Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 May 1938 — Page 10

PAGE 1

The Indianapolis Times (A SCRIPPS-HOWARD NEWSPAPER)

ROY WwW. HOWARD LUDWELL DENNY MARK FERREE President Editor Business Manager

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a an Rey 5551

Give 1A0NE ana the Pespre Will Pina Thetr Own Way

Mambar of United Press, Seripps « Howard News paper Alliahce, NEA Service, and Audit Bue

reau of Circulations, E SCRIPPS ~ NOW

MONDAY, MAY 98, 1938

HAGUES “VICTORY” HE affair of the two Congressmen who were going to mow down Mavor Hague and then changed their minds has its amusing aspects and perhaps its moral. The moral being if you tell the world you're going to be a martyr, be prepared to go through with it or else become & laugh-ing-stock. We would hate to have to take the kidding Reps. O'Connell and Bernard will get from their confreres and their constituents. But the event at most should be described as seriocomic, with the serious part vastly outweighing the comie, No more vital question was ever involved, Even those who subject themselNes to the charge of being Red are entitled to have their sav in this country. The power to suppress, once established, can as well be turned on 8 Hoover or & Roosevelt as on & Rernard or an O'Connell, When that power rules, what we know as freedom is gone, and we have joined the swollen caravan of dictatorship, Mavor Hague has amply demonstrated that he can assemble an army of policemen, veterans and plug-uglies to suppress free speach in Jersey City. Thousands of city and county employees owe their jobs to him and obey his orders. And it iz a shameful fact that the power which he £0 abuses is bagad in part on his position as & vice chair man of the Democratic National Committee and a political ally of the President of the United States,

“RIGMAROLE" DOLF HITLER'S spectacular journey to the Eternal City is drawing to a close. The time for silvern speech has come. Thus the German Fuehrer and the Italian Duce have just swapped the traditional toasts of state, At a farewell banquet the Fuehrer spoke his love for the Italian people and promised everlasting friendship across frontiers forever unalterable, Similarly, but in a more carefully worded speech, Premier Mussolini returned the compliment. “To your powers ful work of reconstruction,” he said in musical cadences, “go the warmest wishes of myself and the Fascist State.” It was all very lovely, Paraphrasing Byron, “The speeches were a fine sample, on the whole, Of rhetoric, which the learn’d call ‘rigmarole,” ” World chancelleries, of course, will now comb the “rhetoric” for hidden meanings, Our guess is they won't find any-if hy that is meant something like a secret alli ance or pledges of mutual aid in time of war, Italy's interests do pfrallel Germany's. Herr Hitler aspives to expansion eastward into Crechoslovakia, Hungary, Rumania, the Ukraine, the Balkans, Poland and bevond. , Mussolini, of course, could be of tremendous help in making his guest's aspirations come true, But Hitler has little, if anvthing, to give the Duce in return, Recent events indicate Signor Mussolini is convinced that Italy's fortunes are far more closely bound to those of Great Britain and France. Developments in that direction are to be expected in the near future. He may observe a policy of hands-off, so far as Herr Hitler's ambitions are concerned, but the odds are against his helping the Fuehrer put them over,

OUR STINGY GOVERNMENT

not

O the frequently dour Harold Ickes goes whatever the | wit

prize is for the best smart-crack of the week,

| black eyes,

| Was

Fair Enough

By Westbrook Pegler

Joo Jacobs and Jim Farley, Both In the Fight Business, Both Abk Managers and Both Disinherited.

EW YORK, May 9 -Jim and Joe Jim Farley, Joe Jacobs, Both ih the fight business, Jim the prize fight commissioner and politician. Joe the little hustler, known as Yuseel the Musele. Joe saw a young fellow coming along. Strong, tough, ambitious, determined but cold. He saw Max Schmeling and hookdd a finger through his lapel. “String along with me, kid, and you'll be champion.” Jit saw a young politictan coming along. A New Yorker. A Roosevelt, Tough, ambitious but cold. “String along with me, kid, and you'll be President.” We in the prize fight business have ween the ecarears of Jack Dempsey and Jack Kearns, of Gene Tunney and Billy Gibson. Kearns had been disinherited, Gibson had been disinherited. Sehmeling became champion, but meantime thare had bean changes in German political life. Joe was a Jewish boy, and Schmeling wax a blond Arvan, blues eved German with black, bristly hair and squinty,

» » »

NS time marchad, Joe had to go to Germany. And though now disinherited and hating Max Scehmeling, who haftd and missed no occasion to humiliate him, Joe got inte the ring ih Germany and stood in mocking respectiuiness while {ribute paid to Hitler and to oevervthing that was

| knifing the very heart of Joe Jacobs and hix mother.

