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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, AUGUST 22, 1929, City Nephew: “This is my polo | reign, led the emperor to carry his from the Canadian octhiwe . costume, Didn't you ever hear of[resolu\lan into effect Accordingly vanced southcastward ‘{-.‘r the polo?” he abdicated in favor of his son | northern Mississippi valicy and the Uncle Ezra: “No, what be it?” | Philip, the crown of the Nether- lake region and is produchig scat- City Nephew: “Why, it's a game |lands (1555) and that of Spain and |tered, showery conditions, accom- T T N Britain H || tion o the electorate. This not hav. | iy harassed by politiclans who be- | Citizens who have been credited | ew Britain Hera ing materialized, the battle was lost | lieve it interferes with the appli- | with attending strictly to their own HERALD PUBLIBHING COMPANY |, ¢ior t1o committee veered toward | cation of their particular style of (business arise to remark with fer- | s ; ation that there is no an earlier opening hour. The Com- | democracy and spoils. | vor and indignat | |2 d % Fracmeint AavsboimaLitpor Lied Dally-/(Babday Mpctipted) mon Councll has taken to the idea | Several scandals have accompa- | we play with horses. ita colonies (1558), and then re- paniod by local thandeiov At Herald Bidg., 67 Church Btreet R | > t } t 1 1d e: t at 10s8. Uncle Ezra ‘Do tell! And who |lired to the monastery of 1\!5[er | 5 S FTow over e that one way to be efficient—and |nied the city manager government |cannot be sold except at a loss. | gonerally wins, yo or the horses?" |situated in a secluded region in| Pressure is relatively low ove save itself extra turmoil—is to ac- | since it was adopted in the Forest | Water invariably finds its level | i T T Wesel | western Spain.” Piains statos and the Rocky Mown- Sin ",U:'C““’"ON RATER cept committee reports, City. But a majority of the people | So does realty. The level being found | (Copyright, 1929, Reproduction Q. When, where and how did |tains with center of greatc 100 & Ye ¥ | i lis w rattic will bes ) Theodore Roosevelt die? ity this morning over the Centra e et % otinellteevanimouehilc rania |1 mhatihaytat doapliises, Shop tylitor, care of the Horpiagen | A, His death occurred at his|Plains states and the upper Mis- R NoR 1¢ providing facilities for enjoy-|slight majority—rightly concluded | Rents will be no higher than what || Britatn Herald, and your letter | home at Sagamore Hill, Oyster Bay. |sissippi valley. Temperatures are ment on Sunday is commercializing it | that scandals are possible in any | the renters in the long run can af- || will he forwarded to New York | Long 'Island, New York, on J comewhat higher in the central and Entered at the Post OfMce at New Britain | 5 % il % Yoa | fora ta puy. | 6, 1919, as he slept, and w: castern portions of the country. A4 Beoond ClasstMall' aiutierl U L e i B D BURG e o [ D QU he | tributed directly to emboli Conditions favor for this vicinity, constantly commercialized to & | that individuals are dishonest. What | The cost of a lot in the long run o e B P Lo e e burtod at |increasing cloudiness followed by greater extent. Times are changing | differentiates the scandals in the [will be no higher than what anybody | “4PI, PUES : Oyster Bay, New York. showers, | and perhaps some clergymen do not | city manager form as compared |can afford to pay for it and earn & | g {ime to be harping on some Q. What is the record for throw: Temperatures yesterday: | 9 High Low think they are changing for the bet- | with scandals in the former method | profit through the medium of the | other string, ing a baseball? : 5 68 | e " o A. Sheldan Le Jeune threw 426 | Atlanta sasneneaen B4 68 ter in this respect. of city government has been a pos- | building that might be erected there- | We can’t help believing, and ore I s e E e : 76 66 The only proftable advartising medium | . s e o so each day, lo Oct ) Buftalo S eTA 64 sity. Circulation books and press The most devastating blow against | sibility of more easily fixing indi- | on. : Ohio, October 12, 1910. 