousness. |He died Saturday. | MAY GONTEST ELECTION Defeated Candidate May Appeal as | related 1‘ Congress Has Not Reapportioned the House Since 1910, 8pokane, Wash., Sept. 17 () — Possibility that the outcome of the ‘prusidttnllul election in November “nmy be contested as to its consti- tutionality and carried to the su- preme court was suggested in io speech here last night United Stat Senator C. Dill. a by | Said Tunney—"Well, | Heeney Martyrs to Modern Sclence! With “talking movies” really here The married man is hard to cheer, He fled from wifey's tongue and lo! _Like “Home Sweet Home" 's the evening sho They Will Happen! Mrs. Harrison: “I can't take a nap in the daytime without having thc most outlandish dreams.” Harrison: *“Oh, those are just od- dities in the day's snooze!" HEENLY, MEENEY— By Vernon E. Hill “Heency, meeney, miney, mo,” Thought Tunney as the gong said “Gol" He counted Tommy out just so, Like us when we were kids, you know. Oh, who took Tunney's heavy blow? "Twas mighty’ Heeney' (mighty slow). But did he holler? Oh, dear, no, ° Unless it was to ask for mo'. He tried to stand up toe to toe, And took some awful socks you know, % He'd never be the one to crow; Lut when we thought him lying low “Round 'leven!" said the radio. “Twas then the referee sald “Wh 1 guess I'd better stop the show. 1 tolq you so— » Meeney, Miney, Mo." O' Man Adam His Chillung Liza: “"Ah suttinly likes cojers. Mah sweetie is a gunner in de dis- | tillery.™ Mandy: “Me toe, wal! Mah man is a private in de infancy!” —Gene Butler Now we e the difference be- 1 the sexes: Men are knight-ed; women du-ted! It are TWIN COP* . Letter IFound by Lucy Prince Gentlesmen|: Yesh 1 gotch yours x-scominuni- shun abouts me being in she coolers, and I shink yoush do me a great insjustish when yoush shay zhat yoush wont lets me have she tens bucksh, 1 washent drunk, I washent even haff spifficashed. ) just drivins along when a sudden two copsh, . came up and mean drivins a car whensh yoush is blotto?” and 1 hat do yoush two grafter shink you are, a duet? If one of voush will keep quiet 1 shink I can unnersthand yoush better.” Well, shir, thosh two cops went rish on jabbering, bosh of shem at once jush like zhey wash the shim- “If the result of the election should be close,” the senator said, | | “the defeated candidate might have some basis for an attack on its le- gality, due to the fact that the| apportioned itsclf since the 1910 census. | “The electoral college is based on | | the number of ators and repre. | | sentatives from cach state, but con- gress has not fi the number 0(\ i representatives in accordance with | the constitution.” Under the constitution, | Dill said, there arc several \;!hfll are entitled to more |atives than they now have. | “The reapportionment | have been made in 1920, {tor usserted. “Since the electors allowed cach st Scnator states *presents Kliould | the sena- number of e is equal ;n‘uunlutlven to which a state is en- [titled, if the result of the clection |18 close the loser will have grounds [ Less homework and more phys | cal exercise 15 to be the keynote of | a new educational system in the | state schools of France, | ‘ SR | . | Observaticns | Cn The Weather | Washington, Sept | tor Southern New and cooler tonight and Tuesday; moderate southwest shifting to | northwest or north winds Forccast for New York: r, cooler fonight and Tuesday; | moderate northwest or north winds. Conditions: The tropical storm continues its movement northwest- ward over Southern Florida to the Gulf coast seciions, but reports Pressure s low St Lawrence valley. An high pressure of consider- itude prevails over the upper Mississippi val- lake region. It s weather and much | Tower temperatures, Williston, North | Dakota, with temperdiure degrees reported a kigling frost. Conditions favar for this vicinity - weather with low temperature, 16.—Forecast England: Fair Zastern incompl of and upper producing fair of .32} eze twiash. Zhey made me sho mad zhat T pulied off my coats, and hit one of zhose copsh rish bestween the eyes, but 1 hitsh she wrongs one. Well shir, itsh she beatenest plash Vi Ve ¢! - | house of represents 2 o + recent days. Governor Walter Mad- | € of representatives has not re- | ror tyins 1 shever shaw. Zhev had twins judges, and win I asked the Judges if shey worked doubles all she time he shed yesh, and zhat shey alwaysh givsh double #hen- tenees. Sho shey give me fifteen #h for being spifficashed, and anussher 15 daysh for being drunk. Sho hoping zhat yoush is. she shame, 1 ams Doubly yoursh [#¢ A.l Wagner. P. 1 shought T jush wrotes one tters, -buts T find two, sho am shending bosh of shem. | “Eventually, why not now?” Made Them Talk?! Mhis is surely a scientific age.” said Thorsen, as he sat looking out ot the window of his club. Surest thing you know,” replied a fellow member. “It was