Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 168, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 November 1922 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times Earle E. Martin. Edltor-in-Chief. F. R. Peters. Editor. Roy W. Howard. Presldent. O. F. Johnson. Business Manager. Publlshed daily except Sunday by The Indiana Daily Times Company. 25-29 S. Meridlan SU Indianapolis. Member of thè Scripps-Howard Newspapers. Client ol thè United Press. United News. United Financial and NEA Service and member of thè Scripps Newspaper Alliance. Member of thè Avdit Bureau of Circulations. Subscrtptlon Ratea: Indiana Dolis —Ten Cents a Week. Elsevhere—Twelve Cents a Week. TELEPHONE—MAIN 3500.
For thou hast malntalned my rlght and my cause; thou satest in thè throne judging rlght.—Psalms 9:4. The World’s Task permanentlv effectlve task before manklnd, i which has to be done before any enduring politicai edlfice is possible, is thè task of working out and applying a Science of property as a basis for freedom and social justlce; a science of currency to insure and preserve an efflcient economie medium; a science of government and collectlve operations whereby in every community men may learn to pursue their common interests in barmony; a science of world politica, through which thè stark waste and cruelty of warfaro between races, peoples and natlons may be brought to an end and thè common Interests of mankind brought under common control, and, above all, a science of edueation to sustain thè will and interest of men in their common human adventure." The above is from Wells’ "Outline of History.” Read it again. Does it not contain about thè gist of thè world’s needs today? Coai. railways. oil, Mexico, Germanv, thè clashing races, thè duty of thè United States to thè world, thè tariff, every one of our problems is included in it. And aster readìng it, ask yourself what party we have in America which is even aware of these problems. Ask yourself what has appeared in thè action of Congress, or thè President, of any branch of our Government, which even recognizes that such questiona exist. And yet civilization itsefT depends upon thè world’s adopting some such program as would lead to thè studi of these questione, thè development of these new Sciences. Art as It W as and Is Y -rNCORKING of thè vials of wrath that have been I J poured on thè head of Mayor Lew Shank over thè Duncan incident, in which he stationed policeinen on thè stage to prevent too much undress in an aesthetic dance, was but one more incident in thè controversy on “art" Commenta publlshed have been to thè effect that America was going to thè dogs because it has no appreciation of art Theatergoers to pack a movie at 25 cents per to attending_ somethlng worthwhile, it is said. Elevatine plays by Shakespeare are “neglected.’’ Shakespeare's plays vere not played to thin crowds of hlghbrows in his time, history says. The common people flocked to his performances because they un derstood them, at least thè humor, much of which is missed by modems and thè rest expurgated. Also because thè admission price was cheap. Movies nowadays meet thè same popular demand. The common mass of us attend something within our means. and in which we are lnterested. Art is all rlght for thè select few that like it. The country will stagger along, in all probabilitv, very well In splte of thè lack deplored by some. Abraham Lincoln doubtless had little time or opportunity to vlew aesthetlc dancing or Shakespeare performances. '7/ere, Boy!” A ROUND factories, offl.ces, Stores and any other places where people work together, a thing frequentlv noticed by vlsitors is thè hard-boiled attltude of grown-ups toward thè boys who are on thè pa> roll. The boss usually is salaamed aad toadied to as it he were a sacred cow Miss Pansy Plush, thè beautiful typist, gets a lot of fawning consideration. And ▼en thè male grown ups treat each other with a mutuai deference or respect, desplte a consideratile amorint of facetious Joshing. But when lt cornea to thè boy who werks around thè place—well, when he’s called and commanded, it generally sonnds as if he were a trained dog that had to be handled rougbly on thè theory that, give him an Inch, he*!! take a mile. Rough treatment, lack of consideration, and a stern rebuke are difficult for a grown-up to “swallow”— desplte thè callouses accumulated by thè senslbilitics durlng years of toll and contact with thè hostile pack that are trylng to get thè same dollar we’re aster ourselvea. The boy, fresh from home and Just strlklng out for Mitìgnìf has none of these callouses. His nature is sensitive, without lnsulation. And making him thè tsrget of thè unnecessary eharp word or lack of con ■Meratlcn ls about thè lowest-down act that thè sotalled human belng is gullty of. When lt comes to girla, a thousand times more so.
