Indianapolis Times, Volume 37, Number 122, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 September 1925 — Page 4

4

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 NBA Service • * * Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Published daily except Sunday by Indianapolis Times P üblishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland St., Indianapolis • • * Subscription Rates: Indianapolis Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere —Twelve Cents a Week PHONE—MA In 3500.

No law shall be 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. .

Radio mNDIANAPOLIS does honor this week to an infant industry, one that is precocious to say the least—radio. Still an infant in years, radio already has had a profound effect on the lives of much of the population. Millions of homes are equipped with receiving sets from the tiny crystal with a cat whisker arrangement for conducting the wave impulses, to the elaborate ultra-super outfits. Radio has provided new lines of endeavor for thousands of persons. It has provided a new outlet for the scientifically inclined. It has provided anew medium for entertainment artists of all descriptions. It has established itself firmly beyond the experimental stage. It has proved itself to be the most popular invention since the automobile. Probably few innovations have made the progress made by radio in so short a time. Popular demand has been responsible. So long as popular demand continues, radio will continue to develop; and there is nu indication that popular demand will wane. No one can predict the ultimate result of transmitting sound without wire. It is entirely probable that it will revolutionize communication. Already pictures are being transmitted by radio as well as by wire. The time is not far distant when every city newspaper will have a photograph receiving set just as it now has wires over which to receive news. It is not only possible but very probable that within a few years news stories from far distant places will be illustrated on the day of publication with pictures of the scenes and events described. The latest radio will be on exhibition at Cadle Tabernacle this week, beginning tonight. The latest in radio, so fast is it progressing, means development brought out during the last few weelcs or months. There is constant change and improvement. The show should be of immense interest to everyone, for radio is the sensation of modern invention. Go to the show and see for yourself.

White Crosses TyT) HITE crosses soon will mark the spots on W Indiana streets and highways where fatal accidents have occurred. The marking of such places is an admirable idea. The white crosses, all too numerous, should he an effective reminder of the consequences of reckless driving. They should impress the motorist who takes his own life and the lives of others in liis hands when he drives, if anything will impress such a driver. Every year in Indiana several hundred persons are killed in automobile accidents. There is hardly an edition of any newspaper that does not record at least one fatal accident. Yet we have become hardened to this constant slaughter and are not impressed. Suppose two or three hundred persons should be killed in a fire. The occurrence would be looked upon as a major tragedy and the whole country would be moved. Yet as many are being killed in automobile accidents in Indiana every year and thousands more are killed in other states. Only a few days ago the Shenandoah fell, carrying fourteen men to their deaths. The nation was horror-stricken. Yet there have been weeks and sometimes periods of two days in Indiana when as many have been killed in automobile accidents. The death toll from careless driving, and nearly every automobile accident is due to careless driving on the part of someone, is one of the greatest problems we have to face. It is to be hoped that the white crosses will help bring the situation home to everyone.

ASK THE TIMES

You can pet an answer to any question of tact or inlormation by writ la* to The luflianacolis Times Washington Bureau. 1322 New York Ave.. Washington, D. C.. inclosing 2 cents in stanjps for reply. Medical. Jepal and marital eavice cannot be given. nor can extended research, be undertaken. All other cuestions will receive a personal reply. Unsigned requests cannot be answered. All letters axe confidential. —Editor. How wide is the Mississippi River at New Orleans? What is the average depth? The width of the Mississippi River at New Orleans Is about 3,600 to 4,000 feet. Its average depth is eighty to ninety feet, but there are holes in the river bed as deep as 190 feet. What instruments make up a ‘‘fife and drum corps?” It is made up merely of fifes and street (or parade) drums—the snare drums and bass drums. The music Is only used so” parade purposes. What is the best method of procedure in getting the eggs of a golden pheasant hatched and when is the usual time for batching. How many eggs should a golden pheasant lay in a year? It Is best to get a sitting hen to hatch out the eggs of the golden pheasant. As the time for hatching approaches it is best to enclose the place where the hatching is being done with fine mesh wire fence,

Espionage nrrjERE are two startling facts about con- | i 11 ditions in Marion county : One man in every hundred is a policeman of one kind or another. There is an alarming increase in crime. Whether one fact bears any relation to the other we do not know. But this we do know, that establishment of citizen police, working without direction and responsible to no one, has not resulted in decrease in crime. Os the 3,350 men in Marion county authorized to wear badges, carry arms and make arrests, only about 1,000 are paid policemen responsible to superiors representing the people and to the people themselves. The others are volunteers who have taken it upon themselves to regulate the activities and morals of their neighbors. In other words, Marion county is permeated with an espionage system of a magnitude almost unbelievable. Nothing could be more demoralizing to a community than this. Nothing is more distasteful to an American citizen tc have his every action watched by a spy. That is not the American way of doing things.

Politics and Prohibition EOLITICS has won the prohibition battle in Indiana. After almost a year of effort Jim Watson has been successful in adding the Federal enforcement department to his political machine. Bert Morgan has been relieved of his duties as head of the prohibition forces in Indiana and A. R. Harris, Eleventh district Republican politician, has been assigned to take his place. Great is she power of politics. Morgan has been recognized, during his term as head of the Federal prohibition enforcement department in Indiana, as an efficient public servant. He is a man who believes in prohibition and who believes in the fair and just enforcement of the law. About a year ago Senator Watson started his efforts to oust Morgan. Morgan is not a “Watson man.” Watson evidently felt that this should be sufficient cause for his removal. But removal at that time was made difficult by public protest in Indianapolis and Indiana. Things went along until the present reorganization of the prohibition department. The change gave the politicians an opportunity to “ease” Morgan out. Who said that politics was going to be kept out of prohibition? • • TUNE in on the radio show. • • • THERE is one nice thing about the hot weather we have been having. How political spellbinders must suffer! • • • THERE were some hot show3 at the old Empire in the old days but the hottest of all occurred Saturday with a record-breaking attendance. • • • THE principal qualification of a prohibition enforcement officer seems to be that of being right politically. • • • THERE are almost enough policemen of various kinds in Marion county to carry an election. • • WE sometimes wonder if friends of prohibition realize how much damage constant outrages in the name of enforcement is doing to the cause.

otherwise as soon as the young pheasants are hatched they will run away and hide so that you will be unable to find them. There is no general rule- about the number of eggs a golden pheasant hen will lay in a year, since it depends upon the feeding and other matters of surroundings. The time for hatching is about the same as for hens' eggs, and the young chicks feed In much the same manner as the ordinary barnyard fowl. Is Roscoe (Fatty) Arbuckle now playing for the screen? No. How are salted peanuts made? Buy raw peanuts, crack and remove the nuts. Blanch them by dipping In boiling water for two minutes, then cold water. Drain and reriiove the skins, and dry thoroughly by keeping in a warm, dry place for several hours. Fry in deep olive oil or vegetable oil until a light brown. The oil should be very hot before Immersing the nuts. Use a basket so that the nuts can be shaken and moved while frying, and all removed immediately when they are brown. Pour onto brown paper to absorb the extra oil, hnd dust with salt, using one-half teaspoonful for each pound of nuts.

Hosiery By Hal Cochran Ar“*"l GIRL gets a kick out of limbs look' ’ slick, when she’s wearin’ anew pair of hose. The silkiness shines, and it brings out the lines—a fact that she very well knows. Her skirts, In the breeze, show they’re rolled at the knees, and she’ll tell you that's cooler, by far. It’s style, and she’ll grab it—or maybe It's habit. Whatever they're rolled for, they are. The reds and the b',u*s, and the funny name hues, are really considered quite dashln*. Not ten years ago we’d have laughed at their show, but today It’s all right ’cause it’s fashion. ’Course some have the knack, with conservative black, to make them look flashy as bright ones. And others, I guess, blend right In with the dress if the maiden is wearin’ the right ones. Alas! Common cotton. In hose. Is forgotten. It’s had Its full swing and it’s through. The si'k has dis plac* and it, the shine has erased it—but I'm not objecting, are you? (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Your lot could Suppose you were a bdy school again wearing new

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

EXTINCTION OF MANY WILD ANIMALS BEING PREDICTED

By David Dietz Bu XEA Service ( HE world is changing so fast ! I that many scientists look for t 1 the disappearance of the last traces of many wild animals from the' face of the earth in less than three generations. A stuffed specimen in the museum or a caged one in a zoo will be your grandchildren's only chance to see some of the animals which once roamed the earth by the millions. That is why big museums of the world, like the American Museum of Natural History, are sending expeditions out to shoot big game and bring back specimens that can be stuffed and mounted for the public to gaze at. Two of the important expeditions now out after big game are the Vernay expedition of the American Museum of Natural History now in Angola, Africa, and the James SimpsonRoosevelt expedition of the Field Museum of Natural History now in Asia. Herbert Long, famous explorer and big game hunter, is general manager of the first expedition. • * • mHE Roosevelts and their party recently left Leh, the outpost of western civilization in Kashmir and continued through the

RIGHT HERE

IN INDIANA By GAYLORD NELSON

FIRST RADIO SHOW SHE first Indianapolis radio show, under the auspices of the Broadcast Listeners’ Association, will open this evening in Calle Tabernacle. Dealers and

m anufacturers have installed hundreds of exit i b 1 ts. The latest fashions in equipment, static, and announcers will be displayed. No doubt the exposition will be a howling success. Every radio fan, with or without his 1 o u d-speaker, will attend to inspect the latest dinguses for taming the wild ether waves.

Nelson

A display of radio apparatus draws the fans like a window of cocktail shakers attracts a dry Congressman. One can sneer at the radio If one likes. But like the bandits, the Charleston and the Eighteenth Amendment it has become a recognized feature of American night life. It may not be a great moral force. However it keeps the householder home evenings swearing softly to himself instead of carousing around. And it's invaluable when company drops in. Os course then a set, like a spoiled child, refuses to be cunning. It merely shrieks ‘wheel whee!” as the perspiring owner twiddles the dials. ■What's needed is a radio set that won’t sulk before company. But even in Its present temperamental state It is a social aid. Static fills an evening as pleasantly for the guests as the melodeon and plush album with which grandfather entertained —and is only slightly more immoral. One may or may not like radio, but it’s here to stay and its future influence on human relations is incalculable. It may mark the beginning of real understanding and cooperation among nations. So attend the show and see what It’s all about. In after years to have attended the first •Indianapolis radio exposition may be as great a mark of distinction to a person as to have studied the McGuffejr readers.

LIGHTENING KITCHEN WORK DY C. DELONG of Columbus (Ind.) has been granted *-■ a patent on a pie crimper. That ought to be good news in pie foundries and kitchens where human thumbs have been dislocated in trying to weld the roofs of pies to the foundations. Hooslers aren’t great inventors. In ratio of patents issued to population last year, Indiana ranked twenty-third among the States— Connecticut, with its wooden nutmeg Yankees, ranking first, of course. But it Is fitting that Hoosler inventive genius should find outlet in improving culinary tools. Lightening kitchen work Is favorite field for American inventors. Drudgery-eliminating domestic appliances are developed in this country on a scale uhknown In the rest of the world. A distinguished British architect recently visited America. Neither our towering sky-scrapers nor monumental railroad stations excited his admiration as much as the American kitchen, with builtin features, hot and cold water, gas and all manner of labor-sav-ing devices and utensils —products of American Inventive genius. And, strange to say, most of these Improvements for lightening woman's toll have invented and developed by mere brute man. Not one household invention out of a hundred is made by the lawful occupant of the kitchen or her sisters. Man has some uses around the house beside being a family door mat. CAN’T BUY~ AN ENGINE SHE Indiana public service commission, In a recent orde-, refused to permit the city of Greenfield to buy anew $19,800 engine for Its municipal light plant The oriler recommended that the city j buy its cur-

great Himalayan Mountains by way of the Karakorum Pass. This pass goes through the mountains at an altitude of 18,300 feet and is made highly dangerous by avalanches. On the wind-swept plains of the world’s highest table land, the Roosevelts hope to shoot specimens of the rare mountain sheep, the Ovis Poll, which Is thought to he the ancestor of the modern sheep. They will hunt also for the Thian Shan ibex, which has scimitar horns a foot long, and for the markhor. the most prized and finest looking of all wild goats. SHE Vernay expedition is hunting especially for the giant sable antelope. Arthur Vernay and Jjeut. Col. J. C. Faunthorpe spent last year hunting big game for the American Museum in India. Using elephants, they hunted for the great Indian one-horned rhinoceros. This is one of the animals which is fast becoming extinct. They brought back two fine specimens, one with a horn twelve inches long, the other with a twelve and one-half-inch horn. They also shot elephants and tigers and obtained many motion pictures of living animals.

