Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 24, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 June 1925 — Page 4

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The Indianapolis Times ROY W. HOWARD, President. FELIX F. BRUNER, Editor. WM. A. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Scripps-Howard Newspaper Alliance * * * Client of the United Press and the NEA Service * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published dally except Sunday by Indianapolis Tinieß P üblishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis * * * Subscription Hates: Indianapolis — Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week * * * PHONE—MA in 3500.

No law shall he passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print, freely, on any subject whatever.—Constitution of Indiana.

Two Indictments mN 1633 one Galileo was indicted by the Inquisition, the indictment setting forth as follows: “Whereas, you, Galileo, son of the late Vincenzo Galileo of Florence, aged 70 years, were denounced in 1615 to this Holy Office for holding as true the false doctrine taught by many—namely, that the sun is immovable in the center of the world . and that the earth moves and also with a diurnal motion; also for having pupils whom you instructed in the same opinions; also for maintaining a correspondence with some German mathematicians; also for publishing certain letters on the solar spots in which you developed the same doctrine as truth; also for answering the objections which were continually produced from the Holy Scriptures by glozing the said Scriptures according to your own meaning; and whereas thereupon was produced a copy of a writing in form of a letter confessedly written by you to a person formerly your pupil, in which, following the hypothesis of Copernicus, you include several propositions contrary to the true sense and authority of the Holy Scripture : “Therefore, this holy tribunal, being desirous of providing against the disorder and mischief thence proceeding and increasing to the detriment of the holy faith, etc., etc.: “The proposition that the sun is the center of the world and immovable from its place is absurd philosophically, false and formally heretical because it is expressly contrary to the Holy Scripture. “The proposition that the earth is not the center of the world nor immovable, but that it moves also with a diurnal motion is : also absurd philosophically considered at least, erroneous in faith.” , In 1925 one Scopes was indicted bj r a Rhea County (Tennessee) grand jury, 'the indictment setting forth: “That John Thomas Scopes, heretofore on the 24th day of April, 1925, did unlaw-

All Rosy With The Farmers?

Editor's Note. For three years Herbert Quick, distinguished novelist and economist. had been a regular contributor to The Times. His death occurred Sunday. May 10. At that time he had completed several articles tor this newspaper, the last of which appears herewith. By Herbert Quick mHAVE just read the statement of a newspaper man who is writing from midwest points to an eastern paper that the farmers of Kansas “have more money; than, they, know. what to do. with.’’ That, he says, is one reason why they are so dead politically. They are simply so buried in contentment that nothing matters but the enjoyment of abounding prosperity. To be sure, such men as Frank O. Lowden of Illinois, insist that the farmers are still Immersed in depression—but what weight has a man like Lowden against the word of a man who talked with the real estate men of Concordia? And this reminds me 6f an item in. a Wisconsin paper, telling of a bankruptcy sale of the Ezra Blumer farm in Green County In that State. This is in the best dairy country in the United States, near Madison. The 280-acre farm was sold for S9O an acre. A short time ago it would

Propose Board to untangle Air Troubles

Times 'Washinaton Bureau. ISii A’ew York Avenue. ASHINQTON, June C.—Unless politics puts its fingers in the ---J pie at the last minute, the national aircraft muddle, long a scandal, will be cleared up during the next session of Congress. The writer can state on the best authority that the Select Committee to investigate the air service named by Congress in March, 1924, will almost certainly ask the appointment of a special board, or commission, to take up the whole question of aviation and recommend a way out of the ugly mess where it new is. '.Like the war-time advisory board headed by Thomas A. Edison, it is ptoposed that a commission of engineers and other experts be named from among the best known figures in the country so that there could be no questioning of their findings. This commission would be asked to make a complete survey of the situation, then recommend to the or to Congress, what to do. Nine Members The Select Committee is headed by Representative Florian Lampert, Repqbllcan, of Wisconsin. There are nine members. Created to bring some order out of the chaos now strangling American aviation, as Republican Snell, of New York, put it:; “We are spending a whole lot of money in this arm of defense and w$ hope to bring something out of this investigation that will be constfuctive and of definite benefit to aviation generally and to the country.’’ It was before this committee that Brig. Gen. William IVJltchell, then Assistant Chief of the Army Air

fully, willfully teach in the public schools of Rhea County, Tennessee, which said public schools are supported in part and in whole by the public school fund of the State, certain theory and theories that deny the story of the Divine Creation of man as taught in the Bible, and did teach instead thereof that man has descended from a lower order of animals, he, the said John Thomas Scopes being at the time, and prior thereto a teacher in the public schools of Rhea County, Tennessee, aforesaid, against the peace and dignity of the State.’’ Perhaps those who indicted Galileo were right. There is little indication here that the world moves. More Trouble for Helen rr-J] ELEN MARIA DAWES, our crusading I*ll vice president, is having unexpected troubles. Following the lead of Senator George H. Moses of New Hampshire, the president pro tempore of the Senate, Senator James W. Wadsworth of New York announces he is strongly opposed to Dawes’ plan to change the Senate rules. The Senate, he says, in effect, is not a factory for quantity production of legislation. Senators Moses and Wadsworth are leaders in the so-called younger group of Republicans in the Senate. Wadsworth, incidentally, like Dawes, has been getting honorable mention as a prospective candidate for the Republican nomination for President should President Coolidge leave the field open to all comers. Naturally Wadsworth "will not give any aid or comfort to Mr. Dawes’ rival ambitions. Aside from springing an innovation on an unsuspecting Senate, without previous consultation with its leaders, Mr. Dawes, it appears, has committed another faux pas in that he aired his presidential ambitions entirely too s ion. He is now out in the open where all other contestants can shoot at him.

have brought S3OO an acre; “but,” says this paper, “owing to the unusual number of bankruptcy sales of real estate recently, prices have been deflated so that in most instances the farms bring less than the personal property.” This resembles abounding prosperity very remotely indeed. In the case of the Ezra Blumer farm, this paper asserts, the buildings on the farm cost several thousanid dollars more than the whole farm sold for. Thus you see, at the time when the most needy farmers are forced to take what they can get for their farms, they can get less than nothing for such superb land as this. Judging from the usual run of such cases the ruined man either goe to town and ekes out a living at whatever he can get to do, or becomes a tenant farmer—thus adding another family to our rural proletariat. No one can realize this tragedy without knowing, as does the writer, what rural paradises therse Wisconsin dairy farms are—when blessed with prosperity. It has for forty years been a cardinal belief of mine that our land

Service but not derr oted and transferred, first made nis sensational charges that we have no air force to speak of that our planes are unfit to fly an dthat bureaucratic Army and Navy officers are hamstringing aviation. Two Facts Revealed Hundreds of witnesses were examined and almost as many different opinion expressed. But in this torrent of testimony two facto kept coming to th esurface, over and over again. 1. That the American airplane is far from being the machine it should and could be, if properly developed, and, 2. That a /strictly impartial, objec-tive-minded and non-political board of engineers should be charged by the Government with working out a national aviation program for the Army, the Navy and the postal service. The Select Committee's report has not yet been formulated, and will not be until the completed volumes of printed testimony is in the hands of all its members for final review. The Government printing shop will finioh its job in June, five bulky volumes and an index, each about 600 finely printed pages thick. Cabinet Change Considered Some members of the committee believe the ultimate solution of the problem lies in the creation of a secretary of national defense with an under secretary for the Navy and And under secretary for the air. But it is not thought this will be recommended now. Others believe in a permanent bureau charged with the intensive study and development of aviation in general in conjunction with the Army/Navq and Postoffice Department. One piember would take the

system is the cancer which will destroy our civilization. Land values belong to society; for society creates them. If we had been living under the system of taxing the unearned increment of land values Into the public treasury every year, and untaxlng everything else, the Ezra Blumer farm would never have been worth S3OO an acre. It would never have been worth a cent over and above the Improvements on it —the buildings, drainage system, plowing, fertilization, fences and the like. But at that It would have been worth more than Its owner got at this sale. The speculative valup went out of it, and much of the real value also. But under landvalue taxation. Its owner would probably never have been so deeply in debt. His farm would have been bought at improvement values. And if he had lost it, he would have been turned out Into the world landless, as he has been, but into a world where actually unimproved land would be pfaetically free. He could make anew start as a farmer. How can he do that as things are now?

12,000 Liberty motors now in the Government's stock room, build 5,000 planet for use on postal routes, while holding the rest as reserves. A number bt Senators and members oil the House have bills of their own which they intend to Introduce as as Congress convenes—all seeking to advance aviation. And the Senate Naval Affairs Committee will bring in its report, as authorised following the hullabaloo in the Spring over the Mitchell charges that the Navy has been rendered obsolete by the airplane. But Chairman Lampert believes ,hls report will be so constructive and so all-inclusive that everybody In Congress interested in clearing up the muddle will get behind it.