Marvelous Humanity WE are stranie nervous mechanìßms, we humans. Hfere are three of thè strangest thlngs about us, c&ugtat from today's news: A young soldier, mentally wrecked by shell-shock, waa experimented on by doctors. Taken to a room where everythlng was a vivid red. he Bhrieked tn agony. Then thev led hlm to a prlmrose-yellow room. He sighed happily, drifted to deep sleep. Kept in this room he rapidlv recovered to normal. S. T. Ballinger of New York tells this remarkable story of a convention of paint and varnish makers. Ballinger says scientista have discovered that a room furnished in a dark color tenda to cause melancholia and an averslon to work. A red room temporarily stimulates, then reacts in nervous headache. Blue lndures cairn. Green seems to impart happiness and ritalltv. Yellow makes people amiable, contented, soothed. A good tip. when you redecorate thè home. To avoid monotony, use combinationa, not one color alone. The effect of color vibrations on our nerves is a mystery. Railroad ridlng will be rongher as thè weather gets colder, saya Dr. Plimmon H. Dudley, weather expert for New York Central Railroad. He explains it this way: Winter cold makes thè steel ralla shrink in length a 150,000th of an inch for each degree thè thermometer drops. To our delicate nerves, riding seems very bumpy over thè slight gaps between thè shrunken ralla. You thlnk it wonderful that “frost’* can shrink Steel enfia and make them crack. More wonderful is that wt strange humans are more powerful than either cold or steel, both our slaves. Our mental and nervo powers, compared with animala’, are little short of terrible. In Western Electric laboratories, this Is discovered: The human voice can be reduced to a millionth of its volume and stili be heard. But thè voice cannot be heard when reduced to a ten-millionth. That is a remarkably fine distinction, thè vaniahing point of Bound so inflnitesimally minuto that thè human brain cannot conceive of it. $ Tel it bolds good for all normal human ears, al-
though no two people hear thè same thing in exactly thè same way. When you ponder marvels, consider thè delicacy of thè human nervea that make all this possible. Taming thè Turk SOME folks, given an inch, will tako aneli. Some, too, know no law save force, and are good only because they are afraid of thè policeman. The Turks are such a people. Ever since they licked thè Greeks they’ve been demanding this and demanding that, threatenlng to lick somebody unless they got it. And every time thè allies gave in thè Turks grabbed offered and promptly deman ied more. The rcsult of this is thè allies go to Lausanne with little more to offer thè insatiable Turk—with very little in reserve for bargain purposes. Of course, thè Turk will pound thè table and ask for more, threatening war unless he gets it. That is why thè news that France, England and Italy l ave agreed on a policy, and will present a uniteci front at Lausanne, is such welcome Information. It was high time thè news was fortheoming. If thè allies show reai unity at Lausanne, with thè gentle Intimatiou that reai force lies behind it, thè terrible Turk will take in his horns. sheath his blocdy scimitar and go home from Lausanne tamed. If thè allies don’t do this there will be serious trouble.