He stood thus his hat on and with a cigar in his mouth, which was a magnificent, if unintentional, in-

| sult to Sehmeling and Hitlerism,

| came President

| Tey,

As time marched on, Franklin D. Roowxevelt be and Jim TFarley went to Washington, Jim didn't belong there, But Mr. Roosevelt alto bagan to develop ideas way over the head of hix friend and manager, Jim Pare AL first Jim used to ®¥ee him all the time, They

were pals,

Ih the career of Max Schmeling, after he bee

| came a big man, there have bean faults for which

little Yussel the Muscle has had to take the blame, Th the career of Mr. Roosevelt, since he became President, there have been faults for which Jim Farley takes the blame, » » » OHMELING repudiated, humiliated and, in all but the official, legal sense, discredited Yussel Mr. Farley's champion started running with a wet

| of new-found friends who regarded Jim as a person

of inferior intellect and political caste

Mr, Roosevelt set up a political Aryan to run

| against Jim for Governor of New York State, the job

dd and humiliated,

on which Jim had set his heart. Mr. Roosevelt's man, Mr. Jackson, was quickly knocked over, but nevertheless his gratitide to the man with whom

he had strung along to become President was exs pressed there, Several days ago Mr. Farley stodd up in masting and denounced the foes of his man, President Roowes velt, Still Joval, still the manager, though discredits Jot

Hut me haope that, like

He gave the salute,

| little Yussel the Muscle in Hamburg, he Kept his hat

{ troubles of the state,

on and didn't take the cigar out of his mouth,

A

Business

By John T. Flynn

The Way Out Is More Difficult Than Dr. Millikan Would Have It,

including laws diplomats, poli the aconomic Dr, Millikan,

EW YORK, May 3 -Evervbody vers, industrialists, preachers, ticians—=have had a try at solving Now the seientist

| famous Nobel prize winner, discoverer of cosmic ravs

hay offerad his advice, Tt iz advice offered before but coming from so distinguished a source, it calls for notice, Tt is simplicity itself. What we should

dn is to put an end to all the schemes and stratagems |

[ of the planners, and produce goods

The report did not reveal just how all this new wealth may be produced, but apparently, as old Alfalfa Bill Murray said about the monsy for pen= sions, “that is a detail.” It is a fact that we have here in this country now all the land, all the eattle, all the machinery to produce nearly twice as much as we produce and probably enough for evervbody. Dr. Millikan wants to wee all this put to work, But so does evervone, Why do not the men who own the machinery to work? They want business and profits

| They won't put it to work because they can’t sell

Commenting on the ejection of Undersecretary Charles |

West from his four-room suite in the imposing Interior Department Building Mr, Ickes said: “What do 1 care which office he doesn't ‘occupy ?” It seems that Charley hasn't shown up for Interior Department toil since December. Hence First Assistant Burlew gets the suite, But for real, simon-pure, yet at the same time expensive, humor we find two paragraphs in the news story telling of the ejection. Placed end to end, they bring simul taneously to the taxpaver & laugh from the belly and a sob from the pocketbook: “With Mr. West continually absent, it was not considered economical to keep his office open, according to the official explanation,” And-— “The Undersecretary retains his title, his $10,000 salary, the use of a Department automobile and garage space in the Interior Building basement, Otherwise his connection with the Department is limited to a telephone line from the main switchboard to his ex-receptionist,” After such punishment Mr. West certainly is entitled to apply for relief, and the Government at Washington to confound for all time those critics who charge that economy, drastic and inexorable, is not always the watchword.