4 S 8 o fa the City. Circ | That fun-ishment, too, s a capital G 1o 1l ioroacy L vhuts 180 the | GRISAEO d b i n e 12 room always opsn to advertisers. | the more or less str servance of | vdual responsibility. One former city | But somebody usuaily is left hold- | Rei el ; - the morefor;lens strlat obseLyan e of | YU Eeny ! | | thidss | meaning of the term doyen? Cincinnati .... s b 70 | ?Sumlny was struck by the automo- | councillor got himself into prison; | ing the bag. It's heavy. == | A, The oldest member of a dip- | Cleveland creees T4 | bile industry. It is easy to claim that | and by the way, that is something. | First Profits! lomatic corps in any capital, in point | Denver .... e 81 Ty Ao e e uiieation of | When a man crulses on tires on Sun- | It is not often, under the moro or- | I r:i*(\‘!rtzor; I[ 1"”::“9;01] tfl:rm‘xm P e el S e e e tiea to the icatio writihg. T : e hi s v e 5 : : Q. From what chemical is Hatteras ............. 18 credited to it or not otherwise | day he uses his own vehicle and |dinary methods of city government, | d darl i ; % T t s . ! A itea. in (hin paper snd aiso local| ' : e e r'acts an ancies | 7o Didyouedihe stoy 4 | “tear gas” made? Los Angeles <.ooooooo 34 Shyditadt fm (il pape cely rides instead of walking. |that a politician goes to prison. e 29 Sl FSCURIEUET. 5 A o This, however, is not even sound | It is uscless to claim, however, — | Author: “No. T sold that much QUESTIONS ANSWERED B S e o [t U gt L BY ROBERT QUILLEN | worth of rejection-slips to an old-| yoy can get an answer to any | African buffalo that begins with the Nantucket ............ T4 i S paper man!” | | New Haven .......ovn. T4 ST, New Orleans . . . THE ETERNAL BROMIDE! New York ooieee. 10 By Elsa M. Shrciber Norfolk, Va. .. S L) 1322 New York avenue, Washington. o) A = When Adam dolve and Eva span, |D. C., enclosing two cents in stamps 25 Years Ago Today Northfield, V e money in real estate and that it Send all communications to Fu We're for It! TELEPHONE CALLS Business Office ..,.. ¥25 Editorial Ruoms ... 926 Member of the Assoclated Press ry, as virtually every gasoline | that the city manager form in Cleve- | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation = 2 : The A. B. C. 1s a national organization [l station is open for business et : " St enl which furnishes newspapers and adver- | o1 cunday—indeed, that is the big- | instrument of city government. No | A democracy is a land in which | tisers with a strictly honest apaiysis of g i ¢ can rise much | CYeTYbody has equal right to feel | clrculation. Our circulation statietice are | gest day of the week; and around | type of government can rise much o, 0ior"t5 the common people. | | | Based upon this audit This losures Pro- |\ o0y automobile cruising hab- | higher than the individuals indenti- | Viclion" against’ trana mimewspaper ‘dr- | the Sundayiautomobile crulalng habz | tribution figures to both national and |t has grown up a plethora of Sun- |fied with it, and in Jersey Cty there | Brief synopsis of Bishop Cnn-l And through the paths of Eden for reply. Medical, legal and marital local advertisers. an example of how low the newer | non's 15,000-word ~defens Darn | : the wet Democrats.” | He cut for her a fig-leaf fan— on of wayside stands. Then there inmds of government can get when 'Twas ninety-something in the |other questions will receive a per- |gubject to much controversy, it be- | g 1 3 ¢ hday aut - e individuals identified with i . ok | . Unsigned requests can- » claimed that the fire escapes are = The Herald 1s on sae dally tn New | s the effect of Sunday automobiling | the individuals identified with it are If sunback garments promote shade. | sonal reply. Uns ing claime hat the fire escapes ars . z = s Hotilagat Nowi | [Es - i Rien ; e e OYS DAMAGE BUIEDINGS ork ac Howling's Newstand, e on church attendance, which some | inclined to be that way. On the | health, why be content to maie| TFor days the temperature ran high, |not be answered. All letters are| only “qummies. et e o i el ke e £ ¢ | whole, however, city manager forms | People healthy on but onc side? "Twixt niaety and a hundred rang- | confidential.—Editor. | The republican caucus to elect| Tranic Monklewita 85 Grand Central, 42 4 say is at least provocative of | . 3 ana s | sl | 5 Aele: to the state convention will | fireet complained to P olies If they are going to censor : “What funny weathert| Q- What language is the name | he held at the Casino this evening. | evening that four );lnl“d bt | false aavertising, the gals can | Palatka and what does it mean- Corporation Counsel Hungerford | i€ hnhldw‘: 0"’ Woodlangigourkeiia 3 EL, B0 &y £ DS . : ol 4 o 9 i heen damaged. " ; T urcly | creasingly common and growingly | that. this is the reason why politi- g lot on rouge. I think the climate must be| A, Itisa Seminole Indian name | ""“g return from Sharon in a few P Ohe!New Britaln Tumber!Co has as confidence in hims e surely | ? i | i & . e PR Ne £ 4 G opular. Sunday is a big day in golf | ¢lans are so uniformly opposed to it. | s chengit] | meaning either “spilled” or “cow | "Y'y ¢ mercial street nine added | complained to the police that hoys There won't be complete se ford" | i roke inte se by the i v <ing Ar! | another vietim to its long list by de- [ broke inte a house owned by quality until’ some bountiful Iz When good King Arthur held his| q. B e 8 e ita Jear | company on Park street ‘mear the establishes a home for fallen men. | court, vahlerday B o 5. railroad crossing, breaking windows Members of the two local compan- | 4nd damaging the building. ies of the Connecticut National | question of fact or information by |letter “N"? | writing to the Question Editor, New | A. Niare. Britain Herald, Washington Bureau. land or anywhere else is a perfect Pittsburgh . . . 82 X e, 78 strayed, advise cannot be given, nor can ex- | Portland, Me. . ; tended rescarch > undertaken. All| e new Majestic theater is the St Loul commerce involving the opera- | e Washington .......... 84 —_ | thought. yield less play to politicians; and | It Coste has as much luck as he | Athletic games on Sunday are in- | one can bet one’s last penny on it will succ " i e e, every | If they had as clear a field as in the ; ircles, baseball and in almost every What state leads in the pro- duction of corn? { S And Guin with all her maidens| A, Iowa, ; . | S e e | Executive session: The act of gay 2 Q. What is the name of the song nessary litigation is a good one. A | e el pulling down the blinds so the | Went forth in flowery meads *to | sung by a negro at the close of the low | all probability residents near the | b S CONCENTRATION ‘ o v which would force the fellow a1 T ¥ | law wh | hL ¢ lic 1 I8 Py S nseTolE the ol Guard have been ordered to pur-| s t ND POLITIC, FECTS Ielehnotsicamt es yontSlic kR otk Shorh | motion_pleture “Show Boat"? | chase tan shoes in preparation for w o o Svedl &) ten snot to. returni|BATI will continuetto favortheipre- | AND POLITIOAT SERIECTS wife. All in the merry month of May, | A, Lonesome Road”, by Gene| i atc ongue i . the maneuvers at Manassas, Va. vention of unnecessary noisc in| Investment trusts, which are hav- | | The day fell hot, and Guinevere |Austin and Nat Shilkret. | . | . | The doctors and lawyers are pick- | F S f lll {Ing a far-reaching influence upon| “Carrying water on hoth shoul-| And Miss Elaine cxclaimed *o. | Q. What is the diffcrence be- or J1gns O ness : | ing up a team to meet the Business: | the prices of a comparatively few |ders” is especially difficult it it gether, ~|tween an embassy and a legation? | en's nine at Rentschler's park to- | Your tongue is nothing more i means riding a camel while keeping | “The climate must be changing,| A. An embassy is a diplomatic [ norrow, | than the upper end of your stomach | Conditions in front of the theater | | one foot on a brass rail. | dear, | mission headed by a dmlnmnm‘} Thomas H. Hardy of this city was | and intestines. It is the first thing Another example how it pays to | windows at 6 p. m. on Sundays have | opinion that a large part of the bus- | o | 1 never knew such funn, agent of the first rank, called am-| clected vice president of the famous| your doctor looks at. It tells at a SR Al . Y |iness of the country some day will | The Bremen and the Graf Zep- weather * |bassador. A legation is a diplo- | Crocodile club at a barbecue held'at | glance the condition of your diges- use the columns of this newspaper: brovided food for thought among | be done by 20 or 30 corporations pelin have made encouraging rec- | matic mission headed by a diplo- | Lake Compounce today. tive system —and physicians say o 2 " |ords. Maybe Heinie will develop the | From neo-lithic days to now, | matic agent of the second class,| Hay fever has reached this city | that 90 per cent of all sicknesses | habit of coming acros: | Recurrent this phehomenon; | called minister. In all state, diplo- | and hundreds of people are suffer- | start with stomach and bowel | iness is getting bigger while small | e The world has mopped a dripping matic, officlal or social functions, |ing from the malady. trouble. | business is having a harder time.