Letters to tlie Editor
THINKS WHIP RUINS CHILD To thè Editor of The Times In regard to. thè question in thè Times, “Do you whip your child?” I do not I have watched that one thing in other children and I have seen some good children totally ruined by ■whipping. / I am a mother of three boys and one girl, and I am very much lnterested in children. I can certainly see that a law llke Mrs. Perklns ls flghting for ls needed and will benefit parente as well as children. Parents whip only when their temper gets thè best of thera, which only teaches thè child to uso its temper. I have spanked my boys but can truthfully say that I never felt it did any good. a READER. SPOI LI NG THE CHILD To thè Editor of The Times Parents have an inuerent right to punish their children according to thè wrong committed, thè same as our Master has a right to punish us according to our mlsdeeds. Please ask Mrs. R. C. Perkins, president of thè Alliance of Woman'B Clubs, to take her Bible, tura to thè hook of Proverbs, chapter 1, and read all, and note very closely that it says, "Spare thè rod and spoil thè child. ’ Brlng children up in thè way they should go and they will never depart from IL I brought my sona up under thè rod and they love and respect me for lt, and if more were brought up so, thè prison detention homes wouldn’t be so full of young men and girls. Of course, I never punished my children for tha truth, no matter how bad it was. Don’t let thè women take thè law out of your hands. judees and jurists. They have enough to do If they will do it, instead of dabbling in thè men's affalrs. My plea is, never abolish corporal punishment A child doesn’t know what is good or bad for it, so correcttng a child and making it do what you say ls no crime. MRS. EMIIT LYKE.
Permit Usto Say Proposed law would keep children under 18 frora working. That is one way to get them to work. Georges Clemenceau has arrived in this country and is making more of a hit than Georges Carpentier dld. It is not true that New Yorkers aleep in theLr shoea ao they will be ready when Are breaks out. Longer dresses are here only for a short timo. They are JUBt to cali attention to their face a. Snltan’s private band has Joined thè Nationalists. What does it playt Turkey trota, of conree. Mr. Addlngton of Ohio claima hla glider atays up indeflnltely. Neighbor'a protest a grand opera singer praetlces late at night. Ihe singer claims she doesn’t. It mav be thè wlnd. The U. S. S. Pittsburgh has gons to Constantinople and may amoke out or out smoke a few Turks. They are urging this country to admit more fon eigners. Well, we will admit we have more than enough. New device tells thè depth of thè sea by echo. If tried at thè three-mile limit thè echo will return drunk. Only thing in thè way as much as a drum is a man tight aa a drum. All thè world is a stage. If you don’t play you have no show. We can be thankful every day that watches don’t Btrike like clocks. TOM SIM3. Speaking of Altltude Bv BERTOV BRAT.EY (American vom n have revolte*! apalnst long- al* irta.—NE A) WE knew they'd be ehorter Beforo very lonir. The fashion reporter, We flrured, wag wroner. Who aaid we’d be peeplm? No longT at lmees, That ektrts would be sweopinsr The streets, if you please. It may be in Paris. Where fashion* are made, That shop girl and heiress Alike will parade In skirtg that are flowinp, Wbose draperies fan So far that tbev're showing No ankles at all. But mode* that check freedora Don't yet over. now. Our women won’t he**! 'em And most of them vow Long skirts are a phony Frenoh costumerà’ trick, To hide ankles bony. Or clijmgy and thick. But most of our women Have limbfi that appear Delightfully trim in Silk liosiery sheer; Long skirts? They can't bear ‘em, For work or for sport, Tfcough Paris may wear 'erti. We’re cutting 'em short. (Copyright. 1922. NBA Service)
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
INDIANA ’S SCHOOLS MUST MEET 11 ESSENTI ALS TO KEEP PACE
