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.y ' Outlet Millinery ESTABLISHED 187 RUM, RELIGION AND FARM BIG_ISSUES Other Hems Only Incidental in This Unusual Campaigh WEST AND SOUTH DUBIOUS Smith Foroes See Hopes of Getting is Paying No Little Attention to the Southern Etates. San Francisco, Sept. 29 UM—In tones that reverberate from coast to coast, prohibition ,religion and farm relief still command the double time march of the presiden- tial campaign as it swing clamorous: 1y through the closing days of Sep- tember. Other issues intrude momentarily, but these three set the pace. During the present week each has again demonstrated its hold on the atten- tions of political leaders and voters alike, Smith Woos Farmers Campaigning in the west and back through the Canadian border states, Governor Smith has addressed him- self most earnestly to the farmer. He has talked of other things as well, but it was the farm relief jssue to which he returned oftenest, and it was the farm problem which he discussed repeatedly with chiefs along the way. . The argument over prohibition took an astonishing turn when Sena- tor Bruce of Maryland gave cur- rency to a quickly denied story that Mr. Hoover does not refuse a drink. Even Chairman Raskob of the dem- ocratic national committee joined in the denial, saying he knew that the rcpublicen nominee did not serve liquor in his home ,and admired him ror it. Unusual Dissension Scarcely less unusual in a presi- dential campaign was & renewed outburst o dissension over the re- ligious fssue, centernig about Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, assistant attorney general at Washington. She denies that her series of speeches to Ohio preachers had any other purpose than to spur them to oppose Smith because of his prohi- bition views, but even 30, her dis- claimer did not quiet controversy within her own party. While Walter Newton, of the republican speakers’ bureau, said he was only sorry Mrs. Willebrandt didn’t have more time to devote to her speechmaking, Ohio’s republican committeeman, Maurice Mascheke described her ac: livities as “well Intended, but m guided,” and & member of the re- publican commiitee in Wisconsin asked that she be kept at home, Hoover Remains Silent I‘ollowing a policy he adopted (arly in the campaign, Mr. Hoover (Continued on Page 12) PROGRESS EXHIBITION OPENS ON WEDNESDAY First Show of Its Kind in City Op: s at Stanley Arena New Britain's first Home Progress Iixposition will open next Wednes- day evening at the Stanley Arena on Church street and will be continued | afternoons and evenings throughout the remainder of the week. Accord- ing to statements from the manage- ment of the show, leading manufac- turers and merchants have engaged booths in which products made and sold in New Britain will be display- On the opening night the enter- tainuvent will consist of a revue and a team of professional acrobats. Maurice Wallen, widely known as a tenor, and Miss Anna Nelligan, a so- prano, will sing. The ceremonies will be in charge of Mr. Robb, whé will introduce Mayor Paonessa and other officials, who will speak. Rep- resentatives of the civic clubs will be in attendance. 8. Sinkbiel will direct the fashion show on Thursday and Friday eve- nings. The show will be presented in the form of a revue. Merchants whose goods will be displayed in- clude Parker & Parker, Davis Co. Co., Connecticut Furriers and Manning Bros. Singing by the Sangerbund of Hartford, under the direction of ol Leventhal, will feature the enter- tainment program on Saturday eve- ning. It is expected that the chorus will consist of 100 voices. At the close of the exhibit Satur- day night officials and merchants will have a banquet at which ar- rangements for producing the event next year will be discussed. Superintendent of Schools Holmes has been given a large number of admission tickets for distribution among children in the higher grades. “For the first time, New Britain will have its own Home Progress 1ixposition, sponsored of the Cham- ber of Commerce, endorsed by the (Continued on Page 12) KILLED BY GAS Lawrence, Mass., Sept. 29 UP— Gas escaping from a connection used for a gas heater asphyxiated Mrs. Grace Stuer, 31, and her two children, Beatrice, 11, and Francea 10 as they lay on a day bed in the living room of their home last night. The bodles were discovered by the woman's husband, Frank Stuer, when he returned home early to- day. The police belleve were accidental, the deaths party | Sets World’s Record Flying Upside Down But He Nearly Dies Kassel, Germany, Sept. 29 U —Pilot Clardon, young Swiss flier, achieved what was describ- ed as a world record for flying upside-down today, but on lend- ing was taken out of his ma- chine more dead