Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 222, Indianapolis, Marion County, 29 January 1924 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN. Editor-In-Chief ROY W. HOWARD. President ALBERT W. BUHRMAN, Editor WM, A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgp Member of the Scrlpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client es the United Press, the NEA Service and the Scripps-Palne Service. • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dally except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos., 25-20 S. Meridian Street. Indianapolis • • • Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week. * • • PHONE—MAIN 3500.
THE PRIMARY AND TAXES ESITANCY of party candidates to agree to a limitation of primary expenses is a regrettable condition. At a time when reduction of taxes is one of the foremost issues in the Nation, disregard of economy in political affairs is hardly in harmony with the spirit of the day. , Why should a candidate solemnly pledge to reduoe taxes and to conduct his duties in an economical manner and then proceed deliberately to spend thousands in winning votes! A man who spends money lavishly for votes will spend the public’s taxes liberally after he is elected. Indiana knows that fact only too well. Former Senator Albert J. Beveridge set an admirable example when he adopted an “open statement” policy in order to keep expenses low. Party candidates now may well consider the question of “economy” in their own political affairs. The public will have no better proof of a thrifty, economical official than his success in reducing primary expenses. AIN’T IT AWFUL, MABEL? IHA!1 HA! Now we know all about it. All about what! Why, tm _ m all about what N. C. Jewett, grand dragon of the Oklahoma Ku-Klux Klan, told Dr. H. W. Evans, imperial wizard, in the famous telegrams dispatched to Atlanta during the “Walton war.” The telegrams were taken right out of the files of the Western Union Telegraph Company and introduced as evidence on behalf of J. C. Walton, former Oklahoma Governor, in the hearing of his motion to quash indictments against him. Just read this telegram if you would know all about the Klan plot to oust Walton: Dr. H. W. Evans, Hemlock 5470, Atlanta, Ga.: Mnxyp wluku svfhf sklmi fxkmr smqqi kaoda bbevx lrsbg tzlfr xeedq tbact hvklc jmeif zrsrl zjpqx azbtl pjjvs rwbdj rlurm flfif zkwow vlkvz piqqb fkbqz xpixy utyuj ylhwl bhdbh zlfsr mbpbm ojbwo jhuhy tiimb fkmsg zpxxr wvwiu fksmi acgwl pwxfd ytzvw zkylu jmbih zcasg jmrph wjqss jjxjx mtkif kmwsg mvgqx tskus ylshn ibajh thlkx ixypx uazmw djknj mtjmn lpxhh igkkm wlqzy jyycv xikl.s ifwcd bqkfp kuazj hukyj.—Jewett. Would you ever believe such things were possible! That’s an awful thing to say about any man! -Of course these telegrams are supposed to be Klan secrets. Don’t tell any one what they mean, please. LITTLE UPLIFT IN IT A" XOTHER award for bright thought and literary effort 1 Prize of S2OO, a decision, a big kick of losers and everything in it. Anti-Saloon League wanted a name of opprobrium for violators of prohibition, offered S2OO for the best and the judges decided upon “Scofflaws,” as one that would “wither with shame and dry them up.” “Scofflaws!” Huh! When millions are scoffing tax laws, dry laws, auto laws, spitting-on-the-sidewalk laws, unmuzzled-dog laws, blasphemy laws, bridge-gambling laws, and other laws, until about the only man who isn’t scoffing some law is a dead one, and there’s mighty little virile shame or possible dryness in being called a scoffer. , Fact is that, as a rule, habitual violators, or evaders of law have a bit of pride rather than shame in their practice. Just recently, a somewhat authentic statement was published to the effect that the country has fifty thousand lawyers engaged in showing corporations and rich individuals how to avoid income taxation. The gambler doesn’t blush upon being called a scoffer of law, but is shamed to be held as an “easy mark” of his ngShame over being called a scoffer of law never keeps any thief out of a henhouse. Finally, the mere calling or names almost invariably makes the party addressed Btick to what he Is at closer and harder than ever, and the league’s “Scofflaws” will, very likely, produce more witness on the part of those willing to '"riak life, honor, family, friends, hope and hereafter on present day booze.
