Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 302, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 May 1924 — Page 4

4

The Indianapolis Times EARLE E. MARTIN, Editor-in-Chief ROY W. HOWARD, President ALBERT W. BUHRMAN, Editor • WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance * • • CHent sf the I'nited Press, the NEA Service and the Scrippa-Palne Service. • * • Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dailv except Sundav bv Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St.. Indianapolis * !* * Subscription Kates: Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. • * • PHONE—MAIN 3300. . THE COUNCIL REPORT mHE partial report of the city council investigating committee is a disappointment to the great majority of citizens. Disappointing, because for an expenditure of nearly $2,000 apparently little has been accomplished. When will action come? Six weeks of secret sessions in which probably 100 witnesses were examined, failed to bring any specific recommendation for eliminating “graft” charges. In reality, the council has taken over Councilman Otto Ray's original charges with no real recommendations. Seriousness of these cluiTges cannot be denied. They strike at high city officials. They involve many city departments, which should only call for more speed in clearing officials of any # suspicion or proving their guilt. Councilman Heydon W. Buchanan has voiced the feeling'of many citizens when he said it was time to drop the probe or push the investigation until it was successfully completed. The halfhearted interest of the council must be ended, or the public money will be wasted in so many months of “buck” passing. The public demands action. THE LIGHT CONTRACT SITO Merchants Heat and Light Company has been granted the Indianapolis street lighting contract for ten years. It underbid the Indianapolis Light and Heat Company about 20 per cent. Ten years ago the Merchants received the contract. At that time it also underbid the Indianapolis company about 20 per cent,. But It was granted two surcharges by the public service commission in the interim which, in March, amounted to 50 per cent of the contract price paid by the city for electrical energy that mouth. Is the Merchants company expecting the commission’s aid again so that it can underbid its only competitor 20 per cent every ten years?

RATTS’ TERM EXPIRES SHE term of Oscar Ratts. a Republican member of the public service cominjssion, ends today. He is retiring, providing Governor Branch approves the appointment of his successor Informer Governor MeCrav. Ratts has done conscientious work as a member of the commission. He has been always on the job and he has made a thorough study of utility problems as they have been presented to him. We have not always agreed with his opinions. We did not agree with the majority order of the commission increasing water rates in Indianapolis. But we see no reason to believe that Ratts and his colleagues had any other than honest motives, despite insinuations on the part of their opponents. There is no reason why a newspaper should vilify a public servant because it does not agree with all the things, he does. The tendency of human beings to disagree, especially when their pocketbooks are effected, is too common for this. Ratts deserves, as do all hard-working public officials, the thanks of the public which he served.

THE WORLD COURT HEARINGS SHE Senate Committee on Foreign Relations has appointed a subcommittee to hold hearings on the world court. It is suggested in dispatches from Washington that tlrt-se hearings, now under way, are intended to permit certain great bodies of American citizens to “blow oil’ steam,” but that there is little likelihood of the committee recommending action. Among those who want to be heard are the Federal Council of Churches, the American Federation of Labor, the. Fnited States Chamber of Commerce, the National League of Women Voters and the Amori#an Association of University Women. The Senate can hardly believe that such people, representing the conscience and intelligence of the country, will be satisfied with being heard and then disregarded. The subject is too important and these men and women are too much in earnest to be trifled with. . Since the Hague Conference in 1907, the United States has urged upon the rest of the world the creation of a world court. The present court, now in its third year of successful and useful operation is, in large part, the work of Elihu Root, a great American lawyer. In February, 1923, President Harding sent a special message to the Senate recommending that the United States become a member of the court on terms outlined by Secretary Hughes. President Coolidge repeated this recommendation, and in his speech in New York only the other day again urged it. The proposal lias been indorsed by the American Bar Association and the State Bar Associations of a number of States, including Ohio. The most important religious, civic and patriotic societies in the country have indorsed the court and no resolutions of any sort have been adopted against it anywhere. The matter has no political significance. Every PresidcnUsince Roosevplt has been for it, Chief Justice Taft, Root, Clarke, Wickersham—lawyers without regard to party in every part of the country advocate it. Just How much evidence of public approval does the Senate want before it takes this forward step? The Indianapolis Times is published in a community of 400,000 people. So far as we know, there is not a single man, woman or child in this entire community who does not believe that America should go into the court. On the League of Nations and practically every other public question there are varieties and differences of opinion, but on this subject we believe Indianapolis is unanimous. Moreover, since February, 1923, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee has done nothing on this subject, and if we are any judge of publie opinion, we believe it is becoming as impatient as it is unanimous. FLORIDA has just shipped the biggest lemon ever grown and what if we should learn that Harry Daugherty went down to the station to meet it? • DETROIT News asks how a painter knows that his futurist painting is finished, and the answer is that he doesn’t. Only the junk gentlemen have that information. PALM REACH is to build a church next the golf links, but nothing w3l come of it but a lot of byroken windows and lost balls. A golfer can Tbe saved.