TRULY RURAL \ JHAT had been promised was & man-eating gorilla, What came out was & lap dog. So much for all the sensational buildup of the Senate Lobby Committee's inquisition into the matter of the magazine Rural Progress, For this was invoked the special dispensation as to use of income tax returns. And what was proven by this invasion of privacy, and after Rural Progress in all its financial nakedness had been paraded through the public square, was that there hadn't been any income on which to pay taxes. but instead, only deficits. That, and no more. Except that rather weird inference on the part of the awkward Mr. Minton that because & magazine wasn't making money in times like these its whole mission in life must necessarily be propaganda. And as for that, if so, so what? What about the Congressional Record? And what about the hearing itself? But it was a great day for Glenn Frank. Almost as good as was that great day recently for Norman Thomas in Jersey City. And in the same sort of way. The Committee wouldn't let Frank talk. Which was stage setting enough for Frank to last him through to 1940. So Frank went out and held a press conference, Whenever a Congressional Committee turns either high-handed or dumb it jeopardizes an important Governmental function. The Lobby Committee did both,

the product after it has been produced. But why can't they sell it? Because the prople haven't enough purchasing power to buy it. But why haven't the people enough purchasing power? Because the men Who own the machinery do not put it to work and employ them. Which gets us back to where we started. Here we ask, why don’t they put it to work and employ people? Because the people haven't the means of buying all that they produce,

Back Into the Vicious Circle

What ix needed 1s someone who will get us out of that vicious circle. Someone must be willing to produce and sell on credit. Well, why don't they? Because no one will ad. vance them the eredit,. Why not? Because they are afraid they won't get their money back. But that isn't the only reason. The things principally bought on long-term eradit are plants and machinery, Men do not want to buy any more of this at present He

| cause they cannot soll the prodnet of the machinery

they have now, Which gets us back into this vielous

| circle ance more

The scientist has to understand that this seonamie

| world moves in obedience to laws quite as imperious

| as the Jaws which move the planets

1

They are laws and they cannot be defied. They have been defied and we pay the penalty now of that defiance. But the way out is difficult. We should learn to mistrust people who have simple remedies,

i —————

‘A Woman's Viewpoint

By Mrs. Walter Ferguson

HE brothers Phil and Bob La Yollette have lnunched a new political party, This is a patri= otic move, for the country needs it far more than it needs a good S-cent olgar, a woman President or a Navy second to none, Maybe the joiners who are tired of old alliances will stampede to the fledgling, giving it sufficient strength, if not to win, at least to break up the coalition of Old and New Deal politicians, The La TFollette platform makes enticing reading even to those of us who have lost faith in platforms. It embodies all the pood sense of the rugged-individus alist crowd with the beautiful theories of a Norman Thomas Socialist. Tt calls loudly for the modernizing of our governmental system. That, of course, may mean anything or nothing, but in considering it the tired taxpayer will be moved by the thought of change. Being a woman T lay claim to no particular politionl astuteness, but it often strikes me that we could get along pretty well under any emblem if we only had enough honest men to keep the platforms from bogging down in a mire of materialism. If we could set up prudence in the State House, common sense in Legislatures and at the same time maintain humanitarian objective in the White House, it wouldn't make any difference what party was in power, Platforms are no good unless we can find some good men to stand on them, and nobody can deny that principles are better for holding them up than platitudes, The American voter considers himself a long. suffering person. He isn't, He merely has handed his country over to the politicians, If the La Follettes will promise us an official housecleaning from constable to Senator, I'm with them. Tt's time we stopped coddling the politicians, don't you think?

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

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(1 mes readers ara TO LIVE WITH INVENTIONS By B © One of the things that make our | . modern ag2 xo hard to understand | re that most | of its greatest achievements dan

td express their

SAYS WORLD HAS TO LEARN | reigrous ons Make

short, so all

thesa <Olumns,

WErsIeS 8X luded,

vaur letter can

[ produce evil as well as good The United Press recently a little story volumes on this point

that The

wirex earried | spoke | story |

was from Bakersfield, Cal, and it

| read like this: “The city ®ehools are having dif [ ficulties with 18 Chinese ohildren [Who were sent here from the battle

lareas of China. They do not speak |

(English, and when airplanes lover the eity thev hide to exeape

fly |

bombs, Tt fx sometimes difficult to |

[locate them afterward.”

[that it waz Not necessary

| There §8 hardly a eity in Amar |

[jen where the sound of {flving overhead is not a [every day thing. The American voungster does not

ordinary 160k

up when he hears the motors in the |

I 8Ky,

Muman flight are perfectly genuine land the airplane has abundantly [justified itsell by the work it has [done ih peaceful Ameriea, But in China it is anothar story, and the Chinese children react very differs ently.

| They RNOW it as an instrument of terror, So we get here a prime example of the double-edged nature of tools which modern inventiveness has placed in our hands And much of the same thing seems to be true of nearly all of four pet achievements, We have fsuch a highly integrated and elab|orately organized civilization that When our owh stupidity or folly [throws it into reverse it ean do great damage to a greal many people. Which simply means that our responsiblity is greater now than ever before, We ean hurt ourselves (more than we once could. Tt is up [to us to learn how to live inh the (miraculous new world we have re. (ated,

» » » (POLICE CRITICIZED [POR ARREST [Ry Virginia Burford

I am beginning to wonder wheth. [or or not the heads of our Police Department are mice or mon, My cousin, a highly respected citizen, was visiting his father-in-Jaw at the Methodist Hospital, Since [he did ndt want to leave his father. [in=law, who was dying, for a very

atrplanes | familiar |

| jail even though he had papers to Now the romance and wonder of | [te po neross the street with him to

|

| |

There is No casual acceptance of | the airplane in their makeup, and | no thrill at its romantic wonder. |

| have a chance, Letters must

be signed, but names will be

withheld on request.)

long period, he went across the street to get a quick evening meal Ax he started to leave the hotel, he was seized hy two men whe did not have uniforms, or who did not show any badges, Hut who said to him that he wax under arrest, He asked to see their badges and they said with the resiilt that, thinking he was being attacked by robbers, he attempted to protect himself, He was badly Heaten hy these men, who later turned out to be police officers. They task him to | prove hix identity, They refused | the hospital so he might be identi fied, After he reached the jail he | continually pleaded with the men | in charge to call the hospital and | tell hizx relatives what had hap- |

WILDFLOWER HUNTING | By E. 8. 1. THOMPSON |

[at the | Choo

| notified his family

| shortly

[man they

pened wo they might come to the jail and make the proper arrange ments for hiz release were ighored After three realized that [BY

jatl, they inflinted

hours in his wounds

[was taken to the Oity Hospital #o | [ hin [wears glasses and ih the melee his

wounds could he dressed. We glasser out his face He told his ston City Hospital, whe Samaritan and ealled the Methodist Hospital, whieh in turn of hix dilemma to the fall imme-

Hix family went

[diately and identified him ax being [a respected eitizen and a [of their family, but the Police De | partment [fdentification [around midnight when it was necess | | ary [of our banks to get out of bed and | | dome gown

refused to accept He wax held to get the president of one to the and the release after midnight When the police learned that the had held in custody not the eriminal they thought

changed

fail to identify

him, wan

they

the eharge of resisting an offiear,

and was completely exonerated hy the judge. T am writing this let tar to vou inh the hope vou will publish it and give the eitizens of

ve Desh wildflower hunting: there. |Our community the apportunity of

the |

|

to driven the lure of above me Roaming in the ‘woodland, near to heaven's Splendor'd eyvex so clear, ah do not doubt me!

By sky, and scents

I've been dream-hound bh the sweet Anemone! Where the moss doth plumy feather I've heard songs where dewseved violets be Lost in glory of April weather!

toss its

[ shall find ® buttercup out yonder With its star-ranged petals golden glory I shall hear a lark, and with him ponder All the wonder of glad Nature's | story!

DAILY THOUGHT

But they refused to hearken, and pulled away the shoulder, and | stopped their ea, that they | should not hear Zechariah 7:11, |

5) SrNAOY and vehemeney in opinion are the surest proofs

of stupidity --Barton, |

knowing how inefeient the Indian. apolis Police Forse is,

Pditor's Note -Police officials re ply that the detectives showed the man their badges, that he started to reach ih hiz pocket and, thinking he was_going for a gun, they hit him, They sav they have two oi three withesses to verily their version,

When an official of a local Hank |

was brought to headauarters about midnight to identify the man, the police say they placed no charges against him except that of resists ing. They say they explained to

[the judge the eircumstances of the

cafe and asked that the case be continued indefinitely, > ® Ww MINTON'S CRITICS ARE SCORED Ny WO Pree Much has been sated hy prominent newspapers and eritieizing and ridiculing Senator Minton for his efforts to eurh wills ful false statements in newspapers and other publications, Gio on and say it. Maine and Vermont are behind vou; and maybe Al Smith,

| White stars painted on thei

| enddy

[ alone to the Diaz trenches [ Into erossing the harder to intern

| waid

Hix pleas |

the police officers were causing | [a tremendous flow of blood and he |

to the doctor | Wax A |

member | IN YORK, May 9 Pranee had But a single | | Marie Antoinette, while we Rave PHONENR 16 éBs thin until |

made | ( that the policies of the present Administration. sr any

| other, are all wrong and to put that thought hte tha

wax |

the charges and ordered | hith to appear in police court under |

big ex-politiefans |

the |

{righ

LET'S EXPLORE YOUR

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soon omy — 3 | OPARY SR ex Rovenip head YOUR OF ON wn

COIVRIGNT NS MBL de

DAD AND DIOK are probably, sweep left-handed (with the left right but the heredity of right | hand nearest the business end of and left-handedness is =a tough the instrument) are superior mens proposition, Indications are that tally and that right-handers who right-handed persons use mostly the | bat right handed but sweep left left side of the brain and left-hand- | handed are inferior mentally if ed persons the right side. The late | males but not necessarily so if fe. Dr, June Downey concluded that males, Anyhow more females are «handed persons who bat.and of this type than males, This needs

Ry DR. ALBERT EDWARD WIGGAM

MIND

further study to prove it, Readers could get a lot of fun by studying how their classmates in school use [their hands in writing, batting, | Rweaping, shoveling, ete, and seeing | how the bright and dull ones do it [Don't draw any hasty cohelusions

THE 738 ELOPEMENTS studied by Dr. Popenoe lead him to say, “These marriages, made against parental opposition, leave on the whole = rather pessimistic picture of parental stubbornness, possess siveness and selfishness--especially of mothers, Tt lends support to the loomy conclusions of Dr. Leonard ottrell of Cornell that, in case of differences of opinion between parents about the desirability of a marriage, young people will be safer to follow the advice of father rather than mother but that the happiest marriages are those in which all the parents on both sides are dead.” A lot of parents won't [like this-<but it comes from very large, actual studies of their selfishness in this field where above all they should be wise, unselfish and tolerant and thousands of let. ters 1 receive from heartbroken young people lend additional proof.

AN INTROVERT--much more likely because he thinks more

about himself and about the probof life, | recreation [peulnrly,

Gen. Johnson

Says—

Some Day Some Writer Will Pick Up Julian Gaujot's Incredible Record And Produce an American Classio,

recently, and one wha huddios unique of

EW YORK, Mav 5 There died war burfed with {hsuffetent honors was among the hext Beloved af mv Army Obl. Juliah Caujet the most cavalrymen Commissioned where hix

one of

Philippine insurrection, gallantry, received the Craujot had an obser 1 got to gat me which

via the fon Oongressional medal of honor sion one of them things for my own self if 1 bus he eventually, duly did Treacherous massacre: of white troop: sent Gen, Jake Bmith to Samar with orders to Blast the island, A fale "Black pope’ and a fake unordained hieMmrehy were responsible for these ahd heredible tortures of white wmoldiers cavght reds handed and quite handily hanged 11 of them, But Governor Williath BH. Taft war horvifted. Jake and Gaujot were consigned to the ofMeinl doghouse,

brother great

‘He wears it for a wateh-fob

mansNacer CGrauiot

® % W» H* held down wa Jjungle-station exile, Hi fantaxiex Pecame Army legends, The savage skipper of his barge of state rechriztensd Benbow wore an admirals cap and nothing exe whatever, He navigated the sluggish bBavoux th nautical phrases from New Bedford hig only Fnelish, Gauiot's native police force wore old gray police helmets and had Pare Hreanis

in

They fwirled clubs and leaned against lamp posts which Gaujot had imported, Both the barges=skipper and the Malay cope renamed Murphy and MecHs amured Grauiol and adored him picturesque language quaint conoeits, Gaujot never had an saual, nor had he Ih eld, stealy, deadly conrage. Yet ehildren loved and focked after him lke a pred piper » » »

