Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 195, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 December 1922 — Page 4

PUBLISHED dafly except Stradar by The Indiana Daily Times Company, 25-29 S. Merldlan Su Indianapolis. * • • Subscrlptlon Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents & week. Elsewhere —Twelve Centa a Week. • • * PHONE —MAIN 3500.

THE "1% yyANY years ago a little girl wrote to thè New DAY OF j\ /■ York Sun: “Is there a Santa Claus?” Francis DAYS IV 1 Pharcellus Church answered her letter in an editorial which is a Christmas gem and which shines ever brighter with thè flight of time : “ Yp, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist. And you X kcow that they abound and give to your lise its highest beauty and jov. Alasi How dreary would be thè world if there were no Santa Claus. Tt would be as dreary as if there were no Virginias. There wotild be no childish faith then, no poetrv, no romance to make tolerable this existence. Nobody sees Santa Claus. But that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most reai things in thè world are those that neither children nor men see. “Y~ou mav tear apart thè baby’s rattle and see what makes thè noise inside, but there is a veil covering thè unseen world which not thè strongest man nor even thè United strength of all thè strongest men that ever lived could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance ean push aside that eurtain and view glory bevond. Is it all reai ? Ah, Virginia, in all this world there is nothing else reai and abiding. “No Santa Claus? Tkank God, he lives and lives forcver. A thousand years from now. Virginia—nav, ten times ten thousand years from now —he will continue to make glad thè heart of ehildhood.” Christmas is more than a date on thè calendar or a season of thè year. It is a spirit—of giving, rather than receiving—an eternai rominder of what a joyous, beautiful existence this lise on earth could be f it were not for thè crash of selfishness against selfishness. Therein is Christmas’ reai charm. It unveils what lise could be. Other days of thè year are matter-of fact, hard as agate, revealing lise as we create it. reflecting ourselves. Christmas is thè day of days because it is thè one day of thè vèar when each of us stri ve s to make others happy. Civilizecl future generations will look back' and marvel that it nevor occurred to usto make a Christmas out of every day in thè year. WIPIXG AREYING record breaking shipments of ChristAWAY si mas mail overseas, twenty ships loft New' OCEANS J York in one day, one laden with 14,412 sacks. Maybe we’re weak on this league of nations thing, but we’re strong on Christmas cheer. In one night ninety-two American amateur radio operators send messages that are picked up in Europe. Where is this wireless thing leading? ri eliminates distance, shortly will bring rhe wliole world to every radio fan’s door. Strange friendships start now, at vast distances, by radio. A common event, later. Radio may be thè greatest invention o* our iifetime. A few Christmas seasons hence all thè world may be exchanging cheerv radio messages. International mail Service brouglit thè people of all nations nearer together. Radio communication has even vaster possibilities. WORLD y inimitable stage humorist and funmaker, NEEDS ’ i Fred Stone. has been playing to capacity audiLAUGHS JL onces in Indianapolis. More humorists. Tbat’s what Ilio world uceds most, says Edgar -Jepson, English psvchologist. He thinks joking is at a low ebb. t Naturally. The world is depressed, moaning in self-pitv. Levity requires light spirits. Then, too, humor is a senso òf thè ridiculous. And humanity in its bewilderment aster thè war is about 9f> per cent ridiculous, so jokesmiths are perplexed when they seek eontrasts that will strike people as funny. When thè ridiculous was isoiated, it was a jokc. Now it’s epidemie, pandemie. Humor is present—so nnieh of it that few see it.

MERRY 'W "x ESOLATION stalks, hand in hand with hunger, XMAS IN I 1 famine, pestilence and coki, through thè BMYRNA 1- -J' charred, black ruins of Smyrna, which last S Christmas was - thriving and teeming a city as thè visitor could find along thè roLnoking waters o!*the bine Mediterranean. Babes and their raothers shiver in soup lines waiting. not for rceals, but for a meager dole of food barely sufficient to susta in fife. Farailies are separated. Houses that shelterod them through generations are mere refuse. Humana dig like rats into thè ground, proteetion from thè weather. And hardly a person vho has not seen deatli steal up on one or more of his dearest. '* Tl-at's Smyrna, just next door to Christ’s birtliplace. All about, near and far, a smug world makes compìacent plans for a merry Christmas. This same smug world, a few short weeks ago, was in an argument, and Smyrna was in thè way, though it wasn’t Smyrna *s fault. Christmas which visits Smyrna this year might have been thè Christmas which fate and luck and circumstance might have wished upon any city, your city, were your city in thè way. Merry Christmas! Here and in Smyrna! Jlow different, vet how tvpical of our little globe today. Our Santa Claus has been good to us. Not so in other lands, and worst of all in Smyrna. Gire more than a thought on Christmas day to Smyrna. Biggest California Tree Measures 300 Ft. High and+3o in Diameter