| A honeymoon is that bricf period | brow ‘nv\ha:( dors take precedence over | —— Some of the latter is slippin in a woman's life when she lIsn't And passed the hoary saying on. | ministe " t A e .“ 5 Thel oo o p‘:‘d\i“_y Js | drcaming of the future or the past. | And while the sun pours forth nsjmg-m_”“,hfl' did Michael Iaraday | Obserygtmns airport before he goes out of office | mix Sunday observance with the — | heat, | dis ? | | - amazingly concentrated. One firm | e >aint Tt oina B ortal man Rt aerang. | A Bllectromagnaticilinduction —if he ever does—the city will have | thrills of the celluloid drama. Hav- : Americanisn ainting soft pine | he wits of mortal ma ang- | i St 2 il 0 T]l W b y ] turns out more than a score of wide- | to Imitate oak; trying to achleve ing, j it pineipe on whicn s EERRD on| n e eather something to remember him by. But | ing conversed with a few of the | The law which forc mployers | Other sport. But baseball games are older styles of mulcting a city they %o pay their workmen without un- |not allowed in Walnut Hill park on | #ould be in favor of the new way Sunday, and neither is tennis, and in it along with the horrowed books and the umbre also would come | these environs. Quitegiancy favored stocks, seem to be of the Right after the story about counter- | those who have had oc ion to |1?le T e T P feit money saw print the avalanch |the thro standing in line. The stopped! throng desiring to gain cntry to the e S movie houses at least proved that ish coating on your tongue is a danger signal of those diges- tive disorders. It tells you why the least ex- ertion tires you out; Lookatyour ~'WhY you have painsin —Torecgst | TONGUE the bowels, gas, sour 1t the mayor can bring about an | thousands of young people wish to | ly used brands of food products, |culture by the same method. * | Will echo that bromidic bleat: (lelectnioirEgchines e Lo | ] 2 [ e e e (RO BRw G sl nelslarl o tivian | Concentration of the meat industry | | Ut Libisbis e S ; 2 A philanthropist is a. man who changing!” sapOneqol ARGt Washington, Aug. i L : ¥ [ e e i ‘ into the hands of half a dozen pack- | yig RO G en G e e on which a cable shvnmn is lm;\,tv\z!. R Sl mo:}!;fll/ s?omach, dizzy spells. a | ers has been going on for years. In | Dick to build a library for Harry. [Tt 15 held under Javanese mandate. | o “(onight or Iriday; slightly| And it's a sign you need Tanlac. almost every fleld the tendency 1s Loerivias o | Q. What does “horal” mean? | \qrmer in interior tonight; moder- | This good old reliable medicine has . : : Ry s\ Now the: s horse £ A. Hour h southwest winds, helped thousands who were physi- | toward mergers and nationwide big- | NOW they sa oru racing is r; B Ty G S e e e it e o | ness. | anced by people who put up only { with this Zeppelin business lookmg;\lntmflmmnvs we learn that they see Nl e up the city ultimately may also need | no differcnce in seeking such enter- a mooring mast. | ing or following sports. Not being a | The American Legion is returning | clergyman we did not contest this | to the war—the election of a new | view. : ing animal? fonight T varmer | ‘tle helps you. oT. | THE |§2 a time. So 18 the automobile T A £ ght or I ri warmer 5 2 Afhteicommandes, The era when one huge concern | jusiness - | A. Not in the sense of their pelts onight; moderate to fresh south-| Tanlac contains no mineral | gl o el west winds. | drugs; it is made of barks, herl R e e ek R i Q. ‘What does the name Jerome | ' yorecast for New Haven and | and roots—nature’s own medicines s ot ot paTahanl '“‘:’ 2 vicinity: Showers tonight and Fri- | for the sick. Get a bottle from Ybe one designed to bring WTIC down | not say. The morning services seem | (b) won't go out with other women. | f N : ; Gy : | druggist today. Your money ) i h il The latest big merger, that of the | pake hald n Conditions: The eastern area of | back if it doesn’t help you. to a whisper. Or else make some | to be well attended; but it has been | ; 2 the | Take bald one a ; i | taking over of the United Cigar |necdn't wo California station come in like an |conceded that the Protestant church- earthquake. | What lasting effect the tendency e | mergers with a rival huge concern Scientists are manufacturing a |to use Sunday as a day has arrived. It is even imminent in ile- v . Tha st | ment has up. Churches mile-long vacuum tube. That must | ment has upon the chur e e Tt is from the Greek and means “holy name"" » girls, and you | SRR 7 /4 Q@ How many homicides are gy pressure diminished consider-$ | there in the United States annually? | 110" quring the past 24 hours and | | Stores Company by the Gold Dust | === ¥ . Tn 1927 there were 2,340. | ™ i v . e its center has shifted southward | K es which hold evening services have | corporation—and with it a substan. | YOU Can measure a man's snccess | [ Q. What is the value of a Gveniihe SonbiATuntic et o E a HE&C been finding it more difficult than | Tt e e s (i) v the degree of his scorn for the 'Y cent United States hr:mripr. ) ijm_r— folk and Charlotte, 30.28 inches. | The British should be able to see | formerly to interest their flocks. The | | neighborhood of his youth. ] revenue stamp of the 1862-71 1~ consequence, the disturbance | 52 MILLION BOTTIES USED for themaelves that to establish the | Chusches being open to everyone, |ing evidence of what is under way| There is plenty of room at the g A. Tt is catalogued at $15.00 if . = international bank in London will | Welcome strangers; but on the Whole | throughout the nation, | top. But when you pass a car near ' | part perforated; at 25 cents if full| cause heavy cable tolls from Wall | those who attend the churches for | | the top of a hill, the room is on | nerforated and on old paper and at street, which - | the most part are identifie ‘ : | the right side where you can't get ) 30 cents if full perforated and on CAN YOU SWING gardl tcm :"m"ds AL X et “"h, But what will be the political ef- | to it in time to dodge the fellow | = |silk paper. | Every family hopcs some day to own a home. In attaining this de- rdless o stance. 1 g? | 1 alrable objective, practically everybody nee financi: assistunce, eots - | ave a opes been | Driactica ! | Prudent minds in Wall stre e | == | Italian? 1 must ve b e s in some cnses | where the mer Wall street. | coraner's business, as we fis- ? | A, Nearly anl have been Ttatan. || (i 2 kale part of the total cuday. Our Washis tosinerecrsRorlginate M arell i Swiol mealis S cnnedl in: exact pioo| 7 but a few were Spanish and French from officinl sources an interesting a [l valuable bhulletin o Home v 3 i che; g X G 4% Gis i scussing the W question of borrowing money for purcl | Worrying about this point when they | portion to the increased m.p.h. of and there was one zlishman Ingdabesng (sl g0 o | take time off to think about it. |Henry's product. | Nicholas Breakspear, who took the b | | | | Stores company—is merely increas- them. If the average churches hav- ing evening services could interest George Bernard Shaw's newest as- | its own members in attending the sertion, that there is no typical | evening services to the extent the American, must be accepted with a | morning services are attended there grain of salt. The typical American | Would be little cause to blame the is he who doesn’t take G. B. S. seri- | movies for intriguing the crowds. ously. As a matter of fact, nelther the | the bulk of business and the masses | churches nor the movies get most | of the people being their employea? | Infra-red rays is a new invisible |Of the public attention on Sunday | : = name of Adrian IV. b L A TFrench critic says cocktalls Q. Tow long did Cardinal Gib- | make the Frenchman foolish. May- bons have the red hat? y be he just seems that way hecause e - From 1886 until his death mi his tongue works so fast his hands orse 921, i : zi 5 2 /hy arles V of Spain | How much * e e ; Higgins (drunk): eve me T| Q. Why did Charles pain | el e Iotbottan, (S L SE AT | hate to go home. I'm afraid my wife [abdicate in favor of his son Philip? | ¥" Will thero bo feft for tho enter- | 0 L TR L gy won't recognize me.” A One historian says “There | postage and handling costs | thinks Lindbergh @ god. for only| Bacon: “I'm afraid mine will* {had long been forming in his mind | thus can it excuse the failure of its | —P. C. Ervwin ‘;hr purpose of tr‘!rwndmlk his ’lra;‘t\ e i dlct b |days in monastic seclusion. | REET AND NUMBE How small will the opportunity | prediction that fame would make | e | sT disappointing issue of his contest | become to “go into business?” O |40 ass of him. |with the Protestant princes of Ger- || | city Overheard by K. P. Gruder |many, the weight of advancing| ¥ vears, together with menacing| troubles which began to thicken like clouds about the evening of his| | purchase and how the moncy is borrowed. Fill out the coupon brlow Will this nation be contented with 20 or 30 monster corporations doing pemmnE = OHE IURORERER e e t lHo.\n: TFINANCING EDITOR, Washington Bureau, New Britain Her 1322 D York Avenue, and enclose | light which brings to view things | evenings. Most people remain at hitherto unseen. Which ought to be bad news for politicians, I want a copy of the bulletin HOM D five conts in coin or loose, uncance stamps, home and are tired enough to re- | prising and the aspiring under such tire early after the day's motor trip. | circumstances? Having pald the city $52 in license | CHILDREN AND CRIME fees for permits to ercct a lunch | What Judge Morris D. Saxe stated | wagon in Franklin square, the | in relation to children and crime has NAME —— . | . Correct this sentence: “When T consist of entering the employ of big | was your age,” said dad, “I felt| Eric: “How do you do, miss? 1 business—at rates dictated by big | very grateful for the kindness of |am looking for a sincere, refined | business? my parent girl.” | e child problem is a very seri- | Tt Copyright. 19 Pub) Martha: “And how do you do, i o | is just possible that there ls} sir? I am looking for a refined, sin- | 5 ‘ Family Stuff | some political dynamite in such i THIS ¢RAZE For ENDURANCE" RECORDS = in the world is caused by children. | futu sric: “Would I do? I am fall R —— S Will the only opportunity remaining I am a reader of th Standard Oil Co. lets it be known ‘ been on the minds of thoughtful ob- L‘ - that an oil company is never beaten | Servers for a long time, until it is licked. And maybe not | then. | ous one and over half of the trouble a SUNDAY MOVIES If children are given a proper train- | i s Gy bl tan o e “Glad it's over,” perhaps is what | ID8 and there is more cooperation | THIE CONVICTION OF SNOOK S L L members of the Common Council | Pétween the home and the sehool, | : 3 Ui : ) : think of the Sunday movie issue, just | Crime will be reduced greatly.” | Martha: “Are you serious-minded LAUDER »- | James Howard Snook, Ohio Univers '""“I!R and of a neat appearance?" The conviction and sentence of-Dr settled in favor af the theaters| BOYsand girls who are allowed to | ity professor, w “I am. And I am also of a cheerful disposition and a steady 5 o Hae ye heard thisone ? | vorker” | Martha: “That helps. Do vou play L S | the plano and speak scveral lang- 3 TELL? HOW COULD HE TELL? s AR e Two Aberdeen men 3 = oFabordern Mnsnyin e Fon S ey , but T am fond of one | tram car golng down from Rose- | 4o iies WO (N AT TORC 0 usually | cannot nelp coming to the conclu- | mont to the city one morning re- | .. 5 R e L ® conclu- | Y 10ININE Te- | 55104 house painter by trade, inter- r | sic hat justice : o . hem ha rgotten | L 3 : man or on that justi sometimes is blind _rnlh One of them had forgotten ested in art, travel, and the great all supposed to know enough to | WOman, a credit o the city, state and | and sometimes it jsn't, AsiobaccoRmobch tan i asketl IS IS 5 eldoor ¥ decide which side represe ation. feamanion rfr°{'_“ i Mo this Te-| " Martha: “Then you might do. I of the public, quest the-other willingly agreedi o “5 raringa Swedlsh lady with blue eyes and a jolly disposition." as not surprising in | Which are allowed to open their | TMain out late at night quite | view of the evidence. Yet when one | places at 4 p. m. on the holy day | Certain to fall into evil ways. instead of 6 p. m. as formerly, It was a hard battle while it last- | 4/l turn out to be a black shee ed. and it lasted for quite some time, | If he does, he will be the : | bears in mind that a certain politi- The well-trained child may, .'