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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1929. ! t | morning and retires at night when |of the board during its month's ex- e hinges on whether the gov- oo N he feels so inclined. stence, has been the formation of [ernor spent in excess of $4,000 p [ [ l H Of course I neve abused my [the Farmers' National Grain Mar- sonally in his campaign to win th € Unparalleled Situation Befogs v Lone Star State Palitics ™% ( | bealth. I have worked hard all my|keting Corporation. Its fundamental | republican nomination for gover-| life. Now 1 have a little money and | purpose is to build up farmer owned |nor, and if so, whether he thereby |a little time and I am enjoying my- |and farmer controlled cooperative | was disqualified to hold the office |self,” he add: Asked if he hal |institutions for marketing wheat and 'to which he was elected last No- any scruples against the use of to- |coarse grains. It will be eligible to|vember. | Monsjeur Baldusk 80 Yeflrs old baéco or liquor he added “I do not|borrow several millions from mvi Contending that a great public| believe in the use of tobacco, [ |farm relief revolving fund, if nec-|question is involved, progressives never use it. Liquor I use sparing-|essary, to carry on its activities |who backed the man Kohler de- BU{ S[lll‘fly fil]d StTOllg !ly, never except in moderation. A | 7The foundation has been prepared feated in the primary, Rcp. Joseph glass before meals is my limit.” for a similar undertaking in the D, Beck, began the court action. The visitor is not favorably im-|wool industry. The wool cooperatives| Kohler, whose sudden rise tio Strong and sturdy, $0 vears of | recced with the hospitality of | Will meet with the board in Chicago | political power in the state after age as the years are numbered but |{ncle Sam. United States does not |carly in October to discuss plans for |a brilliant career in industry that in the prime of life physically like | treat its Canadian visitor the creation of a national marketing | brought him great wealth, has not a gnarled and weatherbeaten 0ai, [thing resembling the sam | agency and an advisory counc permitted the legal tilt to disturb L : J » cordiality Dominick Baldusk packed his 5"”'[thm Canada e his_personally in administration of Bald xhibits towards tour- case on his little farm in Canada, PP 7 ng Lritain, arriving here Tuesday night. I]AN[;ER USES HEAI] i might be an event in the daily rou- [his northern ‘ ngly that he speaks|to their “kindly” w ; from the states, he explains. At Ly eIl hitched his favorite driving horss|Newport, Vt., the port of entry, im- | He issued one statement and to a carriage and drove from his|migration authorities made him re.| |smilingly accepted service of the |selves that this hardy old farmor A few hundred miles by -train o ol damy | v | 1 home within three | I i jlnv of this (:ufh_vc farmer, but it|weeks, and would not remain to ‘Governor KOhler 0 Wlsoonsm is no strain on him physically. come a charge upon the country h”-}‘ Faceg L()[]g Lega] Bame | French. The home in a little Quebec village 10 |main all night while they strugglel papers from Madison's sheriff. the nearest railroad station where |through the various ramifications of | he calmly took passage for New |official red tape, sat fhame from Canada would be en route to Modest and self-conscious, M. Bal- ljow the border line. Then to adl with an Lhre e ; come, the bor- | he Enlish anguie®|der officlals, showed their human| Madison, Wis, Aug. 15 (P—Poll- | e ne comprends pas’t bul|sympathy by refusing to let their |(ical enemies of Gov. Walter J.| | | Vieonese Woman Signals (- chestra by Nods and Shakes i he gains confidence one finds that | protesting guest stay overnight at a | Kahler nit a long legal trail whon | he visitor would be able to looi hotel, even at his own expense, 'va:”‘,.y T i after himself with little difficulty ID |aged traveler has his own idea of |from office = C! & Engli speaking er- otty ff i Rd ron ce. TR ORI RER b (Rl of the American| Charging he was disqualificd! vienna, Aug. 15 (P—F "~ Makes Profit .Farming goyeroments political appointees. | through alieged violation of the cor- |y, 5 % ived in this country, T think | rupt practices act limiting personal | g ke S R Ry ¥ - 2 s act g sonal | qancers of Vienna, hit upon the or- ¢ M Dadusc b tha e I would have been dead 20 y | expendity LaFollette progr iginal idea of conducting an orches- ushet s meslthugarmar s ooy | Reniilne sives began their effort to bar Koh-|tra by movements of her head. | who has traveled through that sec-| Monseur Baldusk will return to|ler from the governor's chair before | ¥ e tion of the country which runs from |Canada within two weeks, I he was inaugurated the city o Quehec northeast alonc Seven months have elapsed since | the St. Lawrence river, past the y "he Phok offine a8 the mirst nom-pro. |t 1D WICh zest. famous Shrine of St. Anne de Beau- M[]NTH i e elo eetoh in A The impulse, says Frau Wisen- pre, that farmers could be in any |ade, and the legal battle, unpre-|thal. which used to come from the condition economically except on the cedented in the state's history, has j€onductor, will now come from the verge of starvation seems strange. | not passed the preliminary stage. |dancer. To this conception of the But Monsieur Baldusk is not an or- In fact, the prospect looms that|“dancing conductor” she has givea dinary farmer. He made his mone Governor Kohler's two-year term of |the name of “Battuta dance: operating a model farm for the gov- P |oftice may <pired before the| Dancing, according to this new ernment. The farm was situated " h |state court finall give their de-|theory, will no longer be passive | St. Victor near Beauville, 50 