That Indiana can only hope to attain a lead In thè -éducational world when lt accomplishe thè eleven essentials In better education, is set out in partone of a three-part report fìled with Governor McCray and thè State board of education by thè Indiana educational survey commission, which was organized two years ego by an act of legislature. Before Indiana can reach thè educational level of thè country, thè commisslon shows that lt will be necessary to have better trained teachers; pay better salaries; better bulldlngs; larger and better kept ground; more and better school equlpment; additional teacher-tralning tnstttutions: abolishment of thè trustee system: reorganization of thè State and locai school admlnistrations; establish new licensing system; form more Consolidated schools and offer better financial supporL All these things and many more, thè commiesion explalns, can be made possible by eliminating thè annual waste of money through poor judgment In erecting buildlngs and purchasing propertles. The comirdsslon. In pointlng out thè -fault* of thè Indiana school system, explalns that Indiana has also many praiseworthy features that should not be overlooked. Include Ten Chapter Partone which Includes ten chapters. coverà thè following: Averago achlevement of Indiana fifth, seventh and elghth gradea In readlng, spelllng and arithmetlc shows that puplls are not up to country standard. Puplls in rural schools are older grade for grada than city puplls. Short school terms and poor exlsting conditions account for these faots. Rural t achers are Immature, unprepared, inexperlenced and lack teachlng skil’. Teachers In high schools of smaller towns are poorly trained and lack experlence and find lt hard to keep a pace ahead of thè studont. Genera] levai of instructlon In these schools ls lower than In western and northern States. High schools of larger cltle ere well manapad and are as good aa can be sound In thè country. Elementary teachers are thè rnost important rtoup of teachers because of number and their Intimate relation between democracy and elementary education. To be qualifled as such a teacher. they shouP • Wgh sepool graduate and should ir •ha - t two years of training related lo .. ai a lng in elementary schools Only 25 per cent of thè teachers In elementary schools of State are satlsfactorlly trained Most of these are sound In city schools. Fifty-two of dty teaehers are satlsfactorlly trained as compared with 22 per cent In thè town and 10 per cent in thè townshlps Slxty-two per cert of high school teachers are satlsfactorlly trained. They sheuld be high school and college graduate and should have used part of lt In professional study. Traln ing of school principale was sound to be generally more satlsfactory than that of teachers. A Principal should
Two American States Prohibit Use of Automatic Hunting Guns
QUESTUIVS ANSWERED * You cari cet an answer to any tmpytlon of fact or Information by wrltlng to thè Indlanapoll TlmrV Waehlmrton Bureau, Ni w York Ave.. Washington. I) C Inelin.lnff 2 cent* In ttampe Medicai, legai ami love and marrlage a<lvlc cannot be spven Unetirned letter eannot be animerei! but all letter aro cor,Monti! and reoelve personal repllee Althourh thè bureau doe rot requlre tt, lt will araure prompter rapile* tf reader wtll confine nueetlona to a elnglo übjeot. wrltln more than one letter If answera oa vorlou üb;ect d-tred. EDITOR. Q. —What States prohibit thè use of automatlc guns In hunting? A.—The following States and province prohibit thè use of automatlc guns: New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Alberta, Britinh Columbia, Manitoba, Cintarlo. New Brunswick, Saskatchewan. Q. —What la thè present eltuatlon In regard to thè Cape-to-Calro Rallroad? A.—The Project ls new known as
Give a Diamond Ring This Christmas .VAI -/1 !// y Easy Arrangements for '>/// ‘ Payment Can Be Effected /x Rare 1 thè feminine hesrt which will not recelre n thrlll upon flndiug among thè Christmas gift a ~2—~ / brilllant, lovely dlamond rlug; these exquisite little / iwcj crystals are prlzed above all other offering. / \ By selecting now, making a reasouable payment, / \ Btl< l finlshlng thè remainder In tveekly Install- / / "v. \ menta, you can have a diamoDd held untll Chrlet- / / \ mas. You are relteved of a largo alngle expendl- / f N I ture, and thè stone ls kept secure untll you need IL J. P. MULLALLY Diamond Merchant, L. S. Ayres & Co. Street Floor.
What Shall I Give? HERE In our atore fon will flnd an array of gift good* that are useful, economlcal and truly deglrablo. No dlacomfort or annoyance will mar your plensure of gift buying here. It makea no difference how much or how little you may wish to spend we will spare no effort to render you thè same personal, efflcient, eourteon servlce which la our year-round rule. Iu our Christmas offering our usuai level of reasonable prlces prevai! Our eomprehensive assortment of plctures, mirrare, lampe, book ends, candlestlcks, lusterware, ash trays and other gift novelttes gives you unusual opportunlty to select somethlng for your friends’ particular liklng. Noveinber and Eecember charge account privlleg of deferring payment untll January IsL LYMAN BROS. 221-223 EAST OHIO STREET THE STORE OF COURTEOUS SERVICE.