rent instead of trying to produce it. The action of the commission reveals how far we have traveled on the road to paternalistic despotism in government. Perhaps the proposed purchase of an engine would have been an extravagance for Greenfield, and current furnished by a private utility cheaper. But what of it? The taxpayers of the municipality proposed to spend their own money. Os what conceivable interest is it to the State of Indiana whether a Hoosier municipality buys or manufactures the electricity which lights it? If a city wants to equip its municipal plant with a dia-mond-studded engine only its own taxpayers are affected. Yet under the law the public service commission must pass on the question. Five men from Indianapolis, Lebanon, Martinsville, and Lafayette. tell the taxpayer of Greenfield what he can and can't do with his own money in a purely local matter. Absurd, isn't it? But characteristic of the interference of the State in local affairs. According to the laws of the State, the citizen of the cities must be irresponsible children. But those same citizens pay much of the State tax and show as much ability as the Jovians in the Statehouse. They could probably manage their own local affairs satisfactorily if given a change, although local self-govern-ment is only a legend.

CARELESSNESS AND CRIME OLICE CHIEF RIKHOFF I I says that most burglars I, 1 are invited into the home. He believes the present crime wave could be checked if residents took greater precautions in securely locking doors and windows—and more people learned to scream. A reformed pickpocket, who lectured in Indianapolis the other night also declared carelessness breeds crime. “It is not the cleverness of thieves, bus the stupidity and carelessness of some of their victims that makes crime possible,” was the way he put it. A pickpocket, with twenty-three years’ professional experience, and a highly respectable police chief get the same answer for crime. There must be something to It. No doubt the habit of carrying considerable sums of money on the person, or in the home, encourages felonious assault. A village cut-up, ■who raps a couple of dollar bills around a corncob and ostentatiously flashes his “roll” Is likely to have a gun poked into hlr, ribs and be separated from his currency before the evening is over. On the other hand, no enterprising bandit holds up John D. Rockefeller, for It is generally understood that America’s richest man never carries a roll—only a few new dimes. However, it is largely owing to John D. and other gentlemen, who control necessities like gasoline, that the average citizen must be well-upholstered with cash to meet the exigencies of daily life. Daily needs require more ready money than formerly—a dollar only does the work of a dime. Perhaps lack of precautions on the part of victims contribute, but the real cause of the crime increase lies deeper. It’s less the carelessness of the Individual than the carelessness of society. Yale locks and self-closing banks won't check crime as long as the legal latchstrings hang out for the criminals.

A Thought Confidence in an unfaithful man in time of trouble is like a broken tooth and a foot out of joint.—Prov. 26:19. Confidence cannot be won in a day.—German Proverb. At what temperature is absolute zero. Has It ever been obtained? Absolute zero, the point at which bodies are entirely devoid of heat, exists at 459.4 degrees below zero. Fahrenheit. A temperature of one degree above absolute zero has been obtained in an effort to liquify helium gas. Should salicylic acid or benzoate of soda be put in canned goods as preservative? The best cook books do not recommend this. Thorough sterilization It is claimed, gives the same results without possibility of Injurious effect.

r — j | ■ " \DO wow . . , . =~‘ \ \*JH*T mIBNAAHC; f HOW CfcM \\f A C™? M ABOUT- SHE VOOSFWSUCH V \ SAW v TOtO Wt. I srCTV*‘ ON N/OO SEE f— ■ ■-J VNC* \ y-Nyi SOVJ “** Ei||F . >H 6w>t2?*v ‘ j TH\S PfL\

No Green Grass Grew Under the Feet of Harold When He Was Mere Freshman

By Walter D. Hickman. Gt~ KEENER than grass is what a freshman is supposed to be in college. A freshie is supposed to be so green that even grass would not grow under his feet. All the world is supposed to laugh at a freshman, and Harold Lloyd knew that when ho started work on

his new comedy, “The Freshman." This picture makes Lloyd the most satisfying comedian on the screen today. It is my opinion that Charlie Chaplin has never turned out a funnier picture than this Harold Lloyd comedy. There is so much new business in this movie, stunts which have never been used on the screen before that one realizes that there is something new

nat out Lloyd

under the sun. It isn’t the burlesque football game that makes this picture a great comedy picture—it Is the entire comedy creation. Harold is probably the greenest freshman that never existed. He was so green that 1 e became the tackling dummy for t'he football squad when the real dummy lost its sawdust. The football players attacked Harold as a dummy until he looked like one. But at heart Harold was the salt of the earth. He thought he was a member of the team when In fact he was only the water boy. But the water boy got into the game ten minutes before the end and bv the injection of a black 6*-rny, toy balloons and a whistle this f< w ball game is turned into the burlesque ever exposed on the screen. The upper classmen made an awful boob out of Harold before he became the real college hero. Harold knew all about college before he reached the campus because he had seen college movies and read books on how to be the sheik of the campus. To make himself the most popular man on the campus, Harold thought he had to dance a litttle dance every time he was introduced to anybody. Then he would stick out his hand and say, "Just call me Speedy.” Probably the funniest scene in the movie is when Harold attends his first college dance. His dress suit was not done in time as the tailor had sinking spells, so the dress suit was only loosely sewed together. So the tailor went with Harold to the dance with his needle and thread. And Harold sure did need the tailor. You can easily imagine what happened—the dress suit just falls to pieces. There never has been a funnier hokum scene filmed upon the screen. I am sure that It will be the greatest box office attraction Lloyd has ever turned out. I am sure that it is the greatest comedy the screen has ever had. Here is real fun. It is going to be difficult to get into the Apollo during the showing Os this picture. It deserves to be the talk of the town. The bill includes Emil Seidel and hts orchestra; Bill Chandler singing “Rah, Rah Cholly” and Earl Gordon at the organ. At the Apollo all week.

Movie Verdict Apollo—“ The Freshman” is the funniest comedy Harold Lloyd has given the screen. Circle—Dramatic sadness and beautiful scenery are featured in "Romola.” Ohio—“ The Ten Commandments” is one of the screen’s finest accomplishments. Colonial —“Parisian Nights” is effective melodrama of underworld life as it is supposed to exist in Paris.

THE SPUDZ FAMILY—By TALBURT

DRAMATIC SADNESS IS FOUND IN “ROMOLA” "Romolo” has stood in literature as a fine dramatic accomplishment. It is a story of sadness —a story of old Italy when Savonarola was trying to preach anew day and a new way of honest living. Os course, much of this sadness had to be filmed in order to follow the story. No director could escape this. To get the right atmosphere, a large company headed by Lillian and Dorothy Gish and Ronald Colman was taken to Italy. I understand that many of the scenes were

Ronald Colman

Os course, Romola la a strange girl. She appears really too good to actually live. The character lacks conviction because Romola was really a holy person. Lillian Gish as Romola again uses that nervous method of expression which D. W. Griffith taught her. Or at least It was Griffith who first made it apparent that Miss Gish was a great artist along individual dramatic lines. Dorothy Gish as Tessa uses a sort of a modified tomboy method in creating the character of this girl who loved none too wisely. Ronald Colman doesn't show up to advantage In ancient costumes. As Carlo. Colman Is not playing a. role that fits him. William H. Powell as Tito is splendid, and so is Herbert Grimwood as Savonarola. The cast is as /follows: Romola . Lillian (Msh UeiM Dorothy Giyi Carlo Bucellini Ronald Colman Tito Melania William 11. Ponell BaiflaisaiTe Charles Lana St vonarola Herbert Grimwoou Bardo Rardt Bonaventura Ibanez Snini Frank Ibwiia Brieida Amelia Summerville Bratti Angelo Seattgna Nello Edultlo Muzzi Monna Ghita Tina Rivall "Komola” is a mighty strong dose of drama. Will grant you that It Is a fine picture, but the story is too dramatically sad. Bill Includes “Classmates" and orchestral music. At the Circle all week. -I- -!• -ILOU BECOMES A MODEL IN ‘PARISIAN NIGHTS’ What has become of Lou Tellegen? Will try to tell you, Tellegen is an actor of much personal charm. On the stage he is given to some peculiar traits which do not seem to be the part of natural characterization. In some romantic roles, he has shown fitting ability. Now he comes

Louou TeUegen artistry is placed > before a moving background of underworld life. Melodramatic, to be sure, but so full of natural situations as we are accustomed to see on the stage, that the entire picture becomes more interesting with every foot of film. The gang fights between the Panthers and the Wolves, two rival Apache gangs, are handled in fine style. When there Is fighting to be done, Tellegen is right on hand to

MONDAY, SEPT. 21, 192D

do a real Job. Don't get the idea that Lou is Just good for sheik roles. He sure can handle a nasty fist when he gets started in a fight. To my way of thinking, Elaine Hammerstein as the American sculptress brings anew natural note to melodramatic situations. She seems to be able to reflect two situations, one being when the artists is just the artist, and then again, when the artist is not the artist, but the woman. Some very effective work here. The picture has a good climax—when the French police train field guns upon the Apache den. Some fine work here. The bill also includes a movie showing how cameramen make a news reel. These scenes were actually taken by cameramen while news reel reporters for the Hearst News Reel were busy on a news Job. Here is a fine picture and will give you a mighty fine idea, just what a reporter is up against in getting news when it is hot. The bill includes music with aru enlarged orchestra. J At the Colonial all week. I •I* •!• -I- 1 ‘TEN COMMANDMENTS’ 1 IN FINAL WEEK HERE “The Ten Commandments" la now in its second and final week at the Ohio. Have gone on record concerning the merits of this very fine movie accomplishment. Have been asked for the casts for both parts. Here It is as follows: ~ , —Part One— Mnse*. the Lawgiver . . . Theodore Roberts Rsmesee. the Marnifleent.Charles de Roche Minaov the gv-ter of Moses. Estelle Tnvlor The Wife of Pharoah mila Faye The Son of Phirnah Terrence Moore Aaron. Brother of Moses James Neill Dathsn. the Discontented. . .Lawson Butt n.t e Taskmaster Clar-nce Burton The Bronze Man T. Noble Johnson —Park Two— Mr*. Martha McT ivish. . . Edythe Chapman John MoTaytsn. her =0n..... Richard Div Dan M.-Tavish. her son Ro t La Roque Mary Lyiah Lea trice Jov cally Lund. an Eurasian Nita Nalcli Redding, an Inspector Robert Edeson The Doctor Charles Ode The Outcast Agnes Ayres Hanks Hanke, pianist of merit, is on the bill. At the Ohio all week. * * • Other theaters today offer; Clara Kimball Young at B. F. Keith’s; Raymond Hitchcock in “Service for Husbands” at English’s; Jack Hoxie in "The White Outlaw” at the Isis. Erin Jackson at the Broadw'ay; Bebe Moffic at the Lyric and “The Charlestown Radium Show" at the Palace Tom Sims Says Paying your debts is a good habit, hut very expensive. Women do make mistakes. Woman in Atlantic City lost $50,000 in Jewels. Her mistake was in not

on the exact location where the author founded his story. I confess that “Romola” is a beautiful story, splendidly acted, beautifully produced and full of fine dramatic moments, but it is not a picture that will universally appeal. It Is a better movie, no doubt as to that. Those who enjoy reading George Eliot will revel in this photoplay.

BP-'

to the screen in a role that he Is acquainted with. You may see him this week as an Apache leader In "Parisian Nights,” who is trying to educate the crook boys and men to "steal artistically.” In so doing, this Apache learns that there Is more than a crook In his soul and that at heart he Is an artist and not a crook. The development of his

Rubens going to marry. She’s a movie star. And all the time we thought she was some famous painting. Now is the time to buy a fruit cake and start getting it all fixed up for Christmas. Keep your health. The only trouble some people have with rheumatism Is when they try to spell It. Every woman knows when hubby wants to take her to the show. It Is when she wants to stay at home. Fish are the only form of life which continues to grow after death. They are trying to reform football. Say it Is too rough. Why not reform work? It is too tough. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.)

being a movie star. The most melancholy part of fall Is reading about the Infant prodigy entering college in short trousers. Dreams do come true. Two newlyweds were wrecked and stranded on a Pacific Island three weeks. Here’s Alma

Sims