Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 292, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 April 1924 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN, Editor-In-Chief ROY W. HOWARD. President ALBERT W. BUHRifAN, Editor WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scripps-Howanl Newspaper Alliance • * • Client of the United Press, the NEA Service and the Seripps-Palne Servlco. • • • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis • • • Subscription Rates: Indianapolis—Ten dents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week. • • • PHONE—MAIN 3500.

A SEAT FOR EVERY CHILD mN speaking at the dedication of the Theodore Potter Fresh Air School, Charles R. Yoke, president of the Indianapolis school board, set out the needs for school improvements and for more school facilities in Indianapolis. We agree with every word he said. The only trouble with Mr. Yoke’s attitude is that he and other members of the majority faction of the school board seem to be putting everything possible in the way of carrying out a school improvement and development program. The new school board, which took office more than three months ago, inherited from the old board a building program ready to be carried out. The new board blocked the program on the ground that the plans and arrangements with architects made by the old board were not satisfactory. In this the new board was well within its rights. But it had no right as representing the citizens of Indianapolis to block any school building program for a long period of time. Citizens of Indianapolis, with very few exceptions, are demanding more school facilities and if the board is to represent the city—as it was elected to do—it must act to satisfy this demand. “An examination of the financial statements for ten years reveals that no new buildings were provided during six years of that time,” Yoke said. He is right. During a part of that period building was blocked by the war. During another part, it was blocked by a few taxpayers who appeared to think more of their pocketbooks than of the children of Indianapolis. Only after a hard fight did the city succeed in obtaining the eight buildings now under construction. Yoke said it may be necessary to levy increased taxes for school improvements. “Mind you,” he added, “this is not for tinsel and gold, nor for auditorivms. but only for a decent seat for every child in a decent building—real necessities.” That is a splendid program—if the school board will only carry it out. TEDDY AND THE JAP this near-war over Japanese exclusion? Canada bars |W| Japanese laborers and there’s never a word. Australia excludes them drastically. Yet all’s serene. Why is it that once every so often we and Japan all but come to blows over precisely the same issue? The answer is that our statesmen are politicians first and statesmen afterwards, if at all. They grab hold of the Japanese immigration problem and ride it dangerously into office while Japanese jingoes take the cue and keep the pot a-boiling. The late Theodore Roosevelt left this country both a platform and a formula for dealing with this delicate problem. We should study them. EIS PLATFORM “In the present state of the world's progress,” he said, “it is highly inadvisable that peoples in wholly different stages of civilization or of wholly different types of civilization, even although both equally high, shall be thrown into intimate contact. “This is especially undesirable when there is a difference in both race and standard of living. “The Japanese would not tolerate the intrusion into their country of a mass of Americans who would displace Japanese in the business of the land. I think they are entirely right in this position. “America has and must insist upon the same right. “The people of California were right in insisting that the Japanese should not come thither in masses, that there should be no influx of laborers, of agricultural workers or small tradesma—in short, mass settlement or immigration.”

HIS FORMULA / “I believe this to be fundamentally a sound aDd proper attitude which must be Insisted upon —yet which can be insisted upon in such a manner and with such courtesy and such sense of mutual fairness and reciprocal obligation and respect as not to give any just sense of offense to Asiatic peoples.” Called the ideal American, Roosevelt was no less a true friend and admirer of the Japanese. Both America and Japan must follow the way he points if trouble is to be avoided. LET’S KEEP FOOD PURE by step we are attaining perfection in foodstuffs. Prior jj to the pure food and drug act the public never knew whether they were getting butter when they asked for it, or something that just looked like butter. An Indianapolis jobber once told of a product manufactured here called “strawberry preserves” which did not contain a single strawberry or juice thereof, yet it looked and tasted very muoh like it. Glucose, imitation strawberry flavor, sugar, timothy seed and ooloring were the ingredients used to make the oiever imitation. Lemonade was one of the commonest products imitated to cUoeive the public. Imitation flavoring, citric acid, saccharine, coloring and a few slices of lemon for trimming makes the celebrated circus lemonade. The State food and drug commissioner is working to give the public wholesome food, and it is hoped his new rules regulating foodstuffs will be adopted. IT might be said of the prisoner who was removed from the ootmty jail because of smallpox that he broke out. NOW .that the first robin is ancient history, next will be the first drowning. WITH 16,000,000 automobiles in the country there will re mafn for a time, some life, but not much hope. TH F scores of the recent games out at Washington Park sound like the results from the annual game at the old settlers’ picnic. ON the other hand, the proposal to quarantine the jail because of smallpox no doubt met with approval in oertain sooial rfiiilnn r / SEVENTY-FIVE persons are beneath the sod in Marion Ootmty because of auto aocidents, attorney informed jury. And Nhere would be many more except for'agility of the pedestrian.