be an experienced teacher and should have had not lesa than three years of training dlrectly related to elementary education. Only 15 per cent are qualifled as such. Teachlng will never pay high, but thè following scale ls recommended: Increase to fi,ooo for etandard-tralned teachers In elementary schools, Inexperlenced; fi, 200 for Inexperlenced In high schools. Indiana’s system of valuing efflclency gained at $lO per year will never hold well trained teachers. Teachers Badly Trained The State is not making thè fullest use of its private institutions. The State must also eatablish and support a sufficient number of teacher-traln-ing institutions since thè output of thè college* ls taken Into account. First step to be taken should be reorganlze thè teacher-training work at Indiana University and thè State norinal, for rareiy has a State been served so poorly and unwisely in thè training of teachers as these instltutlons have of recent years. There are 4.511 one-teacher school houses In thè State. Eighty per cent of these were built before 1910 and are In bad shape and would be condemned if viewed by thè board of health. In construetlon of newer Consolidated schools, arrangement and lighting was hardly considered. City schools and equlpment are good. That of thè towns and townshlps are in most part poor. Larger school ground* are needed. Indiana with its 800 publlc high schools has an unsatisfactory system; it has only thè skeleton of a system. Low standard* prevali; quality of instruetion, more so In smaller high schools ls poor and cost is excesslve. The result ts that thousands graduate annually from high schools who are not well equlpped to take up dutles of lise. Colleges ore handicnpped because of this. Standards need to be raised and school terms lengthened. Small high schools should be eliminated or Consolidated. The cost of these schools must be kept at a minimum lest they cut down thè standard of elementary schools. Vocational education should be an Integrai mrt of nubile school system. Would Abolish Trustee Townshlp trustees’ business, not includlng school dutles, mtght be turned over to thè county commissionerà and thè office of trustee abolished. The county board of education and county superintendent can assist In rellevlng him of school dutles. The county superintendent should be taken from politica. Ruch superintendent are appolnted for work In thè county they reslde. This handicapes j-osslbilities of obtalnlng a superintendent that mlght be taken from another part of thè State and be better sulted. Trustee system too ex pensi ve. The way to abolish this ls to do away with thè township as a locai unlt and made a logicai school unlt. Indianapolis is thè cnly city that has anythlng approachlng a modera school code. State administratlon Jack* vigor and contlnulty. Schools are allowed to go ahead each year without thè guldanco that would come from con
thè Cape-to-Calro Rallway and River Route. From Capetown to Bukam.u thè rallroad ls completed—2,7oo mlles, thè longest continuou link In thè whole scheme. From Bukama to Cairo, thè trip ls an alternatlon of rail. river and motor and lake trave! thè motor trip conslstlng of a 680mlle ran through he Belglan Congo Government and In motor care oper ated by this Government untll thè reti link from Stanleyville to Mahag! now under construetlon, is flnlshed. j This link was surveyed before thè great war. The linea through tho Belglan Congo are belng constructed by thè Belglan Congo government. under agreement with thè South Africa and British government. Q. —Who ls Presldent of France? A. —Alexandre MlUerand.
tinuaus and constructive administration. There ls too largo a gap between thè State superintendent and State board. The board must be made up of lnterested cltizens whose profession ls not that of State school work. The superintendent must be free of politics and made thè executive
Do You Remember When —
\ i Vf' - ■'xs'
The Grand Opera House stood on N. Pennsylvania St.. thè present site of thè I>emcke annex and B. F.
G° e/^ Every day merehants are putting out newly arrived J ! ij| Christmas goods. They unite with Peggy Adii in urging ij. .jlli 1 you to buy early—it’s better for you, for thè recipient of t| if thè gift, and for thè merehant. f
Toys From The North l’ole OH, yes! Santa Claus is here. I thouglit it was time for him so I went hunting and I sound him on thè fourth fioor at Charles Maycr's. He brought them a lot of toya his North Pole helpers have spent this whole year making! Dolis. dolls—eoft. cloth dolls to cuddle, unbreakabie doìls to bang around like old friend, lovely Frenoh dolls with curly hair and reai eyelashes, to take out on parade. But thè toy for Peggy Ann waa thè circus clown who drove a mule hltched to a little cart; thè mule kicked and although thè clown bobbed up and down with much gusto he never lost hold on thè reina. • • • “Good night sleep tlghtr It takes extra blanfteta these night doesn’t lt? You can flnd lovely color comblnatlona to matoh your other bedroom furnlshlng. • • • Save Santa Brlngs AS Christmas time draws near don’t you wish you had saved more money? Start a savings account with your glft money this year or teli Santa you want a hank book for a Christmas gift—all he will have to do is to go to Meyer-Klser Bank and make a deposlt In your name—simple enough for a man like Santa! One of thè dlstinctlve Services rendered by this bank ls thè counsellng department In charge of Miss Fischer who gives export advlce to women custorners In regard to investing their savings. Miss Fischer can make saving a more tnteresting process than any one Peggy Ann ever saw. See her! • • • It Speaks Of The Orient DELIGHTFULLY redolent of thè cherry blossoms of Japan Is thè Japane.se Art Store on W. Ohio SL Big Japaneee Jars, dragon vases, Orientai china, embroidered silk mandarln coats —these are Just a few of thè artlcles that can be purchased here for Christmas gifts. At this shop there are cunnlng robes, Jackets, and bootees tor thè baby. • • • A Tlianksgivlng Appotizer AT his dellcataeeen on E. Ohio St., J. H. /nding haa more than flfty kinds of chee3e, in food value worth twice their weight in choicest beefsteak. Here you can get Roquefort and Camembert cheese from France, Edam cheese from Holland, and nice creamy looking Swlss cheese. Did you know that Russian Cavlar ls In reality eggs of thè Beluga sturgeon, a flsh caught In thè Caspian Sea? Ask for lt at Anding’s.
officiai to whom thè board looks for guidance. In 1920-21 thè State spent $46,038,390 for jjermanent and current operative school purposes. Of total taxes collected, $43,242,444, or 38.3 per cent, was for school purposes. This ranked with thè average of thè country.
Keith's Theater. The picture waa taken by thè W. IL Basa Company.
Our Shopping Service AS thè hurried holiday season approaches, more and more people are utilizìng Pogrsry Ann’s shopping sei-vice. When you wish Peggy Ann to buy an for you, be sure you state thè amount you wish to spend and give a full desecri ption of thè article. She will be glad to look for certain articles and direct you where ‘o go for your purchase. Purchaaes will be sent out C. O. D. unless money ls enclosed In thè letter. Address aH Communications to j Peggy Ann, Indianapolis Time, A Smoking Stand For Dad THE day is done—he sets foot on his own hearth rug—draws up an easy chalr —packs and Ughts his pipe, then Dad breathes one little sigh of contenti For this “pipe o'rest” is there a emoking stand comfortably near? If not, Peggy Ann suggests you go to thè Foster Burniture Company and from their unequaled array select one for Dad'a Christmas gift. • • • Nothlng better reveala thè charm of grace than thè soft swish or careless waft of an ostrich fan carri ed by Mllady as she ooquettlshiy responds to her partner for thè next dance. • • • Delightful Gift Article ALREADY there is a cheery Christmas alr in thè downtown shops. In at thè Pettis Dry Goods Store they have brought some of their loveliest pillows, boudoir lamps, waste baskets, seivlng baskets, and other Innumerable little gifts that feminine hearts adore, dow r n from thè Art Shop and have put them In a main floor aisle, easlly accesslble. You'll notlce their arehed aisle, decorated with handkerchiefs. You can get hankies In every solili color, white with color, or two-toned comblnatlons —hankies of modest office appearance, squares of exquisite elegance. Peggy Ann urges you to vlslt this department soon so as to make satlsfactory selections. • • •
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Fur scarfs, luxurlous and modish, keep away Jack Frost’s lcy fingere.
NOY. 23, 1922
La Follette and Borah Will Take 1924 Spotlight By Times Spedai WASHINGTON, Nov. 23. Keep your eye on two Republican Sèna torà from now on—La Follette and Borah. Elther, under certain circumstances, may be thè Republican nominee for Presldent in 1924. In this special session thè flght starts that will make thè Republican party either Old Guard or Progressive two years from now. That doesn’t mean that thè Progressive will wln at this session—for thè Old Guard Senatore who w-ere licked at thè last election will stili be on thè' job. But they won't be next year. And then La Follette can lead a Progresssive flght that will have powerful backing in both houses. Harding Reai Leader Even though Lodge stays on thè job as leader of thè Republican Senate, President Harding will be thè reai leader—for Old Guard policles will come from thè White House, beginning with thè ship subsidy. In their opposition to this La Follette and Borah will flght side by side. Also, on most of thè Progressive program both in this Congress and thè next. The best thè progressive Republicans can do at this session ls to prevent thè Old Guard majority frora putting its program over, and tbus force thè calling of a special session of thè new- Congress aster thè old one dies on March 4, next year. But when thè new Congress convenes, there will be a chance to put into effect thè progressive program —or part of it. If, then, thè progressives secure control of thè Republican convention In 1924, President Harding can’t well be renommated on a La. Follette platform. 141 Follette Is Cool Unquestionably La Follette ts thè ldol of thè farmer-labor-progres-sive group. If that’s thè color of thè Republican convention he will be thè nominee. If thè Old Guard flnds it car.’t nominate a reactionary, it wiH be for anybody to beat La Follette. Here’s where Borah may come in. His chance would depend upon La Follette' Inabillty to win, and an effort to hold both wings of thè party together by nomlnating a progressive.
Ad Intere*ting Gift Shop AS reflective of celor as thè rainbow, are thè wonderful glass and luster vases, Wall pockets, candlestlcks, and bowla sound at thè J. W. Trenck Shop, 32 S. Pennsylvania St. Why not dresa up your Thanksgivlng table with a fruit dish and candlestlcks in bright- marigold? They will give an alr of festivity to your whole party. There is in unlimited variety of gift articles in this shop and may Peggy Ann advlse you that you pay thè low-est price commensurata with highest quality. • • • Have you purchased your Christmas candles yet? Do not forget these little taper with their Yuletlde sentimenL • • Mother, Here I Glad New 1~ ->u have a sult or coai you uv longer wish to wear take lt to Mis# Gioscio in thè Pembroke Arcade and she will make lt into a cunning coat for Babs or a topcoat for Jack Jr.! She does all kinds of remodellng at a reasonable price. • • • C HOPR are ehowing attraetlve that are very fashlonable just now for thè evenlng colffure. Their glittering splendor lends an additional glamour to thè dancing debutante. • • • A In The Early Days THE patent leather oolonial sllppere sound at thè WalkOver Shoe Shop, N. Pennsylvania St., embody all thè charm of thè footwear of thè “Minuet’’ days. One attractive model show-s insets of gray suede In thè colonial tongue w r hl!e another has a tongue decorated In heavy stitebing. If you prefer suede, you can get a beautiful suede sllpper with oolonial tongue showlng patent insets. For style and servlce go to thè Walk-Over. • • For Your Christmas Music THE gift of tempora! value Is always received with pleasure, trae enough, but thè gift that grows to be a more valued posseseion each day is thè gift that evokes reai gratitude. Bought not only for Christmas day, not only for thè year ushered In by Jan. 1, 1923, but bought for a w-hole lise time’s enjoyment ls a Brunswick Phonograph. Go over to thè Baldwin Piano Company, N. Pennsylvania St., and ask to see their new models. A Brunswick Phonograph plays all record; Brunswick records can be played on all phonographs. sfjZacrtj CMpti —Advertisement
