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NEW BRIT crnment organ, to the effect tnat the superabundance of force in carrying candidate in the field—DMr. Quigley —has a temperament remotely com- | with of the present |out the anti-religious pregram musi And no doubt !'stop for the present Mr. Quigley were nomin- | gratitying. New Britain Herald HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY ew Britain, Connectlcut Tssued Dally (Sunday Excepred) At Herald Bldg., 67 Church Street SUBSCRIPTION RATES 35.00 2 Year 42.00 Thr parable that at 1= only partly At most, it merely means stoppage of the cam which has Mayor we have all that if and the suc- | P ated tepublicans temporary efeating Mr. McDorough d on by ceeded in ign that the air would he st Il over the world. And even undet Moutha : 73c. & Month | two year One of the that an occasion auring the next | the circumstances no effort is prom- to discontinue the where a N ised nefarious the Entered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Clam Mail Matter, | ELEPHONE CALLS Fusiness Office Editorial Rooms vork yurning yet “majority of population” favors it. The only ce public qu tions™ has not been solved stem iion of is to be in those of is the disposal activity which Mr. Quigle sewa upon ideas towns where the vesi. th 1o0 920 v has definite ma jority are not in conformity with dents look with favor upon The only profitable acvertising med in the City. Circulation books and pr room always open to advertisers. Member of the Assuciated Presa The Amoclated Press 1y exciumiely en titled to the nuse for re-publication of all oews credited Lo it or not otherw credited in tis paper and also news published therein. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation The A, B. C. i & nalional which furnisiies newspapers tisers with & strictly honest circulation, Qur circula based upon tils audit. This insures (o tection against fraud in newspaper di tribution figures to bLoth uativnal an local advertisers, ideas on the subject. Rte- | churches trom the some other - state In these, so another dispateh from nother source indicates, a tremend. cently word went ‘that out the city would have to something” about this problem, and | ous of anti-religiour ble campaign consider to take propaganda will be through this some impetus put was ted is to affect all ages, from childrer kindergartens 1o the aged the in City that action s more than likely in the ques- tion will have to be finally solved In three years, it is believed L vrganization avd adier- analysis o un elatistics hie during the xt administration, so Soviet that whoever is ed mayor is even a minority left in Russia with rtain to have much hard think- . This. of course, but to occupy his mind t may be only 1 Russian dream, there e little Not only that, but the extension can v system is likely to b doubt that the The Ilerald 1o on York at lutaling's Newsstaud, ua Schultz's Newsstand, Grand Ceutral, 42nd Street, New Pines | Carried Entrance torward with more specd. | bropaganda contemplated will re- sult in a vast accession of irreligion land. the something which, it is under Water is true, lic aegis o Commission. | in the 15 the public provides the money | Both anti-religious campuign As a manager rast ot worker Domijan the bonds the Mayor is cer- | and the collectivization campaign in avdwarc |t sted the rural districts undoubtedly has stern The mindtul up in. inter and department of ey i perhaps s by Few gentlemen get any faster Domijan But room perversity placed the story o s et with resistance. slighted. ' Sotiets, of too much opposition. apparently the mul- problems, -some o) remain only partly solved | tend to slow up both campaigns use of airplancs are Leyond the stage of dis- | the time being, but substituting creased propaganda as a process to resistance later. take up not stirring from town to town M1 minor simply beca for in- which makes a peculiar t wist of composing ones arc constantly weaken Both o ds to study them an airplane crash in Ohio, in wi two are products of that pecnliar fanaticism which rules th Mise conversant with every campaigns salesmen wers position of trust tha' alongside the 11 W Mr. nteresting — story citizens not without minds of . The final Domijan's exploits