qiKSTIONS AXSffrRED You Cari si t aa ar.s-.ver to my question of faet or ir formatili:', by wriiinsr to thè lmlianapohs Times' Washington Bureau, 1322 Ne Yor;c Ave.. Washington. D. C., inclosin? 2 - In st imi - NI Beai. favai and iove and marriage aùvire cannot be given. Uneigned lettera cannot oe answered. but all lettera are confidcntlal. and recelve in rsonal replica. Aithough thè bureau does r.ot require it. it wtil aseure promoter replies if readcrs -.vili confine questiona to a tn?le subjcct. wrlting more than one letter if answera ou various aubjecta are deslred. How big are thè "big irees” of California? The largest of these treee is over thtrty feet in diameter ten feet from thè ground, and thè tallost are over 100 feet high. "The Fallen Monarch" -.yas one of thè grandest in thè grove. ks it now ìies prostrate upon thè Aprili. it? diameter a over .wenty feet for more than 100 feet in iength. The top and part of thè butt end bave been destroyed by Are. llow long thè tree has laid there la unknown The wood of these trees la a upecies of cedar. One can cllmb thè "Fallen Monarch” by thè aid of a lad- j der and walk along !t for over 100

feet. "The Grizzly Giant" is twentyseven feet in diameeter nine feet from thè ground. At thè height of 100 feet thè first limb Comes out and that iiinb is slx feet in diameter. “The Telescope Tree” ls about 100 feet high, thè top of it above having been destroyed by Are. In what year was Mohammed bom? If rellance can be placed upon thè statement that Mohammed was about 63 years old when he died, thè traditional date of his birth, 670 A. D., would be approxlmately correct. But tradition also connects his bitrh with “thè year of thè depliant.” The march upon Mecca by Abraha, >h>Abyssinian ruler of Yemen, at thè instance of Jystinian, who was at war with Khosrau I, must have occurred before 662. It la. therefore, ; doubtful when thè prophet was born. Hls birthplact was undoubtedly Mecca. He was thè son of Ab.mr-h of thè family of Hashim, and Amina of thè family of Zuhra.

The Indianapolis Times FARLE E. MARTIN, Edltor-in-Chief. F. R. PETERS, Editor. ROY W. HOWARD. Prestdent. Q. F. JOHNSON. Business Manager.

Look Out, Here Comes Collector of In come Taxes By Times Special WASHINGTON, Dee. 25.—L00k out. here Comes thè tace collector, looklng for ‘•small fry” who may liave overlooked small items of income in making out thelr incoine tax returns. The Treasury *is having so much difflculty collecting sufficient taxes that It has put hundreds of auditors to work checking “small fry" incoine tax reports with employers’ re-porta. These collections from folks of small income have become important suddenly because of “delayed payments” and refunds effectod for big tax paying individuala and corporations through what Secretary Mellon calla "permissible avenue of escape." Treasury experts thlnk that hundreds of xhousands of individuala withsmall incomes have falled to report gìfts. bonuses, board and lodging. and other items in their reports. Those who dld are subject to penalties in many cases g reo ter than thè collectable taxes theinselves.

Harding Ad ministrai imi Hits Snag in Dealings With Old World Countries

By Times Special WASHINGTON. Dee. 25. The Harding Administration lias run on a snag in its dealings with thè old World. This is probably thè reason for thè

