Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 272, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1924 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN, Editor-in-Chlef ROT W. HOWARD. President ALBERT W. BI'HRMAN, Editor WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Seripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of the United Press, the NBA Service and the Scripps-Paine Service. • • • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapotis Times Publishing Cos 214 220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis * * • Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week. • • * F HONE—MAIN 3500.

AX EARLY CLEAN UP "rTpLIOE Chief Rikhoff has picked on dance halls as the subject T of a crusade and the attorney general is hurling an attack on certain magazines which, he says, are lurid, objectionable and a menace to the entire State of Indiana. "Who’s going to be the next crusader ? It’s about time for the board of health and sanitary officers to look into a fertile field for a clean-up—the dirty alleys that abound in Indianapolis. There should be no need of a proclamation by the mayor and a movement stamped by the Chamber of Commerce to jog us into doing a duty we owe ourselves and neighbors. The front of 70ur property, your show window, may be spick and span, but how about the rear! Old boxes, papers, tin cans and other litter can be found almost everywhere. , A clean-up now would be a health measure. And one good turn should deserve another. You need not wait until an order is promulgated. REARING A ROYAL BOY ■jTTIOTHERING the Prince of Wales must be a mighty trving lVi job. When the ordinary mother’s son takes to horseback riding and is brought home on a shutter, figuratively speaking, about every time he straddles a horse, mother can say something like, “Eddie, the next time I hear of your getting on a horse, 111 turn you over to your father for a basting.’’ It is, usually, a veto that is not over-ridden. But, with the mother of a future king it is different. The royal dignity is to be preserved. A kinglet must practice up on having his own way. Then, too, there are instances, notablr that of the late King of Prussia, wherein kingly son has met mother’s interference by locking her up in a dank, distant, haunted castle, or something equally as good. The best that we can offer the suffering mother of Prince Edward is to advise that she have him tied securely on the horse, when he mounts one. Edward’s feet might be firmly fastened together beneath the animal’s belly and there might be loop? of strap running from the boy’s neck to the horse’s tail and bits. Whatever then happened, mother’s dear boy would still be op the horse. There wouldn’t be so much wear on the boy, anyway.

UP TO THE FOLKS BACK HOME 18 reports come in from various States about the election of delegates to the national conventions we are told that Coolidge wins and gets so many delegates in this State or that; and it looks, on the face of the reports, that there is nothing to it but Coolidge so far as the Republican presidential nomination is concerned. But that isn’t the story at all. The delegates are elected in the name of Coolidge all right, but that is because the Old Guard put their delegates up as Coolidge delegates. When convention time rolls around the Old Guard leaders will determine whether their delegates shall nominate Coolidge or somebody else. If the situation looks rosy whin the delegates convene; and it looks to the leaders atf if’ Coolidge is the strongest candidate to nominate, then Coolidge will be nominated. If the situation looks hopeless, with the chances in favor of a Republican defeat, then the Old Guard leaders will nominate Coolidge, let him take the beating and get him out of the way. But if it looks as if the scandals of the present Administration can be wiped out by dropping Coolidge, cleaning the slate and starting with anew deal, then the Old Guard leaders will drop Coolidge and have the Coolidge delegates nominate somebody else. In short, Coolidge won’t control the Coolidge delegates. The Old Guard will control them. Democratic Old Guard leaders will play the same game. They will elect delegates in one State as Smith delegates, in another as Ralston delegates, in still another as Cox delegates, and so on all over the country. And then when they get into convention they will determine how the delegates shall vote. That’s the way the game is played. That’s how Harding was nominated in 1920. And it is how Cox was nominated. Os course, there will be some fuss in both conventions. There will be a minority of progressive delegates who will get into the conventions from the "West and Northwest, but after they have protested themselves out of breath, then the hard-boiled political machinists who know the game will quietly run the machine over them and nominate their candidates. From the way the selection of delegates has started there seems to be little promise of a truly progressive candidate on either side, tlnless, in the meantime, the folks back home get so stirred up that they kick the bosses out of the way and pick their own delegates. i VANDERLIP says Wall Street is pure, compared to the Government. But the Government was pure until Wall Street invaded it. HARRY SINCLAIR never appears in Washington now without a bodyguard of high priced lawyers. It may cost Hairy as much to get out of Teapot Dome as it cost him to get into it. DURING 1923 when it switched from the twelve to the eighthour day, United States Steel’s earnings increased $65,000,000. Why say more?