"KEYBOARD" OF WA VES ENORMOUS Ether Is Like Great Piano of Nature, Scientists Discover, By DAVID DIETZ, Science Editor of The Times. SHE discovery of electro-mag-netic waves by Hertz led to the radio telegraph and telephone of today. For Marconi merely perfected apparatus for easily generating powerful waves and other apparatus for receiving them. The only difference between these radio waves and light waves is in the length of the wave. The radio waves t are very much longer than the light waves. The discovery of X-rays gave scientists still another form of wave to explore. These are also waves In space or on the ether. They v differ from ordinary light waves in that they are very much shorter. Today, the scientist knows that there are a great variety of waves which can exist in space. A chart showing all the known waves is called the complete spectrum. Visible light or the visual spectrum occupies only a very small part of it. Like Great Piano If we think of the complete spectrum as a great piano keyboard consisting of fifty-live octaves the visual spectrum occupies only one octave. The shortest waves known to the physicist are the gamma rays emitted by radium. Our "keyboard” begins with three and a third octaves of gamma rays. These range in length from approximately one three-bilUonth of an inch to approximately one three-millionth of an Inch Then follows six- and two-thirds ootaves of X-rays. These are In turn followed by three and a third octavos of unmeasured and as yet unknown waves. Next we find five octaves of waves which are invisible to the eye but seem to have certain chefnical properties. These are known as the ultraviolet rays because they occur immediately before the violet light of the spectrum. After the ultra-violet waves comes the one octave which composes the visual spectrum. • This begins with violet and ends with the red. Xext there are ten octaves of heat waves. These are frequently called infra-red waves because they follow Immediately after the red light of the visual spectrum. Electric Waves Next Fallowing the heat waves come 26 1-3 octaves of electric waves which complete the spectrum. Thp longest electrical waves are about 500,000 feet long. There’s quite a jump, it will be seen, from the shortest gamma wave to the longest electrical wave. Until the year 1922 there was a gap of over five octaves in the spectrum between the he&t and electric waves. The five octaves of shortest electrical waves were missing. But Dr. Ernest Nichols and Dr. J. I). Tear of Cleveland designed an exceedingly clever apparatus which generated these waves and proved their existence. They even succeeded in generating by electrical meaps waves that were shorter than the longest heat waves and which could be detected by the same means used to detect heat waves, thus proving conclusively that the present-day physicist Is right In believing that all the waves of the spectrum are alike, differing only In their lengths. Next article: The Cause of Light Waves. (Copyright. 1924. by David Dietz)

