Show 0 it 0 NOON N 0 oi BOBBIESI SElDOM USE USEL i L fO FORCE CE t- t tt t j By Py NEA IA EA Sers Ren Service Ice I I ONDON Perhaps Perhaps the thing LONDON LO-DO LJ that strikes the AmerL an here more than an thing el else ele e I Is lb the I 1 attitude of the Londoner tol the I There I Is a 1 general feeling or of friendliness toward I ard the m mW man in W ay lb I f D I I o 1 blue The bobby i Is the Londoners stand standby b An important son re reason for this at- at attitude at attitude I is tb the he status ot of the police In inthis Inthis I this Politics does not 1 enter Into the force Corce Although in a 3 av avit it Is under the control of or a 8 cabinet officer when hen cabinets tumble lh the police foie fOI ce goes right on without a change I I J I I 1 And police pollee manners Is IC taught to bp be b polite and civil to the pubic and nd he alwa always remembers hers bers hl he h 1 Is a 8 public publia ser sera servant a nt So hen hen the London squad of police I handle a cro crowd d the last Iut thine It uses Is it 1 force Only in extremities are clubs use used I And as tor for gun puns guns they carry pone lone none I S Marquis Curzon of Kedl glon British I minister fo for foreign affairs recently went ent to 10 France to take tahA the curative curat 0 waters aters at de de The mornIng after hI 11 his arrival lie he a complaint against k J J K I i 11 the tho person In the next next room lIe He said she he coughed all night It U Is I quite true ue explained the thO woman Either Lord Curzon Sleeps alep and then he snores enores so loud joud that he h keeps me awake Or els else he doesn't I sleep ep and then he makes even more noise moving about n nervous In either case I get no sl sleep So SoI SoI SoI I pass m my roy nights reading Thus Tiis I caught cold and that Is wh why I 1 am an I coughing You must put him some someplace someplace place else els at once lord or no lord An American friend of mine re- re re recently bought a translation from front an Burmese classic It told all about the old kings of Burmese centurIes ago one of ot whom UJ I as named ham a mah ad hips Una tina friend I I Some Somo name saId Bald sad my my guess ft Its It's the thO longest name In an any language Whereupon hereupon the Briton promptly pulled out a railway guide lIdo to Welsh I summer resorts an and triumphant pointed to this Llanta Irp n ng ch- ch nd It doen doean doe n t Jool look as long but It tales longer to M say it Only on bred In Welsh elsh hills here have hate good lungs and sound IDd could master it In one breathS breath S S S Seen in the window of ot 8 a little London restaurant re Five och tea ten at all hours hour nn on |