A LESSON ABOUT LYING —r“|T is easy to tell lies. To make them 4 4 stick "is difficult. I When more than one person is "in" on lies, the,difficulties multiply. The two greatest political scandals of recent American history —the Ballinger scandal of 1910 and the Teapot Dome expose —were both unearthed because falsehoods failed to withstand the rigors of investigation. Had not the stories of President Taft and Assistant Attorney General Oscal W. Lawler,varied on important points, the Ballinger case might well have been snowed under an avalanche of presidential exonerations. Had not the tales of former Secretary Fall and those of Edward McLean, E. L. Doheny and J. W. Zevely been entirely contradictory, the whitewash might have been applied so thickly that even this sordid tale would have remained a secret. It is regrettable the highly honored public officials should resort to falsehood, but it is a protection to the public that lies are so difficult to sustain. Public officials, whether Presidents or village mayors, can learn from these notable cases that nothing is more foolhardy or dangerous than trying to deceive the public with lies. DON'T know exactly how to pronounce the name of Mr. Doheny, the California oil millionaire, but the accent is on the first syllable, as in “dough." JUST when we thought the coal question had been settled by Giff Pinchot, along comes news of preparations for anew strike. And it’s a coal, coal world we live in today. CANON AITKIN of England has preached more than 22.000 sermons. Must be a job for the canon to remember how to practice all he has preached. LADY mummies found near King Tut’s tomb after 2,640 years were garbed like women of today, says story. Now watch the wives all get ouVpnd wear last year’s dresses. \ ________ COOLIDGE still standing squarely on the Mellon plan. Evidently Cal is an admirer of the bo4| who stood oa the burning deck
TELESCOPE SHOWS MANY TWIN STARS Look Like Single Body to Naked Eye, but They Are Revolving About One Another in Orbit,
SIR ISAAC NEWTON, WHO ACCORDING TO LEGEND, WAS LED TO FORMULATE HIS LAWS OF GRAVITY AS THE RESULT OF AN APPLE HAVING FALLEN ON HIS HEAD. THE DISCOVERY OF DOUBLE STARS SHOWED THAT THE LAWS OF GRAVITY APPLIED NOT ONLY TO OUR OWN SOLAR SYSTEM, BUT TO THE ENTIRE UNIVERSE. NEWTON WAS BORN IN 1642 AND DIED IN 1727.
BY DAVID DIETZ Science Editor of The Times. (Copyright by David Dietz.) INE of the Interesting things observed when astronomers i. began to train big telescopes upon the stars, was many stars which appeared as single stars to the naked eyes were separated into two stars by the telescope. Os course some of these were cases where two stars, billions of miles apart, happened merely to be In line with each other. But others constituted real systems, there actually being two stars which revolved around each other. Such double stars are given the name binary stars by the astronomer. The first binary' star was dlsoov. T)m Sims’ Newspaper FADS! FADS! j J EWSPAPERS announce a radio : I device for curling hair. ——* All right girls, tune In on a marcel wave. You can expect some local Interference If bobbing for the first time. Dad and ma will provide loud speakers. As transformers, try putting the switch on and off. No need to tell you to avoid frequency or static in style. Station FAD signing off. DAILY SKOFF SKOFFCAR—A bird that gives your flivver the laugh. SKOFFDATE—A dame that turns down your movie Invitation for a dinner bid. SKOFFTOMB—A guy that runs In front of autos and street cars on slippery street. SKOFFPRUNES—Victim either of a boarding house or the ancient Joke concerning It.
ADVERTISING Our want ads bring results. Recently we advertised the mysterious disappearance of our pipe, Gumshoe. We haven’t been able to locate our own pipe, but scores of people have brought In pipes they found and suspected of being ours. We not only have future Christmas presents but far better pipes than the one we lost.
EDITORIAL SHORTS This time it was the oil that troubled the waters. People who work in gas stations shouldn’t throw matches. When It gets too cold to swear—well, it's time to go to Florida. Visitors who tell us their troubles are welcome every Feb. 29. COURT NEWS New York lawyers asked an alienist a 20,000-word hypothetical question. Didn’t bother him at all. He has a small boy at home. LEGAL NOTICE Some lawyers you hire; and some you support for the rest of their lives. FASHIONS Announcement that derbies are to be all the style again will put a lot of mothballs out of jobs. Which raises the delicate question: What would mothballs do for a living 1/ trunks hadn’t been Invented. MUSIC P. Liguattnrri, trombonist extraor dlnarj’t received a distinguished delegation at his hotel last week. They asked him to rehearse In the theater hereafter. ART Rumor has it that La Drauxe sold a painting last week. He paid his board bill. SCIENCE Experiments made on the latest thing In mouse trajjs indicate that they pinch the fingers just as hard as the ancient varieties.