Christmas Snow Puzzles Child Visiting Here From South America-

Written fiT NT \ Servire b> ALICE STEWART Just Arrivetl from Buenos Aire GLEVERANH, Ohio. Dee. 25. Wì.it inaU' -i t'hrl.Umas come In winter here? It always ram In sa:mner before —file hottest part. I ean remember quite awhlie, for Uni 0 years old. Ijast year, in La Argentina, v/hero T was born, I s.Santa j (.v.iiis. He was wilCn? in thè IMaz.n j Mayor. in Buenos Aires, with a ! slgn. He looked so hot, in a r<si | coat, and a fur. I h i . a my suiti--1 mer dress. The an-VoU was all j Soft. I asUcd bini, “Es nsted San Nicolas?” “SI muchachita,” he said. “qua | quiere utted?” So I told him all tb thfngs I jdm m m —■ .-sf. ( j Public Opinion j ({.’frir-rirfs \r!ni'!.lf 10 ihe Pili tot of Th> liti* ft We go to sto Arbuckie’s pleturcs. not to dig up his past. Moat cvoryj body has a skeleton In thè cioset, only ' theyhaven’t had tho airlr.g us has Ar buckle’s: besides, God said we sbould not .Judtre lest we he jurlged, or con I dcrnn lest wo be condenaned. I think Mayor Shank woul l do more cood by asking Arhuckle to coma baci; , ’hun anything elsa he could do. At ìoast, Arhuckle enn tnaka peonie ornilo an i forget their caro. That's 11 ore than Mayor Shank orn over do ‘ in a thousar.d yr . rs with thè way he i cioè his work. And I wonder dos thè Hev. J. P. ! Martin think God would be plensed to j eoe thè knock he prave Arhuckle'. Isn't !t nough ho is down? It le right to drawn hi mout? Then preachers wonder why It ia hard to have peopla lismn to them talk of | stivine boulh. Scema aa though btlng- ' ing him back would be thè duty of all goo-1 people. It mortila more to him 1 than a lot of us know. There are always two !dea to ; story’. Why not let God Judga both | sides? He uSually Arnia a batter way than mortals. and I hope God wiU he ! more forgi vi ng with our Mayor Shank | thati Shank la w! h Arhuckle. If -h" | lsn t . A READER. Rislikcs I.lnyd George !To thè Editor of Tlu Times i Some tinta ago tiie English Prime | Minister, IJoyd George, in an odorosa : bofore tho British and American press | representativen. drew a very gloomy picture of Europe. Ile comparod Europe to a seething racla! lava, which like thè earth’s crust, was seoking a proper lave!. Titls adjustment was full of perils. He emphasized that. Europe must take ccgnizartcé of htingry Russia, which would he equipped by an angry Gemianv. The world must recognize thè fact, ho paid, that Russia and Germany combined contain over twothlrds of thè population o? Europe, i Their voice he neard and thè Russo-German treaty is tho flret warnIng of it. Ho gave it as his opinion that thè disorga nizat ion of Europe would affect thè entire world including thè United States unless a peace pac* be arranged. 110 was confldent that within his own llfe, certainly within thè llfe of thè younger generation ! prosent, Europe would again welter in j blood. 'j He forgot, liowevèr. to teli them ! that he holped to malte tho World War, and thè hellish tutd impossibie ! pact ut Versailles could not have been , eoncluded without bis cooperatlon; ; furthermore, that his policy sinco j then, thè "Hang Kaiser,” and “Seorch thè pockets of thè Germans," and other politicai slogano together with his continuous yielding to thè lmperlalism, despotism and militarìsm of thè French have done thè rest. Now if thè vrorld again is to welter In blood, that blood should come over his contem tibie, crooked head, as 1 much as over Poincaré and his French associates. W. B. SOHUEIBER. Tlie tiate’s Sidewalk To thè Editor of The Times I saw In your paper several articles about keeping sidewalks clean and free from snow. The worst and most sloppy sidewalk In Indianapolis is usually thè one around thè Statehouse. Why not clean that, ai so thè CourthouseT H. K.

fHEEWO! W[SF% jy BEIkTOM BRALEy J§§l IF Chrietmns bc green or if Christmas be whlts It doesn’t especiaily matter. Itj's alvvays a day when our spirits are light, / And hearta beat a Uvelier patter; A fog. or a blizznrd. or Bunshlne outside— We will not compiate of thè weather; For Christmas is Christmas, whatever betide, A day when we’re all paiß together I HERE'S one day at leaat when we re glowlng with love For conirade. for kin and for stranger, One day when we brenthe thè sweet charlty of The Bp-bo who was born in a manger; When no one has room for thè rancor of liate Or any okl grudge to remember. Oh, it is a tender and gloritela date Tht twenty-fllth day of Dccember. IF only rach dny in thè year mlght effect Sudi Joy in caoh child, man, or woman, How lise would itnprove? But we ean not expeot Too much of ourselves. we ars human 1 B.it let us be grateful one day la tlie year Sprt-ads love from thè Poles to thè Isthmus, When sii thè world tingles with mlrth and good cheer And all thè world shouts, “Merry Christmas!” (Copyright 11122, JSEA Service)

