Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 28, Number 262, Decatur, Adams County, 5 November 1930 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
SFOBTS
BIG TEN DRAWS GRID INTEREST ■Cliirago, Nov. 5 <U.P) - With three western conference teams Invading Hw Atlantic seaboard to mw-l east rn foes anil three others pHtying minor millwestern schools, competition in the Pig Ten Saturday will he I niited to battles b<v tween Northwestern and Indiana and Purdue and Chicago. And unless yen h-dieve in ‘jinxes’ neither game promises real competition. Northwestern, marching toward the Big Ten title, should detent Indiana decisively and Purdue Is exp ct d to have little trouble in piling up a large score against Chicago. Indiana has been a "jinx" opponi nt for Northwestern under Coach Dick Hanley’s regime with the’ Wildcats failing to win a single I game from the Hoosiers in Han-! IFV s three years as coach. In every I game. Northwestern was an over-] irtielming favorite, and each defeat > Knocked the Wildcats out of a] chance to win the Big Ten title. .Another habit Indiana boasts is' the ability to win at least on? game, ejch year which has been award-, ed unanimously, before the kickoff, to the opponents. ..This year Indiana has lost to Ohio State, Minnesota, Southern, Vfethodist and Notre Dame, with i»-ti? against Oklahoma A. & M..' and a 14 to 0 victory over Miami as the < nly bright spot of the season. Northwestern has scored success-: ire triumphs over Tulane, Ohio. State, Illinois. Centre and Minnesota. Except for the “jinx" and' record of playing one superlative i game annually. Indiana fans would have no hope of victory. Northwestern's backfield has been; weakened for the contest by the l< ss of "Pug’’ Rentner, key man of; ,h Wildcats offense, but even with’ Rentner out the purple has a great oackfield and a line strong enough to make its running and pass attack effective. Put due served as a favorite Chicago victim for many years — at one time losing 15 consecutive games to the Maroons — but the' situation has altered recently and the Boilermakers are getting revenge. 0 AT BIG TEN” FOOTBALL CLAMPS • ♦ Ann Arbor, Mich. — Only light drills were scheduled today and tomorrow fir the Michigan squad be-1 fore leaving for Cambridge to meet Harvard Saturday. In a long de-' fensive drill yesterday the varsity | failed to stop the freshmen using | Harvard's lateral pass plays, but had little trouble smothering their! running attack. Capt. Simball, who vas injured in the Illinois game,! has returned to his halfback post | and will start Saturday. Champaign, Ill.—Gil Berry, shifty j s phomore halfback who was injured in the Purdue game, was ex-! pi ct d to workout with the Illinois
Taste that can be trusted - - a 1 a WICHAEtS-STON aOTHSS Values that can ivi) A be tested. OF all the nice things a clothier can promise his j newspaper audience, can you think of a better R SB 10 words? p-t It means your clothes will be correct. It I won’t have too much of “this” or too little of /* I “that.” The style won’t be so extreme as to pro- ’f ' mote a snicker or so conservative as to bring forth a sob. On top of this style assurance are TESTED VALUES that are so sure of themselves that they regard comparison as a friend instead of a foe. Leather Coats $9.95 Ide Shirts SI.OO, $1.95 FOR DAD AND LAD Tybest Ties SI.OO , \ r $1.98 to $7.95 Boys Sheepskins $7.95 John,’T'My<stz> Cb-Inc-
|t am today In its last practice beI fore leaving for New York to play | Army Saturday. Hall worked In ■ Beery’s place yesterday, while Hunter Russell and Charles Bennett, just r leased from th * hitsi pital. w re at halfback and end, te- ! spectiveiy. I Columbus, (). Weakcness cf the >, Ohio State line caused by several i injuri- s today worried Coach Sam . Wiilaman. Eearing that the injuries might bi aggravated, Wills- - man cancelled plans to scrimmage i before the Navy game Saturday at I Baltimore. Wesley Fesler, who had to ask for time out last week • for the first time in his collegia! > ; career, is expected to start against the middies. He will play right ' end i n defense and fullback on of11 fens?. Lafayette, Ind. —Purdue will depend on its sophomore reserves to I defeat Chicago at Stagg field SaturI day. Coach Noble Kizer has indicat- ! ed by giving most of his regulars | vacations this week after four conisecutive conference games. | Madison. Wis.