Heard in the Smoking Room
mHK gentleman on his way from Kentucky to New York told, one about his grandfather. The old judge was very intimate with one of the Governers of the State and they used to ride around a good deal, in the days of horses and buggies and toll gates. One day they on their way to the house of a friend to get a mint julip. Xk*y came lu a toil.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
ered by Rlccloll. an Italian observer, in 1650. At the present time about 20,000 binaries have been catalogued. Professor Aitken of the great Lick Observatory estimates about onethird of the stars are blnarlea. Revolve About Another The two stars composing each visual binary revolve around each other In periods ranging from five to 2,000 years. In addition to the visual binaries there are the so-called speotroeeoplo binaries. The spectroscope, in addition to revealing the chemical condition of a star, also reveals the star’s motion. The lines In the spectrum shift toward the blue end when a star Is moving toward us. If the star Is receding, the shift is toward the red end. sJany stars show a complex shlftIrg of the lines which can only be explained by assuming the star Is a binary, but the component stars are so close together the largest telescope falls to reveal the Individual stars. About 600 spectroscopic blnarlea are now known. Some of these have a period of revolution of only a few hours. In the case of some of the visual binaries. It has been shown one of the component stars Is Itself a spectroscopic binary. making In reality a system of three stars. Professor Aitken assumes about one out of every twenty staxs consists of three or more components. Tliroc Theories Considered There are three theories concerning the origin of binary stars. The first Is known as the capture theory. This assumes two stars would, In drifting by each other, be mutually attracted so thereafter they would revolve about each other. The second theory Is known as the Independent nuclei theory. This assumes all atars were originally evolved from nebulae, the great gaseous messes In the sky, which we will discuss In detail a little later. According to this theory, double staxs resulted In cases where the nebula Instead of contracting around one nuoleua, contracted about two nuclei. The third theory Is the fission theory. According to this, a star in its early or nebulous stage would divide In two, due to some Instability In Its structure. The two components, It Is assumed, would at first revolve about each other In surface contact, gradually separating aa times went on. Next article In series: Variable Stars. UNUSUAL PEOPLE
Farm, Stage, Politics
Hu NEA Rervioe INGSWOOD, W. Va.. Jan. 29. —Farmer, actress, war worki. er and politician are the titles attributable to Mrs. Izetta Jewell Brown. fSMM miy Member of the Im¥w'4 home and oommunlty of , / the A in i> rican Farm Bureau Fed- ' 'SBEskisl era tlon, Mrs. Brown has just •' returned from a ’ study of farms abroad. Here at home she has HF managed her own P lirc bred liolI f stein and Jersey ;." JM dairy farm, bej, sides anot her —v—__J farm. A decade ago % MRS. BROWN the stage was her field, when she was leading woman for Otis Skinner, James K. Hackett and othera. When her husband, the late Congressman William G. Brown, Jr., of West Virginia, died In 1916, she took up politics. Now she Is chairman of the National Woman’s Jarty.
gate. The judge put his hand in his pocket to pay the toll. The Governor said: "Judge, I invited you on this | ride and I propose to pay all expenses." Later they came to their destination. The Governor said: "Judge, will you please open the gate?” “No," said the judge. "If I can’t pay mv way, I’Ll bed if I work for it.”
