Indianapolis Times, Volume 40, Number 280, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1929 — Page 8

PAGE 8

r--—'

SCFIPPJ-MOWAtn

Respect for Courts However commendable the motive behind the declaration of Governor Leslie that the courts, and especially the supreme court, should receive nothing but praise and respect, even if mistaken, the result of •such an attitude could not help but be most subversive. There is nothing Inspired about the courts, and one might add, especially the supreme court of this state as at present constituted. That court, under our scheme of government, is the final defense of liberty or the final bulwark of injustice, according to the decisions it renders. If the court shows a persistent attitude for mistake:' or for decisions which fail to meet with the general levels o conscience and intelligence, the one remedy is not praise but criticism, so that the people, " ho have power to change the court by electing new nidges, can finally rcure a court in which the batting average of hits is larger than the error column. Respect tor rourts does not come from stifling criticism but from the decisions and actions of the judges. Courts which show a regard for the constitution, which dispense even handed justice, which are bpyond uspicion that verdicts are given in whispers in those who enter the back doors of the inner chambers. have no need to worry about the respect of the people they servo. The courts which deplore the growing disrespect for all law and all courts are those who have an ear open to the political forces which elect them and which are under suspicion of being reachable. There may come a time, even in this state, when the highest duty of the Governor or private citizen might be a full and free discussion of judges, all judges, and their decisions. The law recognizes the right of criticism. The rourts have never tried, except in one isolated case, to arrogate themselves the right to suppress criticism unless directed to some case then pending for decision. The law and our traditions do not place judges upon pedestals. They are servants of the people and of justice. There must he respect for courts, when they are right. When they are wrong, the people must make them right. A Problem in Ethics “Ethics.’ says Webster, “is the science of moral duty; more broadly, the science of the ideal human character. ’ So we suppose that if a person does something that is called unethical he violates moral duty; or performs an act which is wrong and which injures his fellows. Doctors have a system of ethics for their profession It is considered ‘unethical” for them to advertise for patients as the butcher does for customers, lor instance This code just has been invoked in Chicago bv the medical society of that city. Dr. Louis E. Schmidt, a distinguished physician and philanthropist, and a member of numerous learned societies here and abroad, has been expelled. His offense was that he was active in the Illinois Social Hygiene League, connected with the Public Health Institute of Chicago. The institute was formed by a group of prominent persons to combat social diseases and to provide person*; of limited means with proper treatment. It advertises extensively, and ; herein Dr. Schmidt participated in a violation of the code ot ethics, in the view of the society. The organized medical men apparently were resentful that a charitable institution attracted patients who otherwise would have had to pay for treatment. “We must keep on trying to help the medical men's lot,” Dr. Schmidt argued, "but we can not buy him prosperity at the cost of the sick.” He asserted that the medical proiession "quickly must tiring down the inexcusably high costs of medical care ’ Said tiif medical society, no self-respecting profession toiera*e self-exploitation by its members by advertising; nor it is ethical for a physician to be connected directly with an institution that advertises medical services to the public.” The controversy strikes at the heart of a situation that is coming to be much discussed. Thousands of families, of limited means are unable to have proper hospital and medical care, because it costs too much. Laboratory studies, surgical attention, and the employment of high-priced specialists are beyond their reach. Their choice is neglect resort to quacks, or the use of nostrums. Forward-looking men in the medical profession and on the outside have been calling attention to this condition and movements are afoot to remedy it. The Chicago episode is particularly in point, because it concerns social diseases. The ignorance of these is widespread, dnd their neglect brings tragic consequences. Their prevalence is a menace. Doctors themselves admit that in no part of the practice of medicine is there as much quackery, charlatanism and extortion. The public health institute advertised the perils of these diseases and offered treatment for sufferers, as did the United States government during the war. Physicians properly are pro”d of their mora duty” to heal the sick and to aid humanity, so it is probable that the attitude of Chicago's organized medical men is not representative of the profession. About tire most unethical thing of which -t could op guilty would be to withhold care and knowledge from the masses. The Chicago doctors should re-read their Hippocrates. Red-Baitine Labor Department Red-baiting is the United States labor departments initial contribution in efforts to settle the Carolina textile strikes. Asa result, it has accomplished nothing constructive, but materially has increased the bitterness in that industrial strife. The department’s conciliation agent in the strike area. Charles G Wood, is quoted as saying that “no conciliation is possible until the misled workers divorce themselves from their communistic leaders. Wood further is quoted as describing the strike as a form of “revolution,” and as praising the use of state troops against the strikers. Instead of reprimanding and recalling Us agent for his partisanship, the labor department reasserts it* “utmost confidence in Wood s fairness and his abil- **■ ity as a mediate#'* - ■

The Indianapolis Times I* SCttLt’t'S-HUIVAfiD KBWiHt'f.K) Owned and published daily (except Sunday) by The lndianapoifi Times Publishing Cos., 214-220 W. Maryland Street, Indianapolis, Ind. Price in Marlon County 2 cents—lo cents a week; elsewhere 3 cents—l 2 cents a week. QtIRLBT. HOI vy. HOWARD. FRANK G. MORKISON, Editor. President. Business Manager. ~~PIIONE RILEY trail. ~~ FRIDAY. APRIL IZ. 1929. Member of United Press, Scripps Howard Newspaper Alliance, Newspaper Enterprise Association, Newspaper Information Service and Audit Bureau of Circulations. “Give Light and the People Will Find Their Own Way.”

workers are striking against wages and conditions close to industrial slavery, and that the employers are guilty of sabotaging the system of national highwage prosperity to which American industry and the Hoover administration are committed, the labor departments attitude is inexcusable. Whether the strikers are members of no union, or of a conservative union, or an alleged communistic union is no business of the department or of its agents. There is no law preventing workers joining a socalled communistic union. There are certain laws against violence, which should be enforced equally against employers and employes. But the Carolina strikers have not been guilty of violence, despite provocation and even it they had been guilty the preservation of order does not rest with the labor department. The labor department may be pleased or displeased because certain alleged radical leaders have come to the aid of struggling workers, neglected for years by conservative unions, but such opinions have nothing to do with its duty of attempting neutral conciliation. T. R. on Social Rank Republican forms oi government have no social arbiters. Social arbiters go with kings and hereditary pr vilege. In Britain there is a regularly constituted public official with duties and powers to rule on all questions of official social precedence. When King Edward died every person who marched cr rode in his funeral had a designated position accorded by this government official. And much hard feeling was caused because, under the ancient traditions which govern precedence, kings and kingdoms outrank republics. A little kingdom outranks a big republic. So it happened that ex-President Theodore Roosevelt. who was designated a special envoy to participate in the Edward funeral, found himself in a gilded chariot behind the representatives of Montenegro and other minor kingdoms. The special commissioner from France found his republic also so rated and he went to Roosevelt and urged that both the great republics register a protest. To which Colonel Roosevelt replied: “My dear Cambon, I appreciate your feelings, but I have a very strong feeling myself that a funeral i3 no place to kick up a row.” Which may or may not have a bearing on the present cat fight in Washington. The Coffin Threat Once again Boss Coffin, free from indictment by the statute of limitations, menaces the city of Indianapolis. Shorn of some of his power by the Governor, who does not like Coffin, the boss is seeking patronage and power in other directions. He hopes to destroy tiie city manager lorni ot government in order that someone of his vassals may rule. True to form, he will have two horses in the same race in his own party, if he succeeds in getting the supreme court to overthrow the popular will. But he also makes a more serious attack from another front. He is reaching out for the public schools. The schools are in bad enough hands when they are controlled by the manufacturer of ventilators. They would be in worse hands if they were controlled by the boss. That the children and their education should become fodder for the Coffin machine is unthinkable—but it is very likely to happen on Tuesday night when Coffin will move his henchmen into the jobs where education is not essential and will later take control of the teaching staff, stamina to overthrow such a boss deserves boss rule. Perhaps a city which has neither the courage nor But it is not a pleasant picture for the future.

. David Dietz on Science—

Nature and Vacuum

- No. 328 -

THE history of the barometer is one of the most interesting chapters in the story of science. For it is now the chief aid of the w r eather forecaster. Its inventor had no idea of it being put to any such use. The early philosophers had explained the action of

abhorrence of a vacuum seemed to be limited to thirty-two feet and suggested to one of his pupils, Evangelista Toricelli. that he make a study of the problem. Now the action of a pump is to create a vacuum into which the water rushes. The explanation that the water rushed in because “nature abhorred a vacuum” was. of course, no explanation at all. Toricelli saw that a logical explanation was that the water was forced up into the pump by the pressure of the atmosphere, and that the reason the w j ater only rose to thirtv-two feet was because a column of water thirty-two feet high just balanced the pressure of the atmosphere. Toricelli built the first barometer merely to test this theory. He knew that mercury was about thirteen and a half times as heavy as water. Therefore, the atmosphere ought to support a column of mercury about two and a half feet long. His first barometer proved it. Other scientists naturally, were interested in this experiment. Rene Descartes and Blaise Pascal suggested that since the column of mercury was sustained by the air pressure, it ought to fall a certain amount if the barometer was carried to a mountain top. This was tried and found to be the case. The barometer is still used today as a means of estimating altitudes, both in mountain climbing and in aviation. Some time after the mountain climbing test, it .was noticed that the height of the mercury column fluctuated from day to day, and that these fluctuations usually preceded a change in the weather. Consequently, the barometer became known as a “weather glass.” Mahv men famous in various fields of science— Bovie, Halley, Newton, Leibnitz. Deluc. Cassini and Laplace—experimented with the “weather glas^ff As * result, the foundations of meteorology were

M. E. Tracy SAYS:

“Much as Medical Science May Have Accomplished, It Can Not Afford, to Be Overly Proud.” THERE is another row on in Chicago, and, perhaps, another racket back of it. It is worth mentioning, however, not only because it centers around something besides the beer trade, but because it involves a problem in which every one is interested —the problem of sickness and medical fees. Dr. Louis E. Schmidt was expelled by the Chicago Medical Society a few days ago. on charges of unethical conduct. He had not been guilty of malpractice, or overcharging a patient, but what he had done was far more offensive in the eyes of the Chicago Medical Society. Technically, his offense consisted of associating with the public health institute which advertises. a a o Horrors of Advertising THE Chicago Medical Society can not forgive advertising. It can not even iorgive the writing of articles. Several years ago it expelled Dr. Hazeldine for writing about the “Baby Ballinger” case, though the question involved was more moral than medical. Dr. Hazeldin was only trying to tell an intensely interesting public why he did not save the life of a monstrosity. Dr. Schmidt only was trying to save an intensely interested public some money. The expulsion of the two tells its own story. tt tt tt Public Has Some Rights That story is not yet finished. The question of what doctors shall be allowed to say in print, or what they shall be permitted to charge for their services ; s not entirely' one for them to answer. The public has a right to be heard in the matter, and some doctors have sense enough to recognize that right. Dr. Herman M. Bundesenn, for instance, coroner of Cook county, Illinois, and one of the best known health experts in the country, has resigned fi ; om the Chicago Medical Society in order to show his disapproval of Dr. Schmidt’s treatment, while Dr. Charles Mayo, head of the world famous Rochester clinic, has come to the latter's defense. tx tt tt Too High-Handed INSTITUTIONALIZED medicine can not become too high-handed without kicking the ground from under its own feet. When you get right down to brass tacks the medical profession depends, not on doctors, but other people. It can not survive by circumscribing itself with a code of ethics which fails to include other people. Neither can it survive on an arbitrary fee system which automatically continues to rise. u tt tt Average Folks In Cold ONE hears much about the charity work done by doctors, of which there is a great deal and for which they deserve the highest praise. They do not bear the whole burden; however, since much of the free service to poor people is paid for through excessive charges to rich people. Asa matter of common sense those who can pay their doctor s bills are being forced to balance the account for those who can not. This leaves average folks out in the cold. The bulk of us are too proud to accept charity and too poor to travel with the rich. a tt a Why Overly Proud? SICKNESS and its healing constitute the great problem of human progress. They have been responsible for much of the superset,ution, priestcraft and hokus pokus that has plagued the race. Much as medical science may have accomplished, it can not afford to be overly proud. We have not arrived at a point yet where doctors do not lose every case in the end. More than that, we still are beset. with quackery, some of which comes to us through the most regular channels, and the public is still sorely perplexed. o tt tt Still Make Mistakes rpHE greatest physician still X makes mistakes, and the veriest ignoramus still performs surmising cures. .... f \ Danish laborer opens his throat , with a pen knife and extracts a niece of bread which had become lodsed there and which was choking him to death. Doctors sew up the wound after he is taken to the hospital and praise the operation as highly suecessfiik which is sensible since the\ could have done no better. With what blows did Dfcinpsev floor Tunnev in the seventh round of their fieht in Chicago? According to newspaper accounts the blows were a left to the jaw. followed bv a right- to the jaw, and another left in the same place. .What is the value of a United ; gtotes half cent dated 1807? Five to 15 cenfs. Is William Collier Jr.. playing in vaudeville? What is his latest picture? He is piaving in vaudeville with his father. In his latest picture he olaved opposite Dolorefe Costello in "The College Widow.” What is the meaning of the name Eileen? It is from the Celtic and means i my own one.” Row should cake be eaten? Forks are usually served with cake; What are the chief wheat producing states of the United states? JBorth Dakota. Kansas. Minnesota, Nebraska. South Dakota, Illinois, ------ -* *■— —

the ordinary pump used in pumping water by saying that “Nature abhors a vacuum.” During Galileo's time, some people built a pump to pump water to a great height,, but found to their surprise that it wou 1 and lift the water to a height of only thirty-two feet. Galileo, remarking that nature's

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

BY DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN _ditor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Hygeia, and Health Magazine. THE popular belief that lemon juice will remove freckles is another superstition without any foundation. Tan and freckles are not caused by heat, but apparently are due to the effects of light rays on the skin. To prove that heat has nothing to do with causing the freckles, they appear not infrequently among mountain climbers amidst snow and ice of high altitudes. A white man does not have as much protection against light as

T'HE big Gann war has’ not meant very much to me. As I understand it. the first concerned the place Which the Vice-President's sister should occupy at table when official dinners are given. However, the whole problem fades into insignificance if it is considered in the light of other news developments in Washington. Not very long ago I read that all the members of the cabinet had agreed to respect the Volstead act in private life. And naturally there are no cocktails at official banquets. Why, then, is there any fuss about, where everybody is going to sit during one of these ordeals? The best spot at a dry dinner is out in the pantry where you can get away early without being noticed. a tt tt About Those Heflins HOW sweeter than a serpent's tooth.” My sympathies go, also, to Senator Heflin because reporters seek him out to ask if it is true that his son went on a spl'ee beyond the twelve-mile limit. No matter what the facts, it is not fair to accuse the gentleman from Alabama of hypocrisy. Outside the Heflin home there was no wolf such as most ,of us know. Instead there howled most piteously a demon known as rum. Three times a day, Tom. the elder, donned his frock coat and did his stuff. In addition to the finished product, younf Tom heard the rehearsals. A growing boy must m time grow weary of being called “fellow Democrats” or even “my country.” He knew in advance when poo would low'er his voice and when he and swell it full and send it crashing

I have not sat with vain persons, neither will I go in with dissemblers.—Psalm 26:4. tt tt a PRETENSION almost always overdoes the original, and hence exposes itself.—Hosea Ballou.

You can get an answer to any answerable question ot tayt or m ormation by writing to Frederick M. F erby Question Editor The Indianapolis Times Washington Bureau. 1322 New York avenue Washington. D. C.. inclosing ~ fgnts in stamps for reply. e ??_ advice cannot be sivei nor c:m tended research be in id?. All other questions wiil receive a personal repL Unsiened requests cams >t be All letters are connd' ntial. You are cordially invited to nake use of this service. Who was Calamity Jane? Her real namfe was Jane Burke. She was an American army scout and mail carrier born at Princeton, Mo., in 1852 and died at Deadwood. S. D.. Aug. 1, 1903. She v.as raised on the plains and became an Indian scout at an early age. She was an aid to General Custer and to General Miles in numerous campaigns. For several years she was government mail carrier between Deadwood, S. D. and Custer, Mont: Was Deadwood Dick a real person? That was the nickname of Robert Dickey (1840-191 M, whose actual adventures formed the basis of mam- of the “dime novels” which fed the imaginations of youth in 1860-1880. He was a seout under General George Crook in the days wiieh the red man of thfe plains was making his last stand against the mL.- nonma,.

What Was That Last Remark?

' SON! BE A , , _r l SAP AIL YOUR SirEf -0S EVERYBODY KNOWS (W ? YoueAS'iwr ir -AA ///. W A HILLIQM DOLLARS j

Lemon Juice Won't Remove Freckles

IT SEEMS TO ME

Dai lx Thought

Quest ions and Answers

HEALTH SUPERSTITIONS—No. 10

does a Negro, although he can stand heat just about as well. Since the pigments which form freckles are in the deeper layers of the skin, they can certainly not be removed by anything as inofsensive and mild as lemon juice. They can be removed if one strips off all the skin that covers him but this involves a rather serious process. Most of the freckle creams that are sold contain such dangerous ingredients as bismuth subnitrate and ammoniated mercury. These may eat off enough skin to get, down to the freckles, but they also not infrequently will eat off

against the walls of the Vatican. And if there was an occasional anecdote to save the discourse young Tom knew that as well. B tt tt Tdugii on Junior LIFE with an orator must bfe trying. He demands entlnifiasm i and approval from all within the sound of his voice and when Senator Heflin came striding into the nursery to try out anew gesture before' the big mirror it was little Tom’s task to drop his toy trains and lead soldiers and clap his hands in glee. “Give ’em HELL, Daddy,” he was j supposed to say, and after his fif- | teentlr year some of the sincerity | departed from childish treble. Indeed about the time his voice j changed so did his enthusiasm. Vou ! see. he had been Heflined pretty hard. It may even bfe that he began to feel a certain sympathy for the demon rum, w'hich, like himself, had lived through quite a quantity of’Tom Tom’s harangues. In every human heart there dwells a cheat reservoir of sympathy for the underdog, or the underdemon, for that matter. Steady churchgoers have been known to pray at j night for the “Poor Devil” after hearing him lambasted through a three-hour sermon. a tt A Gentle Monster SO it may have been wdth Heflin Jr. The demon might be just as horrible as his father said and yet he could not help feeling a certain kinship. By dint of reiteration the crusades against alcohol lost their sting. At the very worst, he seemed 3. patient monarch. And gentle, too. . Though Heflin had shaken his fist at the monster many times, young Tom could not remember a single occasion upon which the beast had snapped at the senatorial hand. Rather, when the satesman began to shake, the dragon of drink would roll over on his back and play dead. It was plain to be seen that he i wanted to have his stomach ! scratched. Yet every time the monster asj sumed this sportive attitude Tom

General A. H. Terry during a part cf that commander’s campaign in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains. He became successively an Indian agent, a United States marshal. a trapper and a fur merchant, and, having made a fortune finally lost it and died poor. What is the difference between a yawl, a skiff and a launch? A yawl is a small sailing vessel rigged like a cutter with the addition of a jigger-mast; a ship’s small boat or a small fishing boat. A skiff is usually a light boat propelled by oar'- or seulls. A launch is the largest of a man-of-war boats; a sloop rigged with a jib or main sail: or a large open biat especially when propelled by steam, electricity or gasoline and used as a pleasure boat; as a steam or gas launch. Who comprised the principals in the cast of the picture “Orphans of the Storm?” Lillian Gish. Dorothy Gish, Joseph Sehildkraut, Monte Blue; Lucille La Verne. Sheldon Lewis, Harry Homik and Morgan Wallace. On what Date did Easter Sunday fall in 184|?

enough skin to make the person’s condition serious. Some freckle lotions even contain bichloride of mercury. This is an exceedingly dangerous remedy to use on the skin, except by a person who is fully conversant with its possibilities. It is rather doubtful that lemon juice really helps the skin in any way. As it is a very mild acid, it may remove grease that is washed off with little difficulty, but there are much better ways for improving the quality of the skin than by external application of lemon juice. The quality of the skin is a reflection of the health of the body generally.

By H ST

Heflin put a hobnailed boot upon his chest and shouted loudly that he, the gentleman from Alabama, had slain tile foul creature. Surely it was difficult, not to admire an animal with such a capacity for absorbing punishment. For when the dragon of booze had been slain upon a Friday night, the child ivbtild look out the window of the paternal mansion on a Saturday morning and see it frisking around the lawn. tt tt a Admires Foe A ND he wanted to see it there. 1 Even his father, he came to suspect, had a sneaking admiration for the old adversary. If the dragon ever had died and remained that way, Senator Hfeflin’s occupation would be gone. It would then be necessary for him to get a book and read up on banking or the tariff. In the Heflm home there was meat upon the table, shoes in the closet and frock coats draped across the banisters. As he grew to years of discretion, young Tom could not get away ffofh the realization that the big lizard upon the lawn paid for it all. Papa earned his salary wholly by fierce shadow boxing with Rum and Romanism. Sometimes when he didn’t really want his spinach, the boy longed to open a window and give some to the dragon. He was even generous enough to think of trying a little ice cream on the faithful monster. But such a deed never would be countenanced by Senator Heflin. Whatever feelings might be in his heart, the gentleman from Alabama never greeted the demon with anything more friendly than “Scat.” tt tt a Southern Gentleman There came a day when the tiny edge of heresy crept into little Heflin’s mind. Patience under attack. good humor, a sensitive understanding of the feelings of others; what was the inevitable name for an individual possessihg these qaulitles? He couldn't get away from the logical conclusion. The demon rum of which his father spoke so much was a southern gentleman. In Panama, with no parent present, young Tom ran into the demon and Heflin's action was wholly instinctive. He thrust out his hand and said, “Pleased to meet you. sir.” You would have done the same. (Copyright. 1929. by The limes)

Inspiration AYhenever we open anew shipment of Society Brand Clothes we have the feeling that here is merchandise which is a delight to handle, a joy to examine, a pleasure to talk about and a satisfaction to sell.

Ideals and opinions expressed in this column are those of one of America’s most interesting writers, and are presented without regard to their agreement or disagreement with the editorial attitude of this paper.—The Editor.

I Wilson Bros. Haberdashery DOTY’S 16 N. Meridian St. -^.jj

APRIL 12, 1929

REASON By Frederick Landis

Sentence of Harry Sinclair to Jail Is a Great Victory for Law and Order in the United. States. THIS decision of the United States supreme court that. Harry Sinclair must serve ninety days in jail for shadowing the jury which was trying him and Fall is the most beautiful number heard in an American court in many years. After seeing the influential get. away with murder, as they do almost continuously, it is ravishing delight to have our greatest court reaffirm the proposition that all are equal before the law tt tt B All we have to do. dear brothers and sisters, to restore respect for courts and make Americans a law and order loving people is to amputate the endless monkey business from law' enforcement and have our judges hand out the quinine to the rich as well as to the poor. Do this a little while and common people will take off their hats when they pass their courthouses! a a a Os course, we do not rejoice to see anybody go to jail, but institutions with bars at their window ; were intended for those, who from sheer greed, defy the very laws which protect their millions. The man most eligible to wear stripes is he who. sitting a( the feast of good fortune, would pull down the house which shelters him, St tt tt AMERICANS arc tar from anarchistic; they are in fact, more docile than oxen. They dw'ell without complaint: amid injustices which in other times have been the raw material of revolutions: they see the frightful extremes of chance aggravated by privilege and corruption, yet their only reaction is a sense of helplessness; they go to war to save their land from alien exploitation, only to turn In the hour of “Victory" in find exploitation at their very door. But. all the same the sense of outrage is in their hearts and they break laws which hamper them, justifying the act by the illustrious precedents set by the powerful. This is one of the great handicaps in the enforcement of the dry la v the poor knowing full well that the rich snap their fingers at it. tt tt tt Give them a square deal and the masses will throw their hats in the air for the sovereignty of society; for the evangelizing power of holiest, impartial law enforcement is the greatest in our civilization. It would bring to the mourners bench of Law' and Order millions who now regard offensive statutes as “mere scraps of paper.” tt tt tt Applied equality by constituted authority is irresistible, not, only in courthouses, but in army camps as well. Let a commander be severe, he still will hold the loyalty of his men if in his severity he be impartial. There never was a more strict disciplinarian than General George S. Thomas in our Civil war, yet his soldiers loved him because his rules were iron for officers as well as for private soldiers. tt it tt And so this supreme, court decision is a. national asset. Our prayers as citizens should be. lor more of such decisions, for the common man asks only that Hjs government be honest; that the Goddess of Justice be chaste!

Times Readers Voice Views

Tlie name and addresb of the author must accompany every contribution, bull on request will not be published. Letters not exceeding 200 words will receive preference. Editor Times—How would it do to change the sentence of Daisy Sullivan from 2 to 14 years and make it this way: She is to be stoned to death by the people who wants her locked up for fourteen years. Let the one without sin cast the first stone. W. R. BAILEY. How can one get rid of body lice? Boil or bake the clothing, when body lice usually live, or iron the clothing and especially tj ie seams with a hot lroh. Atl efficient method is to soak the clothing in gasoline. Another less expensive method is to put the clothes for half an hour in a soapy solution to which 2 per cfeht of trichldrethylfehe has been added. A good application for the body is a solution made by mixing one part of gasoline with three parts of vaseline. Who played the parts of Faul Jones and the rillian in the picture “The Cat and the Canary?” Creighton Rale played the part of Paul Jones, the hero, and Forrest Stanley the part of Charles Wilder, the villian.

Society Brand Clothes $45 to $75