Test Yourself mwo words can be similar and yet not be identical. The problem in this test is to complete analogies when there are several choices that might be made. Directions: Notice the relation between the first two words written in capitals, and then underline one of the words in small print, which has a similar relation to the third word written In capitals. You are supposed to be able to complete this test In one and one-half minutes. 1. CAT-PURR BIRD- featners, fur, sing, mouse. 2. EAST-WEST: BLACK- color; reason, white, red. 3. CAT-KITTEN: HORSE- colt, dog, rat, cat. 4. SWEET-SOUR: GOOD- taste, had, clean, mad. 6. JANUARY-FEBRUARY: OCTOBER- September, month, November, year. 6. COVER-BOOK: BARK wood, tree, forest, limb. 7. SEWING-WOMEN: THRASHING- men, wheat, ax, grind. 8. SAD-HAPPY: DEPRESSIONsigh, elation, sick, cheerful. 9. VASB-FLOWERS: BAS KBTchalr, eggs, handle, water. .10. SILENCE-NOISE: HARMONYmusIo, notes, discord, piano. 11. MUCH-LITTLE: MANY- plenty, few, some, more. 12. YES-NO: ACQUIESENCE- affirmative, willing, reply, refusal. 13. PLAY-RECREATION: LABOR toll, rest, ride, sleep. 14. MAN-WOMAN: BOY- youth, girl, baby, fellow. 16. CHAOS-CONFUSION: ABUNDANCE- few, plenty, scarce, cheap. 16. ORIGINATE-INVENT: IMITATE copy, write, draw, qrayon. 17 MONTH-YEAR: ONE- many, dozen, six, few. 18. RED-GREEN: YELLOWorange, blue, purple, black. 19. STEAMSHIP-WATER : LOCOMOTIVE- engine, smoke, rails, speed. 20. ORDER-COMMAND: HELP- aid, urge, insist, compel. Answers: 1. sing; 2. white; 3. oolt: 4. bad, 6. November; 6. tree: 7. men; 8. elation; 9. eggs; 10. discord; 11. few; 12. refusal: 13. toil; 14. girl; 16. plenty; 16. c'py; 17. dozen; 18. purple; 19. rails; 20. aid. One on the Doctor “Do I think I scan cure your catarrh? Why. T’m sure of It.” “So you are very familiar with the disease?” “I should say so! I’ve had It all my life”—Judge.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

_ UNUSUAL PEOPLE. Seamstress at 90

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TI NETT years old and still her own dressmaker. That's Miss i___ Sarah Lettlce Burr of Lansing. Mich., who is busy right now on her spring wardrobe. "I can see as well as ever; why shouldn’t I sew,” says she. Miss Burr was teaching school when Lincoln was shot, attended memorial services for Garfield and was in Buffalo when McKinley was assassinated.

Ask The Times You cau get an answer tj any question o i fact or Information by writing to the Indianapolis Time*’ Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Ave., Washington. D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stamps lor reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research be undertakan. All other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. Why are canaries used in mines? To detoct the presence of gas. us! they are very easily affected by It. Who discovered nitrogen? David Rutherford, a Scottish physician, bom 1749, died 1819. What causes the colors In peacock coal? The refraction and Interference of the rays of light passing through a film of iron oxide (rarely other sub stances) covering the surface of the coal, the display being due to the same causes which produce rainbow colors on stagnant water. What Is the address of H. G Wells? 120 Whitehall Court, S W. 1.. London, England. Is it true that Alexander Dumas, Sr., was part negro? Yes, Alexander Dumas, was the grandson of the Marquis Alexandre Davy De La Pailleterie and p negreas, both of Haiti. In the sentence ”$lO was given by him,” why should the verb be singular when there is a plural subject? A sum of money, in the plural form, is usually followed by a singular verb. Where are the headquarters of the league of Nations? At Geneva, Switzerland. What is meant by a “trunk line?” It means constituting or belonging to a main body, as opposed to a branch. A main line of transportion. How much does Strangler Lewis weigh? 214 pounds. How can one remove grease spots from books? Put n piece of blotting paper over the spot and apply a hot iron. Another way is to apply French chalk, put a piece of paper over, and apply a hot Iron. What does “on the curb” mean in reference to stocks? It means on the street, said of the dealings of curbstone brokers. The Curb Market is New York’s market for securities not listed on the Stock Exchange, held In tho open air for many years on Broad Street below Wall Street, until a building was erected in 1921 In which the “curbbrokers” and their customers could be sheltered from the weather. In compound titles such as Vice President, should both words be capitalized? Yes. both words are capitalized. How is litharge-glycerin cement made and for what Is it us"d? It is generally used In cementing alberene or soapstone and may be used with other stone. This cement Is made by mixing powdered litharge and concentrated (syrupy) glycerin to a putty-llke paste. It must be used immediately after mixing. This cement may be colored by adding dry colors In small portions, but suoh addition must not exceed 10 per cent of the litharge used or the setting of the cement will be retarded. What are the records for the standing high jump, running high Jump, standing broad Jump, running broad Jump and pole vault? Standing high Jump: 6ft. 6% inches! running high Jump: 6 ft. 7 6-16 Inches; standing broad jump: 11 ft. 4% Inohes; running broad Jump: 26 ft. 8 Inches; pole vault: 18 ft. 9% inches. What Is the proper way to shake hands? The proper handshake should be brief; but there should be strength and warmth in the handshake. The hand Is clasped firmly, but Is never shaken violently. What !b gravity? Gravity 1b the accelerating tendency of bodies toward the oenter of the earth, being equal to the earth’s attraction minus the centrifugal force arising from the rotation of the earth on Its axis; weight, equal to about 32.16 feet per second. More widely, the similar tendenoy toward the center of any heavenly body. Loosely, gravitation. t