isgßis j - '• >

sildden shi f t in thè wlnd w'n!.:h otn day was blow'ng utrmug t >vn -,l ii,nu• - diate participi; tion in I•*?-*-un affaire, and th next had pped almost to a buste-1 cairn Liko a surgical operatici! too long

wanted and h- p; ■ ■mis’-d- -“Muy bien, basta la nat’vi-iad." Ar.d thè night bifore Christmas he brought 'he things. I ' v 1 them in my stockir-M thè r-r : -.orrdrg when I wakcd un, ori; were PO big they w- • go !' •: -, <> he jilcd them in \ :’.e palio, and we ti.e :!;•••• . k--.i in The uf'ernoon. My but 1: was a hot day—thè hot *!. -tt fuirumer, peep’e sa!d I do.-.’t •• - it's so cold here thè time Chrìstmaa come*. Oer.evlevr---she l'v*s a cross *he Street from n.e—ar.d Kenny. tl;vy think there are tw-> Hfi ila Claus. s, and or.e goes to La Argon: ina and one cumes lier-, bu? I v.ink th*re's only one. Only I don't <■•- t.ow he gols so f.-.r so f;tst. It tuok us days and days.

i A \' e ri) Merry C h vis tmos SjfSwJH aml 'Sfa' \ * o- A Happy New Year V J. p. Mullally L. S. A i/res cC* Co. Street Floor

, ; vrreetings— This seppie message From heart to keart we send , “Vlerry Chnstmas and a Happy New Year ” Fsom just an old-time friend. Befebid Wall Paper Co, ■lls Massachusetts Ave.

esc ■fsgs’g&mk fì'ly.jìfiy v \(sr£r 26 West W ashington Street 4 Visìr . You a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year With cordini thanks for your tremondous Christmas patronage / The Taylor Carpe t Company

■ eìayed, American intervention in i-'. -i ip*. thè Washington Government now realizes, is not going to bo so easy. Difhculties and clangere are prc-vent wliich were not there to begin with. It is now thoroughly understood bere that intervention in Europe on what is generally spoken of in foreicn circle:, as “thè American pian,” niight very well add fuel to thè flame of bitter:-, oss against thè l'nited •c-s now perfectly apparent throughout thè old world. The “American pian,” as now popula- ly understood in Europe ls. flrst. to induce thè allies, when they rneet in l'aris on Jan. 2, to cut down thè O rman reparations by ni least hall; then. eecondly, to make a largo loan — a biiiion and a half dollars or more—to Oi-rnany. This American loan wou, i bo reeiire i by a sort of flrst r: ••• - ■ on Gcrmany's fiesets. In (,- r words, a-s thè rank and -io in E-; rupe view It, America, havir.g x-'.yed out of lt si noe 1919, now at V. all St. sees wbere it can make nother klllìng. in willing to dip in. but wlille thè expetts aro agree ! C-ccnan reparations must be reduced, •he popular lmpresslon in aiiied nations Is that Gerinany can and should he mudo to pay thè full amount. And ari y allied government rlsks ita po-li-:cal Ufo by ignoring tlxis impression.