CONFLICT OR COMPROMISE IS PROBLEM Party Leaders Doubt Wisdom of LeavingTlatform to Coolidge. By HARRY' B. HUNT, \EA Service Writer \XT 7 ASHINGTON, May I.—Whether W to fight, and, by lighting, perh ...I .haps disrupt the party, or to compromise, and by compromising “straddle” on a patched-up platform that threatens to collapse from the innate flimsiness of the materials used in its construction —that is a problem that is giving Republican “leaders.” who hope to have a determining voice in party parleys at Cleveland, many sleepless nights. If left to himself, President Coolidge would construct a platform which would at least be safe and symmetrical. But powerful elements within the party, while acknowledging the nomination of Coolidge to succeed himself i is inevitable and necessary, do not concede it Is either wise gr desirable to yield to him full authority in the shaping of party doctrine at this time. To them, control of the machinery and policy of the party is more important than any one victory, and rather than surrender their grip on the power they now hold they would rather accept a temporary defeat at the polls. Friction Interferes Willingness to accept President Coolidge as platform writer as well as candidate has been seriously interfered with by recent friction between V\*hite House and Senate. This may be further intensified after the bonus and tax bills have received presideni tial attention, should he. as is consid- ! ered by no means unlikely, veto them. Even the old guard group in the ! Senate, backbone, of the conservatism | Coolidge exemplifies, does not relish I the complacency with which he hits | walked away with the party as his | own undisputed possession. With a mere "by your leave.” he has proceed- ' ed about both the presidency and his cancicacy for renomination, i The “leaders” have been left with nothing to lead. And it has. made them, privately, < petulantly—even j peevish! Party Is Fearful A member of the Republican tional committee,’ speaking privately of the situation, says: “The trouble with the party, and the Government, is that they are run by fear. They are influenced by the fear of what individuals or small mi- , norities may do or say. Instead of I chalking out a straight forward policy j on fundamentals and then hewing to j the line, we put out a platform which ! tries to placate everybody and pleases j no one.”

Remember! By DK. DONALD A. LAIRD Yale Psychological Laboratory One vivid impression is remembered better than three ordinary repetitions. At the circus you saw many persons who were strangers to you. Os alt these should you see them again, you would recognize probably only the fat woman and the human skeleton. The fat woman was remembered when hundreds of other persona were forgotten—because she was unusual and you gave her more attention than you did to normal i>eople. She made a vivid impression. The unusual house or motor car is remembered because they arouse interest. Interest compels attention and makes vivid those thing* which otherwise would be ordinary and soon forgotten. Now for a simple ti-st. Use this newspaper. Scan the advertisements on every page, beginning at Page 2, and after you have done that Lay the paper aside for a moment and recall the advertisements which you have scanned. Which of them ‘'sticks” in your memory-? Now. take the paper again and see WHY those advertisements are remembered. Undoubtedly they were striking. They aroused your interest. Apply tha.t stimulus to intenpet—and improved memory-—by cultivating an Interest in everything worth while that yon read or hrtir. Give attention. of course, to one thing at a time and V)btain a vivid impression. The person with many strong interests remembers better than the one with only a few, and weak, interests. Make your memories vivid. Before you lay this aside, do you remember the striking features of the most striking advertisement you read in todays’ paper?