than alive, He flew upside-down for 18 minutes and 56 seconds beating the record set by the German flier Fiessler by nearly four minutes. Clardon is stated to have turn- ed his machine over at an alti- tude of about 150 yards and then rose to an altitude of about 700 yards when the blood pressure in his head became so severe and his legs so cramped that only by a last desperate effort was he able to right the machine and glide to earth. “It was the worst quarter of an hour of my life,” he said later. FOOTBALLERS SWING INTO ACTION TODAY Many Eastern and West- ern Teams Start Season This Afternoon | | | New York, Sept. 29 (UP)-—Many castern football teams will swing in- to action for the first time tod: Although Harvard, Yale, Prmcc-‘ ton, Brown and Georgetown do not have games scheduled until next Saturday, the Army cleven will meet | Boston university, while the strong Navy team takes on Davis-Elkins, the little eleven that won from West Virginia last Saturday. Last year in the opening game of the season between the two schools, | Boston university held the powerful Army team to two touchdowns. New York university, with one of the most powerful teams in the east, is expected to overwhelm Niagara | university. Al Lassman, captain and glant tackle of the New York U., is expected to take his place in the| |line-up following an injury that | kept him on the sidelines last year. | The principal eastern football | games scheduled for today follow: | Columbia vs, Vermont at New | York. New York U. vs. Niagara at New York., ¢ | Cornell vs. Clarkson at Ithaca. | Dartmouth vs. Norwich at HanA‘ over, Penn State vs. Lebanon Valley at | State College. | Pennsylvania vs. Ursinus at Phil- adelphia, Byracuse vs. Hobart at Syracuse. | Navy vs. Davis-Elkins at Annapo- | lis. | Army vs. Boston U. at Point. | Pittsburgh vs. Theil at Pittsburgh. W. and J. ve. Bethany at Wash- | {ington, Pa. | Boston College v&. Catholic U. at I te vs. St. Lawrence at ll:nm-; ilton, N. H. | Two Big Ten teams—Chicago and Indiana — will pry off the lid of the | 1928 football season today in non-| conference games which should give West | X [mam] NEW BRITAIN HERALD NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1928.—EIG"TFFN PAGES SMITH'S RECORD |Smith to Deliver Final Address CRO INN. Y. ATTACKED G. 0. P. State Convention Hears In West Tonight When He Plans to Explain Prohibition Reform Criticism by F. Trube¢ Davison|Will Elaborate, at Milwaukee, On His Avowed Pasition for State Control of Liquor—Democrats Look to LaFollette and Blaine to Help Them In Winning Wisconsin, “TAMMANY CONTROL" CITED Speaker Asserts That Smith Calmly Takes Credit For All Beneficial Legislation Despite Fact Republicans Adopted It. Syracuse, Sept. 29 P—Governor Smith’s record as a state executive was assailed at the second day's session of the republican state con- vention today by its permanent chairman, Assistant Secretary of War F. Trubee Davison. He said the road to Washington was one “over which Tammay shall not pass.” Discussing what he termed several years of Tammany control, Mr. Davison said the governor was at- tempting to lead the voters astray on prohibition by drawing a red herring across the trail “The democratic party would ap- peal with an empty gesture for law enforcement by telling us that if he takes an oath to uphold the consti. tution and the law whatever his personal beliefs may be, he will see that they are enforced,” Mr. Davison said. “It is well to remember that he took such an oath four times as governor of New York and the whole world knows how little he has been Governor inclined to aid the federal enforce- ment in New York. If it is any standard by which to judge what would happen in Washington, na- tional ecnforcement would be a travesty.” In attacking the governor's record, Mr. Davison, referred directly to al- leged financial wastage in construc- tion of state buildings: “demorali- zation” of the labor department; and increase in taxation. Dangers of Tammany Chairman Davison devoted a con- siderable portion of his address to Tammany Hall. “We have learned from bitter ex- perience the dangers that lurk fn Tammany control,” he sald. “It is our duty, born of that expericnce, to stand in the front line with those who defend the road to Washington, the road to the highest gift which the American people can bestow on one of its sons, Over this road Tammany shall not pass. “For several yeurs New York state has suffered from the burdens usually incident to a Tammany ad- ministration. That they were not & greater handicap to progress than they have been is due largely to two factors: Curbs on Democrats irst, nationwide prosperity x X seconly, the effective curb x on the wholesalé execution of Tam- many policies, made possible