Agriculture in Northwest Is Going Jo Pieces By Times Special WASHINGTON, Dee. 25.—Want to buy a farm? There’s one up in North Dakota listed for sale for delinquent tazes, to which yo.u can buy thè tax title, for 511.94. This was just one of thè things Mr. John P. Sinclair, Minnesota banker, told thè Senate Agricuitural Committee about thè other day. “Agriculture in tlie Northwest,” said Ma. Sinclair, “is going to pieces at thè present moment. In one county alone in North Dakota, there are 4,8U0 tarma for sale because thè farmer oan’t even pay his taxes, let alone make payments on thè property.” In thè tour States of Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Montana, total taxes have increased from $99,000,000 in 1910, to $200,000,000 in 1921, Sinclair said. Farm mortgage lndebtedness lina increased from $109.000,000 in 1910, to $530,000,000 In 1920 —an incroaso of 300 per cent. “That is an overhead which, like additlonal ttixes, has to be inet. It wasn't so diftic-uit to meet these overheads wiien wheat vvas $3.50 a bushel, but when thè fai mer get.s lesa than 90 conts, as he got this fall, and as he is continuine: to get at certain points in thè West today, I do not see how it is posslble for him to pay off his overhead, let alone have anything left for his family.” EASTLAMD DIVER NEARLY LOSES LIFE UNDER WATER Working Salvaging Cargo of Sunk Lake Steamer. MILWAUKEE, Dee. 25 —Capt. William M. Doncau, thè deep sea diverwho brou..;hr up 350 bodies out of thè Chicago iiivt-r at thè time of thè i-lastland tì:- . -ter, rim# near drowning recently when t tube "i\ his sult broke while he wa>- working in thè cold watera of Lake Michigan, sixty-flve feet b'-low thè surface. Tlie captaiii was diving off thè tug Fearless in -i. attempt to salvage thè j cargo of ti-,e Nor: idar.d. wliich sank j off St. Fkuu-ìs some tveeks ago. Cap- ■ tain Den--a u had brought so ver al toy • automoliilec to tic- surface and gone ! down for thè se- end time when a tube lon his ìiving .--...t g..ve v.ay and water ! oaino r -i.:> - inio thè sult. He gave •he disi: t-s - ..'.al to his Uelpcrs and ! they hauled ioni to tlio surface*. but ' ids sui:, w.l fili- i with froezing water !>efore he .--adied t.he top. Repai :*s ■ ■ w i'eing made to thè | stiit an ! t •-. v. < japressor is being installi 1. > i;n lieneau will confinue t!.■ • v :s n as thè repai rs ; are compie• I Ti. • steamer is lying ;°n a rock ani clay bottoni under j sixty-flve feet et water, iie says. Its ibulwarks ire .-p-ead and all tlie cargo ! not ruito -ì by v iter will be salvaged.

Liàffl \V. H. (irltìln SOf. Odd Fellovr Uhlß. Maln fi?l? k' 5f | t. (. nesicr Feirce 510 Occidental Bld* Maln <1355

’>Vm I* Oli O IdiolV Uhi,. I incoio eent 1“. U . t lleoii 101 N. llllnoi I irrlr IS7' pp* ” pi ÉM hmin.t t V M-Krcy ; Koocvclt Are. Web. 9100 : ■ ì iÈs£ v Èva Short 4 I.’, .\ !U lunare ftVW } m-Ùf h C. J. Van V.ìàkè*rs 435 Oci'ldentul Bici. ||o3 1 lèaìÌ Dante 1,. Conner 401 Kahn 151(1 B. WMn SSHO li. Jl. K > an Fountaln Sq. Chlropractor lOCfiVa Virglnlq Drexel 01 IS 1. Kb, U .„m>r SIS Occidental Blds. Main 6555

Gladys O. Bebou 615 Lemeke BldL Main 0877

MEMBER of thè Scripps-Howard Newspapers. • * • Client of thè United Press, United News, United Financial and NEA Service and member of thè Scripps Newspaper Alliance. • • * Ivìember of thè Audit Bureau of Circulations.

TOM SIMS SAYS: f RETAIL prices are being in- W creaci by thè Wholesale. { If you see a celebrator in / mi a stupor he may be hipnotized. / Every girl likes to wash dishcs un- \ jSS til she gets past 6 years old. \ IjSm Several who did their Christmas ’ f Jr shoplifting too late were caught. In York, Fa., bandits carried off thè postofQee safe, but there vvas only money in it, no coai. • • • The Walla Walla, Wash., man cutting his tkird set of teeth will wear them out saving vvhere he lives. t • • Over in Ircland, Dublin will be called Bail Eatha Oliath, but conditions there are mueh better than this sounds. • • • Absence of presents doesn’t make tlie heart grow fonder. t I It takes one to start a tight, which is always thè other one. • ♦ * They are recruiting soldiers by radio now, thè only drawback being recruits can’t drill by radio. * • • Some people’s object in lise is objecting.

By HERBERT QLTCK Our ancestry is alwavs an intere3ting subject, especiaily our remote ancestVy. Is man descended from thè or thè monkey, or from some ancestor of thè ape and thè monkey, or was he made and put in Eden, out of which he flim flammed himself by coiloquing stupidly with Satan, so that he became a murderer in thè second generation? I don't knpw. but I have admired thè noblc struggle which Mr. Biyan hafe been making IO wipe out thè imputation of our having a monkey etrain in our pedigree. Stili, when I luce Yhe cholce of belonging to a race of beings which are descended from tlie godlfke Adam and aro ahvays trying to make monkeys of themselves. or a race descended from monkeys striving generation aster generation to make inen of themselves, I—well. it's about a horse aplece. with thè odds. if any. on thè monkey as a forefatlier. However, thè faets will decide, if we can get them —and as a fact in tlie probleni, pardon me if for a moment I write about thè forbidden subject of—l must say it—tho subject of lice.