\Hrr: al boss in Cincinnatl escaped a sim- | but | ilar fate several years ago after a | xception. | murder had been committed The issue was between the theater | The well-trained chila owners and the clergy, with City | tUrDs into a well-trained ted most | Snook's crime was Crime is due mostly to a had en- | however, and the Vironment and lack of that 50 helnous, : motive so self-evi- Fundamentally, this was . Hontor ths Corasiia ’ training which the judge spoke was an ungrat ‘the. | about. less. No vote ever ng been taken | Y©S Parents have Council in | SPODSibility. Conditions, economi an enormous re- or proper | dent to those having even a cursory knowledg: of the or the methods of mankind in it when folly takes the place of jud ment, that he ways of the world, | ly had a chance | dric: “I hope you are of the ola- fashioned type. Flappers and gold diggers need not apply.” Martha: “T am. T am quiet, sen- nle and home-loving."” on the Pproposition reality could not « othe c: “Are you fond of whole- side had the ‘e H Jjury unless | . some amusements?"” ¢ ha e prepo rating public iem 1o give proper heed to the there happened to be a fanatic upon ‘. X Martha Very fond. I like swim- support uning of their offspring help to |1t Who refused to be convinced that | ming, skating and outdoor Involved also was the mor Mrata arline 5 S vise, which make it impossible | Il front of the average X crime had been committed, (Eiranehats Writieftobucooy x| Epostsy landiamy inierested S in it Clergy - . The trial was o claimed the absent ded. chapjfinerithings of life, s = ! ne which showeq | Claimed the abscnt-minded chap | fiRer things of life o) the bar T et P "“C | when he had loaded up well and| Pric: “Do you know the value of : © sympathy was not with | .o e Wit a true and loyal friend?” commere S 3 Th S | truly and taken a few puffs. “Could 3 Z¢€ nc eater ins the professor. WSpaper comment . | Martha: "I do. I will be a sin refined pal to the right man.' you tell me the name of it mneflman only | at T canna do fer my friend has been unanimous, and the Th ' nersonally subsc 1 has gone down to ite | {r1ends Snook had in this world aft. | neVer told me,” was the reply. : Vh movieh frankly gether and take in a movie!” eat. Since the new meth. | °F the deed was committed and he iz linning s cify. was adopiad Tni| DEcainedmewn naithis ezt res pons Report, Pleaset and—the largest city in the | Sible were his family and relatives a‘flZf Dr. Blake: “I'm afraid it will be try to possess this style of gov- | and his lawyer. This was a difficult [seeea e kst Sl e (Copyright John F. Dille Co.) sk sl Lo 1 : politics in the Ohio m - NCUARaUeR B ios Business Man: “I don't mind the OB DNE threEat. overhead, but what will be the op- system | because he had no chance to escape | G W. Madison Street crating expenses?" to ditch it. It has been | his desserts | Ch Tolorleveabcker | situation. But he got a fair trial | \e when the st solely up- | and has reached the inevitable goal | v observance oy Whet pt contint the when clergymen were GIRL BELL RINGER The mills of the gods grind slov London—Violet Carrier, 20, claims | 1v, which proves that the mil gymen at the committee hear- | /2nd this week has been that the | It requires a so-called depr 1 to be the youngest bell ringer in |have not been unionized! ing might have turned the tide, ¢ city manager government should be | realty market to give an indication | the world. At this age she manipu- | = lates the sixty bells of the carillon The Question! Loughhorough in a masterly| Uncle Ezra: “What's the rig ye ]mmon. The heaviest of the b«l‘.fiigon on?” f thelr vacations. A more | 4" issue around which there was a e d in larger numbers rt on. 1 verdict in Cleve- DEPRESSED REALTY peclally If the clergymen could have | given a proper opportunity to show | as to how many citizens have been proved they represented & large por- | its efficiency, and not be continual- | dabbling in real estate, |