U. S. RIGHT IN CHOOSING IMMIGRANTS Quick Says Country Must Discriminate for Protection, By HERBERT QUICK I IHE protests of Roumania and I J Japan against the immigration Li—l bill which has just passed the House raise the vital question of our right to choose our own immigrants. Through most of our history we held the door wide open to everybody. We have quit that, and are now looking them over before letting them in. Haven’t we a right to do that? W sre a democracy. The destiny of our crhTaren and our children’s children to the end of time depends on the sort of people we have. Haven’t we a right to keep out those not likely to mingle with our present population and work with us? Democracy is teamwork among voters. To say that any foreign government has the right to object if we keep out those with whom we feel that we cannot do teamwork, is to attack our very independence as a Nation. Right in Principle The bill now in Congress may or may not be a good bill; but that is America’s business. It is our best try at the solution of a question that Is our problem. We have the right to fail on it; but we have no right to let any other nation dictate to us as to the remedy. Who shall come to America is an Ameriofyi question. We discriminate against certain races. We have the right to discriminate. If we believe any race does not mix well In our democracy, we must so discriminate or we are false cowards. When any body of people already here makes a row because we keep out others of their race, they prove the case for exclusion. If there were more of them here, they would make more trouble. Might as Well Settle No weight should be given to any foreign governmenf’s protest. As for Japan, we may as well settle this with her first as last. We put no badge of inferiority on the Japanese. If they take it that we do. then they prove the case against our admitting them. We say they are different and do not make for peace and harmony in this country. It may be our fault, but even at that we should keep them out. The matter may as well come out of the secret archives of the State Department and go on the statute books now. If Japan chooses to be Insulted we shall be sorry: but wo cannot delegate to her or to any other country or combination of countries any power over the vital matter of the kind of people to come into the United States. When foreign governments try to control our action in this matter they are trying to govern us. The time to declare our independence In the mutter is right, now.

Tom Sims Says: In Washington the rum runners tried to use dynamite against the oops. That’s bad, but better than selling It to their customers. Most beautiful women marry ugly men because they don’t have to put up with good-looking men. Chicago man was robbed in Los Angeles, when he could have stayed at home and had It done much better. Books on etiquette are still in de mand, although reading them Is said to be had etiquette. Ball team with one eye on the pennant has to bat more than an eye Proper time to change seats in a j canoe Is before you get In. Mali jongg may be bad, but It is a much better craze than the nonstop dancing fad we had last year. # These are the days it is time to go home just before you get settled down to work. A charming little bathing frock Is not the proper costume to wear while sitting on broken glass. Tongue Tips E. W. Nelson, chief United States Biological Survey: “The work of 200.000 men each year is required to offset the damage done by rats.” Miss Katherine Felt, American teacher in Peking, China: ‘‘The only fear the American and English women have In Poking, If they are out on the streets, is meeting with a certain type of American.” E. H. Dudley, University of Kansas: "Don’t do too much for children. Through suggestion and proper persuasion you can Induce children to win their own victories.” Premier Poincare, France: “Today there Is no nation which is not exposed to the curiosity of others.” John C. Coolidge, father of the President: "I am thankful for my son Calvin. I am proud he has been a good boy.” Family Fun One Way to Do It *T*ad, can I have a dime for the pictures?” "No, son, you've been twice this week already. Why don’t you devote some of your time to reading and bettering yourself mentally?" “Dad, who is Einstein?” "Why, —er —er —er —he’s the man who advanced the theory of the fourth dimension.” “What’s the fourth dimension?” “Why, that has to do with space.” “What do you mean by space, Dad?’ “Oh, nothing.” “And what Is nothing, Dad?” “Here! Here’s a quarter. Get some candy, too.”—Judge. The Baby Named "I suppose, old man, you’re going to name the baby ‘John,’ after yourself?” "No: we’ve decided to name him 'Thomas,' after a prolonged family row.’'—Boston TVanscript.