by re- publican majuities in one or both houses in the legislature. “Sight must not be lost of the fact that republican legislators de- serve credit for the competent way in which they have separated the wheat from the chaff in sifting Gov- ernor Smith’s proposals. Some of his schemes were bad—they were rejected; some of them were sound PICKS COLLEGE GIRLS some indication of the strength they | —they were adopted. On the olhcr‘ developed after two weeks' prac- |hand, Governor Smith calmly claims | tice. | credit for every measure the legis- f South Carolina will invade the|lature has passed and berates it for [ Chicago university eamp. legislation it has defeated because | | Indiana will face Wabash it was deemed unsound.” | | Bloomington. Regarding government cxpendi- at Coach Knute Rochne will send his | Notre Dame varsity into a season opener with Loyola of New Orleans. he.remaining west schedule in- cludes: Depauw at Detroit. Penn college at Grinnell. ! simpson at Haskell, Bethany at Kansas Aggies. Kalamazoo at Michigan State. TWO BRITISH OFFICERS KILLED BY PIRATES Chinese Rivermen Capture Ship With 1,400 Passengers—Re- leased After Being Looted. Hong Kong, Sept. 29 (P—Two | British officers of the China Navi- | gation company's steamer Anking have been killed by Chinese pirates. The pirates captured the ship with its 1,400 passengers on Wednesday and steered it to Hong Haibay, which is north of Bias Bay, the no- torious lair of Chinese pirates. The Chinese quartermaster of the vessel was also killed. The officers killed were: Chief of Finance David J. Jones of New Quay, Wales, and Chief Engineer Henry Thomason of Greenock, Scot- land. Captain Phunkett was wounded. A wireless message from the Anking stated that the vessel would arrive at Hong Kong this afternoon. The custom of the pirates is to release ships after looting them, The Anking left Singapore, Straits Settlement, on September 23, for Hong Kong by way of Hoilra, Swa- tow and Amoy. It was attacked by the pirates in the Gulf of Tong King. ROBERT E. MITCHELL Willimantic, Sept. 29 (P—Robert E. Mitchell, 53, died at his home 16 South Park street, today, after suf- fering from a naralytic shock sev- eral weeks ago. He had been city engineer for over twenty years and had been a former selectman for four terms. He was born in Ash- ford in 1875, moving here when a boy and had been a resident for nearly fifty years. He had been a member of the Masons, Odd Fellows and Flks. He is survived by his widow and daughter. e i - (Continued on Page 15) Milwaukee, Wis., Sept. 29 UP—In this former brewing center Gov. Smith tonight will lay before a waiting electorate his detailed pro- gram for prohibition reform. The speech, the sixth and last of his two weeks' western invasion, will be the first devoted by the dem- ocratic presidential candidate to the eighteenth amendment and Volstead act since he advocated their modifi- cation in his acceptance speech at Albany August 22, With only this one subject as his text, it is expected that the nomi- nee will elaborate to some extent on the stand he took in that ad- dress for state control of liquor sales and in the side discussion of prohibition at Omaha, September 18, when, at the close of his farm relief speech, he answered one of several questions propounded to him in a newspaper advertisement with the declaration that he did not con- sider liquor “the great issue” of the campaign. As is his custom, Gov. Smith worked late last night on a draft of his speech. A press conference was the first engagement facing him after breakfast today. It then had been planned to take him on a tour of the city, probably for a visit at Marquette university, whose students, in brown derbies and college flivvers, turned out in such large numbers last night and paraded several miles alongside the automobile procession. A visit to the soldiers’ home also had been arranged. Asked yesterday at a press con- ference on board his train as it cut across castern Minnesota for Mil- waukee whether he had heard any- thing about the New York state democratic situation, the governor replied in the negative. “Well, have you told them any- thing yet?" a reporter queried. “No. I haven't had any corre- spondence on it, back or forth, one way or the other.” “Have you got anything written on the back of an envelope?” some- one asked. “Yes,” smilingl; The New York executive will re- turn to Albany next Tuesday from the Rochester (onvention and prob- the governor admitted, (Continued on Page 12) T0 TRAIN IN $CHOOLS Supt. Holmes Puts Policy in Effect Today Acting on authority given him by the school board, Supt. Stanley H. Holmes today appointed six New Britain young women to act as prac- tice teachers at the three high schools this year, The policy was decided on at the last meeting of the board when it | was revealed that New Britain girls who are graduated from colleges and universities are lost to the New Dritain school system because they | must have one year of experience | before they can receive a regular appointment. The training plan was decided on and if the young women qualify they will be appoint- ed to regular positions next year. The list of appointees and their degrees follow: Alice Gaffney, Smith college, A. B. degree; Helen Wexler, Boston university, 1. 