Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 98, Indianapolis, Marion County, 24 August 1925 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times ROT W. HOWARD, President. FELIX F. BRUNER, Editor. MAYBORN, Bus. Mgr. Member of the Bertpps-Howard Newspaper Alliance • • • Client of Ike United Brew and. the NEA Service • • * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation*. Published dally except Sunday by Indianapolis Times Publishing Cos.. 214-220 W. Maryland St, Indianapolis * • • Subscription 'Rates; Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Weak. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week • • • PHONE—MA In 8000.
No law shall be passed restraining the free interchange of thought and opinion, or restricting the right to speak, write, or print freely, qh any subject whatever.—Constitution: of Indiana.
The Case of Carl Magee rrn NOCKED down, without warning, kicked 11\.| and cursed as he endeavored to rise, Carl C Magee, editor of the New Mexico State Tribune at Albuquerque, shot twice at Judge David J. Leahy, his assailant. One bullet shattered Judge Leahy's arm. The other killed John Lassiter, who had accompanied Judge Leahy into the hotel lobby where the attack on Magee occurred. The New Mexico State Tribune is a Scripps-Howard newspaper and The Times for that reason feels the very deepest regret concerning this tragic occurrence. The record of Carl Magee has been an inspiring one, a revelation of what one brave man can accomplish against the greatest of odds. He is known best to the country at large as the man whose evidence before the United States Senate uncovered the financial relationship between Secretary of the Interior Albert Fall and „ the oil interests —the amazing scandal of the Teapot Dome. The country has known less of the ceaseless fight he has been compelled to carry ou, both before and after his exposure of Secretary Fall, for his very existence in New Mexico. Twice at least before the attack by Judge Leahy he had had to defend himself against personal assault. From the time when Secretary Fall walked into his newspaper office and told Magee, in effect, that he would make New Mexico too hot to hold him, the editor’s very life has appeared to be in jeopardy. Judge Leahy convicted himself of participation in the plot to drive Magee out of the state by endeavoring twice to imprison him on flimsy trumped-up charges of contempt of court. The proceedings in those Cases aroused the indignation of the whole American bar. Magee in return campaigned against Judge Leahy’s re-election and succeeded in converting the county gang’s normal 3,000 majority into a defeat. That is the judge at whom Magee shot. United Press dispatches tell that Magee had three ribs broken by Leahy’s cowardly attack before he had an opportunity to defend himself. These facts are related that the public may judge Carl Magee fairly, that it may not get a distorted picture of a gun-toting, troublehunting editor of the old border type. Some of the old border conditions apparently still remain in New Mexico and with no one like Magee to resist them probably never would be eradicated. But, with all his fighting quality, he is not of that type himself. A successful lawyer, conductor of the largest Bible class in Albuquerque, an eminently good citizen who prefers peace to turmoil, he has suffered a tragic misadventure^ Heart broken by the death of Lassiter, Magee has yet declared that his conscience is clear. Regrettable as the accident was, it is The Times belief that he can say this with complete truth. Baseball by Injunction r\ NE of our most popular indoor sports nowadays is the issuing of injunctions. We have lots of laws, too many, in fact, but there are times when a law to cover a specific case can't be found, and then somebody gets out an injunction. We now have baseball by injunction. The city amateur title is at stake. The Druids claim the championship of the city Fraternal
A Kind of Poor Joke
By Mrs. Walter Ferguson (rp”J ID you ever stop to think IJ I what a large majority of our . J jokes refer to marital lnfielity? , will roar with delight V the comedian who sings with Joy (because his wife has gone to the r ountry, and will applaud with vigor i* re movie star who successfully i -crets her lover from a faithful i.v edded husband. Matrimony is never a sacred subject with us. We do not joke about mother love, nor about the flag, nor about the joys and blessings of friendship. Is not marriage as truly sacred as one of these? Our sense of humor is sadly out of tune when It can become too often and too violently tickled over references to marriage vows which are lightly and easily broken. And believe It or not, these things have a psychological effect upon us and upon our children. "We cannot continue to hold Inreverence that which makes us grin; we cannot count chastity as a noble virtue when we talk too cheerfully about vice; we cannot appreciate what true love is when we scoff at It so often. And ours Is the loss. There is something sinister about the obscenity with which we fill our books and our popular songs and our playhouses, these days. Do you not sometimes long for something fine and sweet and true to replace these everlasting illicit love affairs and secretive husbands evading the eyes of their wives? Does It not spell danger—the assiduity with which we depict marriage as some great game of hide-and-go-seek and never
League. Sc does the Polk MHk Company-team.. The Druids were scheduled, to play the Prest-O-'Lite Company team, champions of the Commercial League,, in a game that was to aid in determining the- city title. But the Polk team protested. Representatives of the Polk team went over to the Columbia Club and them and there obtained a restraining order from Judge Leathers. Later the contest was transferred to the Courthouse and the restraining order turned into an injunction. The dispute is over the eligibility of a player-on. the Polk team. Anyway, it appears that the city amateur baseball championship will ultimately be decided in a courtroom rather-than on a baseball diamond. It seems that more and more contests are being settled that way. But baseball by injunction appears to be anew one. This practice has a lot of possib. lities. For instance, the Indians might enjoin Louisville from winning so many games so that Indianapolis would have a chance at the pennant. Or Umpire Finneran might enjoin Ownie Bush from arguing with him, or Bush might enjoin Finneran from making-what Bush calls.rotten decisions. The injunction is a great institution. Its possibilities in the world of sport seem to be as unlimited as they have proved themselves to be in other fields. One can not help wondering what will happen when the football season starts. We expect to hear the college boys yelling: “Enjoin ’em, enjoin ’em, rah! rah! rah!” Stephenson Trial Date mT is indeed gratifying to learn that at least a tentative date has been set for the trial of D. C. Stephenson, Earl Klinck and Earl Gentry, held in the Hamilton County jail charged with the murder of Miss Madge Oberholtzer of Indianapolis. The date agreed on by counsel on both sides and the court is Oct. 12. This date will be about six months after the arrest of the three men. The case is now in the hands of the third judge to preside since the legal jockeying started last April. Almost every twist of the law has been used by both sides without any appreciable progress having been made. Speedy justice is necessary in a case of this kind in fairness to both sides and in the interest of the public generally.
Gasoline Prices A* - ™" NO 1 HER gasoline price war is under way. Prices in Indianapolis have been reduced 2 cents a gallon. In several other Indiana cities the reduction has been even greater. In some places gasoline is selling as low as 17 cents a gallon. Os course, no motorist objects to reduction of the price of gasoline. The question involved is one of whether prices have not been too high right along. It usually is presumed that the price of a commodity is governed by the law of supply and demand. This apparently has nothing to do with the price of gasoline. There have been repeated unsuccessful efforts to do something about the handling and the prices of petroleum products, but none of them has been particularly successful. It seems t;hat when a business reaches a certain point in size it has pretty much its own way about things.
as a beautiful, solemn compact signed with the heart’s blood of a good man and woman? No wonder men have the Idea that something is wrong with their valor if they do not step out now and then and cull honey from the wayside flower: no wonder that more and more women are coming to feel that unless they can have a few sub rosa affairs they will be objects of scorn to their sophisticated sisters. America’s sense of humor needs a thorough renovating. It lacks subflety and refinement and is becoming crude and coarse and sensual. And men and women can be accurately judged by what they laugh at. There are lots of funny things in the world at which we may laugh with impunity, but the breaking of the mairtxge tie Is not one of them. The unfaithful husband or wife is not an object to excite smiles, but tears. A Thought Yours sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream, dreams, your, young men shall see visions.—Joel 2:28. • * * Dreams are the children of an Idle brain, begot of nothing but vain fantasy.—Shakespeare. In baseball can a runrer score on a foul fly? Yes, it Is as permissible to score after the catch of a foul fly, as it js to score after the catch of a fair fly- 1
Ask The Times c A n . r s t *n answer to any quea- ! Information by wntinff to Tha IndlanuDOits Times Waahlnet'in 1322 Sew York Av“v&Vh" lnaton. D. C.. inclosinir 2 cents in f0 H r enly - Mfob-at. JeSal an3 marital advice cannot be iriven nor can e A t<? nded research be undertaken All ether nutations will receive a personal ,'cnl.v. Unsigned reaueeta cannot uai“ m r t&. Ail ,etters are Do apples have a higher percentage of carbohydrates or-of protein? They have a high percentage of carbohydrates and a low percentage of proteins and fats. What kind of a fraternity is the Tau Kappa Alpha fraternity? This Is a national honorary debating fraternity. It was organized at Indianapolis in 1908 and is now found In many colleges and universities. Are there any lions today in the forests of the United States? Except In captivity, there are no Hons in the United States. The cougar and puma of the western mountainous districts-of the United States are commonly called “mountain lions” but are not real lions. How many Islands In the Bahama group; what are the chief sources of revenue In the Islands, and are there any attractive winter reeorts there? The Bahama Islands number twenty, some of them uninhabited. Sponges and sisal are the chief sources of revenue. Fruit growing Is being developed. Nassau, on the island of New Providence, near the Florida coast", Is an attractive winter resort for Americana.
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
KANSAS OCEAN LIZARD IS ON EXHIBIT IN N. Y. MUSEUM
By David Diet* .V i:A Service Writer OISITORS to the American Museum of Natural History, New York, will he greeted by a terrifying lizard about thirty feet long with four powerful webbed feet and a powerful propelling tail. The lizard was recently put on display at the head of the staircase on the fourth floor of the museum. There’s no need for fear, however, for this particular lizard has been for some 10,000,000 years. - He used to swim in the Kansas ocean, for at the time when he lived, Kansas was covered with the waves of a mighty ocean. This marine lizard and his mates were then the monarchs of the ocean. But with the passing of time, conditions changed. The land rose on the north, west and south, changing the ocean into a small body cut off from direct connection with the great ocean. Life became harder and harder for the mighty marine lizards and finally his race died out entirely. The fossil on display at the museum was found burled In the Bad
RIGHT HERE IN INDIANA \
MILEAGE ALLOWANCE CUT E a whence F. ORR, St^fce examiner, says the State board of accounts will soon Issue an order revising the mileage . allowance of State employes travel-
ing In their own cars on public business. This will be sad news to workers of the mileage graft. At present employes journeying over the State on official business are permitted to charge mileage for the use of their' cars on a scale varying from 10 to 15 cents according to the character and horse power of their autos.
• 8&\ *> :*: '••%.* •‘••'''tom
Nelson
Recently an official drove from the Statehouse to Broad Ripple and return. His mileage claim was $1.60. The same trip could have been made by street car for 20 cents. What did the taxpayer get In that instance for $1.40? Os course the dignity of a State employe must be maintained at all cost. To insist that they travel on public carriers might be unnecessarily cruel. Np doubt it would be galling to a Statehouse demigod to ride street cars, interurbans and trains and rub elbows wth common people. But even an allowance of 10 cents a mile is too much to pay for use of their private automobiles. Busses, electric tractions, and steam railroads will carry them to any point in the State speedily and at a fraction of that mileage charge, with no injury to public business. Why allow more? The mileage graft Is small. It will neither make nor break Indiana. But it is one of the reasons the taxpayer gets less for his tax dollar than for any other dollar he spends. UPKEEP OF” HOOSIER AUTOS BOROUGH. director of the legislative reference bureau, estimates the yearly cost to the people of the State for the operation and of their pleasure automohiies Is about $210,476,000. That’s a large sum—more than the combined annual value of Indiana’s three leading farm crops —corn, w r heat and hay. More is spent by the people of the State in operating their automobiles than the total cost of State and local government. Why shouldn’t more be spent In automobile upkeep than In governments? What Hosier would trade the pleasures of the open road, made possible by his motor car, for all the city, county, and State government In sight? He regards more gas and less government as a desirable state of affairs. Truly, stupendous sums are spent to keep America’s rubber-tired wheels revolving. It Is easy to show by compiling figures that wa spend more on the operation and upkeep of our automohiles than we do for religion, education, or any of the other activities for the welfare of society. If America would lay up the old bus and walk a couple of years it would save enough to pay its war debts or build an ornate consolidated school In every township In the land. But is this money spent In automobile upkeep wasted? Motorization has broadened and speeded American civilization. Who would want to bring hack the horse and buggy days even if it didn’t cost a cent? UNNECESSARY” STREET BEGGARS SHE Indianapolis Council of Social Agencies Invites every street musician and beggar in the city to go to the Family Welfare Society for help In working out a better way of .making a living, Social workers say street begging Is unnecessary In Indianapolis—and a libel on the city’s good name and prosperity. Probably there Is no excuse for such mendicancy here. Blit street begging Is less the result of grim need than the practice of a fine art. Downtown Indianapolis has a few eminent practitioners of mendicancy, Some vend lead pencils, gun; .tuid other trifles, or trade
Lands of the Smoky Hill River in western Kansas. Only the tip of his tail was exposed. Careful digging revealed an unusually well preserved fossil. Not only was every bone of the skeleton present, but the fossilized remnants of the cartilages of the breastbone, ribs and shoulderblades, and the cartilage rings of the windpipe. • • • ' j! OMEN have proved as success\X/ ful as men in the field of as- * “ tronomy, though of course there are many more men than women In the science. This is shown conclusively by the action of Oxford University, England, in picking an American woman astronomer as the first woman- to receive the university’s honorary degree of Doctor of Science. Miss Annie Cannon of Harvard University received the degree. She’s one of the champion bookkeepers of the heavens, having catalogued more than 200,000 stars. The system of classifying stars into six general types, known as Types B, A, F, G, K, M, was devised by Miss Cannon.
butchered songs for pennies. Others have only crippled limbs to entice donations. Perhaps their presence Is a IlbeJ on the fair name of the city. It may Indicate a high degree of local prosperity or the reverse. Begging is not * evidence of economic depression. Professional beggars are most numerous In prosperous communities where easy money walks the streets. Quite likely the experiment of the organized charities of the city will hot noticeably decrease our stook of street beggars. Most of them will pursue their occupations until shooed away by the police. Organized charity can’t eliminate the beggars because human nature won’t let it. Dropping a few pennies in a blind man’s tin cup or buying unneeded shoestrings from a fragment of a man affords many a warmer glow of satisfaction and a greater enlargement of the heart than a large donation to organized charity, It’s the personal contact with the crippled and maimed that most quickly arouses one’s compassion and the impulse to give. Such compassion, spring from the heart not the head, is the beggar’s stock in trade, INVASION OF PRIVATE RIGHTS THE city judge at Ft, Wayne Saturday freed a defendant *—■" in whose nip-pocket officers found a pint of whisky when they raided a soft drink parlor and “frisked" the occupants, He also denounced the officers for the arrest, He held that persons should not be searched without pi-oper warrant or information. To do otherwise is an invasion of private rights, Unwarranted search and seizure have become common in bone-dry Indiana. Front doors are kicked in and private homes ransacked on vague and flimsy John Doe warrants and even without warrants. If a householder objects he is "bawled out" by the raiders. Zealous officers may feel handicapped if required to observe all legal niceties when trailing booze. To read a search warrant before entering a suspected home or investigating a suspicious hippocket bulge might allow a trickle of moonshine to escape. That would be awful. However, inviolability of a citizen’s home and person—except by due process of law —is guaranteed by the Constitution, On that principle Is founded the liberty and security of the private citizen, It was evolved from centuries of conflict between monarchs and subjects. Absolute monarchs can smash down door* and throw people In dungeons as they please. But since the sturdy barons wrested the Great Charter from King John such procedure has not been tolerated In Anglo-Saxon nations. Private rights have been recognized as superior to royal whims, and there is nothing legal about some prohibition enforcement officers. Police activity that results In raids without warrants and illegal search and seizure is more damaging to society than the crime It attempts to suppress, If the slaying of the Demon Rum involves trampling under foot all private rights it isn’t worth the cost, Tom Sims' Says Half the world’s gold is in the United States now and dentists are trying to put It Into teeth, The wheat market goes down and then it recovers. But all the wheat growers don’t recover. Some girls are so unlcky. Chicago
man was run over by an auto the day before his wedding. And two bricklayers fell forty feet in Chicago. But this Is no sign their pay is coming down. Some people hope every day will be Sunday by and by, and others are afraid that it will, Here's pome
Kims
striking news for today;. About 5,'000 matches are lighted every second! n the United States. (Copyright, 1925, BapyloA xne.)
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Anita Becomes South Sea Island Topsy; All The World Sings When Dessa Plays
By Walter D. Hickman. I . J South Sea Island Topsy is I I Anita Stewart these days. U* I That is, Anita is such an edition of Topsy in ‘Never The Twain Shall Meet.” She is that all because one Peter B. Kyne wrote such a story. Little Eva isn’t present hut Topsy of the South Seas has several Romeos. This South Sea Island epedemic in movie land and the world of
fiction is getting about as bad as the “Florida fever” in every day life. One of the Romeos is Bert LyteLl, a rich but weak man, who gets all excited when he sees his Topsy shake a wicked shredded wheat while the ukeleles hike on a far away coat. The Topsy- of the South Seas sneaks off to America* in this instance it is California, and at tempts to win her
aSP.
Bert Lytell
Romeo’s heart being a grand lady. She has the gowns, the jewels and all that but the author lets it be known that ‘the west is west and the east is east.” Our alleged hero has let it be known that he was to marry a white girl but when our South Sea Island Topsy does her parlor stuff in themoonlight, the American girl has no chance. Our little heroine makes an awful mess of society manners while in this country and at last “runs off” to her native Island, The Romeo follokvs her, parries her under two ceremonies, one Christian and the other heathen iwhat a service this is—it would give Broadway producers of revues anew idea of howto undress their girls), but they get married. It is then discovered that water and oil don’t mix. Our South Sea Topsy “gives him up” and lets him return to the land where they use tableelothe3 on the table. But there is another Romeo just around another palm tree and I suspect that Topsy win not be lonety for long. Os course Topsy is- not reajly dark. She is fair tf> look upon. Anyway such a role gives Miss Stewart a chance to spill the South Sea Island applesauce all over several reels,. It is called “romance,” but it la the good old hash that seems to make box office managers smile when they count up the old money at the end of the week. Bill Includes an Our Gang- comedy, a nows reel and music. At the Apollo all week. J— -J----CROOKING UP THE OLD CROOKS DRAMA WITH TRICKS Crooking up the old crook drama with new tricks is just what is done in “The Unholy Three” with Lon Chaney, Mae Busch and Matt More. And a mighty good job of turning out anew kind of a crook yarn has been done in “The Unholy Three.” Three easy money makers— the ventriloquist, the dwarf and the strong man of a side show—team together to trim the world. Chaney as the ventriloquist masquerades ns an old woman who
sells parrots and other things to rich people. The dwarf is doited up like a baby and the bold strong man delivers the goods. Os course the ventrilloquist can make any bird talk its head off but —. When the bird lands in new quarters It can’t even ask for a cracker, so “granny” wheeling- the ’-infant” come; to caJl on the. bird.. This makes tx
L|.
easy to hxjafce the Le Uhseey jewels and the cash that- every rich naan Cn the -Crovhsa supposed to have Vpls<?d ail over- his home. The at sight took off their- (ins-
THE SPUDZ FAMILY—By TALBURT
guise and did the job of looting, the house.. On one of these trips, a murder Is committee while “granny” is not present. Forgot to tell yen that the stool pigeon was a girL who falls fcn love with a good man. The gang attempts to put the blame on the good man. They succeed. A gorilla crushes the two real murderers, the ventriloquist does a little clever work and the good man Is freed to marry his sweetheart, who up to that time has been a pretty good crook hei-self. This Impossible yarn is told In fine theatrical terms. Acting mighty good; Chaney splendid and the entire picture gives good entertainment along trick fines. •* Bill includes Ruth NblTer at the organ; a comedy and orchestral music. At the Ohio all week. J- -J----DESSA TOLD ’EM TO SING AND THEY DID Can you imagine Dessa. By iff, the artist who puts melody in the pipe organ, becoming a singing teacher? Well, anyway, that Is lust, what she is this week. Miss Byrd as her organ solo at the Circle this week is presenting “The Singing Contest.” While she plays, the screen lets T be known that Miss Byrd wants
Milton Sills
sounded to me that everybody was singing as if they enjoyed it.. Then she JLivlted us to whistle. And Ob, Boy,, how we did whistle. When the fun was over,. Miss Byrd was given to understand, by the applause that everything was alright and that we sure did like her as a music teacher. A mighty good novelty Idea and one that Is going ever with a bang.. The orchestral feature this week Is Ted Weems and hie recording orchestra This organization has a large record following.. Applause greeted Weems when the curtains parted.. They are playing the tunes of the day as the public has ordered. The American girl has been glorified in the big revues and now it seems that movies directors are ‘glorifying the common skunk.” A skunk, an animal, has been trained to raise Its tail in plain view of the camerman and the actors. The sight of a skUnk is not pleasant to me, either in real life or on the screen. Such an animal would give a bad odr.' to any picture and I for orte raise a protest to the use of the skunk as a comedy “actor" in any form of entertainment. If the skunk Is a comedian, then a flood is the funniest thing in the world, The “skunk” is used in “The Knockout” with Milton Sills. I wonder what Sills thinks about such competition. This picture iscomposed mostly of one fight against another fight. I guess the director thought that three or more good fights ought to make the perfect picture.. Well it don't.. “The West Wind” is one of those dainty and interesting little Novelties that one expects to find at this theater. It is a picturized confession qf the wind. Mighty clever. At the Circle all week. v * * A THOUGHT OR TWO ON MOVUB PROBLEM, \Vill adroit )rigl* Jtow that “A. Wproan's? Fefch>,“’ gde from Clarence B> Kehaij-d'% “‘Mjraote.” not to ho pojjfusot vhgfc t'ao efcoge spectacle aaHai “The Mnracla,” gave me iiu-ei (fC-HrC-oFa. The story is of wi-oh a nature —
MONDAY, AUG. 24, ihzD
the great ffrilllt of: a woman being exercised so, that ait unbeliever In God might, believe—thgit It Invites discussion.. Alma Rubbers; i& as the woman tvho believed frari Percy Marmont
•I* jgtm'"'
Alma Rubens
good woman comes into the life off the dmabter and In protecting her he loses his eye sight. The woman then leads him on and on until he believes hot not. until his sight has been restored.. By the cold, rules: off: criticism,, as I understand, therm,, “A Woman's Faith”' Is not entertainment.. The acting Is of tile highest order at times, but the theme- te not one that yields to the •■rereem which is every man’s property.. Have your own idea about th-l'e picture and- every picture.. You know my idea.. The bill Includes; a comedy, news reef and music, by the American Harmonists,. At the COlbnl&t alb-week.. U- 'U Otber theaters today- offer?; **The Nervous Wreck” - a>t English's;;jShrine Frolic at Broad Ripple, Jack Hoxle in “The Red Rider" at the Isis;; Miller and Marks at. the Palace and ”A Night in ©id. Mexico” at the Lyric,
everybody to sing the songs she is playing on the organ,, because all .the world knows ’em.. At first some of us who were present yesterday waited fpr the other fellow to clear his throat and start the vocal fire, works. Then when we were not loud 3no ugh, the screen ‘kidded” us a bit. Miss Byrd began to turn the fireworks loose upon the organ and before I knew It, it
Movie Verdict Apollo—Anita, Stewart becomes a South Sea Island "Topsy" in ‘‘Never The Twain Shall Meet.” Circle—The real hit at the Circle this week is Dessa Byrd playing "A Singing Contest”-on the organ. The audience aids Miss Byrd in gome great turm This is the intimate, stuff that makes a theaterfamous.. Colonial*—The Jury-la still- out and probably will be on- the guilt or innocence of. 'A Woman's, Faith” tta regarding entertainment, Ohio—Some mighty- clever new twists is given the crook drama in ‘The Unholy Three.” Chaney is splendid.
Home Sewn By Hal Cochran I once knew a girl by the name of Kathleen, and she spent lots of time at her sewin’ machine. She stitched and she stitched till she wore herself lean, and I wondered what made sewin' interest so keen. This same little miss always dressed very neat, and attracted attention when seen on the street. Her gowns were quite classy and strikingly sweet, and were envied by all of the girls she would meet. The money invested was little, at best, though 'twas plain to be seen she was fashionably dressed. She knew like as not that the other- girls guessed that with money for oodles of clothes she was blest. Ah, she was a girl of the type thaJ is rare-. She never complained had nothing to wear. When ping she went, goods came off of tha shelf, and she copied the latest <m style*; eJi herself.. fl You’ll, have to, adroit that Ml J Kathleen was- wise, fjfre stood mH by windows with, envious- sighs. Bifl stuck- to her- stitchro’ qnd wfllingJH slaved, tgl she- turned put, henS sown, alt tee clothes that craved. - (Copyright, 1925, NBA Sarvice, jflH
Is the man who for awhile does-not. believe In. God*. In the end,, off coarse, he sees- what a “fool?*' he has been. He becomes art unbeliever when he discovers the woman he is about to marry hr the arms of another- ruam I can’t see why a man should blame that on any power of God. Some novelists • hav-g written a deal on thewne, Then a