Palmistry Who let* slip fortune, her shall never find; Occasion once past by, is bald behind. —COWLEY.

Gan you tell fortunes by reading th© palm? Do you want to know how? Our Washington Bureau ha* prepared, from authoritative ■ounces, a six-page bulletin, illustrated with a diagram of the

CLIP COUPON HERE Pahnlrtry Editor. Washington Bureau. Indianapoli* Time*, 1522 New York Are.. Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin PALMISTRY, and enclose herewith five cents in loose postage stamps for same: Street and number or rural rout© ~ , City State .. Writ© Carefully—Give Full *nd Plain Addre©*.

hand, showing how fortunes ar© read by palmistry. Everything is clearly and simply explained. The bulletin w'lll be mailed to any reader on request. Fill out carefully the coupon below and mail a* directed:

BUTLER S' VICE DRIVE FAILS TO END CRIME Lack of Public Support Weakens Efforts of Marine Chief — Wickedness and Vice Still Flourish in Quaker City:

This is the first of three articles on the reform movement in Philadelphia. Every city is vitally interested in efforts of General Smedley Butler to clean up the Quaker City. By MAXWELL HYDE NEA Service Staff Writer HILADELPHIA, March 27. p Philadelphia has not been —— “cleaned up,” and will not be cleaned up unless the* entire citizenship of the city gets solidly behind Gen. Smedley Butler, the fighting marine who became safety director on Jan. 7. And the citizenship is not 100 per cent behind Butler. Crime still exists, major criminals —bandits, burglars, gunmen—still make the city their headquarters, vice walks openly on the streets, bootleg booze continues to be sold, and real pre-prohibition beer may be had for the small sum of 10 cents a glass. The majority believes Butler cannot last much longer. They realize here Butler's activities may he to a fist held wrist-deep in the Atlantic ocean—when the fist is withdrawn the water rushes in. leaving no trace of a depression. They feel Butler has made too many speeches. They know he is making an nonest attempt to rid Philadelphia of undesirables, but secretly a good percentage of them believes even Butler has begun to feel the problem too monumental. Vice Still Rampant Among others, the writer had a long talk with a man generally acknowledged to know more of Philadelphia's underworld than any other single individual in the city. This man is about 58. looks like a retired banker, and stops at one of the most exclusive hotels in the city. Before the writer talked with him he hod been told: “Should the man you are about to talk with' suddenly be imbued with a desire to clean up the city, he could do more in one week than a million Butlers could do in a million years." And this man told me: “Not one underworld woman has left the city since Butler took Not one bootlegger of any consequence has been caught. Gambling, dope - peddling, booze-selling is operated today on as big a scale as ever." It must not be supposed Butler has done nothing. He has reduced the sale of poisonous booze He has raided gambling halls and shut them up. He has forced the underworld woman to cover. He has made it more difficult to get a drink in a public cabaret. He has arrested ecorea of petty crooks —pickpocket*, shoplifters. purs' -snatchers. He has Hogged the police court dockets. I teal fleer Flows Freely

In other words. Butler is scratching the surface. "For instance, just before Butler took hold," a newspaper friend told me, "I happened one night to be talking with q city detective. We stood in a theater lobby. The detective saw a pickpocket in the crowd. He grabbed the fellow by the trousers and "threw him out on the curbstone. Then he told the manager not to allow the fellow inside again. "The pickpocket protested he had done nothing-. Thqt was true, and that's why the detective made no | arrest. But under the Butler regime the pickpocket in such an* instance is locked up and police announce the fact. He comes before the magistrate the next day. Os course, there 1* no evidence against him and he is dismissed, but the police do not announce that.” Philadelphia has long been noted as a place to get good beer. Tt has not 1 lost the reputation since the prohibi j tion enforcement measure. So that 1 the first thing I wanted to know on coming to the City of Brotherly Ixrve was: How openly am they selhng real beer? The first place I was taken was a combination cigar store-bar her shopsaloon. Os the three, the saloon proved the busiest. It looked like the old days. Men were lined up at the bar and their discussions ranged from the League of Nations and Soviet Russia to burlesque shows. Which indicates they might not have been drinking near beer. Th© beer sold for 10 cents, which, I discovered, was the current price. But I wasn't, interested in beerselling. I wanted to find out what progress Butler'is making with major crime and major criminals. I discovered that Philadelphia resembles a giant honeycomb. Outwardly it is calm and quiet. Within, the bees are busy. Family Fun Rather Pay Up "Jo©, this arithmetic problem of yours about the huckster and the apples is all wrong. You’ll have to slay after school and work it out." “How far wrong Is it?” “It's 1 a dollar wrong." replied the teacher. Little Jrs drew forth a roll of bills and peeled of? a dollar. "I’ll just pay up instead of working tne thing out,” he said. —Argonaut. Prayer for Grandma “Don't forget; dear, to include grandma in your prayers tonight, that God should bless her and let her live to be very old.” “Oh, she's old enough. I’d.rather pray that God would make her young." —Boston Transcript. Mother’s New Butler “Your duty as butler will consist of taking 'the coats and wraps of the guest*. Have you had any experience?” < “Sure. I useta make the rounds of the restaurants every night.”—American Legion Weekly. Sister Has a limit "Well, I guess I’ll have to kiss you good by until tomorrow." “No, Jack; I couldn’t hold my breath that long."—Mercury. Dad’s Size “Papa is immensely pleased to hear you are a poet.” '“ls he?” “Oh, very—the last of my Ibvers he tried to lick was a football player.”— Chicago New*. .

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Testifies AL JENNINGS AP“ “lb JENNINGS, reformed Oklahoma "bad man” and train 1 robber, testified today in Teapot Dome oil probe a rut told what he knew of the alleged deal in which the late Jake Hamon was to get a cabinet post. Jennings said Wednesday: “Yes, I was a bandit, but then I was never Secretary of the Interior.” QUESTIONS Ask The Times A N S W E , H S You ran get an answer to any fiue#tion of fart or'information by writing to the Indianapolis Times' W. .nmrtou Bureau, 1322 New York Aye Washington. D. C., inclosing 2 cents in stamps for reply Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor ran extended reaerreh be undertaken. Ail other questions wtil receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters are conttdenUal.—Editor. What is the annual consumption of cigarette* in the United States’ Approximately fifty billion. Which countries produce mercury and how is it found? The chief producing countries arts Spain and tho United States California and Texas furnished the tntiro amount over here. Practically the only ore which is regularly worked for mercury is cinnabar Mercury in the metallic state is found in small quantities only.

How many books are there in the Library of Congress? About 8,000,000 books and printed pamphlets. Can 9. dag** age be told by its teeth? Up to twelve months It ean; after that it is guesswork even to the export. What Is a radiometer? An instrument by which radiant heat and light may be directly converted into mechanical energy, an invention of Sir William Crookes. It consists of an exhausted glob© of glass in which is a needle support carrying a rotating four-disc van©, the faces being blackened on one side. Flr.cOd in a field of light, tho blackened side of each disc absorbs more of the radiant energy than the other side, and the molecules of residual air that strike It ar© thus given greater energy. Th© resulting pressure doe© not become quickly oqauilzed for tho two sides, a* would be the case in air of the ordinary density, hence th© van© rotates. An adaptation of th© Crookes radiometer has been devise-} by Nlchcl* of sufficient sensitiveness to detect th© radiant heat of some of th© fixed stars. When did th© Galveston flood occur and what was th© loss of life and property? Sept. 8. 1900. Property worth $20,. 000.000 was destroyed and approxl mately 8,000 deaths resulted. Are artificial diamonds mado by the electric furnace as hard and brilliant as natural diamond? They are as hard, and if clear ar just, as brilliant, but the only ones that have been made are extremely small and rarely clear. Artificial diamonds have been made only by a French chemist named Moissan on an extremely small scale, and never commercially. Are there any Insects that have ears in their knees? Th© Orthoptera family, including the grasshoppers, crickets, and katydids have the hearing organs located just below the knee. What is a surtax? An additional tax levied op something already taxed. Whom did Pocahnnta* marry and how .many children did she have? She married an Englishman named John Rolf© a.nd had one child, a son named Thomas Rolf©. What breeds of chickens are considered the best for general purposes? The Plymouth Rocks and Rhode Island Reds are the favored breeds for general purposes. They are good layers. are of the "broody” varieties, make good mothers arid are exceptionally fine for table use.

Heard in the Smoking, Room

u -™IUR next-door neighbor's small boy Is anything but an an- ' f gel," the man from Seatttle remarked, "and anything that he does not get Into or get into him, had not been invented. He came running Into the house, one day lately, frothing at the mouth, as his mother thought. She grabbed him under one arm and ran for the telephone. 'Oh, doctor I Come quick!

CORPUSCLES OPPONENTS OF DISEASE Blood Stream of Red and White Cells Battles With Germs. By DAVID DIETZ Science Editor of The Times Copyright by David Dietz j’ r _2n HE heart, as we have seen, ! i I pumps the blood to the lungs. * where it is purified or relieved of its earbondioxide and supplied with oxygen. It then pumps i through the body, where the tissues absorb the oxygen from the blood. This absorption takes place in much the same fashion that the blood obtained the ovgen in the lungs. The arteries, which run through the body, end in fine tubes or capillaries with exceedingly thin walls. In sotne way the tissues absorb the oxygen through these walls. Then the blood returns from the capillaries into the veins and so back to the heart. Let- us now examine the bloodstream in detail. The blood-stream Is a marvelous complex thing about which physiologists still have much to learn. There are a little less than ten pints of blood in the average man. Is Basically Water The blood stream basically is water. The water, however, contains various substances dissolved in it. In addition, various substances are floating in it, or, as the scientist says, "held in suspension” in it. The particles in suspension are known as blood-cells. These consist of two sorts The first are the red cells, which' give the blood its color. The second are the white cells. In a drop of blood the size of a pinhead. there are about 5.000,000 red colls and about 30,000 white cells. These red cells have a much more important function than the coloring of tho blood. It is these cells which absorb the oxygen as the blood flows through the capillaries in the lung Then as they flow through the capillaries in the tissue, they give up the oxygen to the tissues. The red cells are broken up in the liver and utilized In making a secretion known as the bile which forms in the liver. But new red cells are constantly being manufactured within the body. They are manufactured by the marrow' known as the red marrow which fills the ends of the bones. Fewer White OUs Tho white eeljs are fewer in number than the red. But their importance is exceedingly great. The whit© cells are apparently independent things moving about in the blood. They resemble to an exceptionally high degree the little microscopic one-celled animals knowm as amebae. When germs enter the body and gt into the blood, the white cells seem to flock to the point of danger. They proceed to surround the germs and to engulf or "cat” them, completely destroying them In this way. They also absorb or “eat” foreign matter which gets into th* blood. The substances in solution in the bloodstream include fats, sugar, sajt and uric acid. In addition there are substances not yet very well understood which seem to play .an important part in fighting disease. Next article in series: Th© Digestive System.

Jfellotosftip ot draper * Daily Lenten Bible reading and meditation prepared for commission on evanvelUm ot Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. THURSDAY Knterin* the Kingdom

Read Mt. 7:13-23. Text: 7:21. Not every on© that saith unto me, Ixvrfl, Lord, afcall enter Into the kingdom of heaven: but he that floeth th© will of my Father who is in hpaven. “Salvation means being saved from a daily life of growing selfishness to a daily life of growing unselfishness and Its Inevitable enlargement of life. It Involves a deepening acquaintance with God, to know whom is eternal life.” MEDITATION: "Doing the will of the Father" —there t* nothing higher in heaven or on earth than to be sharers of the divine will. When one Is committed wholeheartedly to the great enterprise of making God’s will supreme, he has unltel his life with the ongoing life of God. which union will continue through the long reach©* of the life to come. PERSONAL QUESTION: Have I the courage of high profession knowing that it means making good or acknowledging hypocrisy? PRAYER: Eternal God, help us to do some service for thee today. Let our daily work bring blessings to others. May we be at one with thee in the deepest place of our Ijves, that thy purposes may be our ideals. May we begin this day with a close feeling of tho infinite and continue with an abiding sense of th© eternal, in Christ’s name. Amen. (Copyright, 1924—F. L. Fagley) A Thought Slothfulness casteth into a deep sleep: end an idle soul shall suffer hunger. Prov. 19:15. • * • mDLENESS is the holiday of fools. —Ches terfield.

Frederick is dying, and has had eight convulsions already!’ "The doctor was there in a few moments and made his examination. “ ‘Wbat is it, doctor? Tell me the worst!' “ ‘Sorry to disappoint you, Mrs. T.. but Freddie has eaten tooth paste and been drinking water and h© 1* just blowing a tmvr bubble©.’ ” '

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Readers Discuss Views in Tunes’ Forum

Far Signs 7 o the Editor of The Tim e I am in favor of granting the street car company an increase in fare providing it is a 7-cent fare wdth a universal free transfer. Further, I suggest that the company buy a nickel's worth of white paint and inlay it deep enough on destination signs so that they may be readable at least ten feet away. MRS. O. J. DEEDS. Photographing Sun Jo the Editor of The Times Your readers are invited to try for photograph; of the sun as follows • Some morning, between 8 and 9 o’clock, point a loaded camera (a No. 2 will doi between the sun and horizon. By the "finder” cut th© sun just neatly out so that no part of the sun’s disk shall show in the pictur as seen In the finder. Keep camera still, expose film one-half to one second Carefully repeat until the roll of six films is used, though three of the shots may do aa well, aimed above the sun for exposure. Be careful to keep direct sun's rays off film With atmosphere right and sky right—that is not too silvery white—a long narrow V-shaped picture should show on one or ail the exl osed films at th© edge. Examine exposed films with care as a poor printer may not notice all that is photographed and spoil your work by printing either too dark or too fight One V-shapod point taken above and one below' sun, place one above and the other below a circle (wide ends next the circle), will give you a picture of th© sun's shape as it is today. like th© sd-cal led spiral nebula pictured “edge on.” I hav* soma V-shaped pictures taken as above inid-forenoon and midafternoon which seem to indicate that a gii-dle of some substance encircles the sun and Is th© glowing, shining 1 a*ls of th© zodiacal light often visible at twilight and before dawn. Every hour a large number of bright white bodies ar© coat off from the sun. large and bright enough to be photographed. Therefore, as you work, be alert to W'ateh your films for some of them. WANTED —A camera -invented to picture bodies cast off from the sun. Our young and old people W'ant "movie" showing what is going on about the sun. J. O. SUTTON, Yorktow'n, Ind.

Votary Fees To the Editor of The Times Reading so much in your paper about corruption 1n government and admiring your editorials on such subjects, T am enboldened to seek information on a matter that puzzles me. When getting anew license for my car. either in Missouri or Indiana, T have been charged 50 cents or $1 notary fee. T am told this goes into the State treasury. Assuredly the total runs into thousands of dollars, yet tho applicant receives no receipt and as many persons have their own notary it is impossittfe to ' arrive at the amount the State receives, I believe, by counting the number of licenses issued. I’m wondering. ELMER WHITE, 525 E. Ohio St. “Answer” Answered To the Editor of The Times T am interested in an “Answer” by Janies Knox. It 1© true, as he says, that the main question about Jesus of Nazareth is “Whose son is He?" Undoubtedly He claimed to be the eon of God and His earliest followers supported the claim. The two genealogies, in Matthew and Luke, are cited as offering difficulty. It is a fact that they do puzzle scholars of today. But, also. It Is a fact that the most skilled contenders of primitive times, keen minds like Lucian, Celsus and Prpyry, opposing the gospel before the dose of the third century, never once made attack at this point. They seemed to regard the genealogies as correct. No Jew would accept as Messiah one who was not descended from David. Descent was through MEN not women. There wei-e two ways by which descent might be established.

Where the Trail Divides

THE EDITOR WOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM YOU

MAKE YOUR COMMENT BRIEF

natural and legal. Matthew traces the legal descent and Luke the natural, so there could be no question about that point. The words “as was supposed" in Luke 3:23 show why they both trace through Joseph. The public supposed him to be the son of Joseph and If Joseph was a son of David no question could be raised there. What Mary’s descent was would not matter TO THEM. THEN. But as a matter of fact she, too, was of the house of David. Certainly the angel could refer to Mary’ as Joseph’s wife. So binding was betrothal that unfaithfulness was considered adultery. And he would “reign over the house of Jacob forever.” That had been the promise and w’ould be —WILL YET BE. By Gal. 3:29 We learn that followers of Christ are "Abraham's seed and heirs of the promise.” Christ is THEIR king, though as yet in a veiled and partial way. But his reign is being extended. Presently the Jew that rejected him is to look upon him and accept him. Then will his kingdom be established and he will reign forever and forever. That is the prophetic story of the whole of Scripture. I would commend Mr. Knox for his frankness and for his desire to look Into these matters. It is not good, however, for any man to voice his

MijibdhaHk a/' ' DAILY PQ£M Eating mT may be true that “pigs is pigs" but, be that as it may, it doesn't also mean that eats is eats. And that’s an inspiration for a verse on food today, but I don’t mean on reducing; keep your seats. How often have you lunched at noon and eaten macaroni and also had a dish of mashed "potato©”? Or maybe It was noodle soup, a sandwich of bologna and for dessert a pudding made of dates. it’s Just the same old story when you’re rushing out to lunch; you see a dish of this or that and grab it. You help yourself to odds and ends and then you sit and munch. Tho noonday bite is really Just a habit. For, all the time you’re nibbling there’s a thought runs through your mind: You know you’ll eat of home food pretty soon. And at your house for supper, some hours later, you will find the same display of food you had at noon. When you eat. in repetition (macaroni twice a day, it would almost seem a trifle out of line. But there really is a difference, folks who have, will gladly say, for at noon you only eat—at home you dine! (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Tongue Tips The Rev. Lyndon W. Harper. Kansas City: "Life is made up of just one choice alter another." Fannie Hurst, author: “A house party can be little more than a device for the prevention of human beings enjoying one another.” Sam Wood, motion picture director: "Atmosphere is the most important thing in transfering a story to the screen.”

Animal Facts

California has 185,000 head of deer in Trinity and California national forests alone. -Twenty pounds of good meat apiece; a venison dinner for every inhabitant of the State. In a very few zoos and private avaries in the United States are living specimens of the “bleeding heart” pigeon, native of the Philippines. This white bird' has a red mark on its breast perfectly simulating a blood splotch, with red spots around it and feathers stiffened as by congealing blood So perfect is the illusion that people visiting New York Zoo frequently run breathlese to the office and report a wounded pigeon.

THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1924

doubts or to read to confirm his doubts. Doubt needs not to be encouraged. We .wifi have enough of it naturally. *To prolong the doubting seasons of another by the reiteration, of our own is to “tie the grass across his path and trip him for a fall.” Talk faith and faith will grow. S. S. LAPPIN, First Christian Church, Bedford. Ind. Hero's Comeback To the Editor of The Times Reference is made to a letter In which Mr. Blacksmith objects to postal employes asking for more pay. He states that if his boss doesn’t pay him enough, he goes where they will. I assume that in such event h© changes bosses and not trades; that is. he _ still follows his trade as a blacksmith, but works for another boss. I wonder if he has not failed to take into consideration th© fact that there is only one employer for postoffice workers—The Postofflce Department—and with the postal employe it is not a question of changing bosses, but a question of changing trades. The blacksmith can quit his present boss and go to any city or State and take up his old trade with a new' boss. The postal employe, however, can not do this, as the “boss” is" the same at all postoffices. ANOTHER TIMES READER.

TOM SIMS - -/- Says The rain falls on the just and the unjust, hut especially on the just started picnic. The height of folly Is doing craxy stunts in an idrplane. A stitoh in time eaves wondering? If the hole In your sock shows. The female of the species gets more sleep than the maJe. Faint heart never won falT lady, but faint whisperings have. While confession is good for th soul it causes many a black eye. Experience is the best teacher, but her course is the longest and hardest, and the only degree you get Is the .third degree. Girls will be girls even though, according to the new straight style*, they try to look like boys. The onjy way to hold your own la to hold your own tongue. If you think your luck is going t<* be bad It gets disgusted and Is bad. Science life changes greatly with altitude. Every student knows that as a mountain is climbed the vegetation and animals change with increasing height. What is not so generally known Is that similar changes take plane as we go below the surface of the earth into the ocean depth. The zone along the shore of th ocean teems with Jife which is entirely unlike life at a hundred fathoms and so on down to the greatest depths explored by man. These deepsen animals are much more delicately constructed than their relatives near the surface. There are no seasons in the greater ocean depths, only endless night and intense cold. Temperature seems to be the determining factor in saying what forms of life shail exist In thesa places. Off the coast of California, where the surface water is warm, subarctic types of sea creatures are found at depths of 1,000 to 5.000 fathoms.

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