Other Editors In Condition Tiiis is the grind season when the golf enthusiast gets in physical condition through washing the woodwork, by advice of friend wife.—Lafayette Journal and Courier. They Still Live The manner m which the legal department of the United States Government under Daugherty-tested liquors, consigning only the cheap concoctions to bootleggers, shows that connoisseurs did not all pass with the passage of the Eighteenth Amendment. —Frankfort News. Os Two Evils Mah jongg may be bad, but it Is a much better craze than the non-stop dancing fad we had last year.—South Bend News-Times. Lively Discussion No doufct It is true, 6s reported, that Germany is thte f>awes plan for paying reparations. At least it is noted in Berlin, In connection with one debate, "forty persons needed surgical treatment.”— Lafayette Journal and Courier. A Thought Let all things be done decently and in order. —1 Cor. 14:40. • • * | ET thy mind’s sweetness have I . its operation- upon the body, - clothes, and habitation.—George Herbert.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

UNUSUAL PEOPLE Makes Survey in Hawaii wwruuu. ioL 'f jr lifj/ QK J gjp j Miss Elsie Woods, social service worker, has just returned to San Francisco from a three-year survey of conditions in the Hawaiian Islands. "Child labor and small pay are two of the great troubles on the Islands,” says she. Also, health conditions are bad. Miss Woods advocates a system of government nurses supervising, under direction of government doctors, the general health work in the Islands.

Ask The Times You can get an answer to any question of suet or information l>y writing to (he Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1:122 New York Ave Washington. I). C . inclosing 2 cents in stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor ran extended research be undertaken All other Question* will receive a personal t?ply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. I low much coal and oil is burned every year l>v the United States Na vy The figures for 1023 are: Coal —36,000,000 tons (value $2,000.000). Th.s is for ships only; not for land stations. , Fuel (ill —■5.200,000 barrels (value 18,200.000). Where are tin two principal stations of the United States Marines? At Quantico, Ya.. and San Diego, Cal. Does the Government buy junk silver? No. However, tie- United States Mint at Philadelphia redeems mutilated silver coin at its bullion value, which varies. The United States Treasury at Washington, D. will redeem worn silver coin at its face value. Silversmith's and dealers in old coimCand junk will usually buy silver at |ls bullion value. How many concrete ships were built during the World War, and what has become of tl -in? Twelve were built, eight tankers and four cargo lonts. <)f these, two of the tankers were wrecked off the Pacific ci t and one of them has, since tlie \ ar, been sold to a private party, and is being used as a clubhouse on the coast of Florida. The remaining ships are still on hand awaiting a purchaser. Does the United States Govern meat pay Confederate veterans pensions? No. ’but the former Confederate States generally pay small pensions. doctor obliged to respond to a cftfl? No: if lie were not free to refuse a call he would be little betfer than a slave How many garages are there in the United States? According to the latest available statistics, there fire 47.426. Can electricity be generated n a vacuum? Yes.

What dogs can l>o trained as watch-dogs? German police dogs, collies. St. Bernards, and bulldogs. Why is it Indians have no beards? The Indians are not a very hairy race, but they pull the hairs out of their faces by means of crude tweezers made of two stones. They begin this practice at the age of puberty. How many grams are there in one ounce avoirdupois and one ounce troy? One ounce avoirdupois is equivalent to 28.3495 grams and one ounce troy is equivalent to 31.10348 grams. What is the period of Incubation in smallpox? From eight to fourteen days. On what day of the week did Feb. 19, 1907, come? Tuesday. What causes the “frosting" one sometimes sees on brick buildings? This is due to the deposition of salts which have been dissolved from the brick work by water percolating through the same. As long as It is possible for water to percolate through the brick work and as long as there are soluble salts In the brick or in the cement and lime mortar, it is to be expected that this frosting will take place. The salts deposited are thought to be composed largely of calcium sulphate. How many Jews are there in the world? It is estimated there are 15,286,000. How many bootblacks are there in the. United States. 15,175. What department circulates the film “Uncle Sam, World Champion Farmer.” Can it be borrowed? This film will be circulated through the Film Distribution System of the Department of Agriculture, Washington, D. C-, and the cooperating Suite Colleges. Copies may be borrowed for short periods by responsible persons at the cost of transportation, or copies may be bought by authorized purchasers at the laboratory charge.

WASTE OF TIMBER IS NIGHTMARE Retention of Government Title to Woodland Is Not Socialistic. Editor's Note—This is the first of six articles on the public domain by W,llium Kent, one of the Nation's foremost conservationists. He is a former Congressman, rt former, philanthropist and liberal Republican statesman. and belongs to the old RooseveltPinchot band of anti-privilege and anti-graft crusaders. By WILLIAM KENT Former United States Congressman from California. mN any consideration of the subject of conservation, we must first realize that without access to the land and its products, misery and starvation are inevitable. No amount of effort can be productive, nor is there foundation for any of the arts or sciences, or anything that goes to create civilization, to ameliorate, or even to leave possible human existence. If natural resources are seized upon and fenced in against the public interest, the owners may extort from the non-owners,, and all ideals of equal opportunity be destroyed under trib-ute-laying pi ivilego. The Public Domain originally was invested in charge of the Interior Departmeii*. The thirteen colonies returned ownership and jurisdiction over the lands within their boundaries. At first there seemed an unlimited supply of everything. People never had any realization the timber could ever he cut. It was heedlessly alienated, chopped, cleared and destroyed. Passed to Lumbermen Under every form of grant, bargain. script and fraud it passed Into tlie hands of the lumbermen, with no restriction against waste or destruction. Government timber was openly -and jestingly stolen wherever found. The pine forests of the Northwest, in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, were turned over to the tender mercies of private individuals. 1 can recall when white pine sold in Chicago at fll per thousand feet.' Next followed the yellow pine of the South, now almost exhausted. Tlie cypress went next, and now under the same sort of auspices the great Pacific Coast timber belt is being torn out. Alienate Public Property The traditions of the Interior Department have always been those of the alienation of public property into private hands. There was doubtless a. legitimate and a. wholesome basis underlying this attitude, for in tlie early days what was needed was pioneering and settlement, and the fixed and stable conditions that went with farm owning and homes. But tills initial tradition had nothing to do with the destruction of timber. Roosevelt. Gift >rd Pinchot and others, realizing tlie situation, sought to, create forest reserves, under tlie Agricultural Department, which had not been bred with the idea of ridding the Federal Government of till Its possessions. The policy that has followed the forest reservation has been glaringly distinct from previous traditions, and there never has been a time when there has not been an attempt to wrest tiie forest reserves from the Agricultural department and place them upon the bargain counter of the Department of, the Interior. Timber Going Fast Our timber is going fast. It is being slaughtered, wasted and unconscionably exported. Our finest redwood trees arc being split into grape stakes when inferior growths could as well, but not as cheaply, till this use. Tlie whole vista, with the exception of the control exercised by the forest service In the forest reserves. Is a nightmare of waste, improvidence, graft and destruction. It is no more sir alistte for the Gov eminent to retain title to the land upon which timber grows, and to permit the harvesting of ripe timber under proper conditions, than it is to expend money on I river and harbor improvements.

. Tom Sims Says: A List year's college graduate tells us hopefully he has been working almost a year without Ids past being discovered. Tn Chicago two caddies at a golf course were caught hunting highballs instead of lost balls. Maybe you want to bo Rockefeller and maybe you don’t. We don't. The weather is warm and John wears an overcoat all summer. Maybe a man in Washington who boat his wife was mad because he hasn't been mentioned for President. If you don’t like to eat frogs alive never sleep under a tree out in the yard without first closing your mouth. All the world Is a stage with too many exits. When you see a man malting faces at another man now, it may be the coal man mad at the ice man.

Spreadin ’ Cheer By HAL COCHRAN The world likes the man with the hearty hollo; the fellow who greets you with pep. For ho spreads the spirit that’s likely to grow and get everybody In step. There's something' that’s real in the slap on the baxik (that is, if the slap's not too hard). The man who can do it —well, he’s got the knack and he'll never from friendship be barred. We all hafve our troubles and sorrows in life, but why should we constantly chatter ’bout things that are really our personal strife, and to all other people don’t matter. It’s easy to play just the optimist's part when you’re talking with people that greet you. Let cheery words come and the sad ones depart and they’ll always be tickled to meet you. If you are a grouch there’s a tonic you need. Just follow the tip given here: In things optimistic step Into the lead and forever be spreadin' good cheer. .. Georgie and Nurse “Yah! Georgie has to go out with his nurse! Hah! Hah!” “See here, boys, she Isn’t taking me out—l’m running her around.”