—Neil Hayes, Wisici nsin halfback injured early in | the season, has returned to the I squad and is expected to play a-j i gainst South Dakota here Satur-i I day. Another light workout was ’ scheduled today. Minn apolis. — Coach Fritz Crisi ler expects to use Minnesota re- ■ serves Saturday against South Dakota and save his regulats for the Michigan game November 15. Mer- ( lin Dilner, one of the regular ends, {dislocated a shoulder in scrimmi age yesterday. o Dr. McKean is Smiling Please announce that 1 am grate-! ful for the vote given me in Tuesdays election, have the kindliest; 'feeling towards all and that I hope ; to be a candidate again in four years. T. J. McKean Before the Telegraph Before tile telegraph was devel [ oped commercially, in the early 1 i 1840 s semaphore stations were es j tablished. witli the outpost of High ; land. N .1.. and signals were read by telescope and passed from sta tion to station to New York Tin- ' telegraph line to Highlands wits , 1 constructed about 1850 ami extend 1 ed to Saudi Hook in 1853. 0 Too Smart for Him When a professional philosopher gets married he admits to the world that he has me! somebody smarter than himself—Washington Star. o Pearl Compoition I’enrls ot culture generally pos , sess a finer structure (Iran those ol gci-ldel.tat growth ot the milurnls: but it is almost impossible to dis tingulsb tret ween tire two kinds ex cept try cutting tire petit! and exam (Ding the 'Toss section Bee* Thin Out An average colony ot trees con ' tains from SO.OOO fo~?n.tltKl workers during the time of storing surplus ; honey. During tire winter tire col ony decreases In population until it | numbers only from lli.lttM) to 15,1 K in the early spring.
LEAGUE PLANS TO GIVE PLAY I (CONTINUED FROM PACIv' ONE) ironi Decatur high school another group from Decatur Catholic high school, a group of eight girls from the fifth grade, anti Mrs. Carroll [Cole’s private kindergarten pupils. The cast of characters will include: D . Evans Leigh Bowen. Mrs. Evans —Mrs. Frank Downs. Magnolia Winefride Kitson. Hickory Stout Joe Elzey. Mi s Blue Bonnett Mrs. Bryce Thomas. Minerva Mrs. Chalmer (). Porter Burton Hills Fiance Confer. Thad T m Haubold. Wes Jerome Myers. Janey Beil Mabie Staley Sally Kathryn Onilor. Susie Cecelia Appleman Kate—Mrs. V. J. Bormann Una Mary Mclntosh. Q PHIL DELTS TO PRESENT PLAY (CONTINUED FROM P4O’’ ONE) Jerry Smith, just returned from “Over There" Arthur SvJiamerlohJ I/z, Mrs. Reese's stepdaughter ... Edna Hoile I ’Bing" Dickson, Liz's steady Roy Bleeke, William Denker. Tom's unde . ! Ferd Klenk ! Alice King, Tom's aunt Nora Bleeke Elaine Lynne, Alice King’s ward . Rosa Blakey i Angela Scott. Bob's fiancee .. • Della Blakey 0 What a Hi** Mean* Tlie tiiss does not always meat: disgust and reprobation. In Japan it means delight. A Japanese n. greeting one hisses. In West India the lijss denotes astonishment. In the New Hebrides they Hiss tie foi e any tiling beautiful. Ihe Ba solos hiss in sign of cordial agree ment. Among the Knhylesof nortti ern Attica Hie hiss denotes satis faction. The Cornish Language The ancient Cornish language . has tint been spoken for a century , and a half though many traces ot | it linger in the dialect of the conn I try. In 1777 died Polly Jeffrey (nee . Peutreath. in het ninety third year i and she. it is said upon good author ity. was tlie lasi person who spok> I Cornish She was born ami died I at Mousclode (pronounced "Mau zel”), a fishing village on Mounts bay. Old Russian Outpost For ,’fli years f ort Rose, in north , ern California was a Russian out | [Mist that threatened the Sp.-inist I possession ot what is tod.-ii the I Redwood empire resort mmls ot many San Franciscans. It was es tablished in Isoti by Count Rezanov and garrisoned Ity 250 men The famous Greek chapel and a cor net of rhe stockade were heavily built ot enduring redwood 0 Trusted White Brother At least one Indian still lias faitfi in the honesty of the paleface A collet tint, ot Indian poljery, until tended by a salesman, was spread before the doors of a downtown department store in Phoenix. Ariz.. ri’tently. A sign above tlie collettion attested that it was genuine Hopi pottery. And on tlie sign was Hie penciled notation; "Gone to lunch Will be back ’’
DECATUR DAILY DEMOCRAT WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1930.