via air climax to the revolutionary doctrines the eharacter, views must be achieved, ruling the country. and a most disquieting page in his. iencies of the can- proclaim Being 1he didates prepared to offer their serv- | ‘commitiees” d man o se planet comes to f« The 3 and their talents, Clyde Tounbaug lory at Flags peared in this e city is fortunate in possess. | OFY is being written before our eyes. FAMMANY JUDGEN UNDER FIRE aff, Ariz., ing mayoralty aspirants on the tick e paper who have indicated in the only has a wide appeal but was stirri; vesterday, pas ire worthy of trust, thus g human document, Tom- lesseni possibility of the elec- | The ousting Vitale of Magistrate Albert orate blundering re New York Supreme d. We haugh, himself ardless of did not the photographic the presence of excitement that can not an astronomcr who 11 the the by the inistak markings on I8 elect think. Lecause of ‘ourt for wccepting a loan of $20,00¢ the Arnold TRothstein. followed by Norman Thomas within e Republican plates indicating | lack o onalism late Th when froin a new sphere, Democratic party and the extrems . gambler, has been to him tionalism within the charges made by he noticed the markin bas shared by of who d of his sensutions. \ ¢ surely wa McDonough a | against 11 other nd Tammany judges as everyone of the millions distinct advant: a g listened and read jury this remarkable account How to ma he best of this ad- | documentary cvidence st time in New presente that ntage stsin the hands of | He prob- too the let arg T This is not the fir the e Donough himsels magistrate system or bank at puaing not to say been under fire being entirely the tunds js about thing such a gage in. Again, this tin s th ofticial to speculat on stock market with ban her erring upon too subservient to the political ma- other ; little, the lidhs lican the most dangerou extreme by saying chine ruling the metropolis. It is ontenders upon the T do primary. cspecially disquict- the definite pub- | only wh the talk- | ing After that | o Republicans functionary can en- n sone o the when most of situation arises, case Judge Vitale t t action from Kan- as in sas, com information of sucti | ing before some a lamentable fuilure to live up to “Vent. the have results a District Attorncey sion of grand the itself is not S e G e posy. | definitely made their choice for Crain, also testi- to has candidats. a thorough discu fying before the it courts; tion, according the official re- jury, u pending and issucs prospective important veform but port of a bank examiner. The n to has little patienc pub. lic with thos L IE LR BR Y this in as admission by the that who misapply money entrustcd important as the their hands. In the THE ¥ ON THL OFIT BOOM NEW HAVEN Kansas district attorney 20,000 per- bank president 70 years of sons annually are charged with charged with misapplication ter years of adversity, the N¢ felonies in the city while only about the number are ever railroad is showing as 13 per cent of imprisonad. This is a b enfoccement that s of funds. on is should caution, His years of cxperiencs | Ha have better vkable w protit hoom g somc cakdown of the best railroads in the country. | law sarcely necds comment —_ But it is wise A increased earnin, not to zrow too en- husiastic zo0dly proportion of A QUIET CANDIDAT) TACKLLES ISSUES Mr. it SUNDRY OBSERVATIONS ON FOREIGN TONGUES just announc- ult of “buck maii he cane When the duy McDonouzgh Government, and an be no obj the Italian school. pro- enough students 1t ds opinion of a great many people to be gave s his th rom t Basically, there can opinion ¢ the slice o nerease was duc | io e Bernadotte Loomis, tax collector liCegy ) tion course in had been should be r uljustment of revenue due |, Still “honest and eflicient” and angnage at the high lected. he duced a comparison of Canadian loop traffic. vided willing to take such a course, there are naturaily in {he noted, with ve- matters duly ent attitud dividends was substan- |y, 16 record of th © 81T o previous too old enthusiastic the Mayor, in his recent nent with who are Mr, Loomis, did not hig Ahastio eXh: return o 2 a share or ghout it that study of f¢ stock nothing to although the, S ; remaining ciciency; what v the entirely his honesty or he riled