WOMAN IS SEEKING U. S. SENATE JOB Widow of West Virginia Congressman Is Democratic Aspirant, This article is one of a series by Lowell Mellett, of the Times’ Washington Bureau, who is making a tour, to ascertain political conditions in various parts of the country. By LOWELL MELLETT HEELING, W. Va„ Jan. 29. Y y Guy Goff, son of Nathan, in- — --—I herited his father's wealth. Izetta Jewel Brown, widow of former Congressman W, G. (‘Junior”) Brown, Inherited her husband’s wealth. Edward Cooper, son of John Cooper, Inherited his father's wealth. And the three are now the most prominently mentioned candidates for the Inheritance of Davis Elkins, which was not only his father’s wealth, but his seat In the United States Senate as well. Somebody seems bound to succeed the young Elkins, If what one hears in his home State Is true. Elkins, likable personality, Isn’t very popular In these closing months of his statesmanship. And, as usual, you can blame a woman—this time his mother. At least, lots of folks do. Here’s what they say: "Well, her father was a United States Senator —Henry Gossoway Davis. Her husband was a United States Senßtor—Stephen B. Elkins. She wanted three generations of Senators In the family and she sent this boy down there. It was a mistake. He wasn’t cut out lor the Job.” Woman Is Candidate The election Is next fall. Among the Democratic aspirants Mrs. Brown has made herself foremost for the time being by her excellent showing against M. M. Neeley in the 1922 primary. Former Senators W. E. Chilton and Clarence Watson have Indicated no disposition to seek the nomination. The woman who stirred the San Francisco convention In her speech seconding the nomination of John W. Davis, causing the temperamental band to break Into ‘‘You Great Big Beautiful Doll!” apparently has much more vun der her bonnet than & mass of golden hair. She is frankly after the nomination and hopes to have the labor vote as a nucleus of her strength, as she did the last time. Goff G. O. P. Aspirant Os the Republican candidates, Goff Is better known perhaps In Washing ton, where he is one of Harry Daugherty's assistant attorneys general, than he Is In h!s own State. His father. Judge Goff, was a powerful element In the politics of his days. If he passed his power on to his son. the son hasn't yet come into the Inheritance. Edward Cooper Is a coal operator. His father was one of the pioneer operators In West Virginia and the son, no longer a young man. has developed the elder's properties to the point where they are among the most important In the He has the respect and confidence of all the business Interests and has wielded considerable Influence in affairs for many years. Former Senator Sutherland, defeated for re-election by Neeley, retired from office a poor man and Is devoting himself to the repair of his fortunes He Is not expected to contest for the Republican nomination. This disposes of the possibilities now above the surface, but leaves out three or four formidable factors such as the coal operators' association, the j Standard Oil Company, the B. A: O. Railroad and the United States Steel Trust. These factors, however, can better be discussed in connection with the coming presidential campaign In this State. I A Thought
He that hath knowledge spareth his words: and a man of understanding is of an excellent spirit.—Prov. 17:27. • • • OT only Is there an art In know- \ lng a thing, but also a certain art in teaching It. —C. aro. Family Fun Heavenly Avery loving couple had Just returned from their honeymoon. "Hilda, dearest,” said George, "I see there is some asparagus ready for cooking. Shall wo go out and pluck it together, love?” To which Hilda replied, cooingly. “George, dearest, it will be heavenly! You shall pluck It, and I will hold the ladder."—Tit-Bits (London . YVItMe Tells Teacher “What do we mean when we say the whole Is greater than any of Its parts?" "A doughnut.’’—Boston Transcript. Family Pride “You havo a lot of family pride, haven’t you, dad?" "Yes, my son, a great dead.” “Then help me with my algebra so that the fellows wont call me Blockhead Blackwell any more.” —Judge. Father on Economy "Hermann, see how that lawyer is squeezing daughter's hand under the table?” “Let him! While he's squeezing he can’t be eating!” What Wife Used ' “With what Instrument or article did your wife inflict these wounds on your face and head?” “Wld a motty, yer anner.” “A what?” "A motty—wan o’ these frames wld ‘God Bliss Our Home’ In It.”—Cleveland Leader. No Leap Year in His “Do you believe In divorce?” "My dear girl, I don’t even believe in marriage.”—Am. Legion Weekly. Wife’s Ball Dress "You haven't enough clothes on to wad a shotgun.” “Os course not, dear. Who wads a shotgun these days?”—Judge. (100 Miners Attend Funeral By l nitrd Press PETERSBURG, Ind., Jan. 29.—Six hundred miners attended the funeral of John (Big Tex) Burt, one of the best known “shot flrers” of southern Indiana. Burt was killed in an jxplosion.