jE. E. FuUer j 404 Kahn Bldg, ! Main 3430. ili. X. l.ridln i 50<ì Odd Feitow 111(1 gSlain 6213

YOUR HEALTH AND C HIROPRAC TIC In Perfect Ranning- Order SThe successful and far-seeiug manufacturer is very careful to see thai thè maehìnes in his factory are always kept in perfect running order. He employs a corps of experts whose sole duty it is to see that these machines are in running order and who, when necessary, adjust sanie. It is vastly more important fcr you to take care of that rnost precious of all machines, THE lIU.MAN MACHINE, yet how, few do it. The averase man takes little or no interest 1n matterà conccrning Health until he has lost ais I-léalth in a perfectly foolisli and inexcusable manner. DEFINTTION g 0 ; on g as can keep at high presTh practics ot Chìropractio sure in his chase for thè almightv dolwìtiWha °bandß? lar he does so rogardless of thè damage abie segmenta ’of thè spinai 0 f hi 3 health. If ho were a mauufactCr’l’e pwposé“l rcSovln* tnrer he would not dream of subjecting thè cause of thè diseas. one of his machines (tvhich, by tho w’ay, could be easily replaced), to such a strain without having it periodically overbauled and, if necessary, adjusted. Rentember that when damaged beyond repalr your Human Machina can not be replaced. You may noiv enjoy Health—Make np your mimi to KEEP Healtby. ;i coinpetent Cbiropractor give you a Spinai Analysis at stated perioda. Malie auro that your Tir,man Machine can t-tand ilio strntn to which yoVaubject it. If necessari, let him give you CHIKOPRACTIC VERTEBRA L ADJI.'STMKNTS. They will relieve thè nerve pressure, which is caused by subluxated (displaeed) vertebrae (smali bones of thè spine), and thè resnlt will be that thè vital force will slow unlnterruptedly from thè braln through thè nerves to thè various organa, allowing them to functiou normally. Take care of your Human Machine. Be sure that your spine is In normal conditlon. Tou will be HAPPY, HEALTHY AND SUCCESSFUL, In your business. (RIRHTS RESERVED.)

“Practitioners of Straight Cniropractic”

Some Observations on Lice

tliaft. T. le urli | 408 State JL.ife ! Bldg. Circi 4703 , ■ {Harry loor, 164 i Elisene. Randolph 1074 ]

Each animai hai! its own pecullar kind of lice. Prof. Ferris of Stanford University, is a louse specialist. Ha tells us such : things as these: Tha Egyptian klngflsher has lice like thè North American kingfìsher; thè seals in thè At--1 iantic have lice like thè Pacific seals. Siberian ground squirrels have lice i like American ground squirrels; our ■ tarile hogs have lice like thè African i bush-pigs: hawks all over thè world bave sigiar lice; thè same is true of | domestic chickens and wild bird3 which are their relative. There used to be many more kinds of carnels in remote ages than now. All that ara left aro thè Old World carnei and ! thè llama of South America—and tha Iberna and thè carnei* have thè same ! kir.d of lice! In other words, races of animala that cannot have caught lice of each other, but which are relatives, have in many cases thè same kind of lice, : and lice of a kind which no other animai has. And men and apes and monkeys ! bave simiiar lice! You may draw your own conclusions. But it’s rather disconcerting to nave these faets come up just when Mr. Brvan liad settled lt that men and monkeys are not bìood relatives. Hang i lice anyhow!

Wm. J. Miller 620 Occidental Bldg. Main 6553 r: y Lewis E. short 415 N. Delawar* Main 9583 ì -rfJ E. \I. V lekrey 2626 Roosevelt Ave. 55eb. 9403 M \| - O. !.. Beatty, 610 Odd Fellow Bldg. Et noni n 4816 \\ m. A. Ringo 832% Mass. At. Over Stout's Stor* Circle 5881 E. R. Bebont 615 I.envite Bldg Maln 0877 BJnm L ,1. r n I.oBK 611 Odd Feliow Bldg. Lincoln SOO3 d. L. i rendi 126 Pembrok Arcade Bldg.

se.. | 6w'.' i beoti >V . .VliiKOn i 520 Occidental Bldg. Maln 6355 ■A. .1 Uridgeiord i 126 .-tate Lise Bldg. I Main 2409

f d V iyChas. L. Rowe 9 W. Jlorrls St. Drexel 3733