Loomis was rowas beliv sopular item in curricula, that Mr. ficient folks who 1 of an accomplishment than little u, o 100 ccline more i collecting taxes from sturted dur- | necessity considering the such languages by the aver- I'rom 2 ound themsclves holding ol American. the quite to writc a rather lieavy financial burden well-bred We whether 1o know. however so to commcreial standpoint mastery My unneces- let- McDonough had thi yecord for of a forcizn tongue is cfficiency in mind 0 line con- sary. Anyone wishing a the kind of in for instance and irm in 1° I 1o tax collector an im e he referred whether the time L like tronted him. with the mayor e hglish it will or would t nslated or other side: and h. il negleet, ¥ comes in Fren no heatd ted view jssuc con too ) s o b co t trans »y an expert. much, of 1 knowle of foreign ther cross brid q but the bridgche Al we whe the visited. 1 vdeed 1 we nced to know traveling Know Democratic candidate think ravelin ; cyery ry . Lootnig' activities €0 univer- is view ur ervant. e I- | sa . i travel al- find nd places usually he most it ehared predicat=d upon the casily comprt ar cnoush hended s that ho can yleld a still cxists to co it s ceoinplishment worth while 10 with oreign cluding Itali one ot dor nost expr br handling Loomis on th however, we wish fewer ciple that to cha to sing to us was a dang nan accom- thing akis iy une midsire words sung in Mr. clined to Mcbe tenthe of t naune eay that tongue aL ence, is = WET-DRY PUBLICITY VIA CONGRLSS gressive ideas moot questions of 1y, the I'aonessa v {he Doard iy Donousgh K prohibition his fric was no 1t i M HLLIGIOUS PANNTICISM IN CTHE SOV Donous ckling i€ bad repercussions | | anthorities, there will not be | a desire 1o return to religious activi- | astonishing ! York has | magistrates | ver- | AIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1930. mental conditions the hearing has(0-’000&0&&0&&53*&},.5.‘;L‘;&l/&b&bé&b&“b‘&bb&&&&»&b“&‘l | | | | $588885588. ing a public play than in giving the On the City and Its People | on what has been presented before | committee substantial facts upon it as “testimony™ the vote probably | P34gaa sV dreIPeRCEETEEIITICIIIVIPITVECIVIITETPEIPIR® been a failure. Those testifyng & T S which to base a reasonably accurate will be exactly how the same men have been more interested in mak- |§ Makes Random Observations report. If the committee ever votes | § would have voted had there been no FECTEEFEOPOIPS Political War Horses Their 5 LeSUION Y2 Thus far and up to the momeni, | this has been a painless election. No one has any wounds or scais. Nobody has been insulted. Nobody Factsand Fancies s i ——— Un anyone else could take insult, not o What's the use? mention umbrige. As clections go. |, css, people think you're still in col- |i: has been about the dullest anl lege: and if you wear one, they think | lcast interesting we can recall {you are hald. didate have been sitting knee Inee in offices and explaining wh: they are running and that when they | said they didn't intend to run they really didn’t intend to, but some- — [ thing came up and changed theic Riches aren't everything. You can!mind and now after all they've d take a little pocket change and 2| cided to run but it's all going to | second hand flivver and make ,‘omthv friendliest battle and may i Kids worthless. best man win. ha ha and ho ho. It is probable that words hurled next week. Candidates Bai lctt and Quigley have announc that they would address the bory A great deal of his mental perspir- ation s honest to goodness. 1t's real. Some folks say it's acting but ibe vriter has se:n Mr. Quigley .o verked up in spirit over some pro- ject that there wasn't any possibili- ty of it being counterfeit emotion. ess he begis 1o c.sh in 6on his crensic ability, his campaign wili dud and will de- toulted 1o Mr. In the mean sit Seem to be at Knit all, If you go hat- e & victory Bartlett time the democr md the uproar in the rival oublican camp, it and when the uproar begins to make it- slf heard. Mr. McDenough, to use the argot of the highways, is sitting pretty, and will continue to oceup that preferred position until aft.: the republican primary held. It is possible that will not be content to having a4 detached inter it the fight and