8. 8. degree; Lillian Koplowitz, Marshall college, | A. B. degree; Dagmar Carlson, Bates | college, A. B. degree; Florence Tor- may, Trinity college, A. B. degree | and Columbia university, M. A. de- | gree; Nellie LeWitt, Connecticut Col- | lege for Women, A. B. degree. | Two were appointed to the senior | high school, two to the central junior high achool, and two to the Nathan Hale junior high school, each for a | term of about two months and a | half. Then they will be transferred | to one of the other schools. They | will take the place of the substitute | teachers in filling in class rooms in | case of ubsence of the regular teach- ers. They will receive the minimum | (Continued on Page 12) |timate had been given |cause estimates are too low. CITY’S POPULATION ESTIMATED AT 72,800 Census Bureau Figures Shows Gain of About 12,000 Over 1920 Special to the MHerald) Washington, 1. C., Sept. 29.—New {Britain has a population of 72,800, it was announced today by the census bureau, The announcement is in the an- nual estimate of municipal popula- tions and the figure given for New Britain is that estimated for July 1 last. The 1928 estimate gives New Britain a population increase of about 12,000 since 1920 when the official census showed New Britain to have 59,316 persons. A large number of cities were not included in the estimates for this year, it being explained that no es- for these who “are in the cking” each year be- The estimates are entirely on paper, do not include any canvassing and are based upon®omparisons of estimates municipalities habit” of for previous years based on the 1920 | official census. Nor do the estimates include any annexations that a city may have accomplished since 1920. The bureau admits that in some far from correct.” es the figures given out may be | Comneeticnt St. Advt. Dept., i Hartford, Conn, VUveesne e Arrest Follows Alleged Abuse of Automobile Operator FLAGMAN ~ HALTS TRAIN | Police Sergeant At Sends James Cazette Back to Job When He Learns Novice Is Tend- ing Gates. Headquarters Following a wordy battle about 7:30 last gight between Supernum- erary Officer Charles Ruineault and James Cazetta, night gate tender at | Main street railroad crossing, the of- |ficer took Cazetta to police head- quarters, leaving the gates in charge of & man who is said to be a railroad employe in a capacity other than gateman. Sergeant J. C. Stadler, who was in charge of headquarters white | Licutenant Bamforth was at ‘lunch, sent Cazetta back to his post at once, but in the meantime, a freight (train from the west hove in sight and might have reached the crossing before Cazetta took up his dutics but for a switchman who hurried up |to the track and stopped it. According to Officer Raineauit's |report of the incident, a sedan driv- en by a man and carrying two wo- men, stopped just beyond the place | the gates drop, to pick up a woman. {Cazetta ran into the street and shouted to the driver to “drag along,” and the of r, who was nearby, hurried out ani warned him {to be more courteous in his dealings with the public and more civil in his language. The driver of the se- dan could not proceed until the wo- |man was safely inside the car, the | efficer pointed out, according to his report, but Cazetta turned on him and abused him. The officer took him to head- {quarters to have someone in author- |ity reprimand him, as he has been {making a practice of directing traf- |fic on the crossing and the cificer said he had orders from Sergeant |McAvay to report him the next tine Ihis actions deserved censure. Ac- {cording to the officer, no trains ap- peared for at least ten minutes ait- er the incident, and Scrgeant Stad- {ler, in his report, said there was no the city to the effect that u train had passed while Cazetta was de- tained at headquarters. The s t ordered Cazetta back alwost im- {mediately on recognizing hir, as h | was fearful iest the crossing might be left unprotected or in incope. [tent hands. | It was learned that Building Tn- 1”\(‘1‘(0!‘ A. N. Rutherford called to |a switchman to stan the freight train far up the tracks, and “Pop” Powers, who is employed at ‘the Russell & Erwin factory. lovered the gates as a precautionary meas- ure, Roger Sherman Baldwin Withdraws His Suit | Waterbury, Sept. 29 (UP)—Attor- ney Roger Sherman Baldwin of Woodbury, son of the late Governor Simeon E. Baldwin, has withdrawn his divorce petition in which he TAKEN FROM POST| | | |truth to a report that spread ahout | “ limportant Qdiscrepancies Library, INTOLERANCE; IN PHILADELPHIA {Places Force on Basis of i Fittest and Most Honest | Philadelphia, Sept. 28 (UP)— Mayor Harry A. Mackey has placed {the Philadeiphia police force on a |basis of the survival of the fittest— land the most honest. | The police, many of whom are charged with accepting bribes from bootleggers and proprietors of dis- {orderly houses, are going to have to | work against each other from now |on, and any captain who doesn't Lring in a true and complete re- port of vice conditions in his dis- trict will be reduced to the rank of | patrolman or fired. | Goadud by the failure of his po- {licemen to clean up the city after six weeks of investigation by a |gran@ jury, Mackey has decided to {resort to the most drastic police shake-up ever ordered in a large ‘A\qu rican city | 1t was about a month ago—atter {the grand jury bad unearthed evi- |dence pointing to wholesale bribery jand the existence of a liquor syndi- cate that had made profits of ap- [proximately $10,000,000—that Mack- ey sent out the word for police to |clean up the city in 2 hours or get {out. ' Three days after that order went out, special deteetives working wn- |der District Attorney John Monug- han, were still raiding distilleries in |the shadow of city hall. Thirty-tour police are under arrest, and Monag- han predicts that others will be tak- len_into cuscody soon. Today every police ceptain in the |eity will receive orders to tile a re- |port Monday on conditions in his | district. Then cycry policeman in the {city will be moved to a new district, | with none of them knowing his des- tination until he gets his orders. Again the captains will bo re- quired to file rcports—this time on onditions in their new districts, | Mackey will take the reports and |check them ugainst ona another. 3f en investigation will he made and |the erring ofricer punished. | Monaghan announced that indict- ments would be returncd agaimnst several policcien on Monday and |that the defendunts would he put en Itrial as fast us the courts could take |care of their Yosterday *he civil service woin- {mission took v the case agoinst |Charles Beckman, captain of Jetec- tives, who has been suspended. Pros- ceutors brought out the fact that |while Beckman had earned only about $28,000 in salary since ke | joined the force in 1913, that he had |cash securities and property amounting to about $74,000. Police Captain Charles Cohen, re- leased under $15,000 bail on a fotiid, | charges his wife wrongfully had him |charge of extortion, has disappeared. committed to an insane asylum. |He is said to have left town in an Attorney A. Henry Wetsman, rep- |automobile with his wife yesterday. resenting Baldwin, said there had| Joel D. Kerper. who pleaded been no reconciliation but that oth- guilty to selling liquor to persons er action was contemplated. |high in Philadelphia society, was Baldwin released from the |fined $20,000 and sentenced to 15 | Hartford retreat after examination /months in the federal penitentiary by an alicnist had revealed him [to be mentally sound. THIS WEEKS AFFAIRS * THE WEATHER | 1 New Britain and vicinity: [ i a | | | *. * . £ * . L] NEw BaTAW 1S syrE R A H3 2 ON MINGTON AvE.— /. 4 DON'T FORGET/ —— Turn BACK. THAT 'CLOCKL 3§l TONIGHT—— at Atlanta yesterday. It was the |heaviest fine cver assessed in feder- al court here. '150 HORE CAN BE SEATED " AT NATHAN HALE SCHOOL | Investigating Reports Finding Accommodations Avail- able Without Overcrowding Committee Members of the school survey committee in their visit and inspec- tion of the Nathan Hale Junior High school yesterdiy afternoon learned that the building can accommodate about 150 more pupils without over- crowding, they reported. Most of the classrooms in the Elihu Burritt building were found there was some eriticism by mem- bers of the committee on account of waste space which, it was the opin- ion of some committeemen, might have been usable had more atten- tion been given the question of nat- ural lighting. Nothing of particular interest was found in either of the schools visit- ed yesterday. Notations were made of the number of rooms, average at- tendance in each, and of auditorium sizes uses. Another field inspection will be made next Friday when, it is expect- ed, the Smalley school will be visit- ed. Coolidges Send Sympathy To Man Hurt by John Washington, Sept. 29 (P—Presi- dent Coolidge has sent a message of sympathy to Wiltred Veno of New Haven, Conn., and his mother for the injuries they sustained yes- terday in an automobile collision in that city with a car driven by his son, John. Daylight Saving to End at 2 a. m. Tomorrow New York, Sept. 29 UP—Daylight saving time which has been in ef- fect in this and many other cities during the summer months will of- ficially end at 2 o'clock tomorrow morning. Clocks at ¢hat hour will be set back one hour to conferm to standard time, P to be filled almost to capacity, and | JVER ASSAILS RELIGIOUS SAYS MAN 1§ T0 WORSHIP AS HE SEES FIT MAYOR AFTER POLIGE |Vebemently Reudintes Letter From Virginia G. 0. P. Headquarters Which Urges Women to Save This Nation From Being “Roman< ized.” Missive Sent by Mistake to Woman Believed to Have Accepted Vice-Chaire manship of Republicas Precinct Committee. i ‘Washington, Sept. 29 UP — Here bert Hoover has spoken out for the | tirst time since the delivery of hig acceptance speech on the injectiony of the religious issue in the presle dential campaign. Vehemently repudiating a letter, purportedly from the headquarterg of Mrs. Willie W. Caldwell, republie can national committeewoman fromy Virginia, which included a plea tq American women to save the nae tion from being “Romanized,” Mry Hoover late last night declared thaty whether authentic or a forgery, the communication did violence to everg instinct that he possesses. “Such an attitude,” he said in § prepared statement, entirely ope { posed to every principle of the ree | publican party. I made my position |clear in my acceptance speech when I said: Comes of Quaker Stock “‘In this land, dedicated to tole erance, we still find outbreaks of intolerance. I come of Quaker stock. My ancestors were persecuted for their beliefs. Here they sought and found religlous freedom. By blood and conviction ¥ stand for re. | ligious tolerance both in act and im it. The glory of our American ideals is the right of every man to worship God according to the die- |tates of his own conscience! “I meant that then and I mean it now."” The letter, described as a “form fetter,” was brought to light by the ‘Washington Post which in a copys righted story today said it had re celved it from Mrs. Clara Lyon of Virginia Highlands, Va., to whom it had been sent under the mistakea assumption that she had accepted the post of vice chairman of a ree publican precinct committee, Admits Letter Mrs. Caldwell was interviewed by the Post by telephone at her homa in Roanoke, Va., and the Post quots ed her as saying that such a letteg had been distributed by her heads quarters but that she did not believe it had contained the words quoted from it. As given to the Post by Mrs. Lyon it was written on stations ery of the republican national come mittee and contained Mrs. Caldwell's rubber stamp signature. Letter “Dressed Up” The committeewoman explained t@ the Post that her letters were outa lined to her secretary who them wrote them in her own language. In this case, she said, the secretary | possibly “‘dressed up” the letter. She would not reveal the secretary's name. The Post quoted her as sayw ing that only two or three copies of the letter had heen sent out. Want Date Changed Hoover is being urged by some of his advisers to deliver his Bose ton address, the last of his eastersf campaign, on the night of Saturday, October 20, instead of in the middle |of the weck following, as has beeg | planned tentatively. Should he consent, he would make@ three major speeches on three suce cessive Saturdays, carrying his cams paign into two democratic strongw holds, New York city and Boston, ox the last two of them. Next Saturday, he will speak at Elizabethton, Tenng Buch a program as that proposed would make it necessary for the candidate to work much faster om the preparation of his principal ade dresses than has been his custom | thus far in the campaign. In ordes 10 do that he would have to sharply curtail the time given to political conferences and the active direction of the campaign over the country, Hard Job Meticulous as he is about phrases ology, the job of writing a speech is no small one for the republicas presidential candidate and since his return to Washington more than a mdnth ago its execution has beem made more difficult because of the pressure of campaign details which has been placed upon him. Muck of the work on his Newark and Elizabethton specches had to be done in time snatched betwees meetings with party leaders and long distance telephone calls from otherg in the fleld. With the Elizabethton addres§ finally out of the way today, he cag night of October 13. If he gots thal out of the way in u-omma tribution to the by he will have to forego the brief pare 10d of recreation which these immés diately around him at (Coatinued on Page 38§ *~ Y