GIRLS NOT AS LAZY AS GOYS Says Expert Who Finds Poor Mere Satisfied Than Rich. Washington. — There tire five times ns many lazy boys ns girls. Poor children are mote satisfied with their lot then rich children. The unwanted child unconsciously wants to die. The earliest memories are of puzzling things. These are a .few of the recent findings of European psychological laboratories contained In a report on current progress Jn child studies Issued by the committee on child development of the national research council here. The comparative laziness of boys and girls In school Is tlie tentative conclusion of tlie Russian psyebol.v- , gist. P. P. Blonsky, from a study of i the lazy pupils in n large Moscow j public school. Paradoxically enough. ; he found that the boys were lazier [ because they were naturally more active. Blonskv accepted the teach- i ers’ classification of laziness —tint necessarily Ids own. Out of a total of 1.3411 children, , approximately ’JO per cent of the I boys and 4 per •ent of the girls | wore reported as "b'zy" by the , school authorities. All were given j medical examinations nnd. con'rnry , to expectations. weie found exce;e llonally henltliy. Called “Ilotor Hunger.” Blonsky attributes the difference to “motor hunger." The children normally' are unusually active, but have no patience or tenaeiousness. They seek an outlet for their vigor, but never have been trained to serious endeavor. The children were between four and sixteen years old. i When charged with being lazy 89 ■ per cent of them denied it. This type, lie says, “is harmed ! by Hie form of schooling which re- . quires long hours of unbroken j mental activity." . Blonsky also reported experiments to determine the earliest I memories of human beings, the incidents which are recalled In later i years from the threshold of conscious life. Severn! hundred of these early memories were collected from children eleven and twelve ye?rs old and from adults. The most remarkable of these, he reports, come from tlie “labyrinth i sense." a vaguely defined sensation , of puzzlement which frightens th® child. Antipathies and pathological j fears of hirer life often have tbeir ■ beginning nere, Blonsky says. Next 1 in importance, but coming a little later, lie found memories of those experiences caus’ng pain, dislike for the sources of pain often lingering late In life after the incident was forgotten. Self Preservation impulse. The great majority of early memories. he found, were due to tlie self-preservati< n impulse, which takes precedence over everything , else in the I f? of tlie child. Thus, ' he found, deep emotional experiences in early childhood which are not associated with self preserva- ; tion do not cause memories. The unwelcor>ed child ‘.‘dies eas- , llv and will'ngly.” according to a report of recent experiments by I the Italian psychologist, Sandor Ferenczi. Such a child, he says, senses the aversion or Impatience of parents, with the result that an “inborn instinct” is intensified. Such children as survive infancy, lie says, tend to grow up confirmed pessimists, with an easily awakened aversion for life, which may [ result in suicide. An investigation of clothing preferences by ' children of various ' ages was reported by Eve Macau- j lay in tlie Britisli Journal of Medical Psychology. From six to nine, she found, they were most impressed by color. Design and decoration enter their consciousness only from ten to twelve. Modesty in dress, she reports, enters into tlie consideration of tlie lower social classes, but not so in tlie high- | er social strata. The study of the degree of con- I tentment of children in families of j various sizes was made by tlie Ger- i man psychologist, A. Busemann. He found not only that poor children were more contented than rich children, but that tlie only child was the most dissatisfied of all. Ail tlie children studied were girls." Most desired a younger sister, as an object of ii’otliering, or an older i brother as a protection or a social i asset. The nearer the child came to being the last in tlie family, the more satisfied she was, Busemann found. He found that dissatisfac- j tion witli tlie family position and ! environment increased with the age I of tlie child. Large Family Effect. “The larger tlie family Hie more satisfied the child usually is," says ! tlie report. The psychologist ex- i plains this us being due to such sac- ! tors ns "tlie lack of differentiation ( of personalities in larger families, • the social adaptation which such ■ families encourage, and tlie fact j that in such families a camaraderie may grow up between brothers and I sisters. That children of poorer I families apparently are more sat- ' isfled witli their lot is apparently ! due to a lower standard and to a lack of differentiation, as there was certainly no more true affection in these families than In vtlie families of wealthier persons.’’ The European laboratories, as revealed by these abstracts of their experiments, have been busy trying to shed more light on tlie weird phenomenon of eidetic images closely approaching hallucinations, In children. Tlie German psychologist, E. Liefrnann, studying a group of 834 girls, found the images most frequent in about the • twelfth year and very rare between fifteen and seventeen. Although Lu
adults they seemed related to artistic proclivities, no relation win found between them and scholastic ability. LleDnann retesled various theories which relate these "visions ’ i io physical conditions —eapeelally deficiency of calcium due to a par- ! utliyiold gland detect, speclflcondlI lions us the blood capillaries, and oieruitivlti of the thyroid gland. | He was able to find no relationship. Types of Personality. Other experiments with eidetic images were made by tlie German psychologist, I run/. RucjSler, who found that they occur witli the greatest frequency uttHHig six year olds. Nearly all persons with a string eidetic tendency cun prte duce the Images, always of things seen which reappear Inter as real, at will. They ver* seldom come spontaneously us a result of fright. Roe.-slcr found memory fur colors after long' intervals most riarked among persons witli strong eidetic tendencies. Tlie European psychologists, it Is shown, are busy trying to fit human beings Into personality types by which may be predicted tlie sort of man or woman a child will become. Helmut Zeopffel attempts to build up u classifying system from exlierimeiits witli J«i ihfunts who, at four or five-day intervals, were subjected to ten successive e.xperi meats In sight, hearing, touch mid taste stimulation. He graded the children on tlie intensity and quality of their responses to these stimuli and classified them as to whether these were quick or slow, constant or not. Intense or superficial. 'Hie method Justifies, lie holds, "expert opinion on tbeir personalities. a. fact which is of praetlial importance in adoption,” 'file Russian psychologist, V. Fadeyev, makes a classification Into excitable, inhibitory and labile types of individuals from tlie conditioned reflexes to food wliicli are built up will tlie flushing of lights. He believes these classifications will hold through life. Tlie Freueh psychologist, A. Ferriere. postulates a system of types based on a comparison of tlie evolutionary development of tlie human species, and ;he development of tin* individual. First, lie says, came tl.e presocial, second tlie patriarchal where everything is centered In tlie family, third tlie stage of revolution of tlie individual against authority imposed from without, and fourth tlie stage of mutual respoiisibility and reflexive liberty. Tlie growing child, tie says, normally passes through these stages in tlie development of tlie race, but becomes sidetracked at some particular level. Tlie character traits which belong to tliat level become dominant. Tims he classifies the sensory, conventional, intuitive and rational types of individuals. Lindr. Jr., to Be Flyer cr Cs’r i, Scientist Cays Wasbln-’ton.—Col. Charles A. I.indliergh’s young son p’ohaldy will he either a flyer or a legislator, in view of his lieredity at d environment. Albert F. Blakeslee, Carnegie Institut’on scientist, predicted recently, thnu'-li he said lie had declined to form n "detaiied iiorosco[ e" of the infant. Blakeslee, in a radio talk on "Heredity and Environment,” pointed out that young Lindliergh would inherit flying qualities from his father. Also, lie predicted, tlie child will spend many hours in tlie air and thus lie placed in a flying environment. Statesmanlike qualities should be Inherited by tlie Lindbergh baby from In’s paternal grandfather, a congressman, and his maternal grandfather, wlio “seems likely soon to lie a senator," tlie scientist said. Also, lie added, the child probably will be reared in a political atmosphere. Nice (?) Little Joke Causes Auto Smashup Chippewa Falls, Wis.—There was blood on tlie pavement and idood on tlie body, so a woman driver fainted and her ear smashed into another. When tlie police arrived they found an awed, uncovered group about the gory sight. One patrolman noted tlie smell of paint and thought the Idood too thick. Instead of calling an ambulance, he kicked the" body over and revealed a dummy coated with red paint. Search was started for boyish pranksters. One Duliet, Two Wound* Scotia, N. Y. —A bullet from an accidentally discharged revolver injured two men here. According to police, Michael Yager, twenty-four was cleaning his gun and Walter Hartmati, twenty-one, was near by. Suddenly there was a report and the bullet pierced Yager's thumb and Struck Hartman in the back. Neither was hurt seriously. Young Thief Caught Vienna, Austria.—A child only nine years old was found to be an expert thief by the Vienna police when they began to investigate a robber band which was led by a n neteen-year-old mechanic, , Josef Blaha, and which specialized in stealing tools and spare parts of motorcycles and automobiles.
Orders Her Funeral Then Kills Herself McLeansboro, 111. — Mrs. Dee (‘arson, forty-five, wife of Walter Carson, a farmer west of the city, shot ana killed herself. Site wrote u letter to Coroner Erwin I. Jones here, announcing her intention of taking her life. Site selected the undertaker, made all funeral arrangements and selected pallbearers.
BOTH HOUSES APPEAR SAFE FOR DEMOCRATS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE, iaboi i'.iii.'. •<• ot ii» ■ WWts 1 House count. Meanwhile at Democratic national c: mniitteo h adqttnrtera party officials reiterated their claims that the house had been won from thRepublicans. Tlie sizeable gaiu.i in Gillo and Indiana were pointed to in th s connection. Th election lesults were char ! acterized by Senator Put Harrison, Dent., Miss., as a "nation wide rebuke to the Hoover administration." He predicted a "sweeping victory for tlie Democrats in 1!)32." "Without doubt, in certain slates, the pioii bition qlli stion played **>* important part." Harrison said, "hut taken as a whole it was a nation-wide rebuke to tlie Hoover administration for tlie flagrant lation of campaign pledges. “It clearly shows the peoples disapproval of tlie Hoover faun re-! lief policy as w. 11 as the enact-1 ni-nt of the Hoi verGrundy tariff law.” New York, Nov. s—<U.R>-Pil't'R up one unexpected gain after another. Democrats in a nation-wide sweep had come extremely close to taking outright control of the •senate in i 1 turns up to noon today. This development was more than many Democratic leaders^ expect d. Though the Democrats expected to win the lower house, results at 1 noon showed the Republicans ap-l patently within three votes of having an actual majority. They had ‘ 137 members elected definitely, with the probability cf increasing it to 215, just three short of the] 218 needed for a majority. Democratic probabilities at this hour were for about 195 with the chance it might reaclt 200. Only an unexpected series of favorable , overturns could turn ever the nouse now. During the long hours throughout, the night and well into the day, I stat s tegarded as certain to elect’ Republican senators, see-sawed i n the balance as the count rose and ' fell. Just before noon came word that; Kansas, Republican, to the core, j had defeated S nator Henry J. Al-1 : en, intimate friend and defender' of President Hoover, electing Geo. McGill, a Democrat—the fust time within memory that a R publican had been refused a senate seat, except in the 1912 Progressive r rty spiit. Senator Capper, however, running for the long term, had a iong lead. Few of the reverses in th's election have c< me as close to Mr. Hoover as the Allen defeat. Just a few minutes before Allen publicly conced'd defeat, his intimate friend in the White House was advised of it by long distance telephone from Kansas. Severe as this blow from the heart of the Republican wheat belt manifestly was, there were others in th's category and still mere that were so doubtful as to be within the realm of possible upsets for the administration party. At noon there was a strong chance that if the Democrats did not actually win the senate, it would hang by one vote — giving the only Farmer-Labor senator.' Henrik Shipstead of Minnesota, the decis've vote. Hitherto he has always voted with Republicans in matters of permanent organization! of the senate, creation cf Commit-j tees. Democratic contt ol of the senate would overturn control ■of the powerful committees, and because of the extreme latitude of debate and procedure in that body, their power in legislation, influence of fore;gn affairs, and in the tremendous power of confirming or ■ejecting presidential appointments it would be an event of vastly more far-reaching consequence than “of control in the weaker house.” Democrats also elected their senator.) and ousted Republicans in Massachusetts. West Virginia, Colorado, Oklahoma, apparently in Ohio, and even possibly in South Dakota in addition to last night’s victories in Illinois, and in the un-cont-sted southern states. Even in Montana, where Republicans threw their full force in to defeat Senator Walsh, exposer of Teapot Dome, tunning a wet against him, J— RELIEF Stop It instantly with snow white, odorless OVELMO CREAM. Successful in worst cases. Has rid ever 50,000 persons of eczematous eruptions and annoying skin irritations. Delightful, cooling, soothing. Safe for children. Clears the skin, keeps it youthful and as soft as velvet. At good druggists and toilet goods counters with money-back guarantee. Get OVELMO today. SICK SKIN YEARNS FOR OvelmO EVERY SKIN NEEDS OVELMO
Democrats hold their ground. They! I had fnt d for Walsh. In lowa,; i which they wrote off hh a dead loss] weeks ago. Senator Steck, Demo- -| ! < rat, Was running clou® witli still . 1 a remote chance of coming through. ] I Prohibition, playing its fateful ] patt in some of the contests, eon- | tributed to the defeat cf dry re pultlietHi senatorial candidates in ~ Illinois and Massachusetts and also't came directly before voters in ref- , erendum in Illinois, Massachusetts 1 and Rhode Island. Drys lost by large margins in all three instances. Wlille the next senate will bring with' it such glamorous personal- ( Hies its J. Hamilton Lewis, a sar- t lurtal flower t f the mauve age, tlie , youthful Huey Long, Louisiana's political tornado, and perhaps W. j J. Bulow of South Dakota —of t I whom Will Rogers said, "he is fun- : nier than I am” —it will also lose , ,1. Thomas II flin, of Alabama, whose negto stories, if not his speeches, are welcomed by his Republican opponents. And Ruth i Hanna Mct’<*faick, daughter of I that master politician, Mark Han- | , na, will not be there. Effective “Gate" There's a gale tiial isn't a gate I <>n the road lielwt-en Taiwood amt Garab in Australia. On eacli side of tlie opening is a piece of galvan ized iron witli a life-sized sheep dog painted <>n R. Tlie folks of tlie district swear they have nevei known a sheep to stray through In fact, when moving sheep from ! one paddock to unotlier it Is neees sury to cover up tlie pictured sen I tiuels. o World'* Largest Pearl? i The largest pearl in the world, s , i far as known, is In the British mu , seutn. It weighs a little more that three ounces.
CHRYSLER SIX _=W745 and Ufa f o. b. factor) Hecord Low Prices ! Made STILL LOWER! A Chrysler Six at present reduced prices marks an altogether net record in six-cylinder automobile value. Think of Chrysler performance, Chrysler smartness and Chrysler quality being offered at such low prices—in a Chrysler Six that has the advantages of ail the hewer developments of Chrysler progress over the first famous Chrysler Six that six years ago sold for more than twice today's prices. Today’s Chrysler Six has a 62 - horsepower high - compressioa Chrysler engine mounted on rubber; Iso-therm pistons; low swung perfectly-balanced chassis; self-adjusting spring shackle? hydraulic shock absorbers; quiet all-steel bodies of dreadnought strength; safe, sure, internal hydraulic brakes. Here is value never before obtainable even in a Chrysler. CHRYSLER SIX PRICES: Coupe 1745; Touring $785; Royal Coupe $785; q-Door, Royal Sda $795- AHprices fO. b. factory {uire wheel equipment DETTINGER MOTOR SALES CO. W. 11. DcHinficr West Monroe SI
-' r I I tg f>' L qii » iii in ii i ri Grow With Us T’hE constant increase of deposit' ha? been most encouraging to the otlice’’ 5 j and directors of this bank and we desire to * thank those who have opened accounts her » ■ assuring you of our best efforts to serve carefully and courteously. We ca’l attention to our savings ac<o ' in ! department, Christmas savings, bond mortgage division and farm loans. Let us take care of your banking P r °b iems. That’s our business. Old Adams County Bank
T »0 Killed at R | WtLfton. 1,,,| x nv . 1 Two m,.,, were Injured wnr-n ni( , , ’""H ’hey w-re riding in bridge railing tut 0 P ‘ hM ”* mst night. k The dead w ( r<. ii„»> anti Lewis FrauhiU ' BI H Kaehr. driver. inL 4 .',' Bluffton. ' I’remierTij, rtn.n. Italy, n ()V . s_ (rp .1 •m ta. former Premier of [ this morning at is.. . 1 J, -4! tnont. He wa.s «ii. ®' Facta was premier at lk Sentio Mussolini |,.,| hi(| , j abiished a dictatorship. * New Mun% Merle I’.. I-'.ii..n|, wg p r it| n”W>' ’he M ()rrls 5 ‘ ' * >'•;> to $1 s’ore in thi , c| * I'.llenberger ht , re f ' • land, where h e w as Morris store. ’ dent of Berne. '“"M* -o-— —'I Baradozical St ange ns it nun enlists consider light,,| n ., ~ of the most ns,.|,. ss ' obtaining electricity _ Magazine Live m the Present Let us start up nn<l live; tm come iiioiuems (hut olhM J, had again : few M be Hile.l «nh iui|>erlshable'|.«4 —J Martineau.
