Hammond Times, Volume 15, Number 232, Hammond, Lake County, 16 June 1922 — Page 12

PRISON BARS FAIL TO DAMPEN LOVE OF TEACHER FOR MARRIED PRINCIPAL

ife teies mi5(7 aa un Cha aaadl, ILmvUns tlqi aiaoffihi: ioir sift! i&&ir afcffiajvK. ""TiseKB mxnm anotnrJsfla r jrirk5i ta caodnmn two faaimers In lvitT wagoiMi sr TbusylBB wlo. meeEttng on tha iUeihway., jttop to chal aWKDe with their -venlrO meanwhile blocking Che xoa,a. CTis exirbolsl Is road when lie -encounters this ttuatlon, yet lie is font as aipl to do tricks Just as toad or wo-re. TT you "huxm d change . tlrs, put! ont off f the edge of the paved road OT off to the edge of a. grravel road'.' costlooes tha motor cluh. butlettrt. TMai will gi-r oohe-rsi a. ciuL2x to pass Tea. Freajaeaitly IS la ueoesssary fwr two T&le3ea to pass each other rigil at a. spot where eoma tiher vehida may be stopped to cluLngo s, tire or for other sHrrposses. "If yoa toy on , ps.ved road, always pull over to the edge of the "Bonn" sfhoulder of the road alherever this is possible. The xoawsys themselTes en too narnrr to permit yon to leavs your car standing In tha Tnla tratTSq naitfr or near strelk ip.mth'. , Xf yoa wish to view a. sportiag evast or engage Is a picnic, for Mlie'a saka ft la Ins clear of other trafficiTha attention of sheriffs and oonstaibles everywhere is being called to this situation throughout Indiana by the motor organization. "These officers haw Jurisdiction In such oases wihch constitute blocking tha public bigbway," the Hoosier association stales "As fax aa practical wa ara urging- thejea to eierdaa their3 pojlca powers ia resolstijtg stici matters, eapeciiily on occasjoias of ball gaaues, pjcolcs. holiday events and sucli like. "It is op to the individual motor car driver -first to think of his own actions in such matters, continues the bulletin. "The fellow who la first to condemn a truck driver for not laying ever" is the one who la most apt to stop is car In a felghway In such a manner that two other cars can not move past that spot And this thins1 of llnlxtc both, sides of a narrow hi sh Tray or a narrow pavod road with cars parked to watob a bail game, leaving a single lane through the canter. If Indeed any lass at all is left, most certainly should be stopped and at once "In this again It Is lie Individual who Is responsible arid who is amendaible under the law against blocking higbways. "We hope each drKer will read and heed these admonitions." The Carnegie Foundation has given $150,000 ' toward the reconstruction as a model city of the town of FargnUre, eighty mile from Paris, which was destrowed la the world war. v.: '-v Mors than X.000 Pennsylvania veterans of ths world war, who were with ths 75th division, are planning to revisit Francs and the old battlefields this summer. RUBINI Flavors toy tne gallon for picnics and Foclals. 6--8t IE At imtlm CMcais

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Mis Marcia Kane. "I am willing to pay the price of our lore." Thus spoke Marcia fume, twenty-one, pretty Canadian school teacher, between the bars of a San Francisco jaiL Iler sweetheart is facing Jarceny charges. He's in the same jail. She and Ivor Bassett, thirty-three, were teachers in a little school in Kavelstoke, B. C, Canada. When they eloped Bassett is allejrod to have left hi3 wife penniless.

RIDICULES

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ftNTERN AT70N AC NEWS SERVICE

TEV YORK. June 15, Can Thom

as A. Edison deflne ''slJLeedle-deedle-"Wliether i. caa or caxjiot, the Irr.portanca cf hia answer from a psychological viewpoint eisnifles Just aa much &a the answers to the latest questions made public this week fcy Edison, In tha opinion of J3r. A. A. EriU, head of the department of psychiatrr of Columbia University. Furthermore, Dr. Srill added, 11 n man could answer all or most of the questions -propounded by Edison to applicants et iiis plant, were to apply to the psycholog-ist for a Job, he would hire eome one else. "Thoso questions" said Dr. Brill

"set no criterion w hereto jr the applicants' lltr.ess for a jofo may be J:i:l-(?i. The general smattering: of Ivnowledsre necessary to answer these QMestlons Is not an Index to n man's being1 through anything. In fact, T should think it would be ugainPt him. "i:d";on mlg'ht Just as well have allied the applicants to define Fkeed!e-dedle-do. It would have Femed Just as much for the purpose of judging the maji's ability.''. "This is an age of specialisation. T"nr a man to be a dab'bler In a

thousand and one things es a rule means that he is not tBorougb. In anything1. I ccald aalc Edison a number of questions is phyeiologr which, lie probably oould not answer. "It Is different, however. If he does not consider the answers to the questions, tout the way In which

they are answered. Then there

would he some psychological value to the method."

Dr. Brill Is f the pinion that

psychological tests as they are commonly used are "worked to death." A person selected on the eole basis of a psychological test Is not talways fit, he declared. "The best way to Judg-o the 3t-

ness of the applicant for a position

is by his past, and not matter how

young1 he Is, he has a past."

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DCKIIIG

THE HIGHWAY

The practice of motorists stop

ping- their cars while on paved high

ways so that the vehicle occupies more than Its full share of the roadway Is getting- to be et common according- to a bulletin. Jurt Issued Iby the Hoosler 6tate Automobile association, that some means of combatting: this growing evil must toe found. It is declared. "In the main" the motor organization states, "this practice Is due altogether to thoughtlessness on the part of the car driver. Too many drivers, too much, of the time, think and act as though their car

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