N the Madera revolution, he went to Doulas, Aria The revolutionisty attacked the Diag (OWH AOraNe the horder, Their fire bagan to kill people In Douglas, Gaujot mounted his bHaloved horse, Od Dick, and rode inte the teeth of the revolutionary Are. His frightenad trumpetesr, Pensky, Who Wax oF vears my owh orderly, satd, “Captain, they're firing at ww." Gaujot rode on. Pensky plaved hix ace: "Oaptain, they'll kill Dick.” Gaujot dismounted. “Take him back.” Then alone, that wish of a man walked 1» the gun muzzles, He Hullvrageed the Madera ints ‘ceare firing.” Then, under saually Rot Are, he walked and cursed that garrison

or

nnd

raved but the Mexican CGlavernment wax furious, Taft was President and he remembered the 11 fake priests at Samar, But Gen. Leonard Waod “Tt's either a court-martial or a medal of honor, The madal war never Better deserved and ne Amerts can court-martial will conviet Ho Ghujol got him ‘one of those things for mv awn self There Is not space more than to skim the surface of thizx astonishing eareer, 16 ix ax dark with im placable fate on fronts as a Creek raged) [ome day, some Margulis James will plek up this in credible record and make of iL an American olassio, I am too close to it to attempt that

It Seems to Me By Heywood Broun

Douglas wax

othe

Forget the Editorials and Columns, Your Writer Advises the C. of C.

Rbitute an entire Chamber of Commerce, To be sire, the leading industrialists familiar enough with the indices of business, But they pay seant attention to economic and political tides, At least, (his seems to be true of the men who are articulate at meeting:

Te tx well within the rights of anv Wan te think

are

MOREL vigorous language at his command, But 1 remain constantly amaged nt the amount of purely wishin thinking which ix ‘engaged 1h by gentlemen who Pros fess to be realistic and hard-headed

A Very considerable number of fAnancial oaptaing

He later appearad in police court | nist upon procesding on the premise that there Was

no national election fn 1038. Or, at the very they seem to contend that ft was all A dream

Of course, the kings of commerce read (he news. papers, but they turn instinetively to the aditorial pages and the columns of comment, where they are very likely to find solace for their misconceptions

A friend of mine recently made (he experiment of taking 10 representative papers and Having evervs thing inked out except deh items ax reflected opinion, Por one month he proceaded to shelter himsell from all factual reporting. And (this, of aourse. did net bar him from getting certain pisces in the body of some of the papers which ware presented ax news, My friend kept to this striet diet for a whole month.

A Second Rip Van Winkle

The morning his ordeal ended (he experimenter Went upon a spree among the headlines and the recital of happenings, He tells me that he felt sx. actly like a man from Mars or poor old Rip Van Winkle, Th almost all felds of national endenver he found himself completely out of touch With olirs rent events, For instance, on the moarming when he olimbed down from the columns and (he Olvmpian editorial attitude he found that Senator Pepper had won the Demoeratie primary in ™Morida with a vote that exceadad that of all his opponents put together, And imagine my friend's surprise to learn that the Miecessful eandidate had eaptured a Southern state on a platform of strong support for the New Deal, inelnding the Wage and Hours Bill My friend savs that he still feats shaky aned that ft will take at least a couple of weeks to got Back to normaley, But he is still at heart a research man.

lennt,

[ Far one Mall month he purposes to read the news and

leave out all the editorinly and columns, And 1 suggest thiz very regime to the Chamber of Commerce as a

good cure for Matulence, a A A SH

Watching Your Health

By Dr. Morris Fishbein

"TER =a teachers which most of

sirvey of health conditions among

in order to determine the manner in them sinned against well-established rules in health and hygiene, the 10 fundamentals which teachers should follow in order to have good health were listed, Here they are 1. Admit to yourself the limitations upon vour health, If such have been imposed upon you hy ans cestral Influence and your own past life; but do the bast you ean with what you have 2. Pree yourself from health defects that are wholly or partially remediable, which may lower your fithess, 3, Fat regularly, Eat slowly, Eat some hard food for the sake of the teeth; ent fresh, raw or green food for the chemical needs of the body, eat meat or eges only once a day, Avoid underenting and unders weight, Avoid overeating and overweight, 4, Spend eight to nine hours In bed every night, 5. Spend = half to ghe hour a day in recreation and exercise, outdoors, possible; and it is possible, with few exceptions, even In stormy weather, if you plan intelligently enough, 6. Acquire and maintain a good posture, for posture reflects and helps to determine mental attitude and efficiency as well an bodily Atness, 7. Take a cool tub, shower, or sponge bath each morning before breakfast if you react to this with a glow, 8. Attend to the evacuation of the intestine daily and with absolute regularity, for constipation fs the most common of all physical nilments, 9. Avold persistent worry as you would avoid the plague, Chronic worry injures the nervous system, and Is mentally harmful, 10, Get some form of mental ns well as musoulne

MONDAY, MAY 3, 1038

alas

tmnt ——