CAPITAL OF U. S. MOVED IS OPINION Reader Urges Steps Be Taken to Punish Those Who Defy Senate Committee, Tn thr t'llitnr nl Ihr Timm The capital of a nat.on is generallyaccepted as the seat of government, the people's power. We trust foreign nations have not yet noted the latest change of the seat of government in this country. Many people here are not conscious of the < hange. If the capital is where the greatest power abides, and the greatest power is that which defies or successfully resists any power in the land —then the seat of power in this country is located in Washington Court Mouse, Ohio, a city- of 8.000. and not in Washington, D. €’., a city of -400,000 population. Capital Ayy Place If just an ordinary citizen can. when under suspicion of being interested in violations of the law of the Nation, or of holding information either in Lis head or on the recorded page in books in his custody, refuse to obey the greatest law making bodyin the world, and if the chief executive of the greatest Nation in the world remains inactive—then our Government has ceased to function and any county seat is the capital and any- one with the necessary influence need have no fear from wrong doing. It is doubtful if in any Nation, four or five people have been as successful m defying the law and law makers as sn this Nation during the last few weeks. Not a Republican, Socialist. Democrat. or any other member of Congress should hesitate a second—if no law exists now by which either of the Daugherty's. Mannington. Doheny, Sinclair, Mellon, Rorher, can not be brought before them to tell what they know of interest to the people— to enact a law that will bring them at the point of the bayonet if not otherwise. Punishment Urged Congress can repeal a law, or make a law and if any- co-operating branch stands In the way of execution of the law. Congress should make one to suit the occasion, so that those who defy the law may reoelce justice. The punishment should be something more than a payment of fine —which is no punishment at all to this typo of violator. If M Daugherty's books are straight ho should bo delighted to have them examined and reported so to his depositors. Otherwise they- are justified in withdrawing every cent of deposit In. their names. Who. or where is the Government, if such a person can defy the U. S. Congress? No official assisting in defying tho Government should escape without punishment. A READER. Little Sister’s Idea Little Beth (whose mother has given birth to triplets): "I suppoose Grod didn't want a row in tho family, so He just sent enough so mamma, grandma and Aunt Kate could each have her own way in naming tile baby.”—Boston Transcript.

If you have a. dog. or want a dog, you will want the bulletin our Washington Bureau has just prepared from official and authoritative sources on the selection, care and management of dogs. _ The bulletin tells /the characteristics of different breeds, describes (them, and enables you to pick the kind of dog that you ought to have; it tells all about the

CLIP COUPON HERE Dog Editor, Washington Bureau, The Indianapolis Times. 1322 New York Ave., Washington, D. C. I want a copy of the bulletin, DOGS, and enclose herewith five cents In loose postage stamps for same: Name i ... Street and number or rural route City i .... State

Don’t Judge by the Frame

Around Town Some of those rich Old boys suffering with gout or overweight might persuade Judge Anderson to let them board with Sheriff Snider a while. Mayor Shank evidently believes his announced plank of “home rule” is different from "rule at home.” We can think of at least three positions more pleasant than sand-blast-ing dirt off the face of a downtown building on a hot spring morning. Now is- the time for all good men and true to want to go a-fishing. The age is on the decline. Nobody has coined an antonym for "scofflaw" for three'weeks. Judging from tlie way Mayor Shank hangs around the city hall during his campaign for Governor, if he is elected and should aspire to the presidency—th> in-born hope of every normal Hoosier —the people of California, Maine and Florida will hear more of Lew’s melodious bellow than those of Indiana. “Say. dev may call youse Indiana lads ’Hoosiers’ —and out West Hoosier means ‘Big Farmer’ —but youse certainly ain’t ’Hoosiers’ when it comes to stiekin a jolt on us hardworkin’ guys,” a rum runner captured on the National Rd. and convicted by twelve of his peers in Criminal Court, told Sheriff George Snider. “Why, out in my home town, St. Looie, dey give a guy tirty days for runriin’ a load of booze, and here you Hoosiers stuck us both wit one to two years in prison. Ain’t it de nuts!"

Science cial and 0.l reserves are diminish- : ing. There is no doubt that man will oon use up his supply of material from which powel- is generally created today. Harnessing the power of the sun's lenetgy and similar scientific discov--1 cries of equal importance, while there ! is every reason to believe they will he worked out, are st;ll in the distant future as far as practical application is concerned. Therefore hydro-electric power will bridge the gap. Although railroads are till mostlyrun by coal and oil it is cheaper to i use electricity. The New Haven raili way system, while producing its elec- | trie power from coal, is saving 200,000 j tons of coal a year. The first cost of turning a railroad from steam over to electricity is high and the old equipment must be scrapped at a loss. But outside of that the advantage is entirely with electricity. It speeds up operation, cuts down terminal space and makes possible two levels of tracks. Also \ starting new it is cheaper to build for electric operation than for steam. Musicland Georges Bezet's real name was Alexander Leopold. He had, probably, the most extraordinary career in musical history. He ranks as the foremost modern French composer, through the wonderful success of one opera, namely "Carmen.” This opera | has, probably, been sung by more artists than any other opera, and is still one of the foremost operas. Bezet’s life was ended by an attack of heart disease when he was only 37 years old.

Your Dog

proper care of the dog, his food, habits, manners; the disease to which he Is subject and what to do for him In each case; it tells how to teach him simple tricks and contains much more valuable Information on how to treat him and make‘him treat you. If you want this bulletin, fill out the coupon belowa nd mall to our Washington Bureau as directed:

THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1924

SA YS RADIO WILL BRING ONE TONGUE Air Must Be Kept Free to People, Senator From Washington Says. Hu Y£\-t .'-Verier KY/1 aldington. May i—c. c. Dill, juvenile senatorial insurL. *gent from Washington, believes that radio will ultimately unscramble the confusion of tongues resulting from the attempt to build the tower of Babel and that it will, in addition. accomplish more than all the statesmen and diplomats in history toward establishing world peace. "I foresee the day,” says Dill, “when a universal language will result from the world-wide broadcasting by- radio.. "The better understanding, the friendlier relationships, that will be promoted by the means of communication. will be the biggest factor in bringing universal peace.*’ Must Be Free If this end is to be accomplished, however. Dill maintains radio must be kept “free to the people.” “The air,”'he says, ”.s the only natural resource not already- cornered for private exploitation.” To prevent special interests from obtaining a vested right in radio broadcasting, denying the air to. all who do not pay tribute and giving the right of censorship over what shall lie broadcast, and who may hear it. Dill hits introduced a bill to sate guard the public's interest in radio and broadcasting development.

Defends Cowboys "Roaring Tom” Blanton of Texas has taken up cudgels in defense of the cowboys of his State, whom he feels have been basely wronged by the latest down-east definition of the callow youths who line city curbs and soda bars chiefly on flirtation bentHere in Washington they call them “Eff-street cowboys," F St. being the fashionable downtown promenade for flappers and flirts. Elsewhere they are grouped generally under the term "soda fountain cow-boys.” “That title is an insult to the fine fellows riding the range in the cow coftntry. 1 ’ Blanton declares. Mrs. “Cal" llousecDeaning Mrs. Cal Coolidge is doing her 1 spring housecleaning. Painters and decorators are giving the big house on Pennsylvania Are. anew- coat of w-hite lead and the duster and vacuum cleaner have been busy inside. 'Pears like Mrs. Cal isn’t expecting to move out soon, anyway! Incidentally, It has been noticed that during this housecleaning time Cal has been spending most of his time over at the executive office. Which indicates that even a President may run true to form as a husband.

Tongue Tips Miss Ruth Shelson, Buenos .Vires. Argentina: "Bobbed hair is an old story with us. High heels are still in style, too, but our girls do not chew gum.” Miss Edith Picton-Tubervill, Episcopalian preacher, England: "Women will create a truer purity in sex life if they preach." Henry Fairfield Osborn, New York museum of natural history: "It was a question in my mind whether the human race, judging from the human brain pan. bad improved mu b since paleozoic times. The paleozoic man had brains." King Alfonso, Spain; "If I had been free to choose my own career, 1 probably would have been a soldier and should never have wanted to be a King." j E. W. Howe, editor and philosopher; "T am often impressed with the great numbers of dull people w-ho get along well.”

NEW FORDS FOR RENT Drive Yourself—All Models Vo Red Tape. New Central -Station LINCOLN GARAGE 38 Kentucky At*. lAncoln <BB6