that he may chip in a few sentences and p: pliz to add to the gayety of the situation. them how this city should be &d-| it of an open split in the repube ministered. In the excitement of the | ooy e “inis would be an ini- |moment, certain 41 | portant factor :n democratic success, bound to be made which It Mr. Oui Uheated th :]"\"stm;;d:]'“;: other primary, it is not expeeted that e . will hustle to clect Mr. Bartled. He s an unusual man who can| 1o e (0 LGS etiaieiiot maintain a ealm and ordered mind | 5o B R B S0 e in the midst of.a political campaizn | 0 PHUEAEY: 8 epborters wi it S T e T ehnoi] | S e e e R dates for office are — pO- | & oy s B litical reporters use term thin | SN Wbl el skinned—and strongly resent ang reflections on their ability, intea- rity or sincerity. One word, and it doesn’'t have to be a polysyllabic word either—can stir up a lot of argument and as argument waxes the hail fellow well met stuff melts and docsn't appear again during th campaign. Just as the world the sunrise, as the 8 us, it is also waiting to hav. . Quigley open up. Unless he has reversed his tactics, he is about de to unlimber some weighty ments and cast them in the Mr. Bartlett. Mr. Quigley has been a silent campaigner. waves away the thovght of or the old front porch and for the voters fo com for shake and a chat on the condition of the nation. He always has be a g0 getter—and sometimes a getter—aad for this reason a silent campaign arc M. Quigley political it would be can sit back enjoy “The radio should settle the evolu- tion argnment. In a year or two the Jiuman car should begin to close up. h such may t To renounce the world and devots herself to humble service, a woman can enter a convent or clse marry o genius, o 15 i A Why doubt man’s ability to win the war against insects? The primi- tive did it with no other weapon than finger nails. There scems to be no modern | equivalent of a bow of ribbon on the buggy whip unless it consists in | nanging one clbow out of the coupe door. statements will aet part hopping begets bitterness, sensitive the books called “great” by the | crities have little sale, which proba- bly means that happy people out- | number sorcheads. of The shoulders, Why Wastebaskets in Newspaper Offices “In the wastebasket” empty ph t means just that. Wastebasket large. yawning and hungry, may be found in nearly ev- | ry newspaper plant. All may not be int in appearance but they are bought for their utilitarian value not because they have pretty lines. In some instances, boxes are used. In other cases, discarded paper and clippings are gently dropped on the floor and left there until the janitor ives is not an in a newspaper office. The saloons weren't so bad. They | kicked out the drunks instead of sking them to call again sometime. Sailfish that made the rotogravure scction know how a congressman feels when invited to a White House breakfast. is waiting song writer fo) Americanism: A husband too busy to enjoy his money: a fat wife decid- i tee ing to buy another diamond. nev 1 sitting waiting up nothing.” de- Well, in this man is safely “A statue, proves clares a popular cynic country it proves the dead. Wastebaskets are essential to the press. Bvery mail brings its quota of letters, leaflets and statements on this and that. most of which are eventually deposited in that limbo | of literature—the cditorial wastebas- | ket With poctic irony, the sender of a great deal of this mail mark it " and by one way or another | urge Uncle Sam’s postal department to rush it along to its destination. | There is, of course. material which an be and is used by newspapers and it Is with the hope of having their | screeds selected for the elect that | persons with all sorts of programs | to put over. hire press agents and | turn them loosc | The afternoon mail yesterday seemed 1o be no heavier or lighter | than usual. In it the editor received | reat deal of advice and cstions, some of it of interest the rest of it hardly worth perusing. | To begin with, the editor is as-| sured with a great deal of solemnify | by the publicity burcau of a drug | magazine that “there is neither snv‘ perstitions nor imagination behind the old belief that rheumatic persons | can forecast the coming of rain. It fact.” Well, why not