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QUE9T I O N S Ask— The Times answers You can get an answer to any question of fact or Information by writing to the Indianapolis Time*' Washington Bureau. 1323 New York Ave., Washington. D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stumps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can eg tended research be undertaken. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered Ail letters are confidential.—Editor. What la Mlstlgris’’ Draw poker, the only difference being that It Is played with fifty-three cards, the Joker being added to the regular pack. The joker counts for ary card the player who holds It may desire. Thus he may hold five of a kind. This hand boats a royal flush. Otherwise draw poker rules govern the gome. Why la the ocean salty? By the continuous process of Interchange between the surface waters of the land and the ocean the latter has become a depository of vast quantities of mineral matter that have been disso'ved out of rocks through the agency of springs and streams. The principal constituents of sea water are the more soluble salts—the. chlortdes and sulphates of the alkalies and fukoiine earths. The rmount of salts dissolved In the water varies In different localities, though the range of such variation Is small. In regions of heavy rainfall, such as the equatorial calms, and off the mouths of large rivers, the salinity Is lowered, as It Is also in high latitudes, where evaporation takes place slowly. On the other hand the waters of inclosed seas, like the Red Rea and the Mediterranean. and of trade-wind belts which receive litlle rainfnll and are subject to rapid evaporation, are slightly übove the average salinity.
At what temperature should the home be kept In winter? The publlo health service say* 70 degrees. What Is Ash Wednesday? The first day of Lents it received its name from the oustom of putting ashes on the heads of penitents as a sign of mourning for sin. Who was the most famous violin maker of all times? Antonio Stradivari. How are diamonds cut? With an iron wheel, which is made to rotate very rapidly, and is armed with a mixture of diamond dust and emery. What are the salaries of second lieutenants, first lieutenants, captains. majors, Itentenant colonels and colonels in the United States Army? The pay of a. second lieutenant ranges from $1,500 to $2,000 base pay, depending on the length of service. The base pay of other ranks of the Army follow: First lieutenant, $1,500 to $2,400; captain, $2,000 to $3,000: major. $2,400 to $3,500: lieutenant colonel, $3,000 to $4,000; colonel, $3,500 to $4,000. What. Is the pay of a lieutenant in the Navy? It varies from $160.67 to $375 per month (base pay), according to the length of service. What Is malted milk? A product made by combining whole milk with liquid separated from a mash of grounded barley • malt and wheat flour, with or without the addition of sodium chlorid, sodium bicarbonate and potassium bicarbonate, in such a manner as to secure the full enzymic action of the malt extract and by removing water. The resulting product contains not less than 7t£ per cent of butter fat and not more than 3% per cent of moisture. Does the Government guarantee depositors against losses in the case of the failure of a national hank? * No. though the Government exercises close supervision over national' banks —a fact that tends to Insure safety to depositors—the Government does not guarantee the safety of the deposits or make good any losses occasioned by failure.
Can ’t Get Away From It
Literature By BERTON BRALEY I'd read the books of Bernard Shaw And those of Schopenhauer, In fact, I grabbed each book I saw And all I could devour That made a study of the dances And helped to analyze ’em. To show up all their little games And aid a guy to size ’em. I wouldn’t have my peace of mind By women’s tricks imperiled, And so I read up womankind As wrote by Scott Fitzgerald, And all those other modern ginks That’s studied women. Yea, bo, I gets the dope and so I thinks "They won’t fool this gazabo.” But what’s the use? Books on the shelf Don’t help you when you need it; Each girl’s a volume by herself That changes while you read It! And as for this here kid I love And hope I'm gonna marry; Say, she’s got all the makln’s of A bloomin’ liberarry! (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) What Editors Are Saying Victor (Rushvllle Telegram) Connersville beats us twice In one night—at basketball, and at conflagrations. The first score was 85 to 25, the second 500,000 to 100,000. Truth (South Bend Tribune) Let's have the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth about the Teapot Dome oil leases. Hinting darkly about Federal corruption In this case Is about the only attack the Administration’s enemies have Just now. If there was something wrong In the deal let it come out. the people have & right to know the truth. Grateful (Washlmrton Democrat) For the big counter-scandal In Washington, Indiana should be grateful. Doesn't (Ft Wayne Journal-Gazette) Senator Hi Johnson is about to open Indiana headqtiarters In Indianapolis. It may not get him many delegates, but it will enable him to watch the process by which he doesn’t get them. Child (Ft. Wayne News-Sentinel) A 6-year-old boy knows enough to go home when the neighbors let him know he Isn’t wanted. A little child shall lead them, Governor. Let's go!
Animal Facts
All aboard for some new eatln’s! United States biological survey sharps have planted a family of.the wild ocellated turkey of Honduras, pretty nearly as gorgeously colored as the peacock, on an island off Georgia, whore it never gets freezing cold, being next door to its indigo blue gulf stream sister. If this peacocks turk does well there, his descendants will be scattered over the South and told to multiply and live off the fat of boll weevils and such. Ocellated turk is not quite as big as our domesticated bird. Bites of lions, leopards, tigers, wolves and many other animals often cause blood-poisoning, but the bear’s never. Great swarms of .ocusts sweep over South Africa and do inestimabla damage to crops and all character of green growths. Now these locusts are to be gathered as they fly apd mqanufactured into food for cattle and poultry. A big concern has been organized at Johannesburg to do the manufacturing. The locusts will be sterilized, dried and then crushed and ground into various grades of meal. It is said cattle and chickens are very fond of this food, which Is Mid to be superior to meat and fish products.
TUESDAY, JAN. 29, 1924
Editor’s Mail The editor is -willing to print views of Times readers on interesting subjects. Make your comment brief. Sign your name as an evidence of good faith. It wiil not be printed If you object.
What, Tuh! To the Editor of The Times I see that Roy E. Carpenter of your city shows the difference in oosts of running an auto in New Hampshire and Indiana, with a large credit In favor of Indiana. If Roy would glance at the map he would notice that New Hampshire is only about as big as about twenty Indiana counties an|i that about half of the State Is so mountainous that neither a flivver nor a goat can climb it. That leaves but a small space for autos to park in the State, consequently the natives must cough up in order to keep u pthe roads for tourists that cross the State without knowing it. If portions of Hancock County, for instance, should try to do certain things to their roads themselves I presume the license would be greater too. Say, Mr. Editor, I see Ed Jackson says every mother's son will be cruelly pinched by Feb. 15, if he is minus the orange tin plates. Now if the Legislature was in session and should conclude to give McCray a smooth coat of whitewash along with all the fiftyseven brands, and they found that they would have to make it short, account campaign year, and they tacked onto the same bill another unconstitutional bill or two, and seeing the long since empty treasury staring them in the face and tacked on an emergency clause to get the money quick, and they increased the license to say S3O for flivvers and others In proportion, would we have to cough up simply be cause Jackson told us that “we are busted flatter’n a pancake” and must have the coin? In other words, do the citizens have to pay in accordance with the needs of our officials? GREENFIELD, I NIX From Widow To the Editor of The Times: Just a little advice from Rot 13Carpenter would help some Iloosier to know how he can have a car, pay garage rent, auto license of $19.76, poll tax of $5, coal at $17.50 per ton. buy clothes, food and pay rent on $16.50 per week. Sounds out of reason. How about you? Give us the secret. WIDOW FROM KENTUCKY. Tongue Tips A. P. Moore, ambassador to Spain: “Life in Spain is not all a delightful dream. The humblest cottager in the United States enjoys more comforts than the grandees of Spain. And there Isn't an ice cream soda in the country." Pavson Smith, State commissioner of education, Massachusetts. "You can not satisfy a boy by telling him it’s a good thing to get educated. The outstandir g problem of outh today is. ‘How does a fellow find out where he belongs?’ ” Judge Ira W. Jayne, Detroit: “Today father goes golfing and is not thinking about his son, Jet alone worrying about him. Because of this, the son no longer worships his father as a hero or loves him as a comrade, in too many instances. Instead, he worships the boldest talker and doer ho km vs. He looks up to the man, generally only a few years older than himself, who Is the most reckless In defying the conventions." Judge Clyde M. Reed. Kansas: "Low is ineffective unless it is enforced. We are, in a sense, a lawless people, as strong individualists are prone to become, and we are a nation of strong individuality. We make laws and we disregard them.”
NEW FORDS FOR RENT Drive Yourself—All Models No Red Taoe. New Central Station WALTER T. BOYER CO. 38 Kentucky Are. Li, *>M