only a ion of time before the invent- e some ‘tone’ « Temperatures yesterday High Low 68 70 Atlanta Atlantic City oston Buffalo Chie Cinein Denver Detroit Duluth Hatteras | Kansas City Los Ar Minneapolis Nantucket + New Haven . New Orleans . New York | Norfolk. Va Northficld. Pittsburgh Portland, I8¢, Louis Washington 1 i Vi, M 58 DESIRE Desire Under The lilms P o I put my toot in i Too Studious! Guthrie (rushing in) “Where's a1l that deose smoke coming from, aud that terrible smell? Is the honuse Guthric “No, that's lessons.” just Mrs, Guthrie you sce, che is taking cooking in =chool and she’s out in the Kitchen now doing her home work! —Alice R. Hinkle (Copyright, 1928, Reproduction Forbidden) QUESTIONS ANSWERED You can get an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to the Questic= Editor, New Britain Herald, Washington Burean. 1332 New York avenue, Washington. D. C., enclocing two cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advjce cannot be given, nor can es- tended research be undertaken. All other gquestions will receive a per- sonal reply. Unsigned requests can- not be answered. All letters are con- fidential,.—Tditor. Q. Ts Rin-Tin-Tin living? old is he? Who is his owner? A. RIn-Tin-Tin is living and _is ten years old. His owner is Col. Léland Duncan. Warner Brothers Studios, 6842, Sunset Blvd, Holly- wood, California. Q. Can you give me a recipe for the relish “pepper hash"? A. Drain 1 cup minced green pepper, 1 cup minced red pepper, 2 tablgspoons to 1-3 cup sugar and add about 2 cups vinegar; bring slowly to the boiling point, cook 15 minutes to 30 minutes. This relish keeps well in a stone jar. Put it in a dark place to prevent the red peppers from fading. Q. Who played the part of Ames, the cub reorter, in the pic- ture “The Racket” with Thomas Meighan? A. John Darrow. Q. On what day did 1873 fall? A. Sunday. Q. 1Is Jumbo, the phant, dead? A. He was killed in September 1885 while crossing a railrond track near St. Thomas, Canada. Q. Why is live stock fed salt? A. Because some sodium chlor- ide is apparently essential to all animals living on a vegetable diet, Q. What are the religious affilia- tions of Scnators Curtls and Robin- How June 15, famous ele- They are both members of the Methodist church, Q. Have there ever been any instances where the electors of the Elctoral Colleg> have not voted for the party nominee of the party by which they were el ed? A. The Electors of the Electoral College are moraily bound to vot: according to the returns of th respective states. There have been two instances in U. 8. history when this was not done. Adams was call- ed the “President of Three Votes” because his political opponents claimed that but for the bad faith of two Pennsylvania Electors chos- en for Republicans, Jesferson would have been president instead of Adams (1796). Monroe at his reelection (1820) was not formally nominated by any party and re ceived all but one clectoral vote. One of the electors from New Hampshire which would have gone solidly for Monroe if necessary, cast one vote for John Quincy Adams, unwilling that any president but George Washington should receive a unanimous electoral vote. Q. Where and when was Asther born? Is he married? A. He was born in Malmo, Swe- den, January 17, 1902, He is not married, Q. How Nils much does the railroad Jocomotive cost? A. The cost var depending on the type of locomotive, In 1927 the prices of locomotives purchased ranged from $40,100 to $144,800. Q. Where are the railroads now under comstruction in Bolivia? o whom would one write in regard to them? A struction are the railroad and the average Bolivian rail y¥s under con- La Paz to Yungas Potosi to Sucre State Rallroads, Commercio street, 71 La Pax, Bolivia. Q. ‘How can paint be removed from linoleum? A. Rub with turpentine. It this does mot remove the spots repeat the operation, and while the spots are atill damp rub with fine-grain- ed sand paper. Q. On what date did Easter Sunday fall in 19072 % meaning of o “Germany over all.” ? Q. How long has it been aince Rhode Island had two capitals? Where was the legislature hold when the state had the two capi- tals? A. Until 1900 Rhode Island had two seats of government; the organ- ization of the State government and one session of the legislature being held in Newport in May and other session {n Providence. all sessions are held in Providence. Q. Were the parents of Abraham Lincoln legally married? A. Nancy Hanks and Thomas Lincoln, the parents of Abraham Lincoln, were married June 2, 1806, in Washington county, Kentucky, by a Methodist preacher who was also a justice of the peace, and Rev. Jesse Head. Mukdenites Disarming Shantung Troops Tientsin, China, Sept. 17 UP— Foreign military advices today were to the effect that Shantung province troops were being disarm- ed by Mukdenite forces in the vicinity of 8hihmen, five miles east of- Lanehien, Shansi province. The Shantung forces, & remnant of the northern allies which were defeated by the nationalists had been at- tempting to get past the great wall into Manchuria. White Russian forces attacked the Mukdenites east of Lanhsien with infantry and armoured trains and threw back the eighth Muk- denite army. A Mukdenite counter attack the next day cut off most of the Russians who were made prisoners and taken to the rear. The timely arrival of Mukden forces from Yungpingfu was stated to have assisted in completion of an en- veloping movement which gathered in the Shantung forces. Novena Closes Wednesda; At Church in Hartford The annual novena preparatory to the Feast of Our Lady of La Salette will close at Our Lady of Sorrow's church, Hartford, Wednesday. On the closing day of the novena, there will be masses half-hourly from 6:30 till 9 o'clock, when a solemn high mass will be sung. The closing ex- ercises will take pace in the evening at 7:30 o'clock. They will consist of the rosary, sermon, procession, im- parting of the papal blessing with plenary indulgence and benediction of the Most Blessed Sacramenpt. Dur- ing the day the story of the appari- |tion will be given in various lan- guages, On the eve, as well as on the |morning of the feast, confessions will be heard in English, French, German, Italian, Polish and Lithu- anian. For the convenience of pil- grims breakfast and luncheon will be served in the basement of the |church. our Washington Bureau’ of every boy and girl who iz going to NCHES EDITOR, W: NAME ........ i a9 by {40 n 08BN STREET AND NUMBER # oV CJK ;ol«“o vf 1 want 8 copy of the bulletin SCHOOL LUNCHES, vote apd fail to exercise it, or whe are eligible to become voters amd do not be ‘made’ ave drones in the city's beehive,” Rev. Matthew 3 Traynor declared at eme of Las masses at 8t. Mary's church Sunday morning.* Simillar talks were given at other masses at St. Mary's and at St. Joseph's parishes. At Bt, Joseph's church Rev. Fath- er Bamian, & member of the Pag- sionist order in West Springfl ade- livered a measage for the "‘f' Rev, John F, Donohue in which he declared it was the duty of the Catholic people to exercise their franchise. “Remember, we are got telling you how to vote, but to vote,” he declared in ome part lo( his talk. B He told the people it must selim strange to them to hear this ques- tion discussed from the altar, but that it was & civic 'uty of the peo- ple to vote and | ‘s the duty ‘of priests to urge Ca . .ics to do their duty. At 8t. Mary’s church, Father Traynor declared that people who have the right to vote and do mot are not deserving of the benefits of our government. He urged all who are eligible to become voters to do %0, and jf they do not understand the procedure they should consult someone who has the information through past experience. In con- clusion, he said that every voter should take part because this 15 & government of the people, by the people and for the people. 15 Year Old Page Is : Making Trip With Smith Albany, N. Y. Sept. 17 UM— One of the happiest youngsters in America, fifteen year old Milbura McCarty of Eastland, Tex., is aboard Gov. Smith’s special train headed for the west, He is a page on the campaign special a jop he has had for a year in the United States sen- ate, Milburn isn't five feet'tall but he is a stocky boy with i:mn. even for republicans. He wis all smiles when the train left Albany late last night, for he was starting out cam- paigning with the man he has been alding a bit in New York. For several months, tHe youthful Texan has heen one of tthe office boys at democratic national head- quarters, and at night he has been delivering Smith-Robinson gpeeches at political rallies in and around New York. NECKTIES GOING UP Boston, Sept. 17 P — If supply and demand mean anything the city is due for a sharp rise in necktie prices. Week-end burglaries of clothing and jewelry establishments included a lot of 6,000 colorful cra- vats from a south end wholesale es- tablishment. T R S T I S R T TR _— SCHOOL LUNCHES A complets treatise, drawn from official sources, op the proper feod for growing children, full of suggestions for mourishing food for echool lunches, whether eaten at home, taken to school, or bought at school, i contained in lztest bulletin SCHOOL LUNCHES. The parente school will find this bulletin of valse. Fill out the coupon below and eend for it: CLIP COUPON HERE hington Bureau New Britaia Hoerald, 1322 New York Avenus, Washington, D. C. nd enclose h-n-l with five cents In loose, uncancelied, U. 8. postage stamps, or coin, to cover postage and handiing costs: STATE I am o reader of the NEW BRITAIN NERALD, -— e - - e - > w— w» o = - - MPAUIRE COMES ACRSS THE R.R. TRACKS INTo THE MORFE PoLITE RESIDENTIAL DISTRICT WHENEVER HFE WISHES “To LAY IN A SUPPLY oF CIGARS.