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HE WOULD MAKE CITY HALL CLEAN Citizen Thinks Mayor Shank Does Not Carry Out Slogan, To the Editor of The Time* The other day I happened to be passing the city hall on Alabama St. and I noticed the motto which Mayor Shank has had printed on the two benches which are sitting in front, “Help Make Indianapolis the Cleanest City In the U. S. A.” As X passed around the corner and walked west in Ohio St. I took note that the windows of the haseinent. which happen to be about even with the sidewalk, looked as though they hadn’t been washed for at least a year. It looks to me like it would be a good thing to put into practice a little of Mayor Shank's preaching. If he wants the people of Indianapolis to help keep their city clean, he should see that the city hall is not In such a shape that we residents are not ashamed to own it as a public building. A RESIDENT OF INDIANAPOLIS. Discusses Moses To the Editor oj The Time* I am a reader of The Times and never miss a copy. The Times Forum is a happy outlet j for the political, civic and religious opinions of its readers. I was particularly Interested In a recent article 1 from the pen of C. A. Carlisle. I have no quarrel with Mr. Carlisle’s religious views on dancing, card playing j or theaters. However, I would be pleased to know how and where Mr. Carlisle learned that Moses spent forty years on the Isle of Patmos. Patrnos Is a small island in the Aegean Sea, to which the Apostle John was exiled fifteen centuries after Moses passed on Moses is supposed to have spent forty years In Egypt as the protege of the daughter of Pharaoh. After killing an Egyptian Moses fled to Mid! an where he rharried a daughter of Jethro, a priest of Mldlan. Moses remained with Jethro forty years attending the flocks. The next forty years of his life Moses spent with the children of Israel In the wilderness of Sinai, where he gave to the Jewish race a system of ethics that for thirty-four centuries has shown as a beacon light along the shores of time. Moses was without doubt the greatest lawgiver of all time. N. H. For Good Bridges To the Editor of The Times The Times of "Wednesday stated that because of strong competition the bids received on eighty-six bridge® were below the State engineer’s estimate. It is hoped that the committee handling these bids has had sufficient experience by now to know that it is not safe to aocept a ridiculously low bid for any construction work. No contractor can put up a substantial structure with cheap materials and incompetent help. Good materials and experience men cost money, but the finished product Is cheapest in the long run. A bridge, even more than a road, should be durable and safe. TRAVELER. Musicland EIKE Haydn and Mozart, Ludwig Van Beethoven was the son of peasants, his mother being the daughter of a cook. His eccentric manners and customs were forever placing him in very dangerous positions. In middle life he began to lose his hearing and finally became stone deaf. However, some of his most interesting and most beautiful works were written after his affliction. He was terribly criticised because of his radical views, but nevertheless 20,000 people were present at the funeral of this great master, who was fifty-seven years old at the time of his depth. Just Like Bobby “Bobby, what does ‘lazy’ mean?” “Lazy means always wanting your little sister to get It for you.’'—Boston Transcript.