Movie Verdict Ohio —When a wife has a perfect husband she will find that it is difficult to get a divorce, j But there is a way into the divorce courts. "Grounds for Divorce,” proves that. Smart fun. Circle—“ Chickie” after being declared the most widely read serial The Times ha* ever published, has reached the screen with Dorothy Mackaill playing the chief role. ..Colonial —Would suggest that your calling this week include Reginald Denny In “I’ll Show You the Town.” Quite entertaining, Apollo Hour,” Bete Daniels for the first time proves that she is a splendid emotional actress.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Tom Sims Says There will be gold at the end of the rainbow if you save it while on your way there.

All work and no pay makes Jack a scarce article. There are those who work because they are too lazy to loaf. ■ The hand that rocks the steering wheel is the hand that ruins the world. * California re-

Sims

ports the lemon crop will be a peach. The quickest way to get a boy to take a bath is by asking him to water the lawn. A girl friend tella us she refused a man’s heart because his face went with it. Saw an auto so old it must be nearly paid for. Children and flappers are better seen than heard. Only nice thing about a big city is you never meet anyone you know. A pair of dreamy eyes can put a man to sleep. A thing of beauty wants ice cream sodas forever. The man who Is only a follower can’t see w'here he is going for the dust in his eyes. Bandit news from Chicago. Robber got $286 wo 1 th of stamps. Now he can start a drug store. Perhaps there would be less drinking if it was against the law to refuse a drink. Covurioht. lots, XEA Service

RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA By GAYLORD NELSON

A MESS OF POTTAGE mUDGE THOMAS W. SLICK, in Federal Court at South Bend the other day, upheld the right of the National Government to control interstate highways. He refused to dissolve an injunction against cutting a drainage ditch across the Lincoln Highway near Ft. Wayne. The road Is in Indiana—built by Indiana taxpayers as part of

the State highway system. But because Federal aid money was expended on It the United States District Attorney sought and obtained an injunction against the ditching company. Not a trunk line road in the State but what has had Federal aid money expended on it.

Nelson

If that gives the National Government authority to control a highway the next logical step is to require Federal licenses on automobiles using Federal aid roads. Then as a 3-cent gas tax in Indiana, and more or less In Neighboring States, hampers interstate automobile traffic, why not Federal regulation of the gas tax? Almost before they know It the States will make up to find control of their highways and regulation of motor vehicles entirely in the hands of the Federal Government. Federal aid was a great incentive to road construction. But the States may find that in accepting Federal aid money they have swapped their birthrights for a mess of pottage—and furnished the pottage, for they paid the taxes that raised the Federal aid fund. THEY MAYTPEND THEIR OWN MONEY mHE public service commission Saturday gave the city of Elkhart permission to buy the property of the Elkhart Water Company, at a price of $925,000. Gracious, wasn’t it, of the commission? It allows the taxpayers of Elkhart to spend their own money for acquisition of a public utility solely of interest to the city of Elkhart. The action was paternalism at its best. Os what conceivable interest is It to the State of Indiana whether a Hoosier municipality buys its waterworks or not, or what it pays for the property, or how it spends the profits, if any. from its municipally operated utility? Yet under the law the public service commission .must pass on such questions. A few days ago the city council of Indianapolis, wisely or foolishly, passed an ordinance authorizing purchase of a site for a municipal coliseum. The corporation counsel says the plan is illegal. State law permits tb,> city to pay half the cost of a Cclie * if private parties pay the * ance. The city can bull naif of a coliseum but not the :ole edifice. Absurd. Isn’t it? According to the laws of the State, the citizens of the cities must be irresponsible children. But. they built the cities and pay a large part of the State tax. They could probably manage their own municipal affairs satisfactorily, if given a chance, although local selfgovernment i'3 only a legend in Indiana.

Ask The Times You can set an answer to any question of fact or information by writing to Tha Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Ave.. Washinton. D. C.. inclosing 2 cents In stamps for reply. Medical, legal and marital advice cannot be given, nor can extended research bo undertaken. Al) other questions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters are confidential.—Editor. Is it against the law to swim in Fall Creek Just west of Northwestern Ave. bridge? Yes. Only those places in city streams approved by board of safety may be used for swimming. When did Roosevelt run for mayor of New York City, and who were his opponents? In 1886. His opponents were Henry George, and Abram Hewitt, Democrat. Hewitt was elected. How many enlisted men are provided for in the appropriation for the Army for 1925? 125,000 e)ili3ted men of the Regular army and 7.953 enlisted men of the Philippine Scouts. Will you name some of the kinds of “balls” used by Major League pitchers? The drop, the raise, outcurve, incurve, fadeaway (never used successfully except by Christy Mathewson), drop curve, spit ball, Jump ball and outdrop. Did George Washington ever leave any money to found a university in Washington, D. C.? The establishment of a university in the National Capital was one of the desires most strongly entertained by George Washington. In his will he left a legacy for such an institution, if ever created. However, the legacy never become effective. Congress, because of varying opinions as to the functions of the national Government in matters of education, never acted: and in time the Potomac Canal shares, left by Washington for the purpose, became valueless.

A LOST ART ir-jp" HE Indianapolis Chamber of j[ Commerce has sent questionnaires to many business firms in the city to determine the degree of importance they attach to handwriting of employes. Fifty years ago such an inquiry would have been ranked as a foolish question. Possession of a clerkly hand was then prized. Ability to swing a mean pen—without other qualification—assumed its possessor a position in countinghouse and office. Penmanship as a fine art. whieh generations of school boys stuggled painfully—with corrugated brows and tongue In cheek—to acquire, received a well nigh fatal blow with the invention of the typewriter. It has been decaying ever since. Now' the typewriter is universally used In office, home and school. Signing of cheeks Is about the only practice many people have in penmanship—and often that is not penmanship at all. just weird, undecipherable hieroglyphics.. Handwriting may still.be a commercial asset. But the possessor of a fine Spencerian hand and nothing else Is no longer In demand. He Is more likely to be ensconced on a street corner embellishing cards for gaping yokels than In a position of trust at the elbow of a commercial prince. Readin’, writin’ and ’rithemttc used to be the essentials of education. Modern Inventions are making them superfluous. Typewriters make writing unnecessary. Adding machines and intricate mechanical calculating devices perform the mathematical chores. Instead of reading, man need only thumb the knobs of his radio set. Perhaps In another fifty years he will perfect a device —aside from his wife and his political party—to do his thinking. BEAUTY CONTESTS OPPOSED B r— ““ EAUTY contests, especially the bathing beauty sort —in -■... which the contenders hang their clothes on a hickory limb, but don’kgo near the w’ater—were condemned by the council of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs at West Baden (Ind.) recently. Feminine beauty has inspired poets, painters and sculptors from the beginning of time. A good deal of the history of the so-called human race has revolved around the pursuit of beauty. Faith, hope, charity or any of the other abstract virtues are represented by painters and sculptors by beautiful female figures arrayed in pocket handkerchiefs and gooseflesh. Some of the most outspoken opponents of bathing beauty contests look upon these pictures and statues of nude or semi-nude beauties without a moral qualm. Instead they coo in delight—they are gazing upon art. Is Miss Yonkers or Miss Broad Ripple—clad in cold cream and bits of ribben—displaying her physical pulchritude in an Atlantic City bathing beauty show, any less a work of art? Perhaps such contests are degrading and demoralizing to the fair participants, the judges and the spectators who are liable to sprain their eyesight. Volunteer keepers of public morals have preached and thundered and passed resolutions against such shows for yea rs. But why all the opposition and uproar? A bathing beauty contest may be silly, but inherently it is no more wicked than a fat stock show—except in the minds of exaggerated prudes. ft the competing business can the ordeal without contracting sunstroke or pneumonia unquestionably public morals can si^rvive.

— . —~ || f you’RG just like All men! you seem /dadov Kinwt TUAT I TO HAVE THE IDEA THAT WHEN YOU / DADDY HOW THAT I K 1& you MARFIEO A (ONIHINATIOH IT'&GETTINCi WAR HI EES piiH KIOP AHD WASHING MACHINE. | DONT yOOTHINK yOU fljfT C,ET AS MUCH SYMPATHY FKOM you AS SHOULD GET SOME- " w A FLlvVfcß DRIVED GETS FROM A ,

/wKS ANdYvOu’ MAUE a f~^ Sh almm-DO L. eMPLOVMEMT BUREAU THE SEWIHCr-CLEAN- T cv" 441 oT A C * sss >* ANSWER THE DOOKBEIL pfr-'JM MARRIAGE.

Not Coffee Grounds but Divorce Grounds Are the Things Needed in Vidor Movie

By Walter D. Hickman SLADY wants a divorce from her second husband because she i$ in love with her first husband. But second husband is perfect with the exception that he has the radio habit and continually seek to get Moscow over the air. That’s the sad plight of Florence Vidor in "Grounds for Divorce,’’ a

movie comedy made from the stage comedy-farce used with some success by Ina Claire on the stage. So Florence and her lawyer (who Is her first divorced hubby) seek the grounds that will divorce her again. The air gave the grounds although it was not the radio. The divorce formula was simple—take hubby up in an airplane and scare him to the point of forcing

|||j7” ?Cw- • % '-i™ • % : . Jp. S', ,&x,:mk r, w Wmm,

Florence Vidor

him to sign a paper stating that he was willing to desert his own wife. There is a lot of wise continental fun in this story. Light? Yes. but smartly and well acted by Florence Vidor, Matt Moore, Louise Fazenda (splendid as the temperamental French actress) and Harry Myers. "Grounds for Divorce” comes under the head of light and breezy summer entertainment. Quite harmless in theme although It Is essentially European in theme and treatment. \ Was much interested in the photography. il is not exactly a color movie, but more like a tinted movie. Regardless of the process used, “Grounds for Divorce” has been beautifully photographed. Florence Vidor uses her great beauty to advantage in this photoplay. This woman is developing a smart comedy method. She also knows how to wear gowns. Think that Matt Moore does a pretty good job as the divorce expert. Not Just lh Ms line of work, but he seems to get by with it. The bill includes Lester Huff, playing “My Correspondence School," orchestral music and a comedy, “High Jinks." At the Ohio all week. -I- + + CHICKIE’S LOVE TROUBLES ARE NOW SHOWN ON SCREEN What about “Chickle” as a movie? Just going to tell you about it. Asa newspaper serial, “Chickle” is considered by those who know what a daily serial should contain, declare that it certainly delivers the goods. The same can he said of First National’s production of “Chickle” with Dorothy Mackaill in the title part and John Bowers as the young chap who didn’t court Chickie according to the rules of Cupid. The movie director naturally has made some changes in the story, especially the

ending, I am told, where Chickie and Barry marry after their child is born. To some people “Chickie” will be considered only as another sex picture. I am of the positive opinion that it is a box office success. It is the sort of a picture that will appeal to many women. This sort of story is generally considered seriously by women theater patrons. If we remember back some years we will

John Bowers

recall that the sex story was an easy leader. Not the dirty kind, but the one handling situations that exist in real life. Asa production “Chickie" has been staged on a lavish scale. The apartment scenes In the home of Jake Munson are elaborate, the kind that one would expect a character

THE SPUDZ FAMILY— By TALBERT

of his nature to possess. His apartment was a trap, a golden trap. In creating the role of Chickle, Miss Mackaill takes the viewpoint that the stenograprer was passing through various stages of sex development, both mentally and physically. By doing this Miss Mackaill is able to register certain Important emotional traits that creep into the girl’s character as she grows. Miss Mackaill makes it clear that she had an honest /love and regard for Barry Dunne and also that Chickie could not be bought with pretty gowns by Jake Munson. When Chickie made her great mistake with Barry It w r as because of what she termed as “love.” Miss Mackaill has been handed a difficult role, but she does do some interesting character work, especially in the emotional scenes. Gladys Brockwe.il and Hobart Bosworth as her parents are splendid. Paul Nicholson as Jake Munson has an unsympathetic, part, but keeps the character from being too much, of a beast. The cast Includes Louise Mackintosh, Myrtle Stedman, Olive Tell and Ix>ra Sanderson. Asa serial in The Times, "Chickie” has heen and is being widely read. Those who sat near me yesterday at the Circle were very familiar with the problems of Chickie. Because .of thevrush of openings yesterday I was unable to see the and hear the overture, a James A. Fitzpatrick Music Master Cinema Overture, “Handel.” It Is being directed by Bakalelnikoff and played by the orchestra. Bill Includes a news reel and a comedy. At the’ Circle all week. -I- -1- -IGETTING ACQUAINTED WITH A NEW BEBE DANIELS Am sure you will agree wih me after seeing w The Crowded Hour," that Bebe Daniels Is presenting for the first time real dramatic aWßtyv In this movie Miss Daniels is cast as a husband snatcher—a woman

Babe Daniels

in her desires as well as her great sacrifice. She is cast as Peggy Lawrence, one of those women who are bold enough to love a man, regardless of the fact that he is married. She fights with a nasty sense of loyalty for her man. She nearly succeeds in her selfish course, but the World War wakes her up to her great responsibilities. Peggy makes her sacrifice—she gives Billy Laidlaw back to his wife. For a time I would not have blamed the wife in desiring to get rid of this rounder as a husband. But she preferred to keep him in that capacity. Much of the story is placed in scenes that many a soldier in the last war will recognize. The story at times is theatrical, highly so, but Miss Daniels, Kenneth Harlan and T. Roy Barnes bring it back to a realistic condition. "The Crowded Hour,’’ although plainly theatrical, does give Miss Daniels a dramatic and an emotional chance which shows that she is a woman who now possesses splendid dramatic qualities. She puts a human touch into her work that gets splendid results. Bill includes an Imperial Comedy, "Papa’s Darling,’’ a news reel, music by Dorsey, Kaene and Pelletier and by Seidel’s orchestra. At ths Apollo all week.

MONDAY, JUNE 8, 1925

TRYING TO MAKE A CO-MEDIAN OUT OF DENNY Men who are interested in making movies and exhibiting them realize the need just now of leading men who can play light comedy roles. Good male comedy players are few and far between. Chaplin has developed a certain type of comedy. Harold Lloyd has done tiff* same. But new leaders are In demand. Some season ago Reginald Denny became famous for his work in "The

Reginald Denny in “I’ll Show You the Town." He Is cast as an Innocent looking college professor who suddenly blooms out as a man about town. And when he blooms, he sure does blossom. He Is so wild that he attempts to entertain three women at the same time In the same case without any one of them discovering the fact. At times this movie is rapid movie farce and then It becomes straight comedy only to become hokum In nature, such as the chasing scenes. And then In a second's notice it tlops into the burlesque rank. At times Denny’s comedy touch is as gentle as that of an elephant but this masculine wallop does put over many of the scenes to a laughing success. Much of the comedy business is old In nature but Denny has a method of dressing 'em up to make them look brand new. Rather think that "I’ll Bhow You the Town” should be on your calling list this week. Bill includes much orchestral ffiano and vocal music. At the Colonial all week, t* * • Other attractions on view today Include: "So This is London" at English’s; Franklyn Farnum in "The Bandit Tamer” at the Isis; Ranee Gray Players in “Quick Sands" at the Palace;; Nat Nazarro at the Lyric and many outdoor events at Broad Ripple Park. Stowaways By Hal Cochran It’s only* a trunk that Is chock full of Junk but you cherish it, year after year. I often have wondered if lolks haven't blundered by holding the contents so dear. You're just like a kid, when you open the lid, after fussing around with the keys. Your eyes quickly dash over all sorts of trash, and It soon has you down on your knees. It really Is fun, when the prowling’s begun, and you’re wondrlng Just what you will find. There are snapshots and such 'mong the things that you touch; there are remnants of every old kind. You take them all out and you spread them about. Then you put them all back in the trunk. They are not worth a thing, but what pleasure they bring, though to any one else It's just junk. The answer, I guess, Is that baby’s first dress, and such keepsakes, affect you that way. To eye them's a treat, with their memories sweet, and you can't bear to throw them away. HUNGRY BRIDE SUES jin Unit'd I’m ANDERSON. In., .Tune 9—Declaring she is starving, Hazel Bennett, 16, has sued her husband for divorce for alleged n<s*isupport.

makes rp her mind to “kidnap” the husband of another woman. Not a pleasant thought when nearly all sporting events have been legislated out of existence. It takes real artistry to get this sort of character into your heart. By a fine sense of type c h a r a c terization Miss Daniels makes this character (an actress of the variety halls) become human, both

Leather Pushers” serieo, a story of the fight ring. Denny has always Seen “he” enough poking. Someimes this exireme masculine type does not fit Into polite comedy. There are many tricks to the job of being a polite .comedian. Such an actor is generally called upon to be about every kind of an actor before the finish of the film. Such is the job of

Reginald Denny