New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 2, 1928, Page 22

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1928. POOR STUDENTS NLY ENROLLED commissary for three or four hours AL, HOOVER OOMPETE ot work, Books also are pald for| EI Paso, Tex, Nov. 3 (UP)—Al in work. Smith and Hoover Smith are selling The school largely is self-sup- |cars for an Kl Paso motor company. porting, receiving, however, each| “A couple of woeks ago,” says year funds obtained from & board of [Tom Gillesple, manager of the trustees made up of St. Louls and|motor company, “Al came to town Kansas City business men. There|from Santa Fe, and we added him the work of a number of years, founded originally on the telephone books of all parts of the country, ex. panded, with the elimination of duplications, by the lists of auto- mobile owners of the country, and, in many places, by registration lists. “The list of Digest subscribers is registered voters were asked to re- spond for their favorite candidate ! Heover is leading Smith by 99,916 to 71,810, a ratio of about 10 to 7, while four years ago Coolidge re- ceived approximately a 3 to 1 return over Davis in the regular election | returns, showing & poasible heavy of German educational {institutions has been planned for the summer ot 1929 under the joint auspjces of the International Institute or Teachers College, Columbia unt. versity, and Berlin educators, the HOUVER 1S LEADING IN DIGEST VOTING time perfectly. The cleck made in Massachusetts in 1833. Final Count in Straw Yote Giv Him 48 States Hoover is shown ahead in 2 states and the “Solid South” which has been democratic for more than 50 years, will be broken according to Democratic trend in the larger cities. Hoover Leads in N. Y. The poll indicates Hoover leading | in New York state with a plurality of 218,920 to 185 the returns counted. city, where it is stated every ac- |credited voter was asked to vote in this poll, 8mith leads his republican rival by 140,770 to 105,864, while in | 1924 Coolidge carrie® all five bor- 9 votes with all In New York not included as a unit, as a gowm many commentators seem to believe, when crediting the whole polling list with & ‘highbrow’ tendency, and a companion tendency to minimize the democratic strength by from 5 to | 10 per cent. “If there is a last minute switch in the present election it must be taken into account in considering the valid. ity of the poll.” School in Missonri for Them Especially Holister, Mo., Nov. 2. UM—Here {in the Osark mountains is a school where poverty is an entrance re- quirement, The entrance examination to the are 360 acres in the achool farm. to our force. A few days later, It operates a dairy and creamery, (Hoover. came here from Denver and canning factory, printing plant. The School of the Ozarks was opened 20 years ago by the Rev. James E. Forsyth, who floated down the White river on a raft, landed here and casually started his school. Since the first class to graduate in 1913 no pupil has paid laundry and a|joined our sales force.” Hoover and Al are putting on a sales contest to see which one can get rid of the most cars between now-and election day. Al is slightly in the lead. bureau of education announces. The tour will be limited to 25 teachers having some command of the Ger- man language. ALIVE AND TICKING Pawhuska, Okla, Nov. 3 (UP)— —A 105-year-old clock, made en- FORD BUYS LANDMARK Phoenixville, Conn., Nov, 3 P— A store here bullt in 1775, the frame of which has hand.wrought nails and wooden pegs, has been bought by Henry Ford and will be taken down and transterred elsewhere, so much as a dcllar for his educa- tion at the school. It is non-de- nominational. MFLODRAMA RELIVED El Paso, Texas, Nov. 2. (UP)— | Bruno Hernandez, of this city owes | his life to Ralph Smoot, engine | foreman for the Santa Fe Rail- road. Hernandez, sleeping on the tracks near the Santa Ie bridga, A switch en- gine was backing down upon him. Smoot, on the step at the back of the engine, reached down and hurled Hernandez from the track. A heel on one of Hernandes shoes was crushed and his coat was eut by the engine wheels. He received a scalp wound when Smoot threw him from the track. final peturns of The Literary Digest's huge national presidential poll pub- lished today. Algbama and Arkansas are prac- tically a stand-off between the two camndidates in this pre-election bal- loting and The Literary Digest re- ports that most of the political ob- servers are inclined to place both of these states in the Smith column. Election Is Probable ‘With the exception of a few some- what doubtful sections Hoover is leading by substantial majorities in all of the other 42 states and the returps indicate his probable elec- tion by an ample margin. oughs of the city. The tabulations show Hoover ahead in Massachusetts, which is considered by many astute political observers as the prize doubtful state {of the entire union, by a margin of slightly over 2 to 1. The completed returns show Smith recelving about 38 per cent of his support from those who stated that they voted republican in the last presidential election, while Hoover | He has arranged a party for the obtains over 75 per cent of his | youngsters Oct. 31 in which 1,500 strength from those who professed | children are expected to particl- they were republicans in 1924, | pate in a torchlight parade and Many New Bepublioans | :;ut np:)lcs and doughnuts washed o wn by sw Other than the marked pluralities | Of the 444.370 who cast ballots tn | 10Wh 1Y sweet clder, all to the e e Eant ma. |this “straw election but who did ot | Uslc of 8 brass band. | The affair was inaugurated las " |vote in the oficial presidential elec- A 4 Jjority of states the outstanding fea- rmm four years ago practically 60 |YAT a8 a surprise party. Chiet tures of the poll are the indicated ” McDonnell’s force arrested all the gain of the democratic nominee over (PET cent are voting republican and®| ' 0 0 8 VEE FFEGEE B0 0 | ovi voti e the returns of his party in the offi- w°‘°’c3fn pe °?s';:,‘:ff ;:,‘,‘"‘ dem0s |24 took them 1o polioe headguar- ? ters where the 400 children who clal 1934 election and the atrong re- | F! 3 publican invasion of the south. Ahe. poll” The Literary Digest| . " iooteq foand plenty fo eat Toover Has 63 Per Cent states editorfally, “whése final re- | “ere collected found plenty ©Of the record-breaking total of |Sults are tabulated herewith, has | 2% * P40 m" Vo Nl L e Spost. | Proved to be the greatest in history, | | OVViously ~the property owners card slection” Hoover has 63.2 per | With the complete returns some 380,- | 49 ¥ell a8 the. chiidren voted the 4 7 ! affair a great success. cent and Smith polls 35.7 per cent | 000 votes beyond the record-making with the small remainder distributed [P0}l of 1924. é among the several minor candidates. |, “The total ot votes reccived, Jensen Forced Down 7.263 out o i- h BEOE AiA0UM (0L GREOR On Middlebury Farm Waterbury, Nov. 2.—(UP)—Mar- tin Jensen, second prize winner in School of Ozarks is six weeks of summer farm work. The enroll- ment is 300 this year. “We never turn away a student without money,” sald Robert M. Good, president, “in fact, poverty is an entrance requirement. Most of our students come from families whose cash income is less than $50 a year” Prospective students have been known to tramp more than 100 miles over the mountains. Girls are eligible as well as boys. Each student is required to work 18 hours & week in payment for tui- tion, room and board. When a student nmeeds a new sult, he puts in 30 to 40 hours additional work. Twelve or 15 hours of labor wil merit & new pair of shoes and a new tie may be had from the school ~ You know the pack It is made at Niagara HALLOWE'EN TRUCE Property Owners Throw a Party for the Kids Webster Groves, Mo, Nov. 2. (UP)—The traditional friction be- tween boys and property owners on Hallowe’en has been eliminated here by Chief of Police McDonnel. intexicated was Saturday—Events of Importance! 45-inch Gauge CHIFFON HOSE Picot Edge Service-Weight Silk Stockings POINTED HEEL 29 3 Pair $3.75 FULL FASHIONED AND MADE ESPECIALLY FOR US To buy these fine silk stockings once means to buy them always—for their excellent quality, fit and durability are not to be equalled at this remarkably low price. Reinforced at all points of wear with lisle toes, heels and 4-inch garter.welts. Fashionable Paris shades, also black and gun metal. e alls 2. oun full-size biscuits A.uu.unuauwun Factories for 34 Yoars A builder o? muscle, bone and brain - the perfect food for growing children — easy-to-serve with milk or cream. The Literary Digest in its columns calls especial attention to & possible | Mately 19,000,000 ballots sent out, last minute switch of votes, such as "'9:9““'."" P"‘g‘;“"":’" °’m“-3 per o cent, con erably above e aver- fi:y;';‘“‘;',":;em“e;";,t,}‘;‘,‘,:"‘;‘,;: age for polls of this sort. |the Dole transpacific flight, con- 193¢ election day, which might re- Outstanding Features | tinued his national good will tour verse the returns in certain states| *The outstanding features of the | today after being forced down by from Hoover to Smith, and it 4 cau- | completed poll are the great plurali. | d8rkness on a farm in Middlebury tioned that this factor should be | ties given Mr. Hoover in most of the | Near here last night. Jensen is en taken Into consideration in deter- |states, the indicated democratic gain |TOUle to Maine. After a tour of that mining the vaiidity of the “straw” |over 1924, throughout most of the State, he sald, he will participate in poll, for all of its ballots were re- |country, especially in the largest |3n &ir race from Portland, Me. to turned and counted more than two |cities, and the republican strength Jackson, Miss. weeks before the regular election. |developed throught the south. 2 X The Philadelphia Vote “The Digest, as we announced fn | HOMING PIGEON DS HOME Tt §s pointed out that in a separate | the first article on the poll, and has | Waynesboro, Va., Nov. 2. (M—A polling of Philadelphia, where post- | emphasized since, presents its figures | homing pigeon attended the Pleas- card ballots were sent to the entire in an absolutely non-partisan way, or | ant View-Methodist church here, electerate, Hoover polls 69,704 votes an ‘omnipartisan’ way, as one friend. | and is now staying with the pastor to Smith's 48,429, or about 4 1-¢ to 3, |ly editor puts it, with the desire only | pending instruction from {ts own- whereas fn the 1924 election the ratio | to get at the facts in the case and so | er. The Rev. C, E. Smallwood is between Coolidge and Davis was |fairly present them that its readers | feeding it at his residence. A band about § 1-2 to 1. | may draw their own conclusions. on the pigeon's leg is marked “IF Likewise in Chicago, where all the! “The present huge polling list is | 28 B 56262." Girls’ Chinchilla-Cloth $9.95 Nothing quite equals chinchilla- cloth in simple smartness and serv- iceability for school coats and hats. 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