mil: Ffilm GIOHD Has All‘eflfly Mfldfl T i o ar e en ol s T northeast of the city of Quebec. au :nthal, one of the most refined | No sooner had this idea flashed in her mind, than all Vienna took : offic |now be an active driving forcr. Born in the shadow of the fam- Im]}ol‘[fim S‘I‘]des Circuit Judge James C. Wick-|Any sign given by the dancer to ous citadel and the Chateau Iron- u | ham ‘will sit In Sheboygan, s of [the orchestra is to be “artistic | tenac, he grew up along the fertile | the county in which Walter Kohler |stimulus” or, as AU nthal shores of the St. Lawrence cultivat- Washington, Aug. 15 (A—Far [has lived all his life, the first week |calls it, “theme.” This to re- re be- in ‘his crops, raising a family, d ching policies designed to place [in September and hear the argu-|sult in new and closer relations veloping himself into a speciman of |agriculture on a new and firmer [ ments on the demurrer of the gov-|tween the dancer and the music. physical manhood that is the envy [foundation have been iniviated by the | ernor-defendant to the action com-| The dancer's movements will lead of the younger generatior; fi federal m board which came into i menced by.the state at the instiga- |the orchestra, and, at the same time, cutting his immense farm into three | existence just a month ago today. |tion of four prominent members of |he or she will be carried by its smaller farms and selling them for| The word “organization” has been |the LaFollette progre: faction. |sounds. Under this mutual influ- a price which enables him to realiz: |18 keynote during this period in the| After that, the state suprems ence c¢loser unity of dancing and| the rest that follows a life of hard |belie '}!m( the farmers will be able|court will be called upon to de-|music is to be attained, leaving | work. to stabilize i}hrlr own Ivvfl\!.x‘fl v if co-|cide whether the decision of Judge | wider scope for the imagination, Monsleur Baldusk is the guest of |Ordinated effort is submitted for|yyjckham shall be upheld. If tha rau Wisenthal says that she will haph rd method of production and | sent his stepson Homer Poulin and fam- is in favor of the governor, the case|pr her subject before the In- | ily at 336 Park street. Last evening g | will end there. If not, then the|ternational Congress of Dancers in g e ey Advocates Cooperative Moves | way will be cleared to a trial on | Paris this fall, Britain streets. He thinks they are| Iach member of the board is an |the merits of the case. — | attractive but adds, wistfully, “There advocate of the cooperative market-| In its legal aspect, the unusual | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS | Is no place like home. ing movement, and all of its deci- | ‘ jons have been intended to | strengthen the cooperatives dealing market New Britain may have its beaut ful parks but Canada has muc oes ot it S commatitys et it | Pimples on Face Burned Terribly. board’s marketing program is to LOSt Sleep. Cuticura Heals. in the province of Quebec, the |y, ve overy leading crop marketed > “The trouble began with hard, red pimples on my face. They were visi r stated. Se he ac i - \f”')““ “ld Bl Ly "‘ “’:‘“_‘l by existing. cooperatives through vith a smile, “I saw some beautitul ||, alfonnd s sritions, ehvein- | girls in New Britain—but say, yon neci by, commodity ad- | very itchy and on a warm day burned terribly. Scratching caused the just ought to come ito Quebec. visory councils trouble to spread, and I could not sleep. The trouble lasted about one Health preservation is not much| 4g part of its work, the board mg\ and a half years. of a problem to Monsieur Baldusk. ,,,‘,,,.rfil,m a “redirection of agri- | “I tried other remedies but they did not help the trouble. I began He gives it little or no deliberate | cultural thought.” The .kw,,i,,“o“\ using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and they helped me. I continued consideration. An amused toleration | given the effort to make the country | using them and in about six months I was completely healed.” (Signed) Miss Antoinette Lopriore, 13 Creston St, Worcester, Mass. of “faddists” is about all he thinks|think in terms of specific crops, each | of them. He cats and sleeps regu- | with its own problems, rather than | Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Talcum 25¢. Sold everywhere. Sample each free. larly and without discomfort or in- |mass agriculture. l Address: “Cuticura Laboratories, Dept. H, Malden, Mass.” convenience. He rises early in the| The outstanding accomplishment | e At the Sign of TIE ORANGE DISC H a Husky had the Speed of a Greyhound ’I‘"E modern, high - compression, high-speed /3 motor demands an oil that will stand up under the excessive heat generated and C\’ will function as near perfectly as is humanly possible under the conditions prev=- alent in today’s motors. q The problem has been to secure in one oil the best [} Fair Retail Price qualities of the finest paraffine and naphthene crude oils. €In our laboratories we 30c per Quart have perfected a blend of lubricating oil made from two crude oils. 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S. said to about | Szy Chicago superior court . ind the opinion |clerk, he had a card printed e hat it has lost its with Simchak thereon. It makes its 3955 Main St. Kansas City, Mo. primaries. | . Friends of Gov. Dan Moody are ' l i m to try for a third term. || vear qila Zly 1d of gubernatorial aspir- {torial candi includes Barry Miller Dal. | Votes . l l now lieute o Thom Sl T i' Lae g quietly fe Katie Daffan of Ennis; Oscur Pl E AK Holcombe, former mayor of | Houston; Hatcher, state necaiise N. M of Ganado, | prospective candidates, in- L | , cluding Earle B. 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