let it go at | that? | a 7 n gont aud gers. Mechanics get dirty. yes: but how white collar men invent col- ories and get rich? many lar ace T . who has his share of cumen, must realize that be to his advantage (o get busy and noisy. Mr. Bartlett, sup- perted by the republican organizi- tion, has the machinery by which contests are won. He has plenty of money at his back and many lici- tenants who will take a warm and | personal delight in contributing 1o | the defeat of Mr. Quigley if it ean | A celebrated M. D. calls love a discase, but a diseasc can’t be cured by getting too much of it. An average movic who thinks the silly | program is provided somehody clsc. patron is ene part of the to entertain “Compassion is a quality unknown to primitives.” And even as late as 1890, the waiter brought the check ce-up. b accomplished. Therefore, M. Quigley will find it necessary to stir | imgelf and to do something to ad- Blackened teeth, in Japan. means | VeTtise his presence in the primary the woman is married. Tn some | battle. He always has heen sucec parts of Ameriea the sign is a black | ful in taking an appeal straight cye; in others, frequent use of the [the people. He knows how to s biack in the face and how to himself up into a Jather of indigni- tien. He has personal magnetism-- the kind that appeals to people, tic kind that makes them want to joia his army and march on to the fray sug- | and | o worlk is Telling your trouble doesn't bring | | relief. You just discover that every- | | body else has the same trouble. i i | One thing that makes modern youngsters seem uniquely rotten to| \ middle aged reformer is a poor | - \ | memory. Correct this sentence: “Dick gives } me cverything I want,” said the | A i | wife, “but he doesn't like to hear | / : i | people talk about how generous he ‘ o 1930, Publishers’ ndicate). ht Sy 25 Years Ago Today (Cop: Ground was broken today new garage of the Corbin Vehicle Co. on Chestnut street Dr. McMillan, dry goods merchant | '8 than men is planning to build a three story Judgement and are addition to his Main strect property. | h¥steria in a panic Max J. Unkelbach has charge of the | &1y illustrated in A { Aniong thousands of The Russwin Lyceum has secured | ©F fortuncs. not an injunction from superior court | SUICid! restraining managers of Hartford | Whilt theaters from interfering with the | 0T hands presentation of the show., “On the up window sills, Yellowstone,” at the local theater PRYed o stoic Fedtah cven indul The water department had decid- n.vl;“uunm,; 2 ed to paint all tho hydrants in the | o100 city, Red will be the standard color. The First division. A. O. H.. held very successful social at Hann nory last evening. Professor K v did the prompting. City Clerk Thompson has that there has not heen brought against the city ages growing out of a grade in six years, | There is some criticism of the avowed intention of the commitiee on railroads to report adversely on | the petition to compel the Consoli- | dated road to provide somnie mnner f a device to lessen the third rail According y will not be an 11 mill tax. town of Plainville cent trolley New York. who play the March 13 market ar They Women better los- Letter inclined This was the Big women, stripped sought solice in | daughter is having a dinner party to- night to celebrate her 19th birthday. New York! to - strik- The mos season wa Century weeks a exercise loss - no-account played joke of the on a Twentieth nger to Chicago two | At Cleveland hie received mysterious unsigned tele reading: “Leave train at once, rant out for you." The plungers dis- | immediately stepped — off ¢ They did without hat or overcont feminine prerogative | tracted a cold that York has a half | hospital, thre women who make abusiness | ia. marginal trading, A dozen hrokerage offices strictly feminine clientele crowded. The traders at o'clock and remain until closing. In- stead of hopping about like hens on the proverbial hot stove, they sit placidly in their chairs with note- books and pencils, They are ket vagary s Passc one 0. a tor and their vaulted lady men ir. wrung over Tigh ntleman the train and con- him to the pneumon- Q not a sent viened with with a dways o, on Lexington Avenue various tints for §8. The re non-poisonous and fade ou about fen days. And there is a dog shop in the Fifties that special- izes in giving long haired dogs *pe manents.” It was just a month ago. 100, in our crass optin we pre- dicted hope for the world e arrive dyes dyes in @ cats a ne k stated a suit for dam- change n v sm not inspired by known the e | and are most careful of all in weigh ing financial facts. When the big up heaval desolated hundreds rooms. those patronized by remained comfortably filled ing. watching and hoping for clear- er skies Judzed by the wonien also | cessul in their than men. They arc not so for huge profits for the quick turnover nctting a modest turn. Any number were realizing from $100 to $300 in thi tashion before the Ladies who pit Wall strect are { particular class, | vesented the housewite, I women, chorus girl Ihalf world. Indeed charwomen play hat mar. as T 1 have 34th street at intervals 1 noticed @ man who tip toes alonz with a small hand bellows ap- rently blowing things off build- | Sometimes he will stand of7 | nd admire his handiwbrk for a few and then move on. If hel sceps it up he is going {o wear down | ance to the point of asking | 1l about and I suppose he | out to be another profes with @ smart crack an of hoard oL wonen the dar s of to Mayor conds abl the 10 get along | of ¢ mert amount proved tock manipulations Wpital Ny resis what it i will turn ional Kidder swer is secking within grecdy L five I | limits. fare its as Downtown of Detroit Threatened by Flames Detroit. March 15 (UP)—Fire threatened a block in heart of downtown Detroit toda) firemen battled to control a bluze that roared up through the tive floors of a build- v occupied by the American Up- holetering company he Globe Paper company. fireman L.ouis y when a v a week A recent perfumed discovered debucle their Lgitin not confined Lvery type professional, stenographer. ind ladies of th innovation leather. that to leather new is shoes © Manufacturer many the smell of ordinary is repugnant. With the process the pleasant odor remains indefinitely wits 10 a ren th 1les the i = s | | T the *hil B s theatrical hus- night after rrested the nid third decr in bt - who m 0 had opencd that the thiy loiterin \ Gray th One If. was dooriniin 1t seriov I they =hot a med brick. and “I'h oldest him heneat a4 Ry B suffer to mouth. flop boys who pack them hov coming s rowill in her shark nds like and mitten prople he e th of bei Amcrica’s history impression of lmportance ! S0 propaganda of i} 1Prancine in the must One ma rimor: of a depurtment home {o | ron. with voice. 1o another foyet store: T the cocklails, M) o depart- Advertis- hu 19 Naught Svndi- cate, Ine.) (Copyright mix la | | where. ‘qu:, | searched and lids lited | ditional | Blows ine Then along comes the declaration by the head of the department of therapeutics of a western college of medicine that “coffee increases both mental and muscular power and less- | ens fatigue.” So we give three lusty | cheers for Bahia, Brazil. Next comes the dire information | that women are “racketeering” along | the Mexican border. They bny pe fumes and cosmetics in Mexico, | where they enter from France duty- free and then foist them off on an| American department store as “re-| turned goods.” The profit lies in the | duty which is being collected by the | smuggler instead of by Uncle Sam. | Interesting, but distant. Airplane operators are not satis fied with insurance conditions in the industry, the publicity bureau of an aviation magazine thunders. And it then goes on to explain why, but our curiosity was not sufficiently keen to sustain interest in knowing any- thing more about it. From the same press agent — he apparently has a large number of fat accounts, the lucky fellow—hurtles the fact that| the Soviet government is planning | industrial fecing units for the 30,-| 000 employes of a group of factor 1(‘\" now under construction. That didn’t| put much of a kick in the day. W passed along to the next letter, from federal department, that federal hunter: I fraud in claims for bobeat bounties | in the eastern part of the state of | Washington. And we should get up| and run around the desk six or seven | times for that! In the first place wo | didn’t know they had boheats in| Washington. In the sccond place we didn't know that they paid a bounty | on their pelts or epidernis or what- | ever the hounty hunters pay bounties | on. And in the third place, we didn’t | care anyway. So there. { Districts of the land which have | something to offer the traveling public have been quick to adopt the methods of priv business and | {ypewriters bought in the name of publicity click and clatter continual- ly. From one place. which shall not be named, comes a statement that | visiting sportsmen have almost doub- led in number during the past five years. Very interesting but not espe cially what one would call sizzling | news. | S0 now you know why they have| wastebaskets in newspaper offices. | | declaring | When Bobbie Is Late | For Supper, As Usual | in New Britain is| jor difficulty | Fvery parent confronted with one that few of them solve effectually. When the youngster is scyen. or cight, or nine years old—or maybe little older—what is to be donc when he comes home “late for sup- e The kid is told to he home at fiv o'clock. That doesn’t mean a thing half the time. Dad himself, when | he was that age. wasn't punctual when his mama laid down a similas rule. G S C, at in a letter on this sub-| valuable hint to every parent in ritain—and elsc- Her letter, deservedly of wide publicity, first appeared in a| western paper. We reprint it for the good it may do: | “Although my son is enly mine | vears old he has already given me cause to moun ‘Where is wan- ng boy tonight?” He is requir- ed to come in from play at 3§ o'clock each afternoon. More often thans not he is a few minutes late and, sometimes a half hour. But when the clock strikes 7, and ths| wretch s still abroad, the occasion | calls for much maternal hand-wring - | ject. gives a New my his is what happened recently. | [ came home late to dinner to find | Bob missing and the houschold in | a state of hysteria. The neighbor- | hood had heen combed. garag from cis- terns. Ever since his powers of lo- comotion have developed, Bob has| been guilty of these mysterious dis- appearances. ‘Che fact that comes hack as inevitably as the tra- cat mever seems 1o lessen strain of his absence. | On that evening of trouble 1 had| zuests for dinner who advised the old-fashioned licking. But I am an ardent advocate of “sparc the rod no matter what happens. | don't see what right parents lhave to pound the flesh of their children. | are a nice emotional outlet | for the parent, but of doubtful valu: to children. We were arguing the | point when Bobbie came in, plainly ared to death, Never in my life have [ seen him so dirty. Hair askew, face coated | with grime. trousers torn and shoes muddy. Picces of straw clung about | him here and there, mute evidences ! of some wild adventure. I prefer- red 1o isnore him utterly, but curi- osily pushed me to a stern question., ! ‘Where have you | A ghted me. couldn’t come hom: course, he would learn not to when lies are so plainly The straws gave me whereabouts. He been playing in th he the to been e boy held mc o 1 ot will | lict When questions incvitable clue to his probably ound, and had | that is forbidden territory. You cannot cat at our table to- night. You're too dirty, and beside I just don’t want you.' It sounded like a mild dictum and T admit that 1 felt like shaking the socks off him. But with critical guests weighing in the balance, i | heroically refrained. Bob knew what he was in for. Hours of painful ex clusion from the family group. It breaks his spirit—crushes his soul. He flew upstairs to the source of soap and water. But before he had restored his pristine cleanliness, din- was over downstairs, “‘I'm hungry,' he wailed. ““Then get your own dinner. not interested.” 1 replicd “While he was ecating cold {ood in the Kitchen I took his little Lrothes David into the bathroom and locked the door. David got in the hathtub and we sailed boats and played witn suds and shricked and howled with pleasure. Bob came and stood out- side and smelled the warm, pleasant odors of soap and talenm Now and then he Kicked the door viciously Vecasionally he squeaked rer- in heartbroken But no on: d Dav shouted and sang and splash- wd When cmerged and Do aw the immaculate David in woolly white sleeping snit wiih damp red curls clinging to his brow he howled, ‘I want th. too." ‘“*Sorry. The hot water's gone!' | “Bob suffered scvercly. He know a ' Dowder Mother a voice e and | we have cxposed a | € {lowed that 1 believe the only bad person is he who makes thosc whose fate it is to live with him unhappy. HA® had made us unhappy, given us bad time. In turn refused the comfort of comradeship. He was an outsider—a pariah. So he went ‘og bed in misery and bawled it out alone Wi Mysterious Mystery Solved by the Victim With mystery novels selling in ever increasing volume, with crime-of- the-month clubs coming into vogue with scaled solutions to murdere contained in the backs in books, and with the Herald's daily ¢ Mys- teries” keeping otherwise respectable citizens awalke until dawn, the urge, upon the Observer has become too great and we have had to give in. We therefore submit a baffler which we defy you to sol James Wrenchingham, on arriving® home on Tuesday evening. looked at the clock and saw that it regis- tered noon. Suspecting immediate- ly that something was wrong, hw went into the kitchen and therd found a man lying face down upon the floor in a pool of blood. Without stopping to inspect the body or ever to wipe the blood off the new linole- um, he summoned the police. Medi- 1 Examiner Kutasoff Legzoff, on extracted a .3 probing the wound. caliber bullct, while Detective Ser-# geant Luke McDumm found, upon close examination, two knives. thre bolos, a dirk. six stilettos, and a meat clever lying about the room ir plain sight. The police stated that the murder had been committed with a blunt instrument. Suspicion fell upon Mr: ingham, but investization that she was visiting her San Francisco. Further revealed that there was Wrenchingham, but if there hadg been she would have been visiting her mother in San Francisco. This proved the police point and got Me- Dumm a licutenanc A dark-haired stranger seen snooping about the house thu day after the murder, and it was thought he might have returned and committed the crime, Confirmations that it was the day AFTER, how- cver, made this theory slightly mn- tenable, and McDumm was sent back to pounding pavements. 5 Lfforts to identify the murdercd man failed, and the body was turn- over to relatives for burial in nameless grave. Then Wrenchingham had an idea? sked to see the body azain. Who was the murdered man? Who killed him? (At this point we are going 10 g¢ one better than the ordinary puzzler, for here is the golution) Mr. Wrenchingham, upon ing the body, discovered that he himself was the murdered man. H then suspeeted something was wro 50 he pinched himself, woke up sworc ofi pickles and milk as midnight diet. . Wrench- disclosc® mother in check-ups no Mrs . had been a He cxamin- and Observations On The Weather * Wasiington, March 15 for Houthern New England: with slowly rising temperature urday: Sunday increasing cloudiness and slightly warmer, probably fol by rain Sunday afternoon o | “orecast Jai sat night. Forccast for Eastern New York: Fair with slowly rising femperature saturday: Sunday clondy and slight- Iy warmer, probably followed by? rain Conditions: ssure mains low from Eastern Hudson Straits southward over the Canadian mari-¢ time provinces and thence south- eastward over the ocean. There will be showers Saturday and Sunday in the South Atlanti % states, probably spreading over the lower Lake region and the Middle Atlantic states during Sunday. The temperature will be lewer in por- tions of the South Atlantic states\ Saturday, but it will slowly Saturday and Sunday Ohio Valley and the lower region castward to the Atlantic > S LABOR UNION March 13—Anoth: find the right of interfere with non-union ng on a union job wa yesterday when Dominick stio, Waterbury mason. star $3,000 civil action against tl Stone Masons. Plastur Finishers, Tile anl Union. No. 16. charged with conpire 1 rise om the Lake coa SU Waterbu legal effort unions to men wor started Anasa; od Bricklayers, to . Cement Marbl defendant twice ers Setters is havin deprive i making plaintiit of living. A means of With the near Marathon Greek city \thens adequate water founded in 1 completion a dam ¥ ar, the have its since it of early next will ply fir was tted I'vess Ploto Associated P'ress 1'hoto president of the of people’s eom- missars, . Alexis Soviet conneil