Must Be Presentable First

Bubbles By HAL COCHRAN l,y 3 HEN you were a kid (I’ll admit IYy I that I did) you used to blow L-— J bubbles in air. There once was the day when you’d stop in your play to watch them go floating up there. Each bubble a dream and a bright color scheme as it floated quite gently away. And now the thought cheers as you've grown up in years, for still, you blow bubbles today. The plans that you make, even though they may break, are bubbles that grow in your mind. Your thoughts blow them up out of creation's cup, and then many burst, you will find. Man’s prowess and thought, as in life's march he’s caught, is what takes hiQ} up to the top. It keeps you a-going. when always you’re knowing that failure will come if you stop. .So keep blowing bubbles and make it your play, you’re Only as old as you feel. And one of these days you’ll admit that it pays—some bubbles will las. and be real. (Copyright, 1924. NEA Service, Inc.) Science mN THE present controversy between •‘fundamentalists” and "modernists,” as to whether tho scientific theory or the biblical story of the world is right, the name of Darwin is heard more often than that of any one person. It is often stated that Darwin said "man descended from the monkey.” However, Darwin never made any such statement. But he did announce the doctrine of evolution. That doctrine claims that all living creatures descended from earlier and simpler forms. The anthropoid apes, bearing the closest resemblance to man of any animal, naturally came in for comparison, and for speculation as to whether or not they were man's ancestors. However, according to modern ideas of evolution, man and the man like apes may have come from a common stock without any direct descent of man from these animals. There were many missing links in Darwins theory of the descent of man. Since that time the discovery of fossils has almost completed the chain. There are still some missing links, but not many and no discoveries have been made that tend to weaken the theory. A Thought The laborer is worthy of his reward. —1 Tim. 5:18. • * * SHE fruit derived from labor is the sweetest of all pleasures. —Vauvennrgues. Dad’s Hash “This hash looks rather neat.” “Yes. It’s a case of a place for everything and everything in its place.”—American Legion Weekly. One on the Doctor Ho had never been ill before, and following his first attack he examinted the doctor’s bill carefully. “I am quite ready to pay for the medicine,” he remarked at last. “But the visits I shall certainly return." —Tit-Bits.

Do you want to make your home beautiful without straining the family pocketbook? There is nothing mysterious or awesome in the principles of interior decoration. Any man or woman can learn the essentials of the subject, and adapting the materials available to the home he or she must live in. make It a more beautiful, restful and charming place to occupy. Our Washington Bureau has prepared for you an

CLIP COUPON HERE INTERIOR DECORATING EDITOR, Washington Bureau, Indianapolis Times, 1822 New York Ave., Washington, D. C.: I want the bulletin INTERIOR DECORATING, and enclose herewith 5 cents In loose postage stamps for same. NAME * ST. & NO. OR R. R *■ CITY STATE WRITE CLEARLY —GIVE FULL ADDRESS

SATURDAY, APRIL 19, 1924

STOCKYARD LAW NO AID TO FARMER United States Packers Act !s Stifling Competition, Witness Says. By F. G. ORR ASHINGTON, April 19.—Maladministration of the packers J.—J and stockyards act by the Department of Agriculture is costing the farmers of the country millions of dollars, John M. Burns, law clerk in the department solicitor’s office, has testified before the house committee on Department of Agriculture expenditures. The packers and stockyards act was passed by Congress to help the farmers get a square deaJ from the commission men. Bums says the law has been used to stifle competition. Instead of to promote It, as was intended by Congress. Rates Are Raised |>ums says that whenever private individuals seek to go into the commission business and file lower rates than those prevailing before the passage of the act whioh have been maintained to ds.te, that they have been induced by a combination consisting of a representative of the Department of Agriculture and men from the stock exchanges to withdraw their application, and subsequently have filed the "current rate.” That this Is too high, Burns says, is shown by the fact that farmer cooperatives, which charge their clients the “current rate,” return between 80 and 40 per cent of the charge to their customers as a “patronage dividend." Only about 10 to 16 per cent of farm* erß growing stock can make use of farmer cooperatives. Bums said this means that the farmer today pays as muoh to marked his 6-cent hogs as he used to pay to market his 24-oent hogs. Amendments to Be Offered Bums thinks the aot is a good oam it tt were properly administered, but suggests some changes. One of these would give the secretary of agrL culture power to prosecute a commie* slon man who robs a farmer. TJhder the provisions of the present aot, ha says, all the Secretary can dc is to reprimand the robber and let him go. Certain amendments to the pack* ers and stockyards aot will be offered by the committee very shortly in the House, in an effort to protect the farmers Instead of giving some one a chance to knife them in the back. Sister'S New Feller “Do you think Henry is on the level?" “Well, I’ll go so far as to say he is a flathead.” —Youngstown Tele-

Interior Decoration

authoritative 6,000-word bulletin on the subject, writfen not for those who have money to spend on employing an interior decorator, or to purchase the various expensive books on the subject, but designed to offer helpful suggestions to Mr. and Mrs. Everyday Citizen who have a moderate sized house and purse, and who wish to furnish and decorate the former as attractively a* the latter will allow. Fill out the coupon below If you want this bulletin: