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The Huron Expositor, 1930-08-01, Page 6� , ...... :�.,Ii­".� � :0!� �, ".!!'%4 . .. , �'.�.. 1" " , � , , - �,�:` -1i 'W", IF 7�:`. is:', ,,.!1A�1110� 1. _ .%, .1 � , I , . ,--,,I t'�­;�'i, 114011T." 17 N " , ,� .. , .'. ,�, 11 , . �%I,�,A`N`,f *6� �,"Ir�:,_,Vl_%M�D, �,,,�IIY!I,��".�IlAv��iii�'lli�N;,,��'I'li�,'�I ". 7, �11, ,- � . � , , , ., 'I � , , I R ", �', �, , "' a. - " ",_"AW1­W111.,. '.J � , -­ � .'411' � 'J. Lo , , I � .1 . �, I 11 i:: - ­ % 1� 1,-_111:_--_1. p i��, � g, 4,0"4g ,.� 0" . ,Q � ,. . I ,.� ;10,11' -., 11 ;` !;�`11'.�,,�,Ilily,'Id� I - V ­ ''ml -,, -, �� - 01 M.�� ,`� , i ,a , M1 - -",�,;kv -, - , "Ri, W""", m, 1011 "I 1","', - ­­ , -- � - % ,.I . ­ � "O � , 4 - - - .16 f E N , i �. !, , , A -4 '40T 0 � � Aa , FO* .-,--,-,�',;*,;",g, �1 � �' ,010,`." 0,04 X "Aq, hIP1,11 I F I W- I ,, , , _10 ,. ". 1 , � # -, .5 ,,� I . 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", _� 11 41 E ,';i 4 �p .14 ", , of:�`= otan. =.& "I �,�� �� ,, I , ��4,r-1 �,�%,tuo'� ,�,,,;; ��-�, -,-,i�n,,�,,,-� 1.7" , I* W., 4 . n, � . fau o 0 , pi , A ) " iitf"# , " - i Al N ��� : #f��t $%,�,�t W, A.#r4.q%,1QXWA 1 .1 "'i'M", 2.1,4RA, V,m,� , ��,%s o0onigg. " 1 � .i 0._�� I," 0 I ' '-4 0 .,. 0 P 1-11 �� I - ,% ','� I . . �il_ ,". ,-';' ­ , , , 4'*�'ve of a , . , , RMF Al" I ,'.,:,�_�,-v,,, , # of an abi ty O do enk W�,Qex ORP", TAme W Wu� _ 'hi's, =0. " .117-F ?p , , ,F.,�, , ,�, . M , �,,' me poli'064na to UP 9 Tb,q-: I , , , 2,'� W A . , , . � d" ,. - A , � "N 1 " _ ` sp�lq not part �'t I , . . � $..�, . ­. , . -) 10 # .� �N wl 111.1, �, , . � , f 9r, 11 51R, f . I I.- : 7�1 : , 11� ,� yr,11 � ��s . "-. � I . '" , I . ,,, M4 ! ipk ,ni P ,but, it , 'that. 0 , 11 F-044 -,,,, ,.4p Preft fOA4 .. I wr! , , , I 11 I � "I" ;,��:�%3, .�i:�,,,��,,,,,,I"i.�A*,.:',�;��,� . I I ieulwrly. VIA Ood was OUA , , "N . , , " - gv� t1a A'Aya. . ...XX 'y 00 1, � VIRU'g'� 0 � "hqy,44 4 . "' _ , " ., pment th I " . , dse'd 4avww , , -0, AM - � ,�, "'M , :A oseut4tivea ,,F,. reporter, -but tho-Toift gpfen 'a no I IrWR - I . � 1.: .,., 10111 O,u .mod, that laoliticiam�� qt the firiest of lus , . � I . ­. �� ,Jyn"I . la � A,, -� I I I I I I 1 .17 because 40- toulld" bo ,as, '14a'W'm, ift.-AgAig, 'am-, " ,% �:,�,, "144 ` r 1p United States Sen- , ; :more was 'AT ,,am 1, - . . . ,� ��i.� "', . 40 1DO uridvx# , generation- in � . - I I ., I . , - I 11 ' I , , , I. I I . I - the � . 1� , 0 11 wb� should lila'. . ' ) �1­ - - ,J�!�, I " " "I il taod are Americau. Politicians and or it. R-9- 11401,nag,aA 11ho Aarwusm r'.4%,jim - I ^..-W1%FP W15, ,EL R, i ' _. 11 � 1:1, � . , �w , . , 't 0. �* * .1, I I . . k F ' I te,. Thousands of his fellow 'muntry� ­.. - 6 :from &rJObinep w - .. " I , - h �. � "P. , F. I., , " ", AI 11 I Y, 11YM`-, % , a quesVp - . gr severa$. ye�X.s Pa , . : -WOU0 0461 V ��,,�, Y I., A , , ,is rais,ed not kiy prw � . � . .�?., , , W . *t, had hm�rui .well . ,, � .. ., I I .1 . I . ON . L ,,,#,g Moll:thly deT�O'St 'fty ar6 funny in - ,..� greik,� ,. , tNewS. ,,� ,L- 11 4 11 � 16 0 . I I �t$ 9$ from - I �, . , � .,i,`--' 1, 11-UPPIO but because. be had the couTage to been � , Qn, sw � .1 �� � Z, .A 't -encY " . -1 _ t3i n men favored him for the Pre-sid . . I , . it '"'I "N"'.., �, asiastic . rtpr o�,lefther Prem- � � , I � � ., ,� "! " - - � � .1. -1 � . __ — 0 -, !� .1 "" I I -.,.. 11 . .to $ .:., , . i . .., �, I � 0,1* King or Rqrx, !Mx. Rqu-nett. In any express his convic%ions which happen- I -L $500 _$00 -in cash, never chequQs. orlt�`s.? 13edau4e wi"k �r..UUMOrj4 .. I I ��;., I . ,�, I I I I I . that t6 real answer , .Zttt ­� r 11911� I event, we as4ipne __4n, a baialk? go is known -to hume ,one,<d � the'outivti�, mvilized *an. Puroqts gme, -o , Ap %1� ed not to coincide with the current t , I I ,�� . , ,.,%r(,)v , .., 1, �­, . , %t eAemes , . 41� . _. the whole business of,politics and g9v- . , 0, I d their boys.- , I , ..", .. ", ,0, , to the queWon, Vhy hA*o-politicia-As . ' . IN �. . i 1, � _ 1. -ojudi of the voters of Alabama, been-e0go,ged, in stook� deals; which in- evolved to give, vewit to'pout,up- .',4411�r -SuudF._� ,, , , I : .11 , 11 . , . pi oes ernmerit to the altogether incapable . " I I I I.P. ,� . v-- he lost all his influence a -ad eventual. _ wotkd hundreds Of thousands of dol- twbooed emotions.' Through it, lie 4. ' � - I ..V - t4, -,;; .1 � 5 " � �, 4 � to, lie? Is 5,ibstaritially the same 49 �'ft+'­­ �- I � ", 1, "'I. -I . . Wt Re he " " ' h , .,; ......... .� � ,�� . that be , . ,Q�,, - �.,. - t�.ho answer to the other questloa, Why could and, did, borTOw taing release from repression and,op. One con, )�o. A. great out br fiuy-�, . , � .�, " rl&i,� ..... . I 'I, "A , . , .0 . . ,� "!, , ". .., I � . . ly stopped out of office rathex than and 14rs" ,., - ' -, - 0"' i J " �11 . � .. .. .. "Why Politicians irifinitely w * . "Ad' M,V.er -and- Mo %hndJw M 13 0 a R ,; (lees everyone. lie? risk certain defeat. On. the other ored far all of m? Ought thousandf f Dim his. friends presololk. Laughter is a,4areotio,. It ,*here; only'l"4X­ ponOiI-.�4 . W . . , . . 1. 4 . , -,_at a timp, Ir . W', , o �.A " _, � I S the title of an article d of revolt, . I . ­ IMP � E � _ . Avis'a 01i'dev a "I :�- A Have� to Lie' 4' In the poli'ce' forte he is - al 6 iaid to is one of civilized manAs One ,self are neede#.�_�Qrd Gorell L , 1 4� A � 9'' . hand, there is Senator Heflin who has !tot the better type, instea SO !10 , i�T*o:or: IR . " I In . -y involve I """ : I � I . I . i -9t4WRJSt 4iilloiol ,- "I - 1�' in Coli%,r)s ,by Frank LIL Kent, one of been. a gene -ration in, politics for no ing against the humbugger -4 have been. an invpterateoffice, borrow- freeirig. himself fliv-m I I . I ; , I ,b%ft _-,�* , ,�,J1fVk00W._,. - . �,,� recognize the To,o many peopAe, fw6m t 141. ..'� ". "; , W6 � " I , � � 11 . ,� o the broad view, oppre, I 'Oniviefoll fol 1 . , , " . , I.:� �4, . tho best-known of American political other reason than his gift for appeal- to to'k r. fflUt -he faithfully paid, back the of re,alizing desires in e country �, , , � , n "S.- IrI91 on - - . .. , � N.; writer,%. and author of . � . to atww, � '' - , $ �� I .. , i V an article on, voters, feel about e., . boteieA Wit 1 . Maps � lived "' , Wftf wft 9 I q 9 ,� . j.. ing to the passion of unthinking mot- limititions of the fee., a' looms-, which, were generally orer-night Way- .. have . 41, M , ", , , � - �& , , , ., , , - I . I ".7 -.4 �,.�I, - , o Amaerican Mer- fooling them the 'way people � l ''. Calvin 0oolidge, in Th ers, There is also Cole, Blease now I amommodations. Around tne office, One -of the elernents of the sitwess in the - city,­Honry .,F16rd. : - *ow �4 ,, tW�,o ", ".6, Wq*-;f4r: , . . , . - , "I �, I eux-j whigh ' . ,�'i, 'A 9 , 'St � i� 1 , , ". is said to have frozen the campaigning for renomination i10 the bout te%ng fairy tales to children. s - - of Aono . en, is tUD lure I ,� th J O'' 1i , b A " I �r' . it was understood that he had inli4ait s In' Andy, th . ON .. . , ,6044 �4 "I T:m-:�c �4e � I I I , I A a a 5!1 . � of that states- not the man main, thing to get elect- -6 I riiilv�i 04rsoo I I. % blood of some admirer's *ted State Senate on the platform ed mougy'from his father. It now of the forbidden. I -But. .they ure as 1. . 1. I � ­V.l ,!r �. . ­ . "I Unj s ' . . 1. ,, ., . I I'll " . , , i1q, �' � . . man and to have suggested that the it ed?" estate innocent as the day is, long?" I -can Tomato Crop Improy,enient. . a , if -ad- U�1!1' of lynching negroes who attack whi e - appears that his fothet's .. I . a I ibe-ki4 li'sity r. i 1:: � � ,.law against trea,son, dhould be revived women . amounted- to about $500. Later on hear you ,Rrot6sting. I�Thoir stuff As. Am extensive imptlovement program 11 u .a _0 "Ohgos; bekAipe. "Or . in the United 'States arld made- to ap- , , 01(y, A - tr .. �'. The former Senator Jas. W. Wads- SOMEBODY'S ANNIVERSARY an uncle is supposed to have hand- absolutely clean," - I p . r, i. � . -OF04h oin" , � ., . . for the tomato oVop branch of farr4- , a , . . 1, - ply to criticisms -of American public worth i - i�ndowed him. In xealit5r, Right. But a gTimt 'mayay .t � i 400*4' �, . a another illustration. He was If this is a ibirthday you hav� for� 9011161Y . hings �, - , � , men. Mr. ,Kent has had an experience gle was getting his money thTough are f Dlibidden that'are ing -has lieen planned' by the. Oritarl'o . . ,i - w 10 F- � . : 1. as � I W ,� Iv. , � 1.11 a man. of judgment and breeding and gotten until just now -turn to Your Lin in civilization r '"Ic , prit . : � � �11 - I of some aO years with Americ,4n,,poli- wealth. He was'of the type whicli in telephone. A greeting by long-dis- his connection with the gang life, of not unclean in the le4st. ' One- of these Agrieultural Colloge, for Northumb� . ,. ... .", . . .�, . ticians and he has no lofty opinion England makes public affair,- a suc- tance telephone is a form of ritmem.- the, city'. He was getting it from is to talk improperly. From thq time erlarid and adjoining cofirities. Ac-, . . * , . .1� of them as a body. Nevertheless, he T. H. Jones and Mr. Butler I I 1. . cessful and honorab,lo career. I_1" brance, that is always appreciated as members of the police force whose we are children we are *told oon,,tant_ cqrdingly . ' , / : , of ,the- Ontario agricultuT41 s-aff for . , � ,, - � " thinks they are not greatly different ,night have been a nominee for the a compliment and it will take you prord-otions he negotiated, and from ly to speak correctly. If we - do not, . . . UNIVE -' . ITY . I r _ fro -in, or inferior to, citizens of any presidency in 1928 but for the fact only a few minutes, for out -of town membe6., of the gangs whom he sup- we are punished. All through Our the past few weeks hp;i;�, ,conducted '. "': �, .. .,' . : � . , t, . , � " , . ,I ' 1, , 11� I other class. They certainly are not - experiments -on forms in the. Quinte , . " , I T, deserving of the smug attitude of the that he did not helfeve prohibition was calls are as simple to make now Plie'd wi,6 information, lie is also lives we unconsciously lo4g'to re�urri ' . I :: � ' � . , � the payroll of to the happy, carefree days of child tri sp y! -natp . I �� Ef -1 - - - . �?' enforceable -and had the honesty to as local ones, Evening rates, start- said to have been. on � - dis ct in the ra ng -of tol " 41�1 professional and businessmen who say in bed's befbt6 being tri-iisplanted WE . ZN . I I 4, t -politics is a dirty game ',Ind that say so, Since the Republican party ing at 7.00 P.m., are cheaper than a dog-rocing outfit. ish babble. Amos In' Andy, in effect, ! To�iiat und4r this, treatmeat were � . . , � " " . .�) � , tha in New York State, outside of the cit- ever before. It is .probably accurate to say that take 'us back to ,the happy days of VI . � . , I ("I to be successful in politics one must ies, is dryWadsworth war. automatic- Lingle ,owed his downfall to probibi- "eenie-indenfe-n-drde-mo." - sprayed, at various stages Of growt'h � . 0 . ... be crooked. . ally eliminated. Had he kept this - tion. Like many other moraing news- Puns and baby talkl No -wonder v�jth 6ordelaux mixtgre.' The plants ONTAPI 011 1. . � I.. .. ,NJT. Kent estimates that there are' would probably papermen, and 10hieagG citizens who children -and, grownups:alike are ex- then ypere. distributed 'to different . � . � I . . � � . 11 in the United States some 600,000 vOt- MURDER OF LINGLE NO PUBLIC I . will keep thorn under LONDON , '. CANADA ' I I ; I .. be in public life to -day beco,ning all worked late at night,,be had formed tremely fond of ,them. 'For the chil- growers, "Vho I I . I l. � ers competent to pass sound judgment the time more and more avai'able as the habit of dining at the little re -s- dren, "the, lid is ,off." Improper ]Hklg- close observation, dwing the present ____�'. I 1: t * CALAMITY I . . upon -any pclit�,^al issue tha arises. ' As 1: . ; 'dential candidate. It must be taurant of "Big Jim" Colosimo, once lish is not only Permitted, it is furi)ij se , ,on. , .�� , . . But since they are scattered all over,a Pre,51 I I I . . I .. 1 . . I � .1 "1111 .. I I. - .11 it is impossible for plain from these examples that in cer- it was generally suspeatei, if it a humbile, Sicilian chef who sorved his and admirable.' Modem Spraying. . ., 4 1 � . I the United States, have to was -not po -t the customeri in his shirt sleeves and was But the ' for tilki - - , I �, I , tain circumstances politicians ', -sitively known, tha necessity , ng 'Pro- 'Spraying pra,pticet-have, unliirgoue I ; them to unite in the election of any- � k - lie if they are to be elected to .office. ramificabons ,of Chicago's underworld glad for -a dime tdp. After prohibition perly is -by no mefins the -only o:pprei- radical -changes in the last quarter of admitted to the torrace where the , � � body. The candidate for office, there -clusive And a more satisfactory an usive dqu2,,cte-,s, the. came, Colosimo entered the. bootleg.. sion under which we chafe. We are Cegards, band ,played, the Queen being . eztended into police bea T reio,s an apple grow- . , ". " fore, who addressed himself ex - on it would be difficult to s 9 a century. Whe V*Y fond of music. One af ternoon --- �.: ly to intelligent, public-spirited men reas UPIPIY- ,city hall, the offices of the pro, ecuti-ng ging racket and in a few years bad all Oppressed by somebody -or some- er was once, content to applya single � . _Vx. Kent gives the instance also of att�rneys, the, judges' cha'rabers and earned for himself the� title of "vice thing. One man is oppressed by his an unfamiliar tune comipletely capdv- I .. who bad sufficient interest in politics I to­d�ay many of them spr4y as . she sent a maid of hon- . , an honorable and able candidate who even the executive mansion itself, but lord." Lingle and- Collsimo were boss: a second -by his competitors- a spray . ' ated her, and I �. as well not be a candi- many as nine time� to cont.,61 apple I � to vote might to -ward the close of a campaign found nobody had ever dTeamed that includ- friends and. as Colisimo sank (or third by his bank; a fourth by 'the or to- hsk -the bandmaster the nuum . date, seeing that the 60,0,000 alone - scab. It is true that insects and ; himself addTessing a meeting Of somp ed in this sinister net would be any- rose) into the underworld, I -Angle stock ticker. -Government op,Dresees of it. ,'She returned presently but , I could not elect him. He is therefore 1,500 anti�viviscetionists. No rf,port- body connected with a newspaper. If sank witlihim, or at any rate, widen- some of us; religion others. Many fu-ngus, pests have -greatly increased seemed, embarrassed. The Queen tap- . obliged, to attune his remarks and I in numbers 'and' that their working . � �F- will , ers were present -and his manager indeed, that incredible rumor had ed hi sacquaintance of the new crop penple are oppressed by -poverty; & p;d her gently with her tan and said., 1. �, shape his conduct so that thov thelurged upon- him the fact that her3� -spread, it would have concerm-d per- Of 'Chicago criminals. Thus he be- few by riches. Thousands are op- sCai;on' is ' upparently longer. In any rell, dear, did he tell- you what the 1 7 seem pleasing,in the sight of , I was a chance to round up onough h-aps an advertising solicitor or a cix- came acquainted with Capone 'His pressed by. ill -'health and by real or event.the rrvodor�i orchardist has found tune was?" "Yes Ha'arn " replied the ... . thirty-fiNre million four hundred thou- , otes to secure 'his election. The anti- culation manager, but ce,rtain1y not friendship with Capone wos well fancied hard luck. Children are op- that it paysv to -spray early and often. maid. "He said'it wa's "Come where 1, � sand others who voted in, the last � v ir older Spraying appliances have shown note- the ,booze is cheape*t.'" I , �� Ivi-visectionists were not interested in a,reporter. Now it appears that known in -the Tribune .office and 7as, pressed by their parents, thei ." kk � . presidential election. Of the. -se. Mr. worthy improy�ements. The, old heavy .- One Summer evening the author 11 ' . I Kent says, "Unless you like to fool I the general issues, They merely hun- through the wiles of Alfred ("Jake") valued by that office because Lingle -brothers and sisters, their teachem . ade by early ,pumps End OOz- nd another buy were running home 11 . ubt that gered for some polite words of en- Lingle, the paper which describes it- was able to go to Caponle, at any hour 'One quick and easy escaPe from all rain, in I , yourself, there is not much do zles has changed to the finest -rist o- � . " - .. icouragement. So the Candidate Pro- self as the greatest in the world, has of the' day or night and get informa- these forms ,6f stress is wit and hum' along Long Walk, when 6 ladV d-riring I . fog covering -trees thickly, tho-rotighly, a of horses, with a 'little &oom . , �. the great iiia -i I ceeded to hand them out, telling them been subtly hooked to the triumphal tion for the newspaper. The value or. But so -me forms Of humor are air I . the I I ... I intelligent, impen ous to reason; that,, he t of s and with less material used. P Xh:eol up behind, n 11 what he certainly did not believe, that chariot of Al Capone and othe�'Jrrflu- of that information, in t - ligli more " ure-fire," as they say* in the ' ... . , - they can -be reached only through I they were an intelligent body o ential hoodlums and murderers. 11 That after eylents, might well, be question- show .business, than, others: Aside . drifve. She drew up and said, "You j : I . wayed wholly Injuries to Hogs. are Eton ,boys, 'are You not?" PWI . I their emotions and are s Yonal inter I ple and that if elected they could de- is the sad plight at,the wornent of ed. But in the bitter iivwl,ry for news from tl�eir girbled words and -Puns, ' because .. .1. by their prejudices or perr - i pend on him to study the 11101'ement the Chicago Tribune, -a %pe-mele the:.t among the Chicago -paperS, it was Amos In, Andy use few if any jokes Quite serious losses are sometimes said they were -and in a hurry ,� . ests." It is clearly a waste of timeiand if convinced to give it his suP- causes tears to florNv everyix"here the thought enterprising for one of them or "gags." They rely mainly for their suffered. from bruising of maF!'et hogs they were late. "I will drive you as , , I I'll .� , to talk political sense to thew.. The I port. truth is known, and especially in the to have a representative who was laugh� on situations. . . while in trairsit. The ,bruising caus- far as Windsor Wolge,", she said. - , es a discoloration of the flesh which ,qum.p in. And you, George, j' f�. people as a -wbole cannot stand com. Alection, -news- cheek -by -jowl, if not ind,!ed hand -in- Their comedy is of the black -face . JUMP . . I plete sincerity in politics. The gread This speech saved him the offices of the Other Chicago ith the more illustrious mur- variety. This always is "suTe4ire." the, packers, are forced tO cut away, out and walk back home." So the - mass stomach is not strong enough , but breing a man of honor he has nev- papers. The Tribune - -explains at glove, wi destroying the side perhaps for the boys jumped in and reached school on, 11 .. er since failed to reproach him -self great length that it did not know the derers of the, locality. From time immemorial,, people have ' ..;.�, for the undiluted truth. . I un, of those minorities Wliltshire.�acon trade. Much -of this time. They I�amed later that the I" Mr. Kent does not share the general I with the fact that he desce-nd,,d to i real character and functions of Lingle -In fact the Tribune had -not the always made f injury is d6be at either the loading or kind lady, ,or, as Sir David calls her I - -angle votes out of a crowd for whose ingle nor among them who did not Oeak the . ,N for whose murderer it has offered a slightest fault to find with L, , - 11 I reverence for the theory that the voice rejudic�s he bad nothing but con-! large -reward, which it would prdbab- the faintest suspicion of him until language well. . the uAlloading end, of the trip from with old worW-grace, the dea, �,x ma- ll of the people is the voice of God for P the farm to the patker through rough china,.*as Princess 'Christian. Latbr 11 I.. itenirpt. But bad he not done so he ily pay with better grace for accept- �Lfter his death when- dt'squ,eting As for situation, Amoit:,ri" An iy use . he says, "when the American people handling, which could, be avoided with 1, . wo-uld have been defeated and the. able proof that Lingle never -worked rumors bogan to eddy about. These the time-honored device 'of the big through t on Sir David became a friand . decide an ispe -rightly it is a piece of loss would have been considerable to � for it, or indeed had never bftn born. rumors extended to. other newspaper fellow bullying the little fellow, who, he use ,of secure weli-b'irilt Prince Leopold, the Queen's youngest 11; luck and not the result either of in- the people whom he represented. This' That Lingle was that airwrialy a reporters and other newspapers. It is however, triumphs in the end by dint loading chutes and a little extra care son, and a charming. cultivated -Youth, � , . stinct for the right or of intelligent i I �, � prompts _Vr. Kent to ask the following! scoundrelly newspaperman seems to said that perhaps a dozen men, osten- of greater smartness. Andy is lazy, in providing -plenty of straw in the though delicate. He matriculated at ., grasp of the issues. And when we railroad. car. Christ Church and took a private LL 11 , i questions: "Does not the end just sibly newspapp=en, have a sinister stupid, conceited, domineering. Amos . 1". . . \ elect the best man to office it isn't be- ifY be only too true. There is a -wan ray , �_� house in the city, f or in those days I " , cause he is the best man and �ve have! the means? Would not the refusal of sunshine in that other anornally- connection with the underworld. How is industrious, submissive, moddst, but . Improving the Herd. royalty was not permitteol'to -eningle I ; I I. � re o � found it out (generally -the est man I of men of character and canacity to So far, indeed, as Canadian papers they could be serviceable to thq*gan,g- comparative clever, This, too is "su � i In a recent addres8, W. R. Reek, with the common herd of unde v-gradu- " indicated I be It is the'Adea, underlying the - gets beaten) but because of a large]play along the ,ines are aware -that he was a... -reporter sters, and -at the same time apoear to fire.,, Superintendent of the Ridgetawn Ex - ;y � to nothing. ,tion of crime Mv t t and Jeff comic strip the widest ates. He, rwas -one 'of the original, I equivalent to a 6-omplete surrender Of who wro be diligent, inj the. eoll.qc ..* . . .1 I It perimental Station, urged the veed for members of the University 'Musical 'k..., . �1. I -my easily be uriderst&d. . A read of all newspaper cartoons. .11.11 - — -..--. ____ —==== I . '. news n from St. Louis is responsible is also the secret -of 'Charlie Chap-lin,s cow -testing and declared that breed- Club, and found great pleasilre in I - I . I reporter ers have not made sufficient progress pl�i;ying and singing. He wAs also I ::. . . for the, smoking out of the otheirs, success. along this -4 11ine. "Why Work with low interested, in. chess, and we should, I�U . I . .&I'a and he is expeet,pd to,declare what he Another "sure-fire" quality is the � " ff producers?" he asked. "It is the low judge had probably a less lively time . 111 1� � , knows on oath. After all, when de- Aanos In' Andy comedy is that their pr�oducers and poor crops that are, in., than -his elder brother, the Prince of * -1 I 4 � tectives, judges and, othev public of- humor is grim, Carefully analyzed, juring Our maxkets and it would, be NN-a.es, BuL the Queen -had a special �, MOW, ficials have been corrupted by the there is nothing jolly about their ma- impossible to secure a martket that f 0. " nolness for Leopold and- after his " . W, I wealth of the -Chicago hoodlums, why terial. The characters are in constant L ­..� ou C a n [,-,vm roo would -be profitable for the P0 ­'T crops death never forgot those Who h" 1;.1. 40 . should it be expected that scv,re, re- difficulty; thei rfinancial and, lo-ve af- or inefficient cows. Don't expect know . 1�. . . porters would not be found -iena'r? fairs are always in a muddle. But . n him. � They had something to zell, which they make the best of a bad bargain. someone, .else to clean up your diffi- ,It happened that some time later 11 culties for you. Tackle them your- in Scotland, Sir 'David Wary visiting a I I - they thought they could. dispose of This is known asi ftbe humor of the Al '.. 0 seg. The object of every dairyman frienirat Lord BlythwoDd's where the ,;;; . 1`� without the slightest risk to them- gallows." It is the kind of humor should be a high producing herd, as Que�n. was staying. ,She sent for him I . .,., - selves and at great profit. If they that makes, the spectator or listener too much time is now wasted on talked together of Leopold v, "I , : fell we can only say that Lu,�:fer fell feel: "Well, if those fellows with all cows and inefficient methods." and -his interest ii all the arts. The ., uring a ry ig rzo.b. S t - t'i' m e also. � their troubles- can laugh at their hard I . Queen asked the young. mhn- Ili& Ua- ! � The specific cause of Linglf.'s mur- luck, I am.. after'all, not so badly off -O. tive village, whicili was Fort Augustus. I �1 der seems to have been his known in- myself.,,. i -red the strange comment .., timacy with Capone. Rivals of the The secret o_f Amos In' Andy success VICTORIAN PATRIOT WRITES She then offL 0 I . / scar. -faced one concluded that Lingle then, is that. R*MT,by accident OF de- ' that the inhabitants thereof were sad- � �. was using his influence to protect sign, they -baver taken, several "sure- ABOUi THE QUEEN ly lacking in manners. He did not ask 11 ,� ' why 'but learned later that in 1876 10 ., Just a tiny leak in your 6arn roof will Capone, so the edict for his death fire" comedy devices and welded them - Speaking as a staunch upholder Of the Queen had passed through the 1. . went forth. It happened- therefore into a whole_ ­garbled words, and punt, the monarchy who sacrificed Practical- village on, the ,Caledogian canal, and . . that just a month ago to -day, when black -face dialect, the big -fellow -and- ly ever5thing for the cause in the was -having lunch when the, vessel was ,'�, let the rain drip on to the grain stored Lingle wag hurrying through the 11- little -fellow situation, funny 11"*_ horrible, days of the Coniinorrrealtb, going through the locks 'and descend - I lin-ois Central traffic tunnel under raMes, find the humor of the gallows. - Lyt- ed between two stone walls. When the , ,;. Michigan Boulevard, a bland man And they present this mixture in a v%e yct admit that we prefer th, ,� I 6eneath. A few hours while a chemical wearing a gray suit and a sailor straw manner so childish and' simple, tbat, ton Strachey met -hod of approaching ship �ose again to the level of the ... royalty to the older;fa,vhioned kind. It earth the queen. found the greaterv" . , hat walked- up behind him, drew a it can be followed, and understood by . .. . short -barreled .38 -calibre revolveT, and anyone without the slightest effort. is true that Strachey, like L -vary other part of the'population of the village . I., I, . . reaction takes place and then—spontaneous holding it in his gloved hand, shot �]�ut even this, though it explains man vhcs sets a now style or standard gathered ronr�d the saloon windows, I of -w-riting, bar, his. horde of wearisome and wqt6bing. TOith patriotic solicitude b Lingle through tb,e head. Then he their universal appeal, does not ac- - ., . I tossed the revolver away and dashed count fai their overwhelming popu- irill.ators, but we still, think that his Her Majesty disposing of her cold " ". com6ustion, which spells d,estruction. into the crowd, followed by five other larityo This, of course, is where th6 biographical method -is a vastim- lamb and salad, with a glass of wealc .... --ement on those which it super- whiskey and water. I 11 men who were apparently his accom- -radio cornea in. The3� are known and pro, I , : i lices. They were ,swallowed up, im- liked 6y millions, instead of thou- seden. Of the.laiter kind we find a The last time Sir David saw the r . fair ,�pecimen in. the personal remin- Queen was,pwhen she drove througls ,..., inediately and seen no, more. The re- sands, as m4ght be -the case were the,y - the gates of Buckingham Palace on ,, '. Put Brantford Arro-Lock Slates on polver witN' which the munier was stage entertainers. , . heenc * es of queen Victoria which ap ", . committed was owned by an ,-x-mem- Who are the workers of this mod-: pear -n. the Empire -Review frem the her last visit to Landon. She was ly- � ber of the Moran, gang who bad des- e.rn miracle? Freeman F. Gosderi, the pen oi the Rt. Rev. Sir David Hunter ingbotic in her carriage seemingly ex - I." NOW—right over the old wood shingles, erted to Capone,but, it was last known Amos of the pair, was born, in Rich- Blair, Bt. Sir Davidbad two. or three hausted, and the Guards,' seni-ry who, ...., to have -been in the posseision of one mond, Va. Thus the southern dialect encounters with the Queen, the mem- �alLited her tLld a lady of the .,ouTt . I , I ich are,obvioazly ab-oiig his afterward thiat they all know there � I . of Moran's gunmen.. Moran, ol course, comes naturally to him. He is S, ory of wh . I �! without uncovering the 6arn. dearest ]possessions, and be sets them was; 11sorngthing wrong" for the Queen '�, -was hundreds of miles away at -the years old, married, and a 20 -months - 11 I ,�Y' time the murder was comm',!teil, and old son. Charles J. CbTrell, Andy, is forth in print with the reverence of "always so alert in ,bowing in ack- :, the old lady showing her Me ea " pdals. His nowl�dgmont-of the salute of ber d r � ,�.. no matter what happens to his gun- a native ,of Peoria, Illinois. He is 40 first chronicle is a remark'made, by &Oidiers,bad remained motionless and , 111�1. I .. The Arro-Lock interlocking feature men -which. -will probably be precise- and -married. his father, who had served both, in paid -no attention at all toi the mark . � .", ly nothing -Moran remains to, battle All the material is written by C -Or- the army and navy, to the eff ect that of respect paid her. She died, deeply . 'th Capone for the major sht-re of rell and Gos,den themselves, Usually ,� wy . " I I that loot which, prohibition hak offer- between nine A.m. and noon. Correll while the Prince Consort was "torri'bly lamenteol, a few weeks later." It wiU �. i . Fastens them securely together so that rain stiff, stamhy and formal," the Queen be seen from the foregoing that Sir , . I ed to unscrupulous and desperate men (Andy) operates the typewriter, while, id of � 0 C .. was quite charming and pit' every- Davi ter all, had n t mu h -of im- ., in Chicago. Gosdeft wdlks up and dowfiI, usually � p ., wind - jingling a handful of coins. BOth b9dy at ease. That was in. the early portance to say about Queen Victoria. ''I sm.- .. hail, frost and snow are powerless - gn, as, was the stery of We fiftd his little contribution to the .1 W111 � - contribute i4eas. Like composers of days of the rei I q � ,_ AMOS IN' ANDY EXPLAINDD music, they mark thei the late Lady.Jorsey, who told him unptiblished bistoTy of his) timps none . r Manuscript about the Queen and th6 Prhice Con- the less. ipteresting'as 9, revel0tion. of , ­, against them. They cost less to 6uy, less with the 11 -Mood" in, which the di -a- ' 'and of the charac- ,., 1V sort'visiting her father and molher his own character , 4 � ,, In recent months the Amos, In' Andy logue is written, such as,.Ilsod," itgay,10 Stoneleigh Abbey, Where the Queen ter of the many millions of British 11 "�: veritable 2azy ... .. POPY!, This is done so that a ' . mien. and women to whom Victoria was I.. &Bi can cast ' . Al. to lay, and7nothing for upkeep through the . craze. It is R standing rule at the 11* Ray, their announcer, witb7the children an tho lawn g, only leis, than. a goddess, , 11,.; . ,nt in the same t6inpo., until the Prince appeared and sternly sometbin, ed to be la - I, ,::, . National Broadcasting Company that big announceme Q& ordered them off. The idea of the whose death never ceas years. nothing �s Mlom�ed, to interfere with and mood as the rest of the, In: n e, -11 ;�,' , . . �\ Queen. Ing out ,of her way to amuse mented by tbef,'to the nd of their .1 .,;; � . their program except the President, cast, � 901 I ,�;., o .1 . ' n may, -F I ,,, other. high 06vornment officials com- They take their work Very %�TiIDUS- childre have. been. -a f wmiliar one Lves. . ,, % I ,,�,� ", I , ly, and "live" their chaTecters, before to those wliZ) knew her� as a Young wo- — I -'�,�.,. ,, , marideering the radio for announce- � , .�,�� - , . I I NEW COLOURS: In addition to the well-known mentg, and SOLS calls. the micropbone. Correll projoets man but hardly to, oth6fa. . . 1. . . �� : , . , , Amdy's 6166ining'bass voice by apeok- a een. WAS a �. I " 1, "I",," ,so anxious. are persons in all walks Ing close to the, microphone. Gos&n of' ftosih. ulr� aiid cold , I .,i!,�'j, . ' = tele�";,,�o a � � . � ­_ -Lock Slates, we are now -of life to�h4ar 4oul *0 tbor and repotts'that."hei- la'dies- , �1,11. I Red, Green and Blue -Black Arro . produzm hit; ,,falsetto ab6tit a 'foot great lover I I '..�11. . ma I coirversatiouW,,in the eastern,part 6:� krid a 'half a*ay from the IlymIko.9) ero,fberg .;'' I king them in colour com6inations known as "Dorset' im-waititg At­Bii I 1&#ral, - �f�,Vh - I ,��.,�,.. , the United'gMtes have de,eveased.to Thi National - Broaclenting 661- *ere Meryl fe'W -twos uied'to eall the ,�� M �111­ � an unpr,--cedented mimmum between pany payd -thorn .t'O mt& - ;i 16411111�16h "I � 1wile- - � � �,, — -a galary'.of $i66,000 Plate the �� , f . � � 11;,.�,.', , and "'Cornwall" - shaded tones oF marked 6eauty at'no seven and sai,fto-Afteon, the Auto% %� a yea� llov their Amos, W Audybroad- , vb, , " , V'fof vid, . � C", ,�, . ther that wM a,,O I* i3es 4i ''I .11, . . " , _*'! , ve to., 11 - 'A,W, , AAdy perio.d., At moving &turs n' 1"Ies If tiffg"'w �� 16 - 16 " � , extra cost. , catt§.% A rovbalitg sidelight 6-h the toela" : ., " , . , a . M r . :�. -,1;'_1', Ask the BrantFord dealer �o show you. theaters, a*fidaho6 at -the so�ealled oboraetee of the,t*o. men N the fact the' Owdf tisfe; �d oi(VAO wi-eii t4, de -.T . 71 .1 I . I supper show,bas dropped to -Waik- thsd-tbey -splik the subi tw ddo� , Sitt", ill", , if � _ "I I .11;0, - t1wep parts, ",'.'� "'11% Wt, donvaet. witli I �,,'., " a � � \ "I ,'' 'I . � , ' ' * ' I ., 4, .1 ,� .6. . ,ed degree. 13ut,porhapg the, mos� urr64'oiW4' ' . f . I I . I 20" I , .1 r,�'. .. " " 11 . . I . . I " OW,fig oivd third, to �'Billll 04; thoir 01#,Qqe!� 00 I Ay��'r%00.14, �,�,�!, I I I . , I It b# -* ,E,* � N KWALK � 'th "AhLf"'.,�. �!� . I 14 � striking etldo;rw� 4. their Immeriso w4houqeer fot, -4,6 oth& io A . �V� a ,n ��!, , ,,, :,� I .'�� I